...But I still haven't found
what I'm looking for...
Words, observations and
thoughts from
Bobbie L. Washington
Sunday, June 28, 2015
If Only Mulder & Scully Had Smartphones Then
by
Bobbie L. Washington
I readily admit that I am a fan of The X-Files and am one of the many who are waiting with anticipation for the return of Scully and Mulder in January 2016. It’s been a log time since I had seen some major episodes from the show and so I went online to look up a few thanks to Hulu starting with the Season 1 and episode 1. As I watched the various episodes, I also took a second look at the technology Scully and Mulder used during that time. A lot of the things we have no taken for granted and is commonplace wasn’t available at that time.
The computers they used were archaic 80386's, monitors were bloated cathode ray tube green screen monsters and the cellphones were just glorified walkie talkies. They used their cellphones a lot for communicating but I wondered how would the X-Files would have been if they had smartphones instead.
Well, for one, Mulder could have snapped a picture or shot plenty of video of the spaceships he’s encountered over the course of the series. Scully could have tracked where Mulder was by the GPS tracking device on his smartphone and that way she would know if he was on the spaceship or with Diana Fowley. Mulder could have used a genealogy app to tell who the father of the baby belong to from the three brothers in Home after one or maybe two of them had sex with their mother. Scully could have used her Facebook app to see if Jade Blue Afterglow from First Person Shooter had any likes. The Lone Gunmen, Frohicke, Byers and Langley, could have used the Tinder app to meet real women. The Cigarette Smoking Man could have used the MyQuitBuddy app to help him stop smoking. Mulder could have used the Goggle map feature so he could navigate out of the cornfields in Fight The Future. Skinner could have used the T-Shirt app so that he can find the right one to wear under those starched white shirts, no wife beaters please.
Eugene Tooms could have used the Vegan App to find other alternative meat substitute dishes that don’t use liver but is just as nutritious and would have been on Snapchat. Duane Barry could have used the Paranoia App since he is so worried that somebody is always watching him. Clyde Bruckman could have used the Tarot Oracle Card app so that he could give David Blaine a run for his money. Krychek could have used the One Arm Slot Machine app to give him a better edge in Las Vegas and would have Kim K. following him on his Twitter account..
And as we countdown the final moments for the return of the X-Files, people will be interested in the relationship with Mulder and Scully. That’s a valid concern. Mine, however, will be about the aspect on this generation of technology. TV screens and bigger and flat and they can spy on you if you let them. Smartphones can do a lot more than just call a person. Big government is not just watching you, they are subcontracting private companies to mine data for them. Edward Snowden is the number one enemy to the NSA. Julian Assange is number two. And while the Lone Gunmen may have been right with their predicting the 9/11 disaster, we can rest assured that the alien conspiracy has been effectively put down…or so we think.
Saturday, June 20, 2015
Feminist Icons in Today's Pop Culture
By
Bobbie L. Washington
So I will pose this question, what
makes a feminist in this generation of selfie loving social media
instagram, Facebook, twitter culture? To understand feminism, you
first have to look up what it means and even though this generation
may be savvy with posting pics, memes and the what not, information
gathering tends to come up short. Feminism, by definition, is the
advocating on behalf of women when it comes to the issue of
reproductive rights, equal pay, domestic violence, maternity leave,
sexual harassment, sexual violence, and genital mutilation at it's
most core principles. Feminism started in France during the French
Revolution when the French writer, Olympe de Gouge, wrote about The
Declaration of the Right of Woman and Citizen during the French
Revolution. She was advocating that “woman is born free and
remains equal to man in her rights” and that women should have
equality in all areas of life such as education, government,
employment and the judicial systems.So
now that we have established a point of reference, does the value of
feminism still holds up with this crop of celebrity personalities?
Taylor
Swift, truly a remarkably talented woman, has been bestowed the title
of feminist by some publication. But what is she really doing for
feminism? She makes plenty of hit records about her dating life, she
decides on how her music will be distributed and by whom, she makes
plenty of money and she has donated to numerous charities but I don't
hear her voice in advocating a particular cause. Taylor Swift said
in part that she has become a feminist thanks to her friendship with
Lena Dunham recently so what does that mean in the grand scheme of
things? Taylor Swift has a hardcore fan base that have be vicious if
they find their star come under attack. One person, Clara Beyer, a
then Brown University student, created a Twitter account called
FeministTaylorSwift, that provoked the ire of that fan base who
thought Beyer was hater of Taylor Swift. But by her own summation,
Beyer's feel that she started Taylor Swift into the world of
feminism. Taylor Swift created a video called Bad Blood, where a lot
of her female friends appeared in varied roles as above average women
with kick ass abilities.
Taylor Swift had mention the fact that she
had used the women for these roles for what they supposedly would
represent. But you were just playing dress up. That had nothing to
do with furthering the cause of feminism. Just because you have a
video out pretending to kick fake ass doesn't mean you are
empowering women especially when at the end of the video you wound up
having a bitch slap fight with Selena Gomez. You sort of defeated
your purpose with that message of empowerment. But Taylor Swift has
power, as stated by Forbes magazine. She is ranked as one of the 100
Most Powerful Women of 2015 at number 64. But power is relative and
fleeting. Power is relative to what the people is willing to let you
have. Let me repeat that, power – is only relative – to what the
people – is willing to let you have. Power is popularity. Paul
Simon once sang that every generation finds a hero on the pop charts.
And that is true.
Does
anyone remember the utter fascination with Lady Gaga? She was
everywhere. She had a few hit records. She had her fans listening to
everything coming out of her mouth. But then the hit records stopped
coming. Her fans became fickle. She still is showing up from time
to time but it's for other peoples work and she shows up just to stay
relevant while she still wears the attention grabbing outfits. Here
was a woman who also is considered a feminist.
But what is she
doing, showing up at an event wearing only a bra and panties. That
story didn't make it over the fold with any relevancy what so ever.
As Bootsy Collins once sang, “whatcha gonna do when the novelty
wears off of your style?”
Ariana
Grande recently made headlines because she tweeted about she's her
own woman and doesn't belong to anyone. Some took that as her
feminist calling because she quoted from Gloria Steinem and then came
the “you go girl” attitude as if she had done something
significant. Is that really feminism or just a response to so many
tweets about your ex-boyfriend that you had to give a response just
to get them on another subject? It seems as if the bar has been
lowered a bit when it comes to what constitute as a feminist calling.
Journalists need to be more objective when it comes to reporting on
these celebrities because they have an agenda and a public relations
machine they need to keep oiled and running. And sometimes it seems
like many of these journalists are fans of these stars as well and
that tends to lead to some bias reporting when it comes to their
favorite celebrity. Other than her own self interest and a
sophomoric twitter rant, what else is Ariana doing for feminism?
Bree
Olsen, once a part of Charlie Sheen's harem of women and former anal
porn star had tweeted a letter that she had penned about girls
thinking about entering the porn industry. She advocates for them to
reconsider and outline the pitfalls of traveling down that path and
yet she wasn't labeled a feminist by any blogger, journalist or
group. In her letter, Bree talks about slut shaming, how there is a
double standard with women and with men and the world after the porn
lights have dimmed especially if you happen to have children. So why
weren't her words elevated to a level of importance in the same
manner as Ariana Grande? Why was there silence. Did it not have
value? Did it not have weight? Why didn't she get praise for
speaking out to thousands of impressionable girls who are considering
doing porn for the allure of fame and money from the feminist
community? Maybe it is because of what she wrote and that is that
men are given a pat on the back when they leave porn and women are
slut shamed for doing the same and that applies to speaking out as
well. Maybe it was because she has done porn and the respect for
women who work in the sex industry are not to be taken seriously. If
anyone would have seen Rashida Jones
documentary about young girls
entering the porn industry entitle, Hot
Girls Wanted,
maybe Bree's word would have contained more value and power.
Patricia
Arquette gave a wonderful but all to brief acceptance speech at the
Oscars when she voiced her position of equal pay for women in her
industry. Though to be fair, her industry is based on what an actor
can bring in at the box office and usually that means the lead actor
is a male who has the box office draw eight times out of ten,
especially when it comes to the big box office budgeted films like
The Avengers and Jurassic World. The Hollywood game isn't quite the
same as your typical nine to five but the meaning and platform for
Patrica Arquette to find those words to be the most valuable for her
in the three minute window that was allocated to her. How it
translated the next day with everyday people and the corporate
boardrooms would be the test.
And
Emma Watson has jumped head first into the role of an actual feminist
with her work by accepting the United nation's Women Goodwill
Ambassador role and speaking out on behalf of gender equality. In
her speech, she invited men to join her in this fight as she
recognize that the label of being a feminist had negatives attached
to it with regards to it being too strong, too aggressive, isolating,
anti-male and unattractive. She is hoping to change that because she
has experienced that when, as she put it, the press started
sexualizing her at the age of 14 and at 15, her girlfriends dropped
out of sports because they didn't want to appear to muscle bound. Of
all the women celebrities in her age group, she by far has the better
understanding of what the feminist cause is or at least is trying to
understand instead of it just being a Twitter rant.
Beyonce
Knowles, Beyonce, Queen Bey, calls herself a feminist. She has every
right to do so, but why? She sings and performs about empowering
girls but does that translate into action? Who run the word, girls
is one of her musical anthems but let's look at that carefully. In
third world countries, women are subjected to some of the most cruel
acts that humans inflict on one another. Genital mutilation in parts
of Africa, honor killings in the Middle East, human trafficking in
this part of the globe and the reality sinks in. Singing a pop song
in 3:45 doesn't embolden anyone for the better. Charlize Theron
spoke before a committee on the human rights commission in regards to
the LGBT community.
Jennifer Garner and Halle Berry sat in front of
a state commission advocating for children privacy when it comes to
the celebrity paparazzi with the latter benefiting Beyonce is she
chose to exercise it. These women are doing something with their
feminism. Beyonce readily has admitted that she is not a smart as
she likes during the inauguration of Barack Obama. She does not have
the skill set to have conversations about other worldly topics
because its beyond her save world of music. She has been soundly
criticized for attending the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight because of
Floyd Mayweather domestic abuse charges. From what I understand, she
looked great at the fight. Like Taylor Swift, Beyonce has earned her
respect in the music business. She knows how that work. Her father
has taught her well about it and she has amassed a fortune doing it.
But
where do these artist, these icons to female pop culture, do with
feminism? You can't just sing about ruling the world or kicking
somebody's ass. You will have to take a long hard look at who you
are, what exactly are you doing with your fame and assessing the
finer point of can you do something more with it? Fame is fleeting.
Former president, Jimmy Carter, was a one-term president but since he
has left office, he has done more for human rights than any president
since and I don't think he's a feminist unlike his wife, Rosalynn,
who was a string feminist with many causes that she was an advocate
behind. And maybe that's what these icon need is a strong role model
because even pop icons need role models too. These are young women
who need to look back in history and see what women like Rosalynn
Carter has done for feminism and emulate it.
Saturday, June 13, 2015
In The Case of Rachel Dolezal in The
Age of Meism
By
Bobbie L. Washington
So, where do we go from here? It's a
legitimate question in this age of it's all about me. Surely you are
a party to this aren't you? How many selfies have you taken? How
much of your social media accounts is filled with images of you in
various poses, goofy faces, nude shots, duck lips, etc. And if that
is who you are, then why the supposed outrage over Rachel Dolezal?
Rachel Dolezal is the 37 year old woman
who runs the Spokane, Washington branch of the NAACP. She also
happens to be white but for ten years she has to the position of
being black. This revelation has led to a debate, mostly about race
and also what constitute free expression in the face of the Bruce
Jenner morphing into “woman”. There are those who are outraged
at Rachel Dolezal because they feel that she a appropriated this
notion of the black culture. The appropriation of the black culture
came about when some blacks felt that whites were stealing the
culture as when Bo Derek wore cornrows in her hair in the movie, 10,
or when Macklemore won the Grammy over Kendrick Lamar for best rap
album. Rachel Dolezal held herself out as a black woman and all that
came with it. In that ten years, I do not know if she has faced any
discrimination but as the person who is in charge of the Spokane
chapter of the NAACP, she probably had her challenges in light of the
multiple shootings of young black men by white police officers. She
currently chairs the Spokane Police oversight commission.
Rachel Dolezal claims that she is
black, white and Native American. She did this on an application
with the City of Spokane and if you're familiar with government
documents, they frown on inaccurate information. So here comes the
matter of perspectives. Rachel Dolezal claims that she is part black
but in truth, her DNA would say otherwise as her parents can attest
to her being of German, Czech and Swedish ancestry. Bruce Jenner has
claimed that he is know a woman but DNA says that he still has a
Y-chromosome and because he has declared himself as a woman then
everybody must adhere to that edict and go along with the change.
So, what is the difference?
Well, in the case of Rachel Dolezal,
one can claim that she lied about being black, that she took
advantage of certain positions in life based on a lie which is irony
in itself when being black has certain advantages in this society.
She wore makeup to conceal her identity, what some are calling “black
face”. She married a black man and has a child by him. Did she
take advantage of him? And how much did he know about this? Bruce
Jenner on the other hand has been married twice and apparently had
hid his feelings about being a woman for years. Is that deceitful?
His marriage with Kris Jenner being the most recent must have been a
house of lies if one is to take that position of being truthful. If
the urges were so strong with being a woman, why wasn't the decision
to do this come much earlier? Is it just more fame whoring and money
because there are claims that he is about to cash in with lucrative
contracts.
What we look for today is something
that is intangible and that particular substance is called
recognition. We want to be recognized for everything in this me
society. It's not just that there are thousands of people who take
selfies, it's the myriad of tweets and Facebook post about absolutely
nothing. Being it food that you've eaten, clothes that you wear or
not wear, baby's first step, smile, burp, laugh, your ass in tight
workout pants, in lingerie, hotdog legs, we get to experience it all.
Bruce wants to be recognized as a woman, Rachel Dolezal wants to be
recognized as being black. DNA says otherwise but in once case,
there is recognition for one of the party.
So how far can we keep moving the bar
with things? What if I want to be be recognized as being Chinese.
On the surface you see brown skin and recognize me as being black.
But my DNA says otherwise. I had my DNA tested through the Sorenson
Genealogy Group and with Ancestry.com and what I got back says that
I'm a mutt. My DNA is literally all over the world. On my paternal
side of my genetic in one area of the globe I have elements of DNA
derived from Asia. Does that make me Chinese, no, but I could argue
that I have a link to being Asian. But I do have DNA from Ireland
and I've always felt a connection with Ireland for quite sometime.
So, does that make me Irish?
Does anybody has the right to make
claims about their race if DNA testing says it's diverse as mine?
Since the founding of this country we have had a constant issue with
race and that's what this is all about. There are the old soldiers
who have shed blood over this issue and there are the new soldiers
who have lost their lives in this new struggle. But no blood has
been shed over this issue, just inkjet fluids.
Rachel Dolezal, as far as I know,
hasn't garnered a windfall of cash with this revelation. She is not
seeking any fortune and apparently no fame, unlike Jenner. Why did
she chose to resign herself from her own racial makeup is for more
qualified people to ascertain her mental health, if it is in
question. So let me ask this one final question, are we judging her
by the content of her skin or by the content of her character?
Saturday, June 6, 2015
Saying Goodbye to Your TV
Family
by
Bobbie L. Washington
Well, the time has come for this crop
of TV shows to have their season finales or is some cases, their
series finale. There is a chow called Community that originally
aired on NBC for a few years before they were canceled by them not
because it wasn't a good show but because of lower viewership. But
fate stepped in and Community found a new home with Yahoo. And with
that new venture came with it a new found invigoration to expand the
comedy by using more expressive language in small increments. They
ran 13 episodes and if you were a fan of the show, you at least had
the chance to catch all 13 episodes in you were lucky and some if you
were fortunate. And the best thing about it was that you could watch
off of them through the process of binge watching. And as I watched
the last show, I didn't know if I was watching the season finale or a
series finale?
So as I invoke the spoiler alert for
those who may not have watched it but still are planning to watch it,
one of the key people is moving on with her life. It becomes the
lynch pin for the other characters to absorb especially for Jeff
Winger. And as Annie takes that next journey into an undiscovered
life, you get that sense of ambivalence, you just start having this
sense of longing and foreboding and loss. But why are you feeling
this way and why is it that we tend to have a visceral connection to
our favorite shows?
Well, we let them in our viewing home
for, in some cases, many years. They become an extension as to who
we are. We live vicariously through their one dimensional lives. We
escape with them through whatever travails they may experience. We
cry for them, we're happy for them, we get angry for them, we even
talk back to them, we go on an adventure with them.
When David Letterman ended his 33 year
run on his Late Show with David Letterman, you had to resign yourself
that it was probably time for him to say goodbye. Perhaps what many
did not know is that once his last show aired, that was it. There
was no reruns of the show anymore. There was no slow tapering off
form the David Letterman shtick. What we got was nothing for the
withdrawal pains. It was cold turkey. David Letterman owns his show
unlike what he had gone through while at NBC. And because he owns
his show, we are subjected to reruns of the Mentalist, oh, the
horror, the horror. You at least thought you would see Dave through
the summer until Stephen Colbert took over the slot but since that
didn't happen, we sorely missed David.
This may be a new phenomenon in this
age where social media has become the new normal and television shows
generates a lot of media hits. When The Wonder Years had its run
back in the 80's and 90's, it ended with a a bit of nostalgia and
melancholia. If that was your generation, you perhaps related to the
coming of age with Kevin Arnold and Winnie Cooper. As Kevin narrated
his life story, it reached a point where becoming an adult would end
his childhood landscape. And when that final show aired, Kevin told
of his rites of passage where his brother would run the family
business after the death of his father. He would say that his mother
would have discovered her own calling by becoming a businesswoman and
that his sister had become a new mom and that he and Winnie didn't
turn out being together anymore. And even though it had to come to
an end, it was bittersweet and perhaps a bit real in that happy ever
afters are left to fairy tales.
The same can be said about the TV show
Cheers. When it ended its 11 year run, it to was bittersweet. Once
again, people move on with new chapters to their lives and we are
there to make witness to that. And although you wish you could write
some of those final scenes, Sam was left at the bar by himself with
his last line being, “Sorry, we're closed.” Why couldn't Diane
secretly had his love child and be surprised that it was a girl? We
want them to be okay, to not wind up no being left alone to their own
devices. Sorry,
but a bar will not comfort you or hold your hand or place an arm
around you when you need it.
But there have been many shows, fine
shows that we let in and treat them as family. We tune in each week
to get the latest and see where they have progressed in terms of
character development. We saw the teenager Buffy The Vampire Slayer
become a young woman who watched as her town implode under a hell
hole filled with demons. We saw chemistry teacher Walter White turn
into a mild-mannered man into a methodical killer whom you
sympathized with and champion as well. We watched as Jack Shepherd
from Lost stare up to a clear blue sky as he slowly dies and dream of
things gone by and where he wished he would be, among his friends and
father in a church as that beautiful lofting music played in the
background and the dog laid next to Jack wagging his tail with
content. And Seinfeld, well, as Julia Louis-Dreyfuss said on her
last appearance on Letterman, “... a hugely disappointing series
finale”.
What was Jerry thinking? A show touted as being about
nothing, ended on nothing but a bunch of misanthropes who would take
a selfie at a Texas execution and be mad if it wasn't about them.
So, what does this say about us as
individuals and as a group? Well, we want a connection and a sense
of belonging and purpose. TV shows aren't real but they bridge the
real with the surreal from time to time. If we, with purpose, buy
the bit and buy the premise, we become the latest of investors of a
show, singing its praises and accolades. Derek Shepherd meets his
demise of Grey's Anatomy and half the women feel betrayed by these
turn of events. How could they do this? Maybe it should have been a
dream?
We have become a media savvy generation
where we get to stream any content on any platform and at any time.
I have watched old episodes of The X-Files in anticipation of the
return of the show with new episodes. I watched them online with a
sense of longing for the show and questioning why they should have
ended it after Season 8 but continued with Season 9. I can't wait to
see the new episodes though because I want to see if they will find
Scully and Mulder's son, William?
William should be 14 years old by now.
They had left that story line open ended. Surely you didn't think
their son would be exempt from the darkness did you? So, you see, in
my scenario William was given up for adoption to some couple who were
mysteriously killed when he was still an infant. He winds up in
foster care being passed around from foster parent to foster parent.
At some point in his life, he realize that he's different from his
peer group. There is a longing in him and he has this pull for him
to find out who his parents were. At the same time Scully is having
vivid memories of William. She does not pass this information on to
Mulder because as much as she has seen, she still does not trust her
instincts. William has decided to find his parents and oddly enough,
winds up in the Native American tribe of Albert Hosteen. With the
tribes guidance, William is set on a new path along with an American
wolf that has befriended him. At the same time, young William is
being watched by a mysterious figure who does not do anything to
intervene. William makes it to the FBI headquarters where he finds
Scully's name on the computer file.
Did I mention that the kid is a
computer genius? So, Skinner catches him in the act and William
tells him who he is because somehow the boy knows who Skinner is.
Skinner takes him to the home of Mulder and Scully. Mulder is a
successful novelist who write fiction about the cases that he has
turned into stories. It has made him very rich in the process.
Skinner knocks on their door and Mulder answers it. He is surprised
by the visit from Skinner until Skinner reveals that he has brought
along an additional visitor. Mulder sees the boy and calls for
Scully. Scully comes to the door and sees William and she knows who
he is. She calls out his name but William stops her with telekinetic
powers. Mulder stops him because there is a connection with Mulder
that William seems to understand. After tensions have settled down,
Mulder and Scully final get some of the answers that was left open.
The wolf comes up to the mysterious figure and shape shifts into a
naked woman. He covers her with a coat as the woman says that “They
have reunited once again.” He replies, “Good, they will be able
to train him for the next crusade.”
So why do I know I care so much about
this? Because it's The X-Files and I'm a shipper and a the theory of
Trust No 1 is true or maybe I just invested way too much time in
watching this show.