ILX, coach me up: the "White Straight Guy Who Sucks" Narrative and corresponding lack of "... Who Sucks" in anything other than indie snooze

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i will start a thread bc i am responsible for the thread derail. sorry, everyone!

horseshoe, Wednesday, 13 July 2016 15:30 (seven years ago) link

hey here's a good thread connection:

•ILX, coach me up: the "White Straight Guy Who Sucks" Narrative and corresponding lack of "... Who Sucks" in anything other than indie snooze [Started by El Tomboto in July 2016, last updated 1 minute ago by horseshoe on I Love Everything] 142 new answers
•Kristen Wiig, Leslie Jones, Kate McKinnon, Melissa McCarthy = new Ghostbusters [Started by Ned Raggett in January 2015, last updated 2 minutes ago by j.o. seasoning (how's life) on I Love Everything] 149 new answers

socka flocka-jones (man alive), Wednesday, 13 July 2016 15:32 (seven years ago) link

Well if nothing else this thread has given me a lot to chew on in terms of how I unconsciously expect my protagonists to behave and yeah, what they look like.

For one thing I'm now pretty sure I have a soft bigotry of low expectations thing with female characters vis-a-vis resourcefulness (and perhaps women IRL, ugh, OK better to be self-aware). ME Winstead assembling a makeshift hazmat suit MacGyver-style in 10 Cloverfield Lane, and later a molotov cocktail = wow she's a badass, therefore not an example of this trope, but on further examination, isn't that the trope?!? My brain

For another (to ME - this is my attempted exploration of my own bias and not a projection of how things are inside any other head(s)) anywhere outside of fantasy settings (Star Wars counts btw) non-StrWhiDude protagonists are pretty much always going to up against an additional level of adversity above and beyond what a StrWhiDude would be dealing with, so just by virtue of *being* the protagonist in a world where StrWhiDudes are "the norm" they can't really be schmuckatellis in the same way that a hapless StrWhiDude is. I feel like I could really use a whiteboard here to help me nail it down a little more precisely. Put another way - a hapless female or minority hero in a "real world" setting is automatically not sucking as much as a hapless StrWhiDude hero, because in order for the latter to be hapless and sucking in the first place, they have to be sucking pretty hard given that they live in the "real world" where they have maximum default privilege etc.

El Tomboto, Wednesday, 13 July 2016 15:44 (seven years ago) link

Finn in Ep 8 is quickly becoming illustrative of how a black character can totally fit this poorly-defined trope I've made up, and I think the fact that he is from far-away long-ago galaxy is the reason why I don't saddle him with my "oh he's also up against racial prejudice therefore doesn't actually suck" bullshit

Most of the hobbits, though, still pretty much guys who suck

El Tomboto, Wednesday, 13 July 2016 15:47 (seven years ago) link

Sam is/was a badass though

http://porno (DJP), Wednesday, 13 July 2016 15:52 (seven years ago) link

He took down that spider thing HARDCORE.

a 47-year-old chainsaw artist from South Carolina (Phil D.), Wednesday, 13 July 2016 15:56 (seven years ago) link

non-StrWhiDude protagonists are pretty much always going to up against an additional level of adversity above and beyond what a StrWhiDude would be dealing with, so just by virtue of *being* the protagonist in a world where StrWhiDudes are "the norm" they can't really be schmuckatellis in the same way that a hapless StrWhiDude is.

― El Tomboto, Wednesday, July 13, 2016 8:44 AM (3 minutes ago)

Was thinking about this yesterday, in light of Abbott's megaton tbomb, "if [the accidental hero archetype] only exists w/cis white het men that is probably because they are the only people privilieged enough for that dumbshit magic to happen to."

The "everyman falls into greatness" trope doesn't just reflect str8 white male privilege. It's its mythic foundation, the way the dominant culture tells the story of such privilege to itself. You will get the job just because, as legends have foretold, and once there you will be promoted. It may seem to you that you're aren't really doing all that much, but sometimes just being there and being *you* is enough.

oculus lump (contenderizer), Wednesday, 13 July 2016 16:05 (seven years ago) link

Sam explained potatoes to Gollum, he is a paragon of patience

the lava-staring club (Abbott), Wednesday, 13 July 2016 16:09 (seven years ago) link

Smeagol was definitely a dude who sucked

El Tomboto, Wednesday, 13 July 2016 16:22 (seven years ago) link

The Lego Movie goes to town on this :)

Andrew Farrell, Wednesday, 13 July 2016 16:26 (seven years ago) link

It would be cool if one day society gets to the point where a remake of Edge of Tomorrow ("Live Die Repeat") could swap or otherwise alter the gender / color / orientation of the lead characters and be not seen as being all about the diminishment of the type of person in the Tom Cruise role. That's part of what I'm doing a terrible job circumscribing here.

El Tomboto, Wednesday, 13 July 2016 16:31 (seven years ago) link

What constitutes suckiness isn't clear cut. There are drab failures and glamorous failures, ground-down failures and resilient failures.

Half-baked profundities. Self-referential smirkiness (Bob Six), Wednesday, 13 July 2016 16:39 (seven years ago) link

this is not exactly the same thing, but I realized a couple of years ago that the movie Adventures in Babysitting is a huge apologia for Reaganite politics. There are a bunch of different ways this manifests itself (including "scary" black people on the El and the fact that Elizabeth Shue=good guy because she's a virgin), but the scene that most fully drives it home is when the Elizabeth Shue character is on the phone with her friend, whose rescue is the whole impetus of the film. The friend is at a bus station which is portrayed as the deepest level of hell. The friend has commandeered a phone booth which is usually occupied by a homeless man. While friend is on the phone with ES, homeless man returns and knocks on the door of the phone booth, imploring, "that's my home!" ES's friend, with whom we're meant to sympathize, kicks the homeless man's personal effects out of the booth (I remember slippers) and shouts, "you just moved!" I used to love this movie, but it is some chilling shit to rewatch.

― horsehoe (horseshoe), Sunday, February 12, 2006 4:42 AM (10 years ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

love this post. this movie is so fucked up! the blues club too...what was going to happen if they didn't sing the blues? was albert collins going to murder them?? did the villains have to sing the blues??? how much time was left for albert collins to perform if everyone in the venue had to sing at least once????

all the penelope ann miller bus station stuff was rough. in retrospect the best characters were the tow truck driver and the kid sister, probably. but i still like the movie as a sort of perfect melding of ferris bueller and judgement night.

nomar, Wednesday, 13 July 2016 17:56 (seven years ago) link

and oh man they left that dude on the facade of the crain communications building at the end of the movie. he was still there after the credits!

nomar, Wednesday, 13 July 2016 17:58 (seven years ago) link

The kid sister with the Thor helmet is a horror – my idea of hell is that girl as Satan.

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 13 July 2016 18:03 (seven years ago) link

i remember liking her character for whatever reason but i also haven't seen the movie since the '90s

nomar, Wednesday, 13 July 2016 18:05 (seven years ago) link

never forget

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g9GBuciv20A

Number None, Wednesday, 13 July 2016 21:27 (seven years ago) link


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