Thank you for making this this thread. 
I am a woman and, for the most part, I. Cannot. Stand. Feminism.
Don't get me wrong, I love being a girl. I absolutely love it. I love being feminine, I love nail polish, dresses, summer days, baking, ballet, all that bullshit. Should I feel bad about liking girly sorts of things? Hell no. Likewise, guys should absolutely NEVER be made to feel guilty about being guys. So often do I find in feminism that men are ostracized for simply having a penis and women, like me, who indulge in girly fancies rather than (ironically) masculine pow-wows are shunned. What the fuck.
It's about respect and equality - you know, having human decency. That article, which should have been about this, was anything but. Shame on the author.
The reason why I didn't like River wasn't because she was an example of chauvinistic writing in Hollywood. I hated her because she was a straight up Mary Sue. As much as I like Joss Whedon, he is a bit notorious for having all-powerful female characters in his works. I can't relate to someone who can kill everything without breaking a sweat. I can't relate to someone who whines all the time and gets loving attention for it, either. She had her moments, but most of the time I just wanted to smack her.
But then you have an incredible female character like Zoe on the show. I absolutely loved her! She was strong, but wasn't a ***** or otherwise a problem to the crew. She was smart, but not infallible. She was resilient, but she wasn't all-powerful. She was a normal human being. That's everything.
Maybe the problem is that many writers go into stories thinking... Okay. I need to have a female character here. How can I make her awesome? No. That's how you write a two-dimensional comic book superhero, not a real person you can empathize with.
The way you write a likable character is to start at their source. What was their childhood like? How did that effect their personality growing up? What are their flaws because of this? Conversely, how did it make them strong? What do they fear? You don't even have to mention their background in the story, but as a writer considering these things is vital to making a character feel real.
So, in summary, I feel that the person who wrote that article needs to get a goddamned grip, I LOVE Firefly (Oh, Nathan Fillion... swoon) but it had its issues, and write a female character like you would any other well-rounded character. The end.
Edit- And what's all this hogwash about "wo-man"? This is the most ridiculously thing I've ever heard. -_-
I am a woman and, for the most part, I. Cannot. Stand. Feminism.
Don't get me wrong, I love being a girl. I absolutely love it. I love being feminine, I love nail polish, dresses, summer days, baking, ballet, all that bullshit. Should I feel bad about liking girly sorts of things? Hell no. Likewise, guys should absolutely NEVER be made to feel guilty about being guys. So often do I find in feminism that men are ostracized for simply having a penis and women, like me, who indulge in girly fancies rather than (ironically) masculine pow-wows are shunned. What the fuck.
It's about respect and equality - you know, having human decency. That article, which should have been about this, was anything but. Shame on the author.
The reason why I didn't like River wasn't because she was an example of chauvinistic writing in Hollywood. I hated her because she was a straight up Mary Sue. As much as I like Joss Whedon, he is a bit notorious for having all-powerful female characters in his works. I can't relate to someone who can kill everything without breaking a sweat. I can't relate to someone who whines all the time and gets loving attention for it, either. She had her moments, but most of the time I just wanted to smack her.
But then you have an incredible female character like Zoe on the show. I absolutely loved her! She was strong, but wasn't a ***** or otherwise a problem to the crew. She was smart, but not infallible. She was resilient, but she wasn't all-powerful. She was a normal human being. That's everything.
Maybe the problem is that many writers go into stories thinking... Okay. I need to have a female character here. How can I make her awesome? No. That's how you write a two-dimensional comic book superhero, not a real person you can empathize with.
The way you write a likable character is to start at their source. What was their childhood like? How did that effect their personality growing up? What are their flaws because of this? Conversely, how did it make them strong? What do they fear? You don't even have to mention their background in the story, but as a writer considering these things is vital to making a character feel real.
So, in summary, I feel that the person who wrote that article needs to get a goddamned grip, I LOVE Firefly (Oh, Nathan Fillion... swoon) but it had its issues, and write a female character like you would any other well-rounded character. The end.
Edit- And what's all this hogwash about "wo-man"? This is the most ridiculously thing I've ever heard. -_-