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Bring on the female superheroes!

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    I spend most of my time
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    thinking about little girls,
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    which is kind of a weird thing
    for a grown man in our society to say.
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    But I do. I spend most of my time
    thinking about little girls,
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    and I think it's primarily
    because I have one.
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    This one's mine, and I think
    you would really like her.
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    She is smart and funny
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    and kind to people and a good friend.
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    But when I talk about my daughter,
    the word I find myself saying most
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    is "athlete."
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    My kid's athletic.
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    She is strong and fast
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    and has great balance
    and good body control.
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    She is a three-time,
    back-to-back-to-back state champion
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    in Shaolin Kempo.
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    At nine years old, she is already
    halfway to a black belt.
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    My daughter is athletic.
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    Now, when a man who is six feet two
    and 265 pounds stands in front of you
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    and says his daughter is athletic,
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    you might think
    that's a reflection of him.
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    It is not.
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    (Laughter)
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    My wife in high school
    was a two-time all-state soccer player
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    and a two-time all-state
    volleyball player,
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    and I played "Dungeons and Dragons."
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    And that is why,
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    although my daughter is an athlete,
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    she's also a huge nerd, which I love.
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    She walks around our house
    in a cloak of flames
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    that she made herself.
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    She sits on the Iron Throne --
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    (Laughter)
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    even though she has never
    seen "Game of Thrones,"
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    primarily because we are not
    the worst parents who ever lived.
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    But she knows there's someone
    called the Mother of Dragons,
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    and she calls herself that
    and she loves it.
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    She's a huge comic book fan.
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    Right now, her favorite
    character is Groot.
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    She loves Groot.
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    She adores The Incredible Hulk.
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    But my daughter really at heart,
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    her thing is Star Wars.
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    My kid is a Jedi.
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    Although some days she's also a Sith,
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    which is a choice that I can respect.
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    (Laughter)
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    But here's the question
    that I have to ask.
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    Why is it that when
    my daughter dresses up,
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    whether it's Groot or The Incredible Hulk,
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    whether it's Obi-Wan Kenobi or Darth Maul,
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    why is every character
    she dresses up as a boy?
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    And where are all the female superheroes?
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    And that is not actually the question,
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    because there's plenty
    of female superheroes.
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    My question really is,
    where is all the female superhero stuff?
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    Where are the costumes?
    Where are the toys?
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    Because every day when my daughter
    plays when she dresses up,
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    she's learning stuff
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    through a process that,
    in my own line of work,
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    as a professor of media studies,
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    we refer to as public pedagogy.
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    That is, it is how societies
    are taught ideologies.
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    It's how you learned what it meant
    to be a man or a woman,
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    what it meant to behave
    yourself in public,
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    what it meant to be a patriot
    and have good manners.
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    It's all the constituent social relations
    that make us up as a people.
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    It's, in short, how we learn
    what we know about other people
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    and about the world.
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    But we live in a 100-percent
    media-saturated society.
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    What that means is that every single
    aspect of your human existence
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    outside of your basic bodily functions
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    is in some way touched by media.
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    From the car that you drive
    to the food that you eat
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    to the clothes that you wear
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    to the way you construct
    your relationships
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    to the very language
    you use to formulate thought --
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    all of that is in some way mediated.
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    So the answer in our society
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    to how do we learn what we know
    about other people and about the world
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    is largely through media.
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    Well, there's a wrinkle in that,
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    in that our society,
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    media don't simply exist as information
    distribution technologies and devices.
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    They also exist as corporate entities.
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    And when the distribution of information
    is tied to financial gain,
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    there's a problem.
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    How big of a problem?
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    Well think about this:
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    in 1983, 90 percent of American media
    were owned by 50 companies.
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    In any market, 50 companies
    doing something is a lot of companies.
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    It's a lot of different worldviews.
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    In 2015, that number has shrunk to six,
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    six companies.
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    They are NBCUniversal Comcast,
    AOL Time Warner,
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    the Walt Disney Company, News Corp,
    Viacom and the CBS Corporation.
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    These six companies produce
    nine out of every 10 movies you watch,
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    nine out of every 10 television shows,
    nine out of every 10 songs,
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    nine out of every 10 books.
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    So my question to you is,
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    if six companies control
    90 percent of American media,
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    how much influence do you think they have
    over what you're allowed to see every day?
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    Because in media studies,
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    we spend a lot of time saying
    that media can't tell us what to think,
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    and they can't; they're terrible at that.
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    But that's not their job.
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    Media don't tell us what to think.
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    Media tell us what to think about.
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    They control the conversation,
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    and in controlling the conversation,
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    they don't have to get you
    to think what they want you to think.
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    They'll just get you thinking about
    the things they want you to think about,
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    and more importantly, not thinking about
    the things they don't you to think about.
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    They control the conversation.
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    How does this work in practice?
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    Let's just take one of those companies.
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    We'll do an easy one.
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    Let's talk about the Walt Disney
    Company for a second.
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    The reason why I always pick
    the Walt Disney Company is this.
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    Is there a single person in this room
    who has never seen a Disney movie?
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    Look around. Exactly.
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    I picked Disney because they have
    what we call 100 percent penetration
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    in our society.
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    Every single person
    has been exposed to Disney,
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    so it's an easy one for me to use.
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    Since 1937, Disney has made most
    of its money selling princesses to girls.
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    It's made a huge chunk of its money.
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    Unless, of course, the princess
    your daughter is interested in,
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    as my daughter is, is this one.
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    See, in 2012,
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    Disney purchased LucasFilm
    for the sum of four billion dollars,
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    and immediately they flooded
    the Disney stores with Han Solo
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    and Obi-Wan Kenobi, with Darth Vader
    and Luke Skywalker and Yoda
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    and not Princess Leia.
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    Why? Because this princess
    messes up the public pedagogy
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    for these princesses.
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    So Disney did not put Princess Leia
    merchandise in the store,
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    and when people went to Disney and said,
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    "Hey, where's all
    the Princess Leia stuff?"
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    Disney said, "We have no intention
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    of putting Princess Leia
    merchandise in the store."
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    And fans were angry
    and they took to Twitter
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    with the hashtag #WeWantLeia.
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    And Disney said,
    "Wait, that's not what we meant.
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    What we meant was,
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    we don't have any Princess Leia
    merchandise yet, but we will."
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    And that was in 2012, and it is 2015,
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    and if you go to the Disney Store,
    as I recently have,
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    and look for Princess Leia merchandise,
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    do you know how many Princess Leia
    items there are in the Disney Store?
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    Zero, because Disney has no intention
    of putting Princess Leia in the store.
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    And we shouldn't be surprised
    because we found out that was their policy
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    when they bought Marvel in 2009
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    for the sum of 4.5 billion dollars.
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    Because when you make a lot of money
    selling princesses to girls,
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    you also kind of want
    to make money from boys.
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    And so what better to sell boys
    than superheroes?
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    So now Disney had access
    to Captain America and to Thor,
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    The Incredible Hulk,
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    and they had access even
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    to a group of superheroes
    no one had ever even heard of.
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    That's how good Marvel was
    at selling superheroes.
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    Last year, they released a film
    called "Guardians of the Galaxy."
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    It's a film that absolutely
    should not work.
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    Nobody knew who they were
    except for comic book nerds like me.
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    One of the characters is a talking tree.
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    One of the characters
    is an anthropomorphic raccoon.
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    It should not work.
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    And they made a killing
    off of "Guardians of the Galaxy."
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    This character here in the middle,
    her name is Gamora.
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    She's played by Zoe Saldana,
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    and she is strong and smart and fast
    and fights like a ninja,
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    and she is played
    by a beautiful black woman,
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    and my daughter fell in love with her.
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    So like any good nerd dad,
    I went to buy my daughter Gamora stuff,
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    and when I got to the store,
    I learned a very interesting thing.
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    If I wanted to buy her a Gamora backpack,
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    well, Gamora's not on it.
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    They probably should have marketed this
    as "some" of the Guardians of the Galaxy.
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    (Laughter)
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    And if I wanted to buy her a lunchbox,
    she wasn't on it,
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    and if I wanted to buy her a t-shirt,
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    she wasn't on it.
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    And as a matter of fact,
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    if I went to the store, as I did,
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    and looked at the display,
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    you would find a small picture
    of Gamora right here,
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    but if you look at any
    of the actual merchandise on that shelf,
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    Gamora is not on any of it.
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    Now, I could have taken to Twitter
    with the hashtag #WheresGamora,
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    like millions of fans did
    across the world,
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    but the truth was
    I wasn't even really that surprised,
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    because I was there
    when Disney had released "The Avengers."
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    And just this year, we got
    a new Avengers movie, the "Age of Ultron,"
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    and we were very excited,
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    because there was not one
    but two female superheroes,
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    Scarlet Witch and Black Widow.
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    And we were very excited.
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    But here's the real thing about this.
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    Even though Scarlett Johansson,
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    who is one of the most popular
    actresses in America, plays Black Widow,
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    and Black Widow is the star
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    of not one, not two,
    but five different Marvel movies,
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    there is not a single piece
    of Black Widow merchandise available.
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    Not one.
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    And if you go to the Disney store
    and look for a Black Widow costume,
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    what you will find, is you will find
    Captain America and The Incredible Hulk.
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    You will find Iron Man and Thor.
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    You will even find War Machine,
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    who isn't even really
    in the movie that long.
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    Who you will not find is Black Widow.
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    And I could have gone to Twitter
    with the hashtag, as many people did,
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    # WheresNatasha.
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    But I'm tired of doing that.
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    I'm tired of having to do that.
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    All over the country right now,
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    there are kids playing
    with the Cycle Blast Quinjet play set,
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    where Captain America
    rides a motorcycle out of a moving jet
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    and it's really awesome.
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    You know how awesome it is?
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    So awesome that when
    it happened in the movie,
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    it was Black Widow that did it.
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    Not only has she been erased,
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    but she has been replaced
    with a male figure.
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    And so what is this teaching us?
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    I mean, over the next five years,
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    Disney and Warner Bros.
    and a bunch of movie studios
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    are going to release
    over 30 feature-length films
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    with comic book characters,
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    and of those 30 feature-length films,
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    exactly two of them
    will have female solo leads.
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    Two.
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    Now, there will be females
    in the rest of these movies,
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    but they will be sidekicks,
    they will be love interests,
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    they will be members of teams.
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    They will not be the main character.
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    And if what we learn, what we know
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    about other people and about the world
    we learn through media,
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    then these companies are teaching
    my daughter that even if she is strong
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    and smart and fast
    and fights like a ninja,
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    all four of which are true of her,
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    it doesn't matter.
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    She will either be ignored like Gamora
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    or erased and replaced with a boy
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    like Black Widow.
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    And it's not fair.
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    It's not fair to her and it's not fair
    to your sons and daughters either.
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    But here's the thing:
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    I'm raising a little girl,
    and she has a little tomboy in her,
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    which by the way is
    a terrible thing to call a girl.
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    What that basically is saying is,
    those traits that define you,
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    they're not really yours,
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    they're just on loan to you
    for a little while from boys.
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    But do you know how much grief
    she's going to take in her life
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    for having a little tomboy in her?
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    Zero. None.
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    People will think it's cute.
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    They'll call her feisty,
    because in our society,
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    adding so-called male traits to girls
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    is seen as an upgrade, seen as a bonus.
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    I'm not raising a little boy, like Mike.
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    Mike is a little boy in Florida.
    He's 11 years old,
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    and the thing that he loves
    most in the world
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    is a show called "My Little Pony:
    Friendship is Magic,"
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    like millions of other children
    across America.
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    Now, the show is marketed to girls
    ages five to nine,
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    but there are millions of boys
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    and grown men
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    who enjoy "My Little Pony:
    Friendship is Magic."
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    They have a club.
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    They call themselves Bronies,
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    pony bros, guys who like ponies.
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    I happen to be one of them.
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    And what are Mike and myself
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    and millions of other boys and men
    learning in this feminine,
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    sissified world of "My Little Pony?"
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    Well, they're learning to study hard
    and to work hard and to party hard
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    and to look good and to feel good
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    and to do good,
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    and heaven preserve us from teaching
    these wussified concepts to boys.
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    So the other kids in his neighborhood
    pick on Mike and they beat him up
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    and they make fun of him,
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    and at 11 years old, Mike goes home,
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    finds a belt, wraps it around his neck,
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    and hangs himself
    from the top bunk of his bed.
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    Because we have developed a society
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    in which you would rather be dead as a boy
    than thought of as liking stuff for girls.
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    And that is not Mike's fault.
    That is our fault.
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    We have failed him.
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    We have failed our children.
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    And we have to do better for them.
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    We have to stop making it
    so that the only female superheroes
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    appear on shirts that are pink
    and cut for girls.
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    We have to stop.
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    And when I was putting this together,
    people said to me,
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    "Well, that's never going to happen."
    And I said, "Oh really?"
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    Because just this year, Target announced
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    that they were going to stop
    gendering their toy aisles.
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    They were going to mix it up.
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    Now, before we break our shoulders
    patting Target on the back,
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    just this week they released a shirt
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    in which one of the most
    iconic scenes in "Star Wars: A New Hope"
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    where Princess Leia stands up
    to the Dark Lord of the Sith,
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    was released on a t-shirt
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    in which she's mysteriously
    replaced by Luke.
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    So let's don't pat ourselves
    on the back too much.
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    Just this week also,
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    Disney announced it was no longer
    going to gender its Halloween costumes,
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    which I say, "Thank you, Disney,
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    except the only costumes you make
    are of male superheroes,
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    so does it matter
    who you have wearing them?"
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    Just this week, Mattel, who makes Barbie,
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    announced they're going to release
    a line of DC superhero girls.
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    And the funny thing is,
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    they met with girls
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    and asked them what they
    wanted to see in dolls,
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    and you can see, they have calves
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    and elbows that bend
    so they can do superhero stuff.
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    And please buy them.
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    And don't just buy them
    for your daughters,
  • 14:33 - 14:35
    buy them for your sons.
  • 14:35 - 14:40
    Because it's important that boys
    play with and as female superheroes
  • 14:40 - 14:44
    just as my daughter plays
    with and as male superheroes.
  • 14:44 - 14:46
    As a matter of fact, what I would love
  • 14:46 - 14:48
    is a world in which every person
    who goes to the store
  • 14:48 - 14:51
    goes with a little flowchart in their head
  • 14:51 - 14:54
    of whether or not they should buy
    this toy for a boy or a girl,
  • 14:54 - 14:58
    and it's a real simple flowchart
    because it only has one question on it.
  • 14:58 - 15:01
    It says, "Is this toy
    operated with you genitals?"
  • 15:01 - 15:03
    (Laughter)
  • 15:03 - 15:05
    If the answer is yes,
  • 15:06 - 15:08
    then that is not a toy for children.
  • 15:08 - 15:09
    (Laughter)
  • 15:11 - 15:14
    And if the answer is no,
  • 15:14 - 15:16
    then it's for boys and girls.
  • 15:16 - 15:18
    It's really simple.
  • 15:18 - 15:22
    Because today is about the future
    of the future, and in my future,
  • 15:22 - 15:25
    boys and girls are equally respected,
  • 15:25 - 15:30
    equally valued, and most importantly,
    equally represented.
  • 15:31 - 15:32
    Thank you.
  • 15:32 - 15:35
    (Applause)
Title:
Bring on the female superheroes!
Speaker:
Christopher Bell
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:48

English subtitles

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