Sunday, December 26, 2010
People are stupid when it comes to communication, huh?
Should I send a messenger pigeon? No, I certainly don't have enough time to train one of those. How about a telegram? That'd be swell, but the Western Union is too far away. Man, I really need my friend right this minute... what would someone as hip and with it as he be using to communicate?
Texting? Of course! All the kids are talking about texting these days. Okay, now I just need to know what to text. His landline telephone? Oh drat, he's not home anyway. That little machine beside his rotary phone at home would print out the text I sent, but then he wouldn't see it until he got home. Hello? Operator? I need to get in contact with Mark Zuckerberg, on the double. Would you kindly relay a text for me for me? That's zulu uniform charlie kilo echo... hello? She hung up on me!
Well I've exhausted just about every option I have here... wait a tick... Mark has a cell phone! What if I used my cell phone to send a text message to his cell phone? Does that option exist? It does! Now that that's over and done with, I guess I'll get on Facebook...
Mark Zuckerberg is going out, text the cell if you need me!
OH FOR FUCK'S SAKE, IF I WOULD HAVE JUST CONSULTED FACEBOOK I COULD HAVE SAVED MYSELF AN HOUR OF MAYHEM. HE POSTED FUCKING INSTRUCTIONS THAT CORRESPOND TO MY EXACT DILEMMA.
Conclusively... if your friends really require clarification about how they can get in touch with you, they might be so incredibly dense that they actually do need you. And how kind you are to let them know how to find you. You have a big heart, social network user. Ride on.
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Secret Life of the American Victim of Abstinence-Only Education
For easier digestion, I have broken down for you the reasons I loathe this series.
1. The title
Is there really any need to include the fact that Amy is American? What is that supposed to imply? Either that all American teenagers are secretly pregnant or that when we watch a program on ABC Family, we don't automatically expect it to be set in the United States, I assume. Spoiler alert, but nothing about the lives of these teenagers stays secret. Each one of them is more than willing to discuss their sex lives with their parents.
2. Inbreeding
Another thing that really concerns me about this show is the very small breeding stock the school seems to have. These characters seem pretty afraid to branch out into anyone who isn’t in the main cast.
-Amy is the main character. She gets knocked up by Ricky at fucking band camp, of all places.
-Ricky is a bad boy in foster care. I don’t know what promiscuous bad boys are doing at band camp, but whatever. I’m not to sure why he cares so hardcore for his baby instead of doing the bad boy thing and just punching Amy in the ovaries when she told him he was going to be a dad. Also he works in a butcher shop with Ben.
-Ben has an Italian stereotype for a father and is in love with Amy despite her, uh, baggage. Too bad he knocks up Adrian in the third season.
-Adrian must have serious problems because she enjoys casual sex. She somehow becomes best friends with her foil, Grace.
-Grace was a celibate Christian and preacher’s daughter until she decided to seize the day and bang Jack.
-Jack is also a preacher’s son. (What the fuck? Am I watching 7th Heaven reruns?) After he breaks up with Grace, he starts dating Madison.
-Madison is Amy’s Catholic friend. She's Catholic enough to try to talk Amy out of getting an abortion, but not nearly enough to keep her legs closed. (Oops, realism!) She is also arguably one of the worst actors on the show, second only to Ashley.
-Ashley is Amy’s younger sister whose acting skill could only be improved if she were in a coma.
That’s about it - new characters are not introduced enough. Well... kind of. Actually I’m starting to think that the network itself has a small breeding stock. During episode 304 the fucking YOUNGEST DAUGHTER FROM 7TH HEAVEN just pops on the screen. What is this fascination with minister’s children, Brenda Hampton? What does it mean?
3. The gimmick
Remember Degrassi TNG before the original characters graduated and went off to college? It went there. They hit every issue from homosexuality to eating disorders to teen pregnancy. Yes, no fewer than three pregnancies and one pregnancy scare happened in this series. But at least they were a bit spread out and had different outcomes (one abortion, one adoption, one teenage mom). No such luck with Secret Life. The first season, Amy is pregnant. This is the basis for the drama. The second season, Amy’s fucking mother (played by none other than... Molly Ringwald?!) is pregnant and is uncertain as to who the father is. What a delightful twist! Secret Life of the American Housewife! Okay, that’s enough accidental pregnancies for now. There are other plots for high school drama, right? NO. The third season revolves around Adrian’s pregnancy. 7th Heaven references withdrawn. Now I feel like I’m watching that Lifetime movie The Pregnancy Pact.
4. The lack of realism
There is nothing real about this show. After Amy’s pregnancy is revealed, Ricky and Ben start to compete. She’s in love with Ben, but having Ricky’s baby. And everyone knows this. If you don’t know this, you must be braindead, because the script is written to make sure this fact is mentioned no fewer than sixteen times per episode. So according to Brenda Hampton and the savvy writers of Secret Life, get pregnant, and as long as you’re pretty, boys will actually fight over you! The footage of the birth is pretty hard hitting too. Show your sixteen year old daughter the clip of all of Amy’s friends and family walking in and out of the delivery room, from the outside, to “Stand By Me” and I’m sure she’ll get that it’s in her best interest to keep her whore legs closed. Okay, but this is a family program. Obviously we’re not going to get to see graphic closeups of a teenager’s vagina, and many people are made uncomfortable by seeing women in labor. Besides, it’s after the baby is born that’s important, right? Once those kids see how boring and unhappy Amy’s life is as a teen mom, that’ll set them straight. Except for the fact that the children are almost never fucking seen. It’s all too easy to forget that both Amy and her mother have to care for babies because they’re shown to the audience maybe an average of once per episode. What you actually do get to see during your forty minutes of viewing will most likely be a) teenagers gossiping in the hallway, b) Amy’s parents tooling around in the kitchen disagreeing about how to raise their children, or c) Ricky and Ben disagreeing in the butcher shop.
5. Copious use of the word “sex”
If I processed all the scripts to every episode with a word frequency counter, “sex” would be the most common after “the” and “and”. Since when do teenagers talk about this like medical professionals or guidance counselors? It could only sound more unnatural if they were referring to it as “copulation”, or in the case of one of the preacher’s kids, we might get lucky enough to hear “fornication”. I was in high school fairly recently, and no one was having sex. However, plenty of people were fucking, and most of the shy ones were doing it. Actual quote:
"I wanna take you to a movie and sit in the dark with you and hold hands, maybe make out a little. I wanna go to a late dinner and eat food with you. Then I wanna drop you off at your house and kiss you goodnight, and then go home and think about having sex with you. But I'm not gonna have sex with you until I'm ready to have sex with you and that's that!"
You show her, whatever boy uttered this sentence!
Imagine how fucking surprised I was to find out that Brenda Hampton produced 7th Heaven. I. Hate. Television.
Monday, July 26, 2010
Best Worst Quotes from "Avalon High"
Now I'm not going to complain about how godawful and embarrassing this book was. I'll just present some examples straight from its pages that explain why Meg is so successful.
It's obviously linked to how "authentic teenager" her narration and description of high school stereotypes are.
It had always been my dream, of course, to start off my junior year as a new student in a high school in faraway state where I knew no one. Um, not?
And his friends hadn't looked like headbangers. They'd been wearing normal clothes, khaki shorts and T-shirts. I hadn't noticed a single tattoo or piercing on any of them.
Or could it be her amazing talent for physical description?
'Just give me your keys and I'll drive myself over.'But it's best not to get too wrapped up in small details like this. Meg makes that clear a bit later in the book.
He looked appalled.
It was hard not to look at his abs, which were extremely six pack-like.
'He's even skipped football practice to do it twice this week. I heard he says he likes to go there to think. Think! Who even does that?'
I heave a great sigh and announce that the movie will premiere on the Disney channel this fall.
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Sucky Summer Cinema
Sex and the City: the story of four women and their pet horse.
-Numerous clever fucks
-Roger Ebert
There aren't a lot of great summer movies for you to choose from this year. What you have to ask yourself is this: "How much I want to puke my pants at the movies?" You have to know analyze your taste in film and ask yourself which is more effective for this purpose. *Slight spoiler alert*
Will it be:
A. Watching an Asian man defecate into a woman's mouth, or
B. looking at Sarah Jessica Parker's face for 146 minutes?
If you chose A, go see The Human Centipede and seek therapy if you enjoy it.
If you chose B, go see Sex and the City 2, but do make sure you have a female escort unless you want your ass kicked. By me.
Disclaimer: I had the opportunity to see The Human Centipede in theatres and I loved it. I will not take my own advice and seek therapy because I would most definitely be prescribed medication that mellow my ability to hate sufficiently to write my blog. Cheers!
Secret Life of the American Victim of Abstinence-Only Education
I'm not going to lie to you, I missed most of the second season. However, I was fortunate enough to see all its events montage-ed in the first episode of the third season. As soon as I have seen the most recent episode (302) I will be kind enough to provide a thought-provoking post about it.
Friday, June 11, 2010
Keeping You a Secret
Let's begin with judging a book by its cover. A blue image of a girls head leaning on a shoulder - the other face is mostly out of the frame but the lips that we can see definitely look like those of a girl. The tagline reads "Is it worth falling in love if you have to keep it a secret?" I was like, okay Peter, I'll bite. But was it worth reading this piece of shit to find out? Not really. But I'll be polite enough to indicate that this is where the *spoiler alerts* start just in case any of my readers feel like putting themselves through this.
Our main character's name is Holland Jaeger, and that is the only cool thing about this book. (Then again, if that's not a name that gives off the almost the same feeling as Aryan Nation, I don't know what is.) As we get to know Holland, we learn that she swims for her high school team, doesn't like having sex with her boyfriend but fulfills her obligations, is applying to Ivy League schools, and is not a likeable character in the least. Nobody in this entire book is likeable. The first thing that Holland did to piss me off was refer to her stepsister as a walking freakshow because she's "into Goth right now, which is just sick after Columbine." I sincerely hoped, for the author's sake, that it was the character who was this naive and not the author herself.
Anyway, guess what? Our all-American protagonist Netherlands Jaegermeister starts to get all tingly about Cece, the new girl at school! Here is the passage of realization, the entire inner struggle, that you get from the book that's been so applauded for its realism.
Ms. Fielding, in German class. I was so in love with her. I used to pretend I needed help so I could stay after school. She wasn't gay, I don't think. Just beautiful. And Leah. God. I had a torrid crush on Leah in sixth grade . . . My pulse quickened. Was I? Gay, I mean? If so, what was I doing with Seth? Maybe I was bi. That would explain it. An open heart, willing to give and accept love wherever it came from. The feelings, the stirrings, the awakening senses with Cece, though, I'd never experienced those with Seth. With any guy.So how long did it take you read that paragraph? That, according to Julie Anne Peters, is exactly how long it takes to figure out you're gay. Did you notice how she even went through the intermediate bisexual stage before she went over to the dark side completely? That must be the realistic part. And since when does internal monologue sound like that? I can't quite remember the last time I thought to myself, "Am I? Hideous, I mean." Sorry, I just think the girl who is accepted to Stanford later in the book could have thought patterns a bit more coherent.
So moving on to Amsterdam Weinerschnitzel's girlfriend, well, she's a bitch. Cece has just transferred from a different school for "health reasons" - her health was endangered by all the gay bashers at her old school, you see. So instead of keeping things on the downlow and trying to get through the rest of school without dying, she wears a different lesbian-themed t-shirt every day and tries to start a GLBT club at school. To be clear, this isn't the part I hate about her. It's actually kind of noble. The thing is, when she's told her only chance to have her club at school is to make it a non-discriminatory Gay-Straight Alliance, she says no. According to Cece, straight people can't possibly understand the real issues. That's a pretty cunty thing to say when you're asking for acceptance.
So how does their relationship go down? Well, after Cece demands that the relationship be kept a secret for Holland's sake, it takes them about a minute and a half to fall "so unabashedly in love." Nothing about how different it is to have sex with a girl, no worries about who gets to wear the pants in the relationship, no feelings at all really. Why was Peters in such a damn hurry writing this book, I wonder? Now I know that some people believe that the gays don't really love each other and are just satisfying their perverted urges, but you will change your mind after you read Cece's profession.
"No, I only get up at the butt-crack of dawn so I can pretend we're having breakfast together at our lockers. I don't even have a seven o' clock class, you know. I dropped it after the first day . . . Then I have to haul ass down three flights of stairs to pass you in the hall between third and fourth period. And I stall around outside the restroom by the art studio so I can watch you walking down the hall. I'm late to algebra every day . . . I drive by Children's Cottage after school to see if you're there yet, to see if I can catch a glimpse of you in the window. I go by your house on the way to school. Sometimes from the library, I'd watch you guys leave for lunch. A couple of times I even followed you so I could maybe find out what you liked to eat." [hint: it's pussy.]
Look, if any young adults are out there, please listen to me. I don't care who says this to you, whether it's your brand new gay lover or a sparkly vampire or the guy you met on Craigslist. The appropriate response is running and possibly calling the cops, not swooning.
The secret love doesn't last long, obviously. Soon, Holland is outed to everyone at school, and those who hate her for it out her to her own mother. The important thing to know about Mama Jaeger is that her parents disowned her when she got pregnant in high school. Having vowed to give her daughter a better life, she attempts to beat the shit out of Holland and throws her out on her ass upon finding out that she's a lesbian. The whole situation is a little bit surreal though. I don't know many people who, if their mother was asking in a very serious and angry way whether or not you're dating someone of the same sex and sleeping with said person, would respond, "Well, actually, [*smirk*] we don't get a lot of sleep." I'm sure that helped her case. To make things even more confusing, Mrs. Jaeger is in the middle of frosting a cake when she confronts Holland. We never find out why. Holland wonders whose birthday it is, but she never finds out. Is this some kind of meaningful juxtaposition of the happiness of cakery and raging homophobia? I've seen the Ace of Cakes get pretty stressed over a deadline, but I have never seen someone frost a cake angrily. Where was I? Oh yeah. Holland has to move into a shelter for abandoned gays.
The best part is when homeless Windmill ThirdReich has to give up all her dreams now that her mother won't so much as look at her. She registers for community college just after finding out that she was accepted to Stanford, and begins working two jobs just to support herself. But I guess we're supposed to infer that it's all worth it or something because she's found love.
I am not saying that the book should have ended happily. Things like this do indeed happen, so I suppose that's where the realism comes from. But when it comes down to it, there's really no closure. Holland's life sucks, and it doesn't even necessarily suck for love. It sucks for the sake of a stalky high school girlfriend who she's known for two or three months.
If this book exists to teach gay teens anything, it's this: Don't come out until you're independent. Shit will get way too real. Be terrified of people's reactions.
So hopefully Peters wasn't trying for, "Be yourself no matter what!"
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Chasing Cars? More like chasing down a better grasp on the English language.
The fundamental problem here is that the vocalist asks a hypothetical question about what would happen if he was to "lay here" but never states what object he intends to lay. Certainly he is not implying that he means to recline somewhere, intransitively. Because you know, then he'd say "if I just lie here." Curiously, he asks the person to whom this song is devoted if he or she would lie with him! I really do not understand how it can be possible to make this mistake once, and to correct oneself in the same sentence. Was the writer in a lyrical race, questioning which verb was correct and using both in an attempt to get half credit or something? If so, this would be the result (click to enlarge):
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
The Second Short Life of Bree Tanner
Stephenie Meyer will never give up.
Steph has written exactly five books thus far: one entitled The Host and the four epics of the Twilight series. Every time some socially awkward and/or braindead teen girl goes out and buys one of these paperback monstrosities, she [unknowingly?] makes a donation to the Jesus Christ Church of Latter-Day Saints. I'm not entirely sure what that means, but hopefully for Steph these saints are so latter that she'll be able to get canonized after the Breaking Dawn comes out - 10% of the profits from all the Twilight bullshit should keep all the Prop 8's and Prop 1's of the U.S. strong for years! Thanks Steph!
Anyway, on to the reason Anniehilation's hatred for Smeyer has flared up this week: The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner. I saw an ad for this in the window and Border's and thought, huh, she's writing another book. Maybe it'll have a plot and not suck so hard this time. And then I read the subtitle: an Eclipse novella. I really didn't know she could sink this low. Steph's first attempt at exploiting how incredibly stupid her disciples are was Midnight Sun, which is Twilight from Edward's perspective instead of Bella's. Seriously, she thought her fans were so dense they'd want to read the exact same book over again. (She was right.) Anyway, it was never formally published because one of her trusted beta readers posted it online. Her second attempt is basically the same damn thing, replace Twilight with Eclipse and Edward with Bree. There's nothing wrong with whoring out your creative gold for fan service, particularly if it's going to keep your income nice and steady. God forbid Steph try anything new, it might not be as well received.
Oh, that or she doesn't have an original thought in her head. At least The Tales of Beedle the Bard and Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them were metafiction written under pseudonyms. Not Tom Riddle’s fucking first-person orphan sob story.
Don't worry, Twitards, it doesn't have to ever end. I assume that immediately after you've all grown tired of the Bree Tanner book, film, broadway musical, and theme park, there will be something else on the shelves. Perhaps we could do New Moon from Alice’s perspective, revealing her hardcore lesbian crush on Bella, or Bella’s entire childhood narrated by her mother! Maybe I can ghostwrite what it was like to suck so many delicate little teenage necks from Carlisle’s point of view. Actually, everyone should read that one. Sounds like it’d answer a lot of questions.
Monday, April 12, 2010
My Life As Liz
If you've been keeping up with your MTV, you know that My Life As Liz is a "reality" show about a girl who just doesn't fit in at her high school, which is mostly due to the fact that she makes awkward, arbitrary Star Wars references and isn't blond.
So let's talk about Liz herself. In the first episode, through a series of events that reek of incredibly lazy exposition (Liz picks up the phone and says "Hey cuz, you're weird, I can't believe I'm related to you. Get it? It's her cousin! For real, not just figuratively!) the viewers come to know that Liz is just way too good for her Bible-thumping pig farmer hometown of Burleson, Texas. She's sophisticated! "Everyone in this town looks, acts, and thinks the same! And they don't take too kind to anyone who's not a blond Texan barbie doll," she laments. In addition to proving that MTV shows are produced by old white guys who have done their research watching every teen movie since 1980 (Sarcastic redhead = 21st century Molly Ringwald?) this show plays gracelessly on every Texas and high school stereotype in existence.
Excerpt from Liz's official bio:
Liz often finds herself mixing up a fresh batch of mix CDs with the latest and greatest indie songs. . . When she's not jamming out to tunes. . . she is often face planted in front of a classic comic book, or trying to invent new ways to insult the blond conformists who populate her high school. She has a pet snake and is a vegan. . .
Alright, we get it, everything about Liz is supposed to be indie as fuck. You might even say she's this generation's attempt at Daria, but then I'd have to kill you because that's damn near blasphemy. She could only prove herself further if she made mixtapes instead of CDs and played guitar! And guess what, her friends guy enjoy LARPing! If at some point we find out they're Trekkies, that would just be perfect.
By the way, aren't good characters supposed to have flaws? You might think that the "insulting the blond conformists part" takes care of this, but it doesn't. This show doesn't encourage being yourself, it only glorifies clique wars. So it's okay to be a giant bitch if you're an indie kid, because you're right. How would MTV feel about making a show featuring Tiffani, a Camaro-driving cheerleader whose hobbies include tanning, shopping with Daddy's credit card, and thinking of new ways to insult the nerds who simply exist in her high school. A hero for us all!
Liz's love life echoes the triangle we've seen over and over: chunky nerd BFF Sully likes Liz, but she's oblivious and flaunts her crush on Bryson right in front of him! But don't worry, this trying-too-hard-to-be-indie series doesn't take a completely original turn by having Liz actually end up with the one who's always been loyal and made sacrifices for her. That would be heinous - he's fat, for fuck's sake!
Liz's friendships sure are deep. She doesn't just hang out with the LARP kids, you know. In the first episode of the series, Liz accidentally befriends pageant queen Taylor Terry. And she's going to fix her, help her escape the mold! Their friendship consists of awkward culture clashes and pushing each other around in shopping carts.
Oh and guess what? Burleson High has a prom! And Liz struggles with whether or not she's going to go. Liz is cool and indie enough to associate with the LARP guys, but definitely not cool enough to reject stupid traditions like prom and Valentine's Day. She "feels behind in life" because she hadn't been to the prom before her senior year. Really kids, like every series MTV pulls out of its ass will tell you, if you don't go to the prom you might as well kill yourself. I guess Liz feels behind because she's never been to "anything remotely close to the prom." You know, except for the Valentine's Day dance she went to in the second episode. And let's not forget when she was a "sports-loving, school-spirited, school dance-attending, Jesus-adoring preteen." Actual fucking quote from the first episode.
Liz seems to think that everything that happens to her is somehow larger than life, so no wonder she feels like she deserves her own damn "reality" show. The first instance of this that really stuck out to me was when she implied that Bryson rejecting her as a prom date was more awkward than an incestuous makeout. But then again, that may have just been the only place they could fit in the obligatory Star Wars reference and have it almost make sense. But don't worry, she "won't spend a single lightyear" thinking about that. Probably because lightyears measure distance. Dumbass. But of course this only makes it a little bit hypocritical when Liz offers her sage advice, "It's just high school," to blond Cori. Oh, isn't she smart?
The last episode is Liz's graduation, so hopefully this means there won't be a second season. Liz has never once talked about her ambitions during the eight episodes leading up to this, and all of a sudden we're suppose to pretend we knew it was her lifelong dream to go to New York. Of course, she never implies what it is she wants to do there, just that it's full of "enough weird people to make [her] seem normal." No job, school, or living conditions are mentioned. Six weeks after graduation, it's time - she's leaving for New York because Bryson never came out to her about his feelings. Yeah, this "lifelong dream" depends on whether or not a guy she met earlier this year who did nothing but play mind games with her will finally admit to liking her. Remember, Liz has always had the lowest opinion of Texas and just can't wait to get out and go some place where people will understand her liberal, Star Wars fan, dyed-hair, vegan, ways. But when you hear what Bryson says to her in this year's most dramatic TV moment, you can't blame her for wanting to stay:
(monotone) "You really are cool. Like, so much cooler than any girl I know. You have a favorite comic book artist. You listen to some of the best music of anybody I know . . . I like that you have that, uh, red hair. I, just, uh, I like you.
Liz's conclusion? "I don't really know what happens from here . . . Sometimes it's best when things aren't perfect. At least then, you know they're real."
Oh, precisely. As real as when the high school student who owns a Mustang lets you sit on the hood of his car and eat french fries. As real as the fat friend suddenly deciding he'll help the not-fat friend get Liz. As real as this being a scene from the actual high school hallway:
I hope you all appreciated this post - you have NO idea how many Crest and Tampax commercials I had to sit through to watch enough episodes to write this shit.
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
Taylor Swift
I first realized I hate Swift in the dining hall at school when I was listening to her very originally titled song "Love Story." All I could discern in the lyrics was a repetitive mention of Romeo and Juliet. Even though the music didn't suit me, I thought the lyrics might - I'm into tragedies. So when I finally got around to looking up the lyrics, here's what I found for the final verse:
Marry me, Juliet, you'll never have to be alone
I love you and that's all I really know
I talked to your dad, go pick out a white dress
It's a love story, baby, just say yes
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm fairly sure that's not how Romeo and Juliet ends. I have to assume that Swift stopped reading halfway through. I wonder if she was using No Fear Shakespeare or the original text. Whatever it was, she didn't quite understand, judging by the line in the chorus that says You'll be the prince and I'll be the princess. Her grasp on the actual play must have been something like this:
I love how the entire song promotes the image of the weak female, with several mentions to the Juliet character waiting around and crying. How about something more like get up off your ass and do something? Or is that just too edgy for a country musician?
One might want to forgive these awful lyrics and assume that since she's so young, Swift must be a beginner. Well, that's not quite the case here - she spends quite enough time in the biography section of her official website congratulating herself for being so experienced and original:
“I didn’t want to write songs about being on the road and being on hotels and missing your family and missing your friends,” insists Swift. “When I was like 14 or 15 and I would hear those things on an album...being alone, living out of a suitcase... and I was always like, ‘Ugh, skip!’ I’m inspired by boys and love. I’d rather write songs about how I’m feeling and the relationship side of things.”
I simply cannot accept this as a legitimate excuse - how fucking hard is it to write lyrics for country music? All the naive young ladies who are buying up all the Taylor Swift albums and are also inspired by, erm, "love and boys" are going to think they can make it to the top too... fear for the future of popular music.
The next item that needs to be discussed is Swift's award-winning video, "You Belong With Me." Don't let the title fool you like the Romeo and Juliet references did, it may sound warm and fuzzy but I think there's cause for a bit of concern here. It all starts with Taylor watching a boy through his window - is this permissible? I know with the invention of the Twilight series we've all come to think that stalking and obsession is just about as romantic as it gets, but really? Anyway, in this masterpiece, Swift makes sure not to miss out on exploiting the most
But she wears short skirts, I wear t-shirts
She's cheer captain and I'm on the bleachers
She wears high heels, I wear sneakers
She's cheer captain and I'm on the bleachers
Oh God. She goes to high school and wears t-shirts? What is she thinking? And she's in the band? SOCIAL FUCKING SUICIDE. Oh, and don't forget the glasses. Girls that wear glasses, are you trying to be hideous?
But wait! The thrilling conclusion will save us all!
Following the same exact formulas of every high school movie ever, the big dance is the climax. (Which in turn has led more than one teenager to believe that their own prom will be something more than an overpriced dinner and dancefloor - like, for instance, the high point of her life.) In accordance with the rules, the main character has removed her glasses and/or taken her hair down and/or put on a dress and is miraculously HAWT. (See She's All That, The Princess Diaries, A Walk to Remember.)
It is at this point we find out that the pretty blonde boy from next door has loved HER along, and not the popular but bitchy cheerleader! Funny that he should only admit this after Tay has ditched the glasses, sneakers, and t-shirt. What remains untold is whether or not she's quit the band yet. Remember girls, he really does like you, he'd just be too embarrassed to be seen with you if you're going to wear those atrocious lenses on your face. Change your look and he's yours!
If you want to stop here and say, hold up, it's clear that not all teen girls are dumb enough to buy into this. Swift begs to differ with the lyrics to another popular single from 2009, "Fifteen."
Cause when you're fifteen and
Somebody tells you they love you
You're gonna believe them
Much of the song is written to "you," as if generalizing the entire fifteen-year-old population. About halfway through, Swift changes "you" to "I" - this is much more fitting, as her statements were getting a bit specific to encompass the typical experience of a high schooler (You sit in class next to a redhead named Abigail/And soon enough you're best friends/Laughing at the other girls who think they're so cool/We'll be out of here as soon as we can - did that happen to most people?). So why the change in subject? I theorize that it's a trick; Swift wants you to think her song is about you, but in the end you find out it's all about her looking back on how stupid she was to lose her virginity to a boy. Oh wait, my mistake, she decided to celebrate her own coming of age while exploiting her "best friend's" folly - Back then I swore I was gonna marry him someday/But I realized some bigger dreams of mine/And Abigail gave everything she had to a boy/Who changed his mind.
So why the are Fifteen and You Belong With Me so ridiculously juvenile? The imagery in the videos is damn near sickening, and you would have to wonder if the people who directed them had ever actually been in high school. I theorize that she must be incredibly bitter about her own homeschooling. Perhaps she never got that prom climax she so desperately needed. If there's one thing the teenagers of today do not need, it's more pop culture bullshit that portrays high school as a battleground between vicious blonde cheerleaders and sweet misunderstood individuals interrupted only by the occasional dance or convertible ride to a cliff overlooking the city with a boy. Now I know a completely realistic portrayal of high school would not suffice for the entertainment industry, but would it upset the balance to subtly imply that academics are part of those four years?
Just as a bonus, take a look at how Swift answered this interview question:
4. When you are not touring, what do you like to do for fun?
My best friend, Abigail, and I like to drive past our ex-boyfriends' houses.
No red flags there.
Disclaimer and stuff
If you want to contradict me I welcome it, but please keep in mind the following:
- A comment that is acceptable would be similar to this: "Acutally, I think [opinion] because [supporting detail] and [supporting detail]."
- An unacceptable comment would be similar to this: "y dont u shut up and quit living in ur moms basement" or "y do u have to be such a bitch about this"
- Should I read your comment and find that you have disregarded these simple regulations, I will simply delete it. You will be welcome to try again if it's important enough to you.
- Stop being so fucking sensitive because I'm annihilating things you enjoy. If you're not the author/director/musician in question, I'm not insulting you personally. I am, however, promoting critical thinking.
If you want to make suggestions for what you'd like to see me blog about next, I would be glad to hear your ideas. Leave a comment and I'll check out whatever it is you suggest and see if it's worth it.