Oh, the internet...
What we have is a moderately famous actress writing a blog on conservative Jewish parenting website in which she says that she happened to watch a DVD of Frozen and she and her boys happened not to like it. MSN then spins this into clickbait as a 'rant', that she is 'stepping up her campaign against Hollywood sexism' and now 'has set her sights' on Frozen. The Escapist, where we all apparently hate the Big Bang Theory (actually I quite like it), then finds a way to link it with GamerGate.
If you read her actual article she doesn't use the word 'sexism' at all. She wonders whether "Finding a man" is the appropriate basis for a movie aimed at young girls (i.e. 5-16 year olds) and especially since the sisters in the movie are already quite young (Elsa is 18?) and maybe have better things to be doing than finding a life partner. The trope is subverted because the prince is the 'wrong' man, but it is implied that the main character has found the 'right' man at the end. Maybe she has a point with this as nearly all boy-focused cartoons (for example most of the Pixar movies) don't have "Finding a girl" as the driving force behind their plots (Wall-E being a possible exception). I don't think she's right, in the sense that I think girls tend to like romance stories more than young boys do and don't think this is entirely a result of social conditioning, but I don't think its a terrible position to take for a conservative parenting website. Her man-bashing point is a little more bizarre, and I don't really know what to say about it.
(Incidently I learned today that Bailik has a PhD in Neuroscience and has written books on parenting, though whether they are any good or not remains a matter of argument.)
At the end of the day, its a manufactured conspiracy. Somebody didn't like a movie that other people liked. That someone is in a TV show you might have seen. Its hardly a rant, in fact she says she's taking it too seriously.
What we have is a moderately famous actress writing a blog on conservative Jewish parenting website in which she says that she happened to watch a DVD of Frozen and she and her boys happened not to like it. MSN then spins this into clickbait as a 'rant', that she is 'stepping up her campaign against Hollywood sexism' and now 'has set her sights' on Frozen. The Escapist, where we all apparently hate the Big Bang Theory (actually I quite like it), then finds a way to link it with GamerGate.
If you read her actual article she doesn't use the word 'sexism' at all. She wonders whether "Finding a man" is the appropriate basis for a movie aimed at young girls (i.e. 5-16 year olds) and especially since the sisters in the movie are already quite young (Elsa is 18?) and maybe have better things to be doing than finding a life partner. The trope is subverted because the prince is the 'wrong' man, but it is implied that the main character has found the 'right' man at the end. Maybe she has a point with this as nearly all boy-focused cartoons (for example most of the Pixar movies) don't have "Finding a girl" as the driving force behind their plots (Wall-E being a possible exception). I don't think she's right, in the sense that I think girls tend to like romance stories more than young boys do and don't think this is entirely a result of social conditioning, but I don't think its a terrible position to take for a conservative parenting website. Her man-bashing point is a little more bizarre, and I don't really know what to say about it.
(Incidently I learned today that Bailik has a PhD in Neuroscience and has written books on parenting, though whether they are any good or not remains a matter of argument.)
At the end of the day, its a manufactured conspiracy. Somebody didn't like a movie that other people liked. That someone is in a TV show you might have seen. Its hardly a rant, in fact she says she's taking it too seriously.