.
Ann Hornaday, the Washington Post's film critic, published an op-ed yesterday that implied that one of the principal reasons for Elliot Rodger's mass killing in Isla Vista was the white men of Hollywood's "escapist fantasies [that] so often revolve around vigilantism and sexual wish-fulfillment." Hornaday specifically called out both Judd Apatow and Seth Rogen's recently-released Neighbors as an example.
From the op-ed:
"How many students watch outsized frat-boy fantasies like "Neighbors" and feel, as Rodger did, unjustly shut out of college life that should be full of "sex and fun and pleasure"? How many men, raised on a steady diet of Judd Apatow comedies in which the shlubby arrested adolescent always gets the girl, find that those happy endings constantly elude them and conclude, "It's not fair"?
Hornaday continued:
If our cinematic grammar is one of violence, sexual conquest and macho swagger — thanks to male studio executives who green-light projects according to their own pathetic predilections — no one should be surprised when those impulses take luridly literal form in the culture at large.
Rogen tweeted his response to Hornaday this evening:
Seth Rogen ✔ @Sethrogen
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.@AnnHornaday I find your article horribly insulting and misinformed.
Judd Apatow also tweeted at Hornaday, claiming the article was self-promotional and idiotic.
Judd Apatow ✔ @JuddApatow
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“@Sethrogen: .@AnnHornaday I find your article horribly insulting and misinformed.”She uses tragedy to promote herself with idiotic thoughts
And Apatow later suggested that the op-ed was published for shock value.
Melissa @melissa5001
@Sethrogen @marshallsheldon @AnnHornaday why is it always everything but mental illness?
Judd Apatow ✔ @JuddApatow
Follow
“@melissa5001: @Sethrogen @marshallsheldon @AnnHornaday why is it always everything but mental illness?” Because that doesn't sell papers.
Hornaday has yet to respond to the critiques.
Comments:
ClioUDayna Evans
Yesterday 10:37pm
Hollywood produces shit. The world consumes shit. Conclusion: humans are full of shit.
581Reply
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UClio
Yesterday 10:39pm
You've never liked a film before?
181Reply
kevinzimmerman
Clio
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ClioU
Yesterday 10:41pm
I didn't exclude myself.
291Reply
michaelpronk
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michaelpronkUClio
Yesterday 10:44pm
Thats why your on this website.
41Reply
cmalaparte
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cmalaparteU
Yesterday 10:45pm
Hollywood doesn't make film. It makes propaganda.
21Reply
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Jeremiad started this thread Yesterday 10:39pm
Jeremiad
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JeremiadUDayna Evans
Yesterday 10:39pm
Aren't the same things said about video games and violence, and hasn't the research shown time and time again that there is not a connection?
I can understand her point, but I definitely would have chosen different examples of misogyny in the media because the ones she pointed out aren't very good, just recent (with Neighbors, then her jump to Judd Apatow was a bit weird).
Judd Apatow consistently shows that being/accepting yourself and not being an immature asshole is the way to go if you want to be happy, which is pretty much the opposite of these "incels" and PUAs.
Moreover, if you're looking at a movie as a blueprint to your life, you have larger issues. Most peoples college experiences aren't exactly Animal House, doesn't mean you get broken up about it. None of these movies insinuate anybody is "owed" anything.
I would like to explore this topic more if anybody would so choose to respond.
451Reply
prometheus
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prometheusUJeremiad
Yesterday 10:54pm
I'd agree with you about Apatow "consistently shows that being/accepting yourself and not being an immature asshole is the way to go if you want to be happy..." if his films didn't spend most of its running time celebrating the immature asshole or holes. As a theory supporting Apatow it doesn't hold. I don't disagree with most everything else you've posted.
101Reply
jwill08
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Jwill08UJeremiad
Yesterday 10:54pm
The problem with blaming media is that you then have to make your half-assed theory jive with decades of openly or passively sexist books, movies, music, and comics. Which you kinda can't. At the very least, video games add the dimension of being interactive, so you might be more likely to perceive yourself as the avatar in-game. When Jaime Lannister throws Bran out of the window, we all go "what a dick" when you throw a kid out of a window in a video game (none that I'm aware of?) you say "I'm a dick", or laugh about it. However, as you said, evidence suggests that it isn't necessarily tied to violence... just frustration.
Personally, I think people take these manifestos way too seriously. The guy was fucked in the head. He did something a normal person wouldn't do. Why would anyone think that his reasoning would make sense to us or come from a rational place?
61Reply
realfunnyguysrealfunny
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realfunnyguysrealfunnyUJeremiad
Yesterday 10:55pm
"incels"? What is that?
21Reply
Lozzle
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LozzleUrealfunnyguysrealfunny
Yesterday 10:57pm
Involuntary celibates.
41Reply
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rationalings started this thread Yesterday 10:42pm
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rationalingsUDayna Evans
Yesterday 10:42pm
a lot of people find the frat boy ethos horribly insulting and misinformed. Sure this guy was deeply ill no question. but cultural narratives such as the men's rights nonsense give a validation and support for some horrible mindsets. The fact of this man's mental illness does not render the the culture non-existent or above criticism.
241Reply
PrayForDenton
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PrayForDentonUrationalings
Yesterday 10:50pm
Yes, that sort of culture does indeed deserve criticism, but culture doesn't drive sane individuals toward unspeakable violence. That sort of violence is born in the madness of one's mind.
81Reply
BurninAlive
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Big Gay OwlUPrayForDenton
Yesterday 10:53pm
Well, not murder, but a lot of fraternities seem awfully rapey.
301Reply
KaiFromDogtown
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KaiFromDogtownUrationalings
Yesterday 11:02pm
People aren't suggesting stuff like MRA and PUA culture is beyond reproach. And hey if you want to take on frat-boy culture too, that's fine. But connecting it to something like this killing spree is over the top. It's sensationalism, and it cheapens much of the real issues.
81Reply
PrayForDenton
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PrayForDentonUBig Gay Owl
Yesterday 11:02pm
That's funny, because a lot of fraternities back in my day seemed awfully gay. But in all seriousness, I do believe there is a valid conversation about MRAs and PUAs and patriarchal blah blah blah in reference to this tragedy, but a lot of the conversation at this point seems too reactionary and less substantive. It's our nature to find something to blame, because it's easier to find fault in something than to acknowledge that there are disturbed individuals among us that are prone to violence and that there is little we can do to stop them.
31Reply
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Milton Berle's Cock started this thread Yesterday 10:45pm
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Milton Berle's CockUDayna Evans
Yesterday 10:45pm
"How many students watch outsized frat-boy fantasies like "Neighbors" and feel, as Rodger did, unjustly shut out of college life that should be full of "sex and fun and pleasure"?
Wait, college isn't that?
81Reply
PrayForDenton
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PrayForDentonUMilton Berle's Cock
Yesterday 10:46pm
My college certainly was.
1Reply
KaiFromDogtown
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KaiFromDogtownUMilton Berle's Cock
Yesterday 10:55pm
I'm sure as hell glad Rogen's films weren't around when I was in college. Otherwise I probably would have killed a lot of people.
Or I would have probably just smoked more weed and laughed more. That seems more like it actually.
111Reply
cameron1123
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Cam/ronUMilton Berle's Cock
Yesterday 10:56pm
I never forgave Hollywood for lying to me.
SEXPAND
201Reply
muffin_cupcake
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muffin_cupcakeUMilton Berle's Cock
Yesterday 11:08pm
College is like that for many people, but I think a lot of young people find college stressful and even lonely, and the pressure to have the TIME OF YOUR LIFE just adds to the feeling that you're doing something wrong. Socially anxious kids, depressed kids, and kids who are "different" in some important way have a college experience that is very different from the mainstream expectation.
I enjoyed college despite being a nerdy gay kid — I made friends, joined an activity, dated some — but every time I found myself without plans on a Friday night, I felt like I was failing at college. There were fun times, but there were also stressful and lonely times. And I had friends who were more outside of that mainstream college culture than I was, and they look back on college as a difficult and isolating time. My social life is better now (in my 30s) than it was then, and I think that's the case for a lot of people.
201Reply
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Derfel started this thread Yesterday 10:39pm
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DerfelUDayna Evans
Yesterday 10:39pm
I've seen at least a half-dozen articles by female journalists that have taken advantage of this horrible event to push their names out for book deals and media interviews, trying to suggest that #yesallmen are at fault.
91Reply
peregondusoir
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PeregonUDerfel
Yesterday 10:42pm
At least half a dozen. That many? Wow. I get it - some people are glory-hounds. Can we not connect that to #YesAllWomen as a general trend, though? Otherwise, I will make you own /MensRights and the Drudge Report, just for funzies. Let's keep it focused.
281Reply
denwaf
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The Gutenberg DiscontinuityUDerfel
Yesterday 10:49pm
True, many males ( I being one of them) watch the crap hwood delivers, but we never ever thought ladies owe us sex. Or atleast I have never thought that.
21Reply
theroncorse
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The Other TheronUDerfel
Yesterday 11:00pm
In a country of 315 million, give or take. Whatever.
11Reply
derfel
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DerfelUThe Other Theron
Yesterday 11:05pm
315 million journalists? NIGHTMARE
41Reply
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elaine layabout started this thread Yesterday 11:08pm
elainelayabout
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elaine layaboutUDayna Evans
Yesterday 11:08pm
ann hornaday has reading comprehension issues, given that elliot rodger didn't see himself as "shlubby" ... he wasn't overweight or unkempt, and not only did he think he was attractive, he thought he was a god
oh, and if you actually watch movies where the schlub gets the girl, he usually gets the girl by being funny and self deprecating ... and he never, ever drives a bmw
51Reply
traceacex
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TraceUelaine layabout
31 minutes ago
I was honestly just thinking this. There's really only a handful of examples I can think of that could fit how he apparently viewed himself. Pretty in Pink was the first one I thought of, which says a lot about how many recent films had the almighty, amazing, popular, rich guy get the girl. They're usually the ones picking up the pieces by the end of the movie and cast in a terrible light. This asshole wanted to be the rich guy in the movie, not the nerd.
I am sure there's some legitimate argument about media /reinforcing/ male expectations, but the seed is planted early on. Hell, I see it with my family and niece sometimes, this weird aversion toward "non-feminine" things, even though my niece doesn't care if she shits on blue pants or pink, it's all the same to her. Regardless, if you want to present the argument, at least present it when the situation fits. The movies I've seen made from Apatow don't really fit this asshole.
31Reply
Russianist
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RussianistUelaine layabout
17 minutes ago
He apparently had some insecurities about his height and biracial appearance, and he wanted his external appearance to match his inner blonde golden god so the women would give him the sex he was entitled to. How Ann Hornaday gets that confused with a Seth Rogen character ending up with a Katherine Heigl one is a puzzler.
21Reply
elainelayabout
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elaine layaboutURussianist
4 minutes ago
i'm not sure what this guy really thought of his looks ... given that he compulsively diva posed for photographs
my theory, though, is that his height (5'9") and ethnic looks were just excuses to avoid looking at his personality and to blame women, not himself, for being shallow and bigoted
1Reply
theRoo
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Rooo sez BISH PLZURussianist
A minute ago
Honestly? ER's underlying narrative was "I am entitled to sex without effort because I am a golden god".
The Apatow/Rogen narrative, which even Cracked references and which I have personally heard more than one NiceGuy ™ refer to in order to rationalize his own odious behavior, is "I should be rewarded with women and sex if I complete my personal version of Hero's Journey tasks".
I certainly see differences there, but I see more parallels than differences.
If you don't see them maybe it's because you're excusing them away, or maybe willing yourself not to.
1Reply
corey3rd started this thread Yesterday 10:43pm
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corey3rdUDayna Evans
Yesterday 10:43pm
Normally Judd Apatow movies merely make me contemplate things I should be doing instead of watching a Judd Apatow movie.
Maybe the reason women weren't attracted to that guy because they could sense he was a homicidal maniac?
311Reply
theroncorse
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The Other TheronUcorey3rd
Yesterday 11:01pm
And yet imprisoned serial killers have groupies. It's a big world, I guess.
11Reply
corey3rd
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corey3rdUThe Other Theron
Yesterday 11:05pm
But notice they mostly get the groupies after they're caught and the girls don't have much fear of being part of the body count.
21Reply
theroncorse
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The Other TheronUcorey3rd
Yesterday 11:08pm
Good point.