Ok. Not so sure this subject is as exciting to others as it is to me at midnight, so bear with me here. I may even hate myself in the morning for posting what I realize later is drivel - who knows? Isnt life hard? So. I'm randomly replying to a thread about martial arts when I post this:
And. It got me thinking. Female boxing. Why? Seriously. Why? Hilary Swank's character got her brains beat out. And in some way, it was glorified. And in some way, that bothers me. Why? Because I'm confused about the idea of a person wanting to have their face beat in, male or female. I know guys who box in amatuer fights, and I dont understand the appeal. I understand money, and I understand a man being willing to get his face beat in for money, but I dont understand a girl who is willing to get her face beat in for money, nor the appeal of watching it happen.
Boxing makes me uncomfortable. Female boxing downright disturbs me.
And to wrap this up (since I'm rambling), the other thing I saw recently that unsettled me was a nationally televised story on a 6 foot 12 year old girl who plays basketball for her school.
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=4923635
Evidently, due to her size, she far outstripped the girls team - they placed her on the boys team in an attempt to give her some competition (and, no doubt, to give the girl's league a break). Well, this girl is dominating the 12 year old boys teams, such that the parents of the schools complained, and had the girl removed from the male team and placed back on the girls team.
Wanna know the technicality? Because she is a girl, and the rules state that the team cannot be Co-Ed.
If you think that is what I find upsetting, you'd be wrong. Maybe I'm slightly sexist, but that bothers me none at all. If I had a 12 year old boy that was being dominated in sports by a 6 foot girl his age, I'd complain to, and have her promptly removed back to the girls team, if only to preserve his (pre)pubescent psyche from the demoralization.
Here's the thing, though. The media caught this one, and instead of being handled by the parents and the school, it became a nationally televised event, complete with them taking the 12 year old on national tv and making a huge deal about the fact that she happened to say she wanted to play for the NBA as opposed to the WNBA. Me? I think the poor little thing was shell-shocked from all the attention, a little shy, and who wouldnt say "NBA?" But the interviewer latched on to that like a leech, and made a huge deal about how she may be the first woman to break the gender barrier of the sport, yadda, yadda.
I was taken aback. I really was. I was taken aback at this shameless and public exploitation of a 12 year old. Give me a break - am I to really believe that a 12 year old is concerned with breaking adult gender barriers? Please. You could earn a college degree in the time it will take her to earn a driver's license! That child is an open book, and already her parents and the media are writing gender resentment on her pages.
And here's the thing. There really ARE gender barriers, and there really are areas of concern - but in this case, I would say they are making a mountain out of a molehill: the girl is 6 feet tall - what she needs is NOT to play with 4 feet tall boys - what she needs is to play with high school or college age students who are her size. A few facials by those girls will bring her down a few pegs, give her (and her parents) a dose of realism and perspective, and keep everyone happy. Because lets face it - for now, she's a novelty, but unless she puts on another 2 feet, she will only take her place beside giants....in the WNBA.
[/rant]
My rants aside
- any thoughts on the subject?
Hilary Swank
She gets honorable mention because she did the girl Karate Kid, and got her brains beat out so bravely in Million Dollar Baby.
She gets honorable mention because she did the girl Karate Kid, and got her brains beat out so bravely in Million Dollar Baby.
Boxing makes me uncomfortable. Female boxing downright disturbs me.

And to wrap this up (since I'm rambling), the other thing I saw recently that unsettled me was a nationally televised story on a 6 foot 12 year old girl who plays basketball for her school.
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=4923635
Evidently, due to her size, she far outstripped the girls team - they placed her on the boys team in an attempt to give her some competition (and, no doubt, to give the girl's league a break). Well, this girl is dominating the 12 year old boys teams, such that the parents of the schools complained, and had the girl removed from the male team and placed back on the girls team.
Wanna know the technicality? Because she is a girl, and the rules state that the team cannot be Co-Ed.
If you think that is what I find upsetting, you'd be wrong. Maybe I'm slightly sexist, but that bothers me none at all. If I had a 12 year old boy that was being dominated in sports by a 6 foot girl his age, I'd complain to, and have her promptly removed back to the girls team, if only to preserve his (pre)pubescent psyche from the demoralization.
Here's the thing, though. The media caught this one, and instead of being handled by the parents and the school, it became a nationally televised event, complete with them taking the 12 year old on national tv and making a huge deal about the fact that she happened to say she wanted to play for the NBA as opposed to the WNBA. Me? I think the poor little thing was shell-shocked from all the attention, a little shy, and who wouldnt say "NBA?" But the interviewer latched on to that like a leech, and made a huge deal about how she may be the first woman to break the gender barrier of the sport, yadda, yadda.
I was taken aback. I really was. I was taken aback at this shameless and public exploitation of a 12 year old. Give me a break - am I to really believe that a 12 year old is concerned with breaking adult gender barriers? Please. You could earn a college degree in the time it will take her to earn a driver's license! That child is an open book, and already her parents and the media are writing gender resentment on her pages.
And here's the thing. There really ARE gender barriers, and there really are areas of concern - but in this case, I would say they are making a mountain out of a molehill: the girl is 6 feet tall - what she needs is NOT to play with 4 feet tall boys - what she needs is to play with high school or college age students who are her size. A few facials by those girls will bring her down a few pegs, give her (and her parents) a dose of realism and perspective, and keep everyone happy. Because lets face it - for now, she's a novelty, but unless she puts on another 2 feet, she will only take her place beside giants....in the WNBA.
[/rant]
My rants aside

__________________
something witty goes here......
something witty goes here......
Last edited by mack; 06-02-08 at 03:08 AM.