Monday, 23 November 2015

Sam Newman’s blast for political correctness and his critics | HeraldSun

Sam Newman’s blast for political correctness and his critics | HeraldSun



 November 23, 2015 6:40am

Sam Newman is hitting out at political correctness. Picture: JAY TOWN
THE Footy Show star and controversy magnet Sam Newman has lashed out at what he says is a growing culture of political correctness “gone mad”.
Newman, 69, said a “crit­ique industry” exists where groups leap on supposedly controversial views in order to push their own agendas.
As a result, he told the Herald Sun, fewer people were willing to say what they thought — including politicians or public figures who “bend and submit to lobbyists”.
“The politically correct ­nature of our society has gone mad, for no reason,” he said.
He says this often leads to accusations he is sexist, racist, or “anything else that ends in ‘ist’”.
“If I said my religious beliefs did not allow me to accept gay marriage as a legal institution, I would be called a homophobe,” he writes.
Newman cites examples in the United States, including when presidential candidate Ben Carson was branded racist for saying he didn’t think a Muslim could be president because of America’s history and culture.
Fellow presidential candidate Marco Rubio, he says, was branded an anti-Semite for ­visiting the home of a collector who owned a document signed by Hitler.
“What chance have we of engaging in meaningful ­dialogue with stupidity like that?” he writes.
Sam in the spotlight.
In comments likely to rile some people he is criticising, Newman revisits Billy Brownless’s gaffe at a footy function, when he called a mother and daughter “strippers”.
“I find it astonishing, when one stands back and looks at the context and circumstances, that this was manufactured into the furore it became,” Newman writes.
“That by no means ignores the offence, or the subsequent apology from Brownless, but the incident was whipped-up by self-appointed PC zealots who urged action: the removal of Brownless, and me, from The Footy Show and a suggestion that a female producer be appointed.
“To use the new communication, LOL!
“By the way, I am all for a female producer, if she’s the best man for the job.”
Newman also hits out at the change in approach to language used to describe gender.
“We are all destined to be pigeonholed by the bleaters, those who tell us that ‘mother’ and ‘father’ are taboo but ‘parents’ are ­acceptable,” Newman writes.

Sunday, 22 November 2015

Zoolander 2: Calls for boycott over 'cartoonish' portrayal of androgynous character - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Zoolander 2: Calls for boycott over 'cartoonish' portrayal of androgynous character - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)



Zoolander 2: Calls for boycott over 'cartoonish' portrayal of androgynous character

Updated

The highly anticipated Zoolander sequel has been
slammed for its "harmful", "cartoonish" portrayal of an androgynous
character played by Benedict Cumberbatch, with an online petition
calling for a boycott of the film.
In the trailer for Zoolander 2,
Zoolander and Hansel — portrayed by Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson — ask
Cumberbatch's character if they are a "male or female model" and if they
"have a hot dog or a bun".

The character, named All, answers "All is all".

"Cumberbatch's character is clearly portrayed as an
over-the-top, cartoonish mockery of androgyne/trans/non-binary
individuals," the petition initiated by Sarah Rose reads.

"This is the modern equivalent of using blackface to represent a minority.

"If
the producers and screenwriters of Zoolander wanted to provide social
commentary on the presence of trans/androgyne individuals in the fashion
industry, they could have approached models like Andreja Pejic to be in
the film."

Pejic — who until 2014 described herself as "in
between genders" and worked as an androgynous male modelling both
masculine and feminine clothing — now identifies as a transgender woman,
and was the first openly transgender model to be profiled by Vogue.

Ms
Rose added: "By hiring a cis actor to play a non-binary individual in a
clearly negative way, they (sic) film endorses harmful and dangerous
perceptions of the queer community at large."

"Tell Paramount Pictures, Ben Stiller, and Benedict
Cumberbatch that mocking transgender/androgyne/gender fluid people is
not okay."

The term "cis" or "cisgender" refers to an individual whose gender identity conforms to their anatomical sex at birth.

The petition has so far garnered almost 9,000 signatures, with many supporters expressing their frustrations.

"I am transgender. How long do we have to be mocked by Hollywood before they just leave us alone?" one person wrote.

Another
wrote: "This part of the movie basically encourages people to see
transgender people are just a surgical experiment instead of from an
understanding point of view.

"How immature and regressive."

Paramount Pictures, Cumberbatch and Stiller, who also directed the film, are yet to respond to the backlash.