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You Bitch!: An Examination of What We Choose to Accept

[caption id="attachment_6210" align="alignright" width="320" caption="Photo Courtesy Comestiblog.com"][/caption]

“You Bitch!” Excuse me what did my TV just call me? Freezing at the words that came blaring through my TV during a prime time broadcast, I was left with my mouth agape. Since when can you say Bitch on TV? This wasn’t HBO or Showtime, this is was regular cable. And I found myself laughing as I saw a commercial for (BLEEP) My Dad Says. Ok wait, just give me one second to process this. You can’t say Shit on TV but a word that degrades women can be thrown about casually?

Federal Communications Commission (FCC) can restrict but not censor broadcasts from using profane language. If the FCC would censor broadcast material, this would infringe on the First Amendment. So instead the FCC imposes fines for obscene, indecent, or profane material. According to the FCC website, “Profane speech is prohibited on broadcast radio and television between the hours of 6 a.m. and 10 p.m.” Any material that is “so highly offensive that their mere utterance in the context presented may, in legal terms, amount to a ‘nuisance’” is considered profane.

Ask any woman: if you were approached by someone and as a conversation starter, you were addressed as Bitch, would you deem the word as a “nuisance?” The word bitch has mutated from its original meaning. Merriam-Webster defines bitch as:

1: the female of the dog or some other carnivorous mammals,

2: a) a lewd or immoral woman b) a malicious, spiteful, or overbearing woman —sometimes used as a generalized term of abuse,

3: something that is extremely difficult, objectionable, or unpleasant,

4: complaint.

Somewhere in between its first usage and now, Bitch shape shifted to meaning an immoral woman, a man of low effeminate character, difficult circumstances, or a grievance. Which brings me back to why would the FCC allow the word Bitch, a word that obviously denigrates women, to be uncensored and not a word like Shit. Calling someone a piece of Shit does not equate to calling someone a Bitch. So when did we as a society take such a misogynistic view of the word?

For starters, Bitch is found in more places than just Male Studies (See Molly Knefel’s argument towards Manhood101) and TV/Film. With headphones dangling from the ears of subway riders, fast walking New Yorkers, and the locusts that commute in and out of the city, Bitch is in ears of many. I cringe when others discuss music misogyny and use Hip-Hop and Rap as a primary example. However, being that I am not an avid listener to Country or Pop-Elektronica, I will continue with a quote from Ice Cube, “A bitch is a bitch. So ladies, we ain’t just talkin’ bout you, cause some of y’all niggas is bitches too!” Aside from showing that Bitch not only is disrespectful towards women, Ice Cube points out that the word is insulting to a man when used to call him out on being less than a man, and therefore a Bitch.

The word’s usage has infiltrated music just as it is now being used more casually in conversations. Examples of Bitch in music spread from the 1980’s band called Bitch, Akon and David Guetta’s song “Sexy Bitch,” to Meredith Brooks embracing the word bitch in her 90’s hit “Bitch.” Of course I am leaving out the obvious overuse and many meanings of the word Bitch littered throughout Hip-Hop and Rap, but even though Bitch has become common in music, it doesn’t support or give reason to making it anymore socially acceptable.

Shit has many definitions. Merriam-Webster starts every definition of shit with “usually vulgar.” Meaning anything from “an act of defecation” to “a detestable person.” Used in such phrases as “I don’t give a shit, Don’t tell me that shit, We’re in this shit together, You’re nothing but a piece of shit, SHIT!!” None however demean the person’s being to the extreme derogatory usage that Bitch has been equated to.

In 1968, Jo Freeman published The BITCH Manifesto, a feminist article. She has this to say about Bitch: Bitches are aggressive, assertive, domineering, overbearing, strong-minded, spiteful, hostile, direct, blunt, candid, obnoxious, thick-skinned, hard-headed, vicious, dogmatic, competent, competitive, pushy, loud-mouthed, independent, stubborn, demanding, manipulative, egoistic, driven, achieving, overwhelming, threatening, scary, ambitious, tough, brassy, masculine, boisterous and turbulent. A Bitch takes shit from no one. You may not like her, but you cannot ignore her.

In following suit, the coined phrase H.B.I.C. or Head Bitch In Charge is taking the profane word and using it as a title of power. I respect those who can take adverse circumstances and use it to their advantage. But still, the take-charge approach to Bitch does not make me anymore comfortable with the word. Oprah recently announced that her new channel will refrain from using the word altogether. I am not one of those Oprah disciples that carve her beliefs into my arm, but I do think she is onto something.

Which brings me to this: it is not the use or integration of a word that should make it ok but the meaning. Shit is more commonly used across all platforms of media, entertainment, and social interactions, yet the FCC justifies the imposition of fines for it. So why not Bitch? My fight is not with the FCC entirely or with our society’s use of profanity. My fight is with the type of thinking that accepts the word Bitch over Shit. Condoning a word that is emphatically anti-women shouldn’t be socially acceptable.

Sources:

http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/consumerfacts/obscene.html
http://trueslant.com/mollyknefel/2010/04/26/finally-men-tell-women-what-the-word-bitch-really-means/
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/shit
http://www.uic.edu/orgs/cwluherstory/jofreeman/joreen/bitch.htm
http://www.nypost.com/p/entertainment/tv/oprah_no_bitches_allowed_w5MafyabZMIHYW2Eiz4UiM#ixzz13lq3Onkl
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bitch

Five Underrated Actors: No. 1- Alan Arkin

Alan Arkin is the s##t. He’s been in some of the worst comedies but his scenes are always hilarious – his turn as a nice-guy cop in So I Married an Axe Murderer is a standout performance in a movie that’s otherwise charming but forgettable. And Grosse Point Blank, one of my favorite movies of all time, features Alan Arkin in a supporting role as a harassed psychiatrist – and I don’t know what it is, something about the way he talks, but everything he says is hilarious.

He’s finally getting some of the recognition he’s deserved since the 70s, having recently won a Best Supporting Actor for his (yet again) show-stealing performance in Little Miss Sunshine. But the man deserves more than an Oscar – he deserves endless adulation, a legion of fawning fans. He ought to be at least as famous as Brad Pitt. If I saw Brad Pitt on the streets of New York, that’d be cool – hey, you know, Brad Pitt. But if I saw Alan Arkin, I would faint like a little girl. That’s how awesome he is.

Also: Five Overrated Actors

Five Underrated Actors: No. 2- Jeffrey Tambor

Jeffrey Tambor recieved some recognition for his turn as George Bluth in the critically acclaimed series Arrested Development. His work as the uncaring, immoral patriarch of the Bluth family was superb, but many people have already forgotten his brilliant acting as Hank Kingsley in The Larry Sanders Show – in which he played a completely different character, a pathetic, clueless talk-show sidekick. The man is ridiculously flexible and always hilarious – and is one of those rare actors who can imbue even the funniest characters with a strong pathos.

Despite this, most people wouldn’t even know his name, and probably wouldn’t even recognize his face – they’d probably confuse him with Dr. Phil. Jeffrey Tambor has all of the talent of the most well-known actors around today, but none of the fame.

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Five Underrated Actors: No. 3- Nathan Fillion

Among Joss Whedon fans, Nathan Fillion is legend. Fillion is easily the best leading actor in any Whedon series. His turn as Mal Reynolds in Firefly makes David Boreanaz (Angel), Sarah Michelle Gellar (Buffy), and Elia Dushku (Dollhouse) look like rank amateurs. Nathan Fillion is effortlessly likeable, with brilliant comedic timing, a leading man’s looks, and a character actor’s subtle appreciation for the small moments that make great drama.

Yet for some reason, he has had trouble getting roles in non-Whedon works – all of his best roles are either in Buffy, Firefly, or Dr. Horrible. Nathan Fillion is now working as the lead in the detective show Castle, but, sadly, the show is not nearly up to his talents. His charm – as prodigious as it is – is basically the only reason to watch.

Click here for #2

Five Underrated Actors: No. 4- Alessandro Juliani

An opera major in college, and frequent choir member as well as stage actor, Alessandro Juliani was the man behind one of the most complex and well-written characters in television history – Battlestar Galactica’s Felix Gaeta. Gaeta, a brilliant technician and lieutenant for the voyaging Galactica fleet, was a courageous man with a profound sense of honor and duty, which he always followed – even when it led to tragedy. And Alessandro Juliani was pitch-perfect at every point throughout the show, his high points including his lonely, wistful singing in “Guess What’s Coming to Dinner?” and his strange, poetic conversation with Baltar immediately before the gripping final scene of “Blood on the Scales.”

Next to the larger roles and more famous actors of Battlestar, though, Alessandro Juliani hardly gets any notice. His work is as outstanding as Edward James Olmos’ was, if not more so – even if it was only in a supporting role.

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Five Underrated Actors: No. 5- Zachary Levi

I’m fairly certain that including Zachery Levi might look stupid in a couple of years – he seems like the kind of guy who’ll probably be a superstar soon. He’s funny, charming, handsome, and full of odd little tics and nervous habits that never seem forced. I’ve been watching his current show, Chuck, for the past three years – and while this most recent season was pretty bad, Zachery Levi is game for anything. He’s a great lead who really seems to care for his fellow actors, and is capable of producing chemistry with nearly anyone. I hope either Chuck turns it around, or Zachery Levi finds something else worth his talents.

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Five Underrated Actors

I love discovering great actors I’ve never seen before. When I was fourteen I first watched On the Waterfront with Marlon Brando, and ever since then I’ve become a bit of a performance geek – I love watching a great actor sink into a meaty role.

There are many highly esteemed actors nowadays – Sean Penn, Johnny Depp, Christian Bale – but I’d like to focus on some of the current actors I’ve seen who I don’t think have gotten the recognition that they deserve.

I’m including both movie performances and television performances. A great television performance is, I’d say, even tougher than a great movie performance – a lot of very good actors have seen themselves grow stale in the long-form narratives and repeated emotional arcs of a television series.

Click here for #5