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It’s often said that cinema,
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by it's very nature, is voyeuristic,
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because film offers the audience a window
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into the hidden lives of others.
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Watching people’s stories on the big
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and small screen can indeed be
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fascinating and exhilarating.
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But the act of looking can also feel
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uncomfortable, invasive, even violating.
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Underpinning these uncomfortable moments
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we can find some alarming messages
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about the role of consent.
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To explain, let’s start here
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in the normal bedroom of a normal boy
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doing normal boy stuff.
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Normal stuff
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like spying on the girl next door.
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Popular culture is filled with scenes like this one
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Scenes in which one character, usually a man
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spies on another character, usually a woman
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without that person’s knowledge or consent
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To be clear, we're talking about secret
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surveillance of a person
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while they're alone
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in various states of undress
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or engaged in sexual activity.
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This is invasive looking
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that violates a person's
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reasonable expectation of privacy.
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In a staggering number of movies
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and tv shows, this type of spying
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isn't done by the villain.
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It is instead perpetrated
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by "nice guy" characters.
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"Slow down, baby"
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These are straight men, who are otherwise
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presented as decent.
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Or, at the very least,
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mostly harmless.
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"Hey! Hey!"
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This media patern is so prevasive,
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I thought it needed a name.
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"He's a peeping Tom!"
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So I call it "The harmless peeping Tom".
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"You know, it occurs to me,
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that you can see right into Donna's house
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from my driveway."
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"You don't say"
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(off-screen laughter)
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All of the boys on "That 70s Show"
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for instance, casually participate
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in spying behavior.
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"No, Anette! Not the robe!"
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(off-screen laughter)