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Tuesday, May 19, 2009 - Posts

  • HBO Seeks to Replace "The Sopranos" with "The Penis Diaries"


    No longer the home of hits like Sex and the City, The Sopranos, and The Wire, HBO is looking to replace its sex-and-violence lineup of yesteryear with ... more sex. Last spring, the network issued a somewhat mysterious announcement about Hung, a dramatic comedy that debuts this summer... (To read the rest of this post, visit our new website DoubleX.com!)

  • Possibly the Most Feminist Season of 24 Ever


    In seven seasons of 24, I've never given much thought to its gender politics. For one, I've mostly tuned in for the escapism of watching Jack Bauer save the world. For another, it's always had enough strong female characters—villains, heads of CTU, and the ass-kicking-yet-socially-awkward Chloe—to make up for the damsels in distress. (Yes, I'm looking at you, Kim Bauer.)

    But two sequences at the end of last night's finale jumped out at me for their portrayal of the women. (Warning, if you have the finale waiting on your TiVO: Spoilers ahead.) To wrap one storyline, President Allison Taylor has to decide... (To read the rest of this post, visit our new website DoubleX.com!)

  • Keep It Simple, MoDo


    Like Slate's Jack Shafer, I'm curious to see whether Maureen Dowd uses her next Times column to address the mini-plagiarism scandal surrounding her last one (Dowd admitted to unintentionally lifting a paragraph from Talking Points Memo blogger Josh Marshall, blaming the confusion on a conversation with a friend who quoted the passage to her without attribution.) But I can't agree with Shafer that Dowd's explanation sounds "plausible—if a tad incomplete." Her account of how Marshall's observation found its way into her column is patently absurd. Unless the friends in question are... (To read the rest of this post, visit our new website DoubleX.com!)

  • Did Women Cause Edmund Andrews' Mortgage Mess?


    New York Times reporter Edmund Andrews wrote a doozy of a story in a recent issue of the paper’s magazine, about how he went from a beaming homeowner and newlywed to an anxious debtor who owed hundreds of thousands of dollars on his mortgage. He described the trials and headaches of borrowing, and throughout the story, a basic disbelief that he, a reporter *who covers economics,* could have been caught up in the same overzealous swindling and poor decision-making that he wrote about for the Times.

    His story may have been cause for a lot of rubbernecking and tsk-ing among readers, but Dana Goldstein and Megan McArdle have perhaps hit on... (To read the rest of this post, visit our new website at DoubleX.com!)

  • Blame Rapists for Rape, Not Women


    A guest post from Double X writer Jaclyn Friedman:

    Last Tuesday, in the debut of Double X, Linda Hirshman said that the bloggers at Jezebel need to accept that they may be raped if they’re going to insist on being such public sluts (I'm paraphrasing here, but not as much as I wish I were). Latoya Peterson responded by rightly pointing out that screeds like Hirshman's give feminism a bad name. The internets erupted. And now, just what we needed, the Observer has swooped in to Explain It All To Us, clucking their editorial tongue about the whole "infighting" mess.

    Missing from this entire kerfuffle is one crucial point. Women aren't... (To read the rest of this post, visit our new website DoubleX.com!)

  • Meghan McCain Preaches What She Practices


    Meghan McCain was on The Colbert Report last night and despite some giggles and a hideous, huge, Bedazzled ring, she acquitted herself admirably. When is someone going to give this self-identified "24-year-old, pro-sex woman" and Republican her own television show? Young and Republican In America, hosted by Meghan McCain, running on one of the cable news networks twice a week? I'd watch.

    Colbert tries his best to throw his guests off their talking points, but McCain could recite hers in a coma. She was not to be derailed. While defending her core position... (To read the rest of this post, visit our new website DoubleX.com!)

  • I’m Sorry, Honey, But I Just Don’t Love Bruce Springsteen


    My husband has been in love with Bruce Springsteen longer than he's been in love with me. Bruce's lyrics were the soundtrack for our courtship (I came for you, for you, I came for you), our long-overdue wedding (So you're scared and you're thinking that maybe we ain't that young anymore), the many years of our marriage (This life, this life and then the next, with you I have been blessed), and his own work (sick of sitting round here trying to write this book). He rarely misses a Springsteen concert and can recite tracks, covers, and lyrics for any occasion. It was no surprise to me then that... (To read the rest of this post, visit our new website DoubleX.com!)

  • Rachel Alexandra: Si Se Puede!


    A guest post from Double X writer Vanessa Gezari:

    The Preakness Stakes is not a particularly gender-neutral event. The second leg of the Triple Crown is, in fact, one of the last places where men dress like men of a certain era (waistcoats, wingtips, fedoras), and women dress like women as we grew up imagining them: in crisp yet feminine suits, low-cut, brightly colored dresses and high, high heels. I’ve been to the Preakness three years running, and I gave up on the dress-and-heels approach long ago. (Unless you book a limo to and from your box seat, the amount of walking and stair climbing required by Pimlico’s layout demands comfortable footwear.) On Saturday, I noted with empathy... (To read the rest of this post, visit our new website DoubleX.com!)

  • AT&T v. Hulteen: The Ghost of Bad Supreme Court Rulings Past


    Agreed, Dahlia, that Justice Ginsburg is carefully applying the law as she sees it in her dissent in AT&T v. Hulteen. Her problem is a bad old ruling that haunts this case and that all but one of her male colleagues refused to banish. In General Electric Co. v. Gilbert in 1976, the Supreme Court ruled that discrimination based on pregnancy is not discrimination based on sex, because some women (the nonpregnant ones) won't be discriminated against. By ignoring how... (To read the rest of this post, visit our new website DoubleX.com!)

  • Those Wily Female Reporters


    In his review of the new Warren Buffet biography, Michael Lewis has a great description of how writer Alice Schroeder won over the billionaire by turning his need to be mothered by lovely brainiacs against him... (To read the rest of this post, visit our new website DoubleX.com!)

  • Ruth Bader Ginsburg Ain't No Oprah Winfrey


    The Supreme Court ruled, 7-2 yesterday in AT&T v. Hulteen, that women denied credits toward their pension for their pregnancies in the 1960s and '70s—before it became illegal—were not the victims of gender discrimination. The question came down to whether AT&T could rely on past discriminatory practices—before 1978 pregnant women were denied disability leave granted to men—to calculate pensions. Writing for the majority, David Souter found that... (To read the rest of this post, visit our new website DoubleX.com!)

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