*thunk* *thunk* *thunk*

BlackShanglan

Silver-Tongued Papist
Joined
Jul 7, 2004
Posts
16,888
Sorry, that's me banging my head on the table. I am trying knock out of it any memory of/belief in this:

http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/05/03/D8HCAA784.html

In a nutshell, we're now issuing awards to actresses at ceremonies held at the UN because they did a good job of pretending to be president. This, evidently, is considered some sort of step toward having a female president, the lack of which is decried by Ms. Davis in this statement:

"I think it's appalling that we haven't yet. The crime is not that it's taken so long, but why haven't we done it yet?"

One assumes that Ms. Davis' pretend-Secretary of State might fill the pretend-president in on the usual causal connection between things taking a long time and not having happened yet.

Seriously, could we not find a single woman of actual accomplishments to honor in this ceremony? Might not the current Secretary of State, or if she is objectionable for party reasons, the ex-Attorney General, or the recently retired Justice for the Supreme Court, have conceivably have been deemed a worthy alternative to a B-list actress?

Geena Davis Honored for Role As PresidentMay 03 8:41 AM US/Eastern

UNITED NATIONS

To the strains of "Hail to the Chief," actress Geena Davis accepted an award night for her television portrayal of the first woman president of the United States from an organization which is seeking to turn fiction into reality.

When the star of the ABC television show "Commander in Chief" got to the podium Tuesday, she was given a red, white and blue sash to put on over her gown, similar to one worn by Chile's first woman president, Michelle Bachelet. "This is the coolest thing I ever got! Wow I love it!," she said.

"So many countries have had a female head of state before us," she told the 500 guests at a dinner in the U.N. Delegates Dining Room. "So it is certainly time."

The award was presented by The White House Project, a non-profit organization which works to promote women's voting, political participation and leadership, with a goal of putting a woman in the White House.

"Every interviewer eventually says, `Do you think we will see a female president in our lifetime?', Davis said.

"I think it's appalling that we haven't yet. The crime is not that it's taken so long, but why haven't we done it yet?" she said to loud applause from the predominantly female audience that included Martha Stewart and former Maryland Lt. Gov. Kathleen Kennedy Townsend.

Davis, who plays President Mackenzie Allen, said she was thrilled and honored to receive the award because she cares so much about empowering girls and women.

"Year in and year out there are real-life gains being made by women, but there is still a huge gender disparity," she said. "It really shows up in my industry. For every president Allen, there are a hundred never-rans. There are fewer (women) victors than victims. There are fewer (women) leaders than followers, fewer women than men, and fewer girls than boys."

But "if elected to another season _ un term," Davis said to more laughter, "... whatever I can do to make change happen quicker in the fake world, I promise to do."

Filmmaker Rod Lurie, the creater of "Commander in Chief" also received an award and called the question of whether the United States is ready for a female president "insulting."

"From now on, my answer is, `Are we ready for more of what we have got?,'" he said.

"Females represent 51 percent of the country and it's absurd that they're not represented in the highest level of power, and not even given that opportunity," Lurie said.

But he said things may be changing.

"There's a lot of firepower in the world ladies and gentelmen," Lurie said. "There's lots of it, but there's no weapon as powerful as an idea whose time has come."

Marie Wilson, president of the White House Project, said the EPIC Awards acknowledge the power of media and popular culture, and she thanked Davis and Lurie "for bringing the concept of a female president to life, and doing it so well."

Anita Hill, who accused Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment during 1991 hearings on his nomination to the Supreme Court, presented another award to Jeff Skoll, founder of Participant Productions for making "North Country," a movie about courageous women who led a fight against sexual harassment in Minnesota mines,

"I for one am thankful that we live in an age where we have role models like Anita Hill to show us the way forward," Skoll said. "We're also grateful that the White House Project" is working to see that a woman becomes president.
 
i vote we give an award to a single mom, or a woman who's managed to scrape together enough to have a decent standard of living despite an income well below the poverty line.

But that's just me.
 
Don't hurt the table there! :)

I try not to notice things like that. They destroy my faith in the intelligence of committees and organizations...oh, wait, I don't HAVE any of that left. I ignore them because they annoy me, like sand in my bathing suit.
 
I second Ent's motion. Far too much is made of celebs who have it easy and not enough of people who pay their salaries (the ticket-buying public who just want some diversion from the daily grind at their local cinema).
 
They are smart to recognize that media has an impact on society and plays a role in politics. I hope they put that knowledge to better use in the future by developing an effective marketing campaign to raise the visibility of the achievements of women in power today so voters have some non-fiction reasons to believe a woman can handle the Presidency.

I'm sad to say this, but I think Americans are a long way off from electing a woman.
 
Oh, but everyone knows women can't be presidents! Just think of the danger! Do we really want a land with nuclear weapons to be run by someone with PMS?

It's SO much better to have it run by someone who has no hormones at all, let alone brain cells.
 
Chantelle

We had a Celebrity Big Brother show in the UK that included a non-entity, Chantelle, who was pretending to be a celebrity among the real C list types.

Now she is a celebrity for pretending to be one and her forthcoming marriage is a newsworthy item in the tabloids.

'No one went broke underestimating the intelligence of the public' seems to be coming true over and over again.

Og
 
I didn't even make it through a full episode of that show.

Made me embarrassed to be American and a woman. And that's hard to do.

Which is why I didn't watch any further.

Any more indignant righteous rage over other people's right to exist and breathe and I was going to throw things at the TV. Well, again.

"Fear me, I am indignant PMS woman!"
 
Recidiva said:
I didn't even make it through a full episode of that show.

Made me embarrassed to be American and a woman. And that's hard to do.

Which is why I didn't watch any further.

Any more indignant righteous rage over other people's right to exist and breathe and I was going to throw things at the TV. Well, again.

"Fear me, I am indignant PMS woman!"


Ami's worst nightmare? :rolleyes:
 
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