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	<title>Over Analysing It &#187; sga</title>
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		<title>Women in TV</title>
		<link>http://anovelconcept.net/blog/2009/08/19/women-in-tv/</link>
		<comments>http://anovelconcept.net/blog/2009/08/19/women-in-tv/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Aug 2009 17:11:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Nikki</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://anovelconcept.net/blog/?p=15</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Maybe it&#8217;s just the shows I watch or the books I read, but I find one strange similarity between them all&#8230; there is rarely, if ever, a woman as the ultimate lead character.  In fact, off the top of my head, I can only name Star Trek: Voyager and Sanctuary as shows I&#8217;ve watched with [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Maybe it&#8217;s just the shows I watch or the books I read, but I find one strange similarity between them all&#8230; there is rarely, if ever, a woman as the ultimate lead character.  In fact, off the top of my head, I can only name Star Trek: Voyager and Sanctuary as shows I&#8217;ve watched with a female lead.  But I&#8217;ve got a notoriously bad memory, so let&#8217;s make a list (in a rough order of air time from the 2008-2009 season).</p>
<p>Buuut I&#8217;ll put it under a cut cuz I really hate uncut long articles on blogs.</p>
<p><span id="more-15"></span></p>
<ul>
<li>House &#8211; I&#8217;m pretttty sure the perma-stubble gives away the gender of the lead character</li>
<li>Chuck &#8211; The last time I checked, Sarah wasn&#8217;t the lead character</li>
<li>Castle &#8211; Third show in a row to be named after the male lead? Niiiice Nikki, niiice.</li>
<li>The Big Bang Theory &#8211; One female character in the regular cast. &#8217;nuff said.</li>
<li>Fringe &#8211; I&#8217;m not sure on this one&#8230; Olivia is sorta the main character, but Walter steals the screen and Peter is almost as important as Olivia.  It is a bit too ensemble-y with the three leads to really count as a female lead. Getting close, though!</li>
<li>Criminal Minds &#8211; This show has not one, but two male leads</li>
<li>Bones &#8211; Brennan and Booth are equally important, as seen by the title screen with both Emily Deschanel and David Boreanaz in the most equal manner possible</li>
<li>Eleventh Hour &#8211; Canceled, yes, but Rufus Sewell (aka, the male lead) is yummy enough for me to watch the show again&#8230; and again&#8230; and again&#8230;. Oh, the science is great too.</li>
<li>Sanctuary &#8211; Amanda Tapping!</li>
<li>Eureka &#8211; Male lead. But, wut wut, the not-Tony-Stark character is on the screen?  Get that sheriff outta my line of sight!</li>
<li>Stargate SG-1 &#8211; While Sam Carter should have been the lead character after Richard Dean Anderson left the show, it was not to be.</li>
<li>Stargate Atlantis &#8211; Ultimately, John Sheppard is the lead character of this series&#8230; though Elizabeth Weir and Sam Carter lead the expedition for four seasons and (Meredith) Rodney McKay stole the show with awesomeness.</li>
<li>Star Trek: TOS, TNG, ENT &#8211; Combined cuz I&#8217;m lazy and, well, the Captain is male. &#8217;nuff said.  (DS9 is excluded simply because I haven&#8217;t had a chance to watch that series yet.)</li>
<li>Star Trek: Voyager &#8211; Honestly?  I find most of the male characters rather boring. But, yay, short redheaded female captains ftw!</li>
<li>The X-Files &#8211; C&#8217;mon, there are only two main-main characters (what? I need to separate M+S from Skinner, Reyes and Doggett somehow) and they share the lead pretty well &#8211; whilst Mulder will run off without Scully, the weird stuff tends to happen to <em>her</em>, not him.</li>
<li>Warehouse 13 &#8211; It&#8217;s in the vein of The X-Files and Bones so Myka and Pete are co-main characters, I guess</li>
<li>Defying Gravity &#8211; Ensemble cast, but the two leaders of the expedition are male</li>
</ul>
<p>So, yeah, long story short?  There generally aren&#8217;t any clearly dominant female leads in the stuff I watch.  This also applies to novels (unless they were written for women), but I&#8217;m not going to make a massive list of that because A) I&#8217;ve read <em>way</em> too many books in my life time and B) I don&#8217;t even remember all the names or the authors of most of the books I&#8217;ve read.</p>
<p>And I&#8217;m not going to bother listing comics because those are written for men and I expect the lead characters to be male and I half expect that the female characters are going to suck.  Some of them don&#8217;t, but I find that male writers tend to have women that are just&#8230; weird.  They don&#8217;t seem like they&#8217;re people, y&#8217;know?  Not that I&#8217;m dissing male writers &#8211; the opposite definitely holds true for female writers.  Seriously, read any yaoi recently?  Half of the time one or both of the characters take on a distinctly feminine feel.  And that&#8217;s even in fanfic where the character isn&#8217;t canonically girly.</p>
<p>Again, the opposite often is true for men writing femslash.</p>
<p>Naturally, I began wondering why it is this way and, wellll, beyond the &#8216;women/men can&#8217;t write men/women&#8217;, I haven&#8217;t come up with a good reason.  Of course, I&#8217;ve come up with reasons, but my idealistic self doesn&#8217;t want them to be true and my feminist self doesn&#8217;t believe that they&#8217;re <em>good</em> reasons.</p>
<p>Simply put, my other reasons all involve sexism &#8211; too many male writers/producers/executives that all believe that men could never relate to a female character.  And, thus, for whatever reason they have decided that lead characters must be male because either A) women don&#8217;t count (from a marketers standpoint, that&#8217;s technically true since, in some workplaces, women still make a lower salary than men.  Add in the fact that it still seems to be women who leave the workforce to raise children and you have a definite skew towards men making, and thus spending, more money.  Thus, you&#8217;d want men to be watching the show and commercials and, thus, buying stuff) or, B) they feel that women can relate to men (or throw in a secondary female character for women to relate to).</p>
<p>Yeah.</p>
<p>You can see why I hope that I&#8217;m not right.</p>
<p>For interests of full disclosure, I&#8217;m kind of guilty of this as well &#8211; my lead characters tend to be female and, in the story that still only has a WIP name (currently Forced Fate), my two main characters are both female and, of my three secondary characters, two are male.  Not a very gender balanced cast, but I&#8217;d rather have the cast skewed in one direction over it being dead even because casts with exactly as many women as there are men often seem a little bit contrived.  It can be done, but I don&#8217;t think I could pull it off.</p>
<p>Besides, I don&#8217;t think about that sort of thing while writing &#8211; I just come up with characters and put them together.  If they happen to be male, fine by me.  It really does not make a difference to me.</p>
<p>And, perhaps, that&#8217;s just how tv is written as well.</p>
<p>But I doubt it.</p>
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