Fully Functional.

  • @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    411 months ago

    So she’s basically the only woman in the show, and the only long term one. Despite basically everyone at the company being completely clueless about technology most of the jokes about it are played at her expense, particularly early on.

    It’s very much playing into the “haha women be shopping and clueless” stuff, which is a misogynistic framing. Especially considering the actual history of computing.

    • @Sunfoil
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      111 months ago

      It’s a show about a corporate IT department, and there are like 5 long term characters. Not unreasonable there is one woman. A lot of if not more of the jokes are with the CEO too. She gets a lot of jokes at her expense because she is a main character in a comedy show.

      It doesn’t play into that at all, she is clueless because she lied to get the job, not because she is a woman, the other 2 are just as clueless about other stuff, and her interpersonal skills and cunning is what gets them through a lot of their challenges. The whole premise of the show is they’re clueless nerds and she is clueless at her job she lied to get. They cover each other’s weaknesses.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        211 months ago

        You need to ask yourself questions like “why is that character a woman?” “how does the show treat women generally?” etc

        Like obviously they made choices, and those choices are because of and reenforcing misogynistic steriotypes.

        misogyny isn’t characters screaming about hating women, it’s portraying women as bad at tech, sex objects, making a joke entirely about beating up a woman as the end of an episode, portraying women as liars etc.

        • @Sunfoil
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          111 months ago

          Portraying misogyny doesn’t make the show misogynist. They are all bad people, that’s the underlying comedic premise of the show.