Shaddy wrote: Fri Dec 06, 2024 12:23 pmJust for reference, this is a negative comparison to something I like that I
100% agree with, especially given the context. Shadow 2005's atmosphere and gunplay were already a break with tradition, but the JP
script wasn't that big a departure from the previous 6 years of games. It got
way way worse in localization, because just like DBZ, it was entirely the English dub that tried to make the script "darker", which the 4kids cast proceeded to enunciate the hell out of so it sounds like little jimmy's first time saying "damn it". It took what was already a weird game and turned it completely sophomoric by failing to even allow the innate
silliness of something that looks like
this to shine through, and instead trying to play it so straight it's downright embarrassing.
One of my repeated points on here (both in this thread in particular, as well as in my recent posting history on this site in general) is basically that much of this community is
so single-mindedly wrapped up in children’s media to the exclusion of most else, that there are
large swathes of this community that honestly and sincerely cannot tell the fucking difference between
this kind of “faux-edgy” being described here (cringe kiddie “batbutt” Shadow the Hedgehog “edgy”) and things that
actually succeed at being genuinely and legitimately edgy the “right way”.
Which are almost
always and to a fault usually things that aren’t in any way aimed at children at all: which is why so much of this community doesn’t understand this and fails to acknowledge it.
(Not that things aimed at adults can’t
also fail at being edgy and embarrass themselves in the attempt: they can and have of course. Just that adult-aimed works is where you’ll find the overwhelming majority of examples that actually succeed at it.)
JulieYBM wrote: Thu Dec 05, 2024 8:29 pmYeah, I completely forgot to mention that a lot of that 2000s-era queerphobia was ramping up in large part due to the 2004 POtUS election, which same-gender marriage was a big topic of debate. That, mixed in with the rise in Islamaphobia post-9/11 really just stoked all of the bigotry, I think. How that played a part in the way that media and marketing was approached to make media 'Patriotic', 'American', and 'manly' all had to have tied in together a lot more.
Yeah, a LOT of this homophobia from the early aughts was also being further artificially stoked/astroturfed by the Bush admin of the time, who wanted to turn the '04 election from a referendum on the Iraq War into a referendum on gay people (gay
men specifically).
Not to say that it also wasn't coming from a genuine/organic place as well: like I said, the overall zeitgeist of the late-most 90s and early-most 2000s was over the top absurd in its dudebro-ishness, and there was a (for want of a better way of putting it) genuine, sincere reactionary backlash against what was (up to that point in time of course) the most significant pro-gay rights push and softening of anti-gay rhetoric we'd seen in the U.S mainstream in the mid-90s, which accounted for a bunch of the homophobia of the time ramping up.
Nonetheless, given the political circumstances of the Bush years at the time, the goal of the Bush admin during the 2004 re-election was to reorient the public discourse as far away from the at-the-time increasingly unpopular war, and more towards whatever bullshit distraction they could come up with: and since gay-bashing was already back "in" at this point, gay bashing is what they tapped into to be their distraction/"wedge" issue. And so political messaging from the right focused on demonizing gays was even
further heightened.
By the way, for the historically-minded among you: the 2004 Bush admin’s leaning into generalized gay bashing is basically almost
exactly identical to what’s been happening with right wing/Republican messaging (particularly among the Trump and DeSantis camps) in the last several years with regards to anti-trans messaging.
The names and terminology are vaguely swapped around, but the intent and impact remains largely exactly identical. Only instead of trying to distract from a specific Middle East war, its an attempt to distract from more generalized economic issues that have been coming to an absolute boil for the past couple decades now.
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
JulieYBM wrote: Thu Dec 05, 2024 8:29 pmAnother thing to note—which kind of gets lost in the discussion often—is that same-gender marriage wasn't legalized until 2015. In the US, the ability to marry someone of the same gender in any state is still not even ten years old yet. I feel like that gets lost in the discussion about 'acceptable' shit and influences how we make our media.
This point really cannot be stressed enough: one of my biggest ever pet peeves in general is ahistoricism. Its especially aggravating when its for
incredibly recent fucking history that isn’t even that old yet. And nowhere is ahistoricism more prevalent than among reactionaries.
It has been an article of faith among reactionary voices online that the fight for gay rights was somehow “won a very long time ago” and the more gay-accepting landscape we’ve seen has somehow been around for evidently generations or something: when as noted, its barely been a decade. Not even a decade if we just go back to Obergefell, like Julie noted.
The Obama years is where much of this pro-gay pushback from the Bush years began, and
Obama still wasn’t that fucking long ago in the grand scheme of things guys. Many of you have accounts on here that are older than that. Young people have an innate tendency to act like ten years is more akin to 30 or 50 years.
JulieYBM wrote: Thu Dec 05, 2024 8:29 pmEven now, there's a very specifically acceptable type of queerness allowed in media and while some of the toxic masculinity elements are no long as highlighted, I think the potential for regression is still there as we see the real world rights of trans people eroded.
If the attacks on cis queer people twenty years ago have now reformatted into attacks on trans people in the 2020s, I highly suspect that we can say that the generalized homophobic takes on masculinity in the 2020s have reformatted, too.
And to my earlier point about how Obergefell still wasn’t that fucking long ago: things are still as they currently stand RIPE for a regression back into familiar old hatred and prejudice. Which as has been noted here, has
already been starting in earnest for a little while now. The conservative hatred for queers writ large had never gone away in all this time, it was simply regrouping and changing up its tactics.
But these struggles for queer/LGBTQ rights are far, far from over with, especially with a conservative majority in the SCOTUS that’s seemingly here to stay for at least another generation or two. Rights that were only just VERY recently won are precarious enough to still be easily rolled back again.
Lack of understanding of insanely basic history is one of countless ways in which public education has completely failed an entire generation of people.
WittyUsername wrote: Thu Dec 05, 2024 10:38 pmAt the risk of going off-topic, in regards to the point about the perpetually shifting cultural attitudes towards queerness, if these past few years are any indication, homophobia seems to be making one hell of a comeback in the United States. It really seemed for a brief period after 2015 like the Western part of the world was finally moving past all this, but now it’s back with a vengeance.
Funny enough, 2015 is literally the exact same year that Trump first began his “serious” political career into presidential politics, which is also the exact moment we saw the earliest beginnings of the current rightward backlash against the mainstreaming of pro-gay attitudes from earlier in the 2010s: and its also the same year that Obergefell declared gay marriage legal finally.
Which furthers my point here that all of this is still
insanely recent history, and these fights are all still ongoing and far,
far from over with.
WittyUsername wrote: Thu Dec 05, 2024 10:38 pmHell, Disney apparently told the team working on
Inside Out 2 to make Riley seem “less gay”, because they were spooked by Ron DeSantis.
Again, this also furthers another point that people like myself and Julie have been making on here for some time now: the seemingly “pro-queer” attitudes among major corporations has NOTHING whatsoever to do with sincere ideological commitment on their end (which is what the right wing/reactionary narrative has been constantly insisting on). Its ALWAYS been purely conditional and transactional, rooted in profit-seeking due to the change in attitudes among the mainstream.
In other words, conservative/reactionary voices have it
exactly fucking backwards: they insist that attitudes among the mainstream populace towards queer people has softened because major corporate media (movies, TV, etc) have been “brainwashing” and “indoctrinating” people into it (for what end-goal or purpose, none of them can coherently identify), when the reality is that the mainstream populace FIRST softened its views on queer people, AND THEN corporate mainstream media followed suit because its simply chasing the public’s fucking dollars.
Corporate mainstream media is
almost ALWAYS reactive, not proactive, towards cultural shifts: because corporate media is only ever committed to profiteering. Corporations of all kinds literally
only exist for that reason, and nothing else. Ergo, wherever the public goes, so too will mainstream corporate media usually tend to follow: so long as where the public goes doesn’t threaten their own profits.
Because the ONLY exceptions to this usually is when the public sentiment might be headed in a direction that threatens corporate profits in some broader way: usually then, corporate marketing and messaging with go proactively against public sentiment. So long as wherever the public sentiment is is at a place that doesn't threaten corporate profits and hegemony, then generally speaking, mainstream corporate marketing and advertising is typically happy enough to follow along on whatever thread or trend that the broader populace happens to land on in its pursuit of their wallets' contents.
And gay/trans acceptance on a broad mainstream level doesn't absolutely
NOTHING to threaten corporate profits and hegemony. All it means is that corporate mainstream advertising is just going to adapt and reorient itself towards targeting and appealing to gay and trans people (as we've seen it do exactly that over the last decade or so): which in and of itself is what drives the most hardcore bigots fucking
insane and towards the increasingly ridiculous and unhinged lunatic ravings and conspiracy theorizing that they've been engaging in on this subject.
The inability and refusal to grasp this insanely basic fundamental of how our society functions is one of the core-most differences between Left and Right Wing narratives on a great deal of different issues. The conservative/right wing/reactionary narrative is that corporate mainstream media somehow creates and sets the culture as opposed to simply reflecting and chasing after where the culture is already at in pursuit of the public’s dollars.
The moment a broad enough segment of the public sours on gay people again is the same exact moment that all of this “pro-LGBTQ” stuff we see in corporate media will also magically disappear overnight in a puff of smoke.
The reality is, the public got to a more pro-gay stance
all on its own organically over a perioid of numerous decades: and a LOT of it honestly came down to simply more and more people actually getting to personally know more and more openly/non-closeted gay people in their own personal lives, and realizing (what a lot of the rest of us already knew since eons ago) that they’re just normal fucking people like anyone else and not child-devouring Hell Demons from a Clive Barker novel.
And corporate mainstream media saw this, saw that this is where the broader public’s money was at, and suddenly “got woke” overnight on the subject. The moment that anti-gay sentiment comes back within a larger (or large enough) segment of the public is the same moment that corporate mainstream media will suddenly forget it was ever “woke” on the subject in the first place. Just like that.
(You thought
you guys can go on an off-topic side-tangent? Hold my beer...)
Psychologically speaking, this is a *large* part of the reason why conservative/right wing/reactionary conspiracy theories are so fucking idiotic, asinine, and incoherent on their face. There is an abject refusal within the right wing/reactionary mind to accept that hate and fear of an “other/outgroup” (in this case, queer people) is
anything but 100% natural and innate, and that any time human beings show basic empathy, kindness, and decency to an othered outgroup, there simply
has to be some kind of “conspiracy” or “manipulation” or “ulterior motive” behind it.
It can't EVER be the case that most people in general are not bothered by superficial "differences" (once they realize that is how superficial those differences ultimately are of course): because if that's the case, then it leaves the people who try and ardently hold onto those irrational, paranoid fears looking increasingly more and more like the nutjob psychos that they are
No batshit loony raving or nonsensical non-sequitur is too stupid or too inane to help reinforce the article of faith that bigotry and othering is "natural and innate" that they’re working backwards from.
Anything to prevent the reactionary/conservative mind from accepting the cold, blunt fact of reality: that they’re just hateful, bigoted fucking freaks. That
they and their irrational hatreds and fears are the abnormal ones,
not everyone else.
Interrogate a bigot (
any kind of bigot, including ones who are bigoted against race/ethnicity) about their worldviews, and they’ll almost always inevitably end up telling you the same thing: “Everyone deep down agrees with me (i.e. that gays, blacks, Jews, Muslims, women, fill-in-the-blanks, are the worst fucking scum ever and are responsible for all the world’s ills), I’m just one of the few people brave enough to have the guts to say what we’re all secretly thinking and believing deep inside.”
Those people NEED that belief to sustain themselves and justify their irrational fears and hatreds, and you’ll find that view/belief all over foundational Neo Nazi (and proto-Neo Nazi) books and writings from the 1950s through 1970s (which I’d recommend reading only for historical/educational purposes of understanding where these beliefs come from and how they fester in people’s minds).
Funnily enough (and I can’t believe I’m referencing this fucking movie here of all things, but the quote is too on-the-nose apt to ignore), this dynamic is basically almost verbatim the real life version of that line Batman has to The Joker in The Dark Knight:
“What were you trying to prove? That deep inside, everyone’s as ugly as you? You’re alone!”
This is why anytime the broader public comes around on ditching an old, antiquated bigotry (in this case, against gay people, but really fill-in-the-blank), you'll find within the most ardently right wing/reactionary feverswamps all manner of insane, completely unhinged raving conspirasizing of something as normal and simple as basic human empathy and love for one's fellow man/woman/whatever. Which is ultimately one of the key instincts that fuels a lot of these "The woke mainstream media is trying to turn all our kids gay and trans!" babblings.
And why all of a sudden you'll find the most hardcore "let the free market decide!" ancaps and Libertarians suddenly on a dime turn conspiratorial and suspicious towards big business, markets, and capital all of a sudden. Big business and capital can't EVER be the bad guys who are at fault to those people... unless the public is suddenly becoming more tolerant and accepting of gay and trans people. THEN and ONLY then apparently are big business and capital suddenly the Evil Supervillains trying to underhandedly and deceptively "manipulate public sentiment."
Decide for yourself which makes more sense and sounds like less insane, paranoid raving:
A) That corporations and big business only ever care about making money and will just say or do whatever appeals to the current tastes and attitudes (good or bad) of the broader public and makes them more willing to spend their money on the products being sold.
or B) That corporations and big business only ever cared about making money in order to make the world a better place... until sometime circa the late 2000s/early 2010s when they suddenly on a dime decided out of nowhere that they wanted to brainwash everyone's children into being gay and trans in order to break up families for reasons and goals that are somehow beneficial to them which no one who believes and pushes this narrative can or has yet clearly or concretely defined or articulated.