Sexual harassment at Comic-Con in the spotlight

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
a36320fbe216d21c5a0f6a706700165f.jpg


SAN DIEGO (AP) — Amid the costumes and fantasy of this weekend's Comic-Con convention, a group of young women drew widespread attention to a very real issue — allegations of sexual harassment at the annual comic book convention.

Geeks for CONsent, founded by three women from Philadelphia, gathered nearly 2,600 signatures on an online petition supporting a formal anti-harassment policy at Comic-Con.

Conventioneers told Geeks for CONsent they'd been groped, followed and unwillingly photographed during the four-day festival.

Meanwhile, what Geeks for CONsent and others regarded as blatant objectification continued at this year's convention. Scantily clad women were still used as decoration for some presentations, and costumed women were described as "vaguely slutty" by panel moderator Craig Ferguson. When Dwayne Johnson made a surprise appearance to promote "Hercules," 10 women in belly-baring outfits stood silently in front of the stage for no apparent reason.

Groping, cat-calling and other forms of sexual harassment are a larger social issue, not just a Comic-Con problem. And many comics and movies still portray women as damsels in distress. But Geeks for CONsent says things are amplified at the pop-culture convention where fantasy and character costumes play such a large role.

"It's a separate, more specific issue within the convention space," said Rochelle Keyhan, 29, director of Geeks for CONsent. "It's very much connected (to the larger problem) and it's the same phenomena, but manifesting a little more sexually vulgar in the comic space."

"Comic-Con has an explicit Code of Conduct that addresses harassing and offensive behavior," said Comic-Con International in a statement on Sunday to The Associated Press. "This Code of Conduct is made available online as well as on page two of the Events Guide that is given to each attendee."

Earlier, Comic-Con spokesman David Glanzer told the Los Angeles Times that "anyone being made to feel uncomfortable at our show is obviously a concern for us." He said additional security was in place this year, including an increased presence by San Diego Police.

Keyhan's focus on Comic-Con began with a movement launched in her hometown called HollabackPhilly, to help end public harassment against women and members of the LGBT community. She and her colleagues developed a comic book on the subject in hopes of engaging middle- and high-school students, which is what brought them to Comic-Con.

Costuming, or cosplay, is a big part of the popular convention, with male and female fans dressing as their favorite characters, regardless of gender. A man might wear a Wonder Woman outfit, and a woman could dress as Wolverine.

Keyhan and her colleagues — all in costume — carried signs and passed out temporary tattoos during the convention that read, "Cosplay does not equal consent."

In addition to Comic-Con's Code of Conduct, Geeks for CONsent wants the 45-year-old convention to adopt a clearly stated policy and says staff members should to be trained to handle sexual harassment complaints.

"It makes it feel safer for the person being harassed to report it and also for bystanders who witness (inappropriate behavior)," Keyhan said.

Toni Darling, a 24-year-old model who was dressed as Wonder Woman on Saturday, said the issue goes way beyond Comic-Con.

"I don't think it has anything to do with cosplay or anything to do with costumes," she said. "People who are the kind of people who are going to take a photo of you when you're not looking from behind are going to do that regardless, whether you're in costume or not."

Still, she'd like to see an advisory in the Comic-Con program against surreptitious photography, and a clearer statement from Geeks for CONsent. She found some fans were afraid to take photos, even when she was posing at a booth on the showroom floor.

"The kind of behavior that needs to be modified," she said, "is somebody taking a photo of you bent over while you're signing a print."
 
148329390-fans-participate-in-zombie-walk-san-diego-during-comic.jpg.CROP.promovar-mediumlarge.jpg


The recent accounting of everyday sexism has a new entry: As the Mary Sue’s Jill Pantozzi wrote on Friday, Geeks for CONsent, a group committed to rooting out sexual harassment at comic conventions, has been fighting to get Comic-Con International in San Diego (SDCC) to update its harassment policy. Demeaning and threatening behavior is a well-documented problem where fans in the weeds of their fantasy heroes mingle en masse. Last year, a blogger at Comic-Con International posted pictures of attending women’s butts without their knowledge. As the 2014 conference approaches, Geeks for CONsent created a petition asking SDCC for a “full harassment policy,” as well as anti-harassment signs and trained volunteers to deal with complaints.

So far, the petition has inked more than 2,000 signatures. But in an interview with Comic Book Resources, Comic-Con public relations director David Glanzer shot down the demands. He said SDCC already has a harassment policy (and its painful vagueness—“Harassing or offensive behavior will not be tolerated”—is intentional), that the policy is readily accessible on the organization’s website (though the Mary Sue sleuths had to go on a 10-link-long vision quest to find it), and that signs would give press and outsiders the wrong idea:

I will tell you, though, that because we’re really an international show, and have 3,000 members of the media, I think the story would be harassment is such an issue at Comic-Con that they needed to post these signs around there. Now, people within the industry, and fans, know that isn’t the case, but the general public out there, and I think the news media, might look at this as, “Why would you, if this wasn’t such a bad issue, why do you feel the need to single out this one issue and put signs up about it?” I think that’s a concern.

So SDCC would rather ignore the real, frequent instances of female cosplayers feeling targeted or unsafe than send a message that harassment is a problem. That’s infuriating, but also unwise—the many women who attend the event would likely respond positively to seeing their experience validated and their safety concerns taken seriously. Were Glanzer less blind to the existence of girl geeks, he’d know that anti-harassment signs would do the opposite of begriming SDCC’s image. In March, the Emerald City Comicon in Seattle drew tons of happy publicity with a poster campaign called “Costumes Are Not Consent.” But asked about Seattle, Glanzer told CBR: “What works at other conventions might not necessarily apply to ours. I don’t know. I think we’re comfortable in the policy we have.” My PR translator renders this: Yes, but. Status quo. So comfy, like a flannel shirt.

Woman cosplayers face an uphill climb in part because most women in the interrelated nerdospheres of gaming, fantasy, and tech face an uphill climb. This weekend, the New York Times reported on the gender imbalance in programming: Only 0.4 percent of women entering college intend to major in computer science, and women comprise just 14 percent of computer science graduates. Meanwhile, a slender 17 percent of Google’s tech employees are female. In pop culture, too, the computer lab and the gaming den are a man’s man’s world—just ask the lamely sexist nerdbros of HBO’s Silicon Valley.

In a searing indictment of entitlement and nerd-lust for the Daily Beast, Arthur Chu proposes that sexism may be baked into the geek DNA.

He lays out one go-to geek trope—the socially awkward guy who “earns” the hot babe through persistence, smarts, and niceness. Mostly persistence. “It’s a narrative that nerds and nerd media kept repeating,” he says. “That if we try hard enough … we’ll get the girl in the end. Like life is a video game and women, like money and status, are just part of the reward.”

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articl...er-castle-misogyny-entitlement-and-nerds.html

Offline, of course, continuing to pursue a woman who’s not interested in you goes by a different name: harassment. And the gamer mentality that turns women into prizes, not protagonists, feels awfully related to SDCC’s cavalier attitude toward female cosplayers. It could be that Glanzer honestly doesn’t believe sexual harassment happens at comic conventions. (My colleague Amanda Hess has written about why even well-intentioned men overlook misogyny.) But it could also be that he doesn’t want to publicize the issue because, especially in the absence of female perspectives, he’s not so sure it’s a big deal. “Why do you feel the need to single out this one issue and put up signs about it?” he imagined the press wondering in his CBR interview. But this is projection. He is the one who doesn't understand that harassment of women in his world is an issue, and that Comic-Con could suffer for that massive blind spot.

http://www.slate.com/blogs/xx_facto...nvention_says_no_to_a_more_comprehensive.html
 
"Offline, of course, continuing to pursue a woman who’s not interested in you goes by a different name: harassment. And the gamer mentality that turns women into prizes...."


lolololol
 
When an African American such as myself smacks one of these pasty overweight mayonnaise jars in a two piece on the ass and calls her, ' Sweet cheeks ' it starts a scene right out of a xxx version of Mad Men.


On the other end, the awkward gamer comic L7 inspires Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.

These women do realize they are imitating the purposely marketed pubescent fantasies of some of the most sexually inept men on earth.
 
When an African American such as myself smacks one of these pasty overweight mayonnaise jars in a two piece on the ass and calls her, ' Sweet cheeks ' it starts a scene right out of a xxx version of Mad Men.


On the other end, the awkward gamer comic L7 inspires Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.

These women do realize they are imitating the purposely marketed pubescent fantasies of some of the most sexually inept men on earth.

* boom
 
When an African American such as myself smacks one of these pasty overweight mayonnaise jars in a two piece on the ass and calls her, ' Sweet cheeks ' it starts a scene right out of a xxx version of Mad Men.


On the other end, the awkward gamer comic L7 inspires Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.

These women do realize they are imitating the purposely marketed pubescent fantasies of some of the most sexually inept men on earth.

SHane just ended this thread


but boy you should see what goes down at the parties that accompany these types of events
 
These women do realize they are imitating the purposely marketed pubescent fantasies of some of the most sexually inept men on earth.

Dick in da hand, PC gaming joystick in da other hand niggas that know females personally who're simply attracted to their inner fires take note!!! :lol:
 
I'm not reading all that shit but go figure a bunch of socially awkward recluses who enjoy fantasy books comics and movies don't behave like gentleman around halfnaked women. Cosplay girls are attention whores at the core seeking recognition they can't recieve being themselves rather transforming into mostly unrealistic images originally created by the above!
 
lol. good to be back. lol

Wow, that's all you got to say!?

Even Queen erroneous, the Grand Dutches of Fallacy can't carry the water for that bassackwards overtly feminist bullshit.




Street Fighter Red Tape: Chun-Li

<object width="560" height="315"><param name="movie" value="//www.youtube.com/v/_jdi0MWW-gw?version=3&amp;hl=en_US"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="//www.youtube.com/v/_jdi0MWW-gw?version=3&amp;hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="560" height="315" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object>
http://youtu.be/_jdi0MWW-gw

" The only way it could be anymore inappropriate is if your tights were pink and you painted a labia on your crotch! "

" Fun in the Chun! "
 
I doubt they are getting groped on like the kappa but prolly just creeper pics but I'm sorry you wear all that what you expect. Then the irony is they stop and pose for 400 pics
 
Wow, that's all you got to say!?

Even Queen erroneous, the Grand Dutches of Fallacy can't carry the water for that bassackwards overtly feminist bullshit.




Street Fighter Red Tape: Chun-Li

<object width="560" height="315"><param name="movie" value="//www.youtube.com/v/_jdi0MWW-gw?version=3&amp;hl=en_US"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="//www.youtube.com/v/_jdi0MWW-gw?version=3&amp;hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="560" height="315" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object>
http://youtu.be/_jdi0MWW-gw

" The only way it could be anymore inappropriate is if your tights were pink and you painted a labia on your crotch! "

" Fun in the Chun! "

:lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:
 
The touchy feely geeks won't be satisfied until comic con is made an invite only/industry only event, similar to E3.

Sent from my Nexus 5

My one wish in life: "I want to die and be reincarnated as a rich and famous athlete, because Finger and Jay threads have too many simp worthy hoes".
 
When an African American such as myself smacks one of these pasty overweight mayonnaise jars in a two piece on the ass and calls her, ' Sweet cheeks ' it starts a scene right out of a xxx version of Mad Men.


On the other end, the awkward gamer comic L7 inspires Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.

These women do realize they are imitating the purposely marketed pubescent fantasies of some of the most sexually inept men on earth.

:lol:

them nerds so confused right now....

man them nerds better hope, these stripper hoes

dont get innvolved...

oh man it will turn into a gotdam nerd bike week..

wit nerds getting super friend tatts and rolling up in bat bikes and shit..:lol:

but on a serious note, a lot of those nerds are nerds for a reason...

I truly believe a few of them are not operating with a full deck...

like on some lawnmower man shit, once they get a bit of that social knowledge and understanding of women..

theres going to be a lot more missing women in somebodies basement....

remember jeffery dahmer was a fuckin nerd!!

I think these chicks need to tone it down, they going to

free a caged monster that aint going to back in that cage....


let the nerds stay nerds..


slam

duh duh duh.....duh duh duh

let the nerds stay nerds:lol:
 
This wouldn't even be an issue for most of these chicks if they caught the attention of FAMOUS people in the industry.

They would be giving up that pussy really quick to any GEEK Icon.

Some may have a legit gripe. But I think the whole thing is bogus. These women are just mad because they're not getting attention from the RIGHT people.

I'll never forget when my GrandFather took me to one of my first cons during the mid-70s in NYC. I was 14/15 at the time.

Wendy Pini (before "ELFQUEST") was dressed as RED SONJA. She was taking photos with that book's artist Frank Thorne.

Let's just say that HomeGirl didn't shave in the right spots. Cats were taking photos left and right. GrandDad was so disgusted, he kept trying to drag me away.

I don't have those pics anymore.

But Pini's RED SONJA moment has always been considered one of those 70s iconic comic moments. And responsible for the Cos-Play movement. She ended up traveling across the country in that get-up.

The 70s.
You young cats just don't know.


c8a265f82bcbd26725e55c2f662768b3.jpg


tumblr_mrvsn29W3W1rt9dzjo6_1280.jpg


tumblr_mrvsn29W3W1rt9dzjo7_1280.jpg


tumblr_mrvsn29W3W1rt9dzjo5_500.jpg
 
Back
Top