Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Not so Modern Family: Top sitcoms make for sexist, inaccurate television [View all]
http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/Opinion/2012/0127/Not-so-Modern-Family-Top-sitcoms-make-for-sexist-inaccurate-television?cmpid=addthis_twitter#.TyLPB8a9AKs.twitter
The unemployment rate for women characters on network sitcoms is staggering. In the five highest rated primetime sitcoms The Big Bang Theory, Modern Family, Two Broke Girls, Two and a Half Men, and How I Met Your Mother the majority of the male characters are professionally accomplished, while the female characters are almost all unemployed or financially struggling.
There is a difference between quirky, flawed characters and ones who are incapable of professional success. And when the latter is reliably female, it makes for sexist television. It also makes for unrealistic television.
Take a look: The female characters on Modern Family are stay-at-home moms; Robin, on How I Met Your Mother, is a struggling journalist (and Lily, the other female character, is a shopaholic nursery school teacher); Two Broke Girls is about model-pretty waitresses who can barely pay their rent; and in the dystopic world of Two and a Half Men, all of the female characters are stalkers, dimwits, cleaning ladies, vindictive ex-wives, or manipulative mothers.
The only accomplished women on any of these shows are on The Big Bang Theory. But like 30 Rocks Liz Lemon, the most successful one, Amy, is undatable, while Penny, the hot waitress, is the one the male characters lust after.
...
The unemployment rate for women characters on network sitcoms is staggering. In the five highest rated primetime sitcoms The Big Bang Theory, Modern Family, Two Broke Girls, Two and a Half Men, and How I Met Your Mother the majority of the male characters are professionally accomplished, while the female characters are almost all unemployed or financially struggling.
There is a difference between quirky, flawed characters and ones who are incapable of professional success. And when the latter is reliably female, it makes for sexist television. It also makes for unrealistic television.
Take a look: The female characters on Modern Family are stay-at-home moms; Robin, on How I Met Your Mother, is a struggling journalist (and Lily, the other female character, is a shopaholic nursery school teacher); Two Broke Girls is about model-pretty waitresses who can barely pay their rent; and in the dystopic world of Two and a Half Men, all of the female characters are stalkers, dimwits, cleaning ladies, vindictive ex-wives, or manipulative mothers.
The only accomplished women on any of these shows are on The Big Bang Theory. But like 30 Rocks Liz Lemon, the most successful one, Amy, is undatable, while Penny, the hot waitress, is the one the male characters lust after.
...
The article goes on to mention that in the past, this wasn't the case (e.g. Claire Huxtable, Julia Sugarbaker, Murphy Brown, Mary Tyler Moore)... so why are we moving backward?
48 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Not so Modern Family: Top sitcoms make for sexist, inaccurate television [View all]
redqueen
Jan 2012
OP
ALL i have seen on modern family (didnt know til a poster told me it was that show, maybe family guy
seabeyond
Jan 2012
#8
I am watching it on DVD because I don't get much network TV, so I can't tell you.
cbayer
Jan 2012
#35
did anyone watch stewart last night about primetime tv. all the sodomy talk on all the shows. and
seabeyond
Jan 2012
#11
On The Big Bang Theory, the character 'Amy' is not 'undatable' she is in fact the romantic
Bluenorthwest
Jan 2012
#13
So you do not see the sexism in insisting that Amy, who dates the main character is
Bluenorthwest
Jan 2012
#33
I did not say she is a liar, at all. I said she misreports the facts. And she does.
Bluenorthwest
Jan 2012
#40
or you can not worry about it and the threads sink and swim depending on others interest
seabeyond
Jan 2012
#43