#and Gulalai is Tired
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PART 5 of my incorrect quotes shenanigans featuring six of our newest OCs, which I am happy I kept forgetting to post because that means I now get to use them to hopefully brighten up @katkastrofaâs day a little ^â^
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#I donât have the energy for extensive tags bc today was LONG#however. I can share a few explanations#âbut Nia. I hear you say. wouldnât Daneli make more sense as the one whoâd cry over her friends?â#yes. but have you considered Shezan is crying because sheâs afraid her friends will leave her#thinking that she will only ever be second best to the romantic relationship Roheen and Gulalai have#and she knows theyâre planning on leaving eventually but canât imagine managing a different life with her chronic pain#you ever think about THAT?#anyway. hey look!! Phailin appears more in this bunch!!!#she really deserves more attention that this incorrect quotes generator refuses to give her#I like to think that maybe sheâs not as quick to catch onto slang and common euphemisms#bc while she grew up in the EK she was pretty isolated from her peers bc of discrimination#hence the âput them on a boatâ comment#and everything else is the same#Shezan is once again a danger to herself. Daneli is once again adorably clueless about a lot of things#and Gulalai is Tired#itâs been just over a week and a half since their creation and Iâm still not any less obsessed with these girls :)#kat and nia and their multiverse of madness#original characters#lmao. just realised that Iâm posting this in the exact same circumstances as the last bunch#in the afternoon on a Wednesday waiting to go over to my auntieâs place#neat coincidence
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Presidential Candidates Ditch the âGlass Ceilingâ: The Broadsheet
Good morning, Broadsheet readers! Rent the Runway suffers from growing pains, a Pakistani womenâs rights activist hasnât been seen in months, and presidential candidates ditch the âglass ceilingâ talk. Have a wonderful Wednesday.Â
EVERYONEâS TALKING
â Turn of phrase.When Hillary Clinton ran for president, the proverbial âglass ceilingâ had a starring role in her campaign. Clinton not only invoked what she called âthat highest and hardest glass ceilingâ repeatedly, also but used it as a visual metaphor (remember that shattered glass animation that played before she addressed the Democratic Convention?)
But as Jessica Bennett observes in the New York Times, the latest crop of Democratic female candidates have largely avoided the phrase. Why? Linguist Robin Lakoff speculates that it just âseems tired.â Whartonâs Adam Grant, meanwhile, wonders whether the candidates are avoiding the phrase because they believe talking about the glass ceilingâand the biases it conjuresâwill just serve to put those biases front and center in votersâ minds.
Of course, thatâs not to say that todayâs female politicians arenât talking about the unique challenges women face in their fieldâtheyâre just using their own language to do so. (See: Elizabeth Warrenâs âshe persisted,â AOCâs âbuild our own house,â and Kamala Harrisâs pledge to âbreak things.â)
For me, the most fascinating aspect of the story is the deep dive into the origin of the term. Bennett reports that âthe glass ceilingâ first made its way into the lexicon in the late â70s thanks to female workers at Hewlett-Packard and the New York Telephone Co. It quickly spread to the media, the political realm, and now the culture at large, becoming a go-to shorthand for any situation where womenâno matter how talentedâjust never quite seem to be able to make it to the top.
Personally, I think âglass ceilingâ is still useful, though I donât often deploy it myself. (Looking back, the Broadsheet has used the phrase a couple dozen times over the past four years.) And I wonder whether the candidatesâ attitudes toward it will change as the race thins out. If we end up with another female nomineeâand the race boils down to one man against one womanâmight we start hearing about that transparent barrier again?
What do you think Broadsheet readers? Does âthe glass ceilingâ metaphor hold upâand if so, does it still have a place in our conversations about gender? Or is it time for fresher, and perhaps more nuanced language? If you have a take, please let me knowâwe may use your comments in a future edition.
Kristen Bellstrom [email protected] @kayelbee
ALSO IN THE HEADLINES
â The new Theresa May. Itâs official: Theresa Mayâs replacement as U.K. prime minister is Boris Johnson. He got a congratulations (with a typo) from Ivanka Trump. (And thus ends the Broadsheetâs Brexit coverage? Stay tunedâŠ) Fortune
â Renting pains. Rent the Runwayâs growth has led toâyou guessed itâgrowing pains. Subscribers to the monthly unlimited subscription service have in recent weeks reported dissatisfaction with clothing availability and customer service, while the company has also faced trouble with its technology systems. At the center is a debate among executives over âhow much to spend to improve each customerâs experience at the expense of profits.â Wall Street Journal
â Sheltonâs standard. Judy Shelton is one of President Trumpâs leading candidates to serve on the governing board of the Federal Reserve. In this story, the rundown on her provocative views (gold standard, anyone?) and what they mean for the Fed. Washington PostÂ
â Career change. For Fortuneâs series about entry-level jobs, Sarah Entwistle tells us about her career change from Goldman Sachs to testing recipes for Blue Apron. She says being happy in her job was worth the pay cut. FortuneÂ
MOVERS AND SHAKERS: Peloton hired Karina Kogan of TBS & TNT as SVP and general manager of Peloton Digital.Â
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
â Missing in action. For two months, no one has seen Pakistani womenâs rights activist Gulalai Ismail. Sheâs accused by her government of inciting rebellionânot because of her advocacy against forced marriages and gang rape but because of her support of the Pashtun rights movementâand is on the run, avoiding contact with friends and family. New York Times
â Womenâs rights in Venezuela. The New Yorker examines the recent report on human rights in Venezuela from the office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet. The former president of Chile, Bachelet has been criticized for her policies toward and relationship with Venzuelaâs government during her time in office. Bachelet is also the former executive director of the UN Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women, and her report breaks ground by documenting the lack of access to contraception and abortion in Venezuela and the effects of food shortages on women. The New Yorker
â Game on. Five years after Gamergate, where does womenâs representation in gaming stand? Only 5% of games at the E3 Gaming Expo in 2019 had female protagonists, not to mention the unrealistic and misogynistic portrayal of women that persists in many games. The lack of women in the gaming industryâdespite the fact that women now make up half the gaming populationâcontributes to the cyclical problem. Financial Times
â Secret style. The next big fashion show at the Metropolitan Museum of Artâs Costume Institute will feature the collection of Sandy Schreier. Schreier isnât famous, but over her 80-plus years she quietly amassed 15,000 pieces to build âone of the most important private fashion collections in the United States that most people have never heard of.â New York Times
Todayâs Broadsheet was produced by Emma Hinchliffe. Share it with a friend. Looking for previous Broadsheets? Click here.
ON MY RADAR
Megan Thee Stallion files to trademark âhot girl summerâ Billboard
The Harvard professor and the paternity trap The Cut
Norah OâDonnellâs ambitious debut Columbia Journalism Review
Cynthia Erivo shines as Harriet Tubman in new Harriet trailer Elle
QUOTE
âI donât always agree, but I love their insistence on being heard.â
-Connie Schultz, journalist and wife of Sen. Sherrod Brown, on the views of younger women
Credit: Source link
The post Presidential Candidates Ditch the âGlass Ceilingâ: The Broadsheet appeared first on WeeklyReviewer.
from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.com/presidential-candidates-ditch-the-glass-ceiling-the-broadsheet/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=presidential-candidates-ditch-the-glass-ceiling-the-broadsheet from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.tumblr.com/post/186515546617
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Presidential Candidates Ditch the âGlass Ceilingâ: The Broadsheet
Good morning, Broadsheet readers! Rent the Runway suffers from growing pains, a Pakistani womenâs rights activist hasnât been seen in months, and presidential candidates ditch the âglass ceilingâ talk. Have a wonderful Wednesday.Â
EVERYONEâS TALKING
â Turn of phrase.When Hillary Clinton ran for president, the proverbial âglass ceilingâ had a starring role in her campaign. Clinton not only invoked what she called âthat highest and hardest glass ceilingâ repeatedly, also but used it as a visual metaphor (remember that shattered glass animation that played before she addressed the Democratic Convention?)
But as Jessica Bennett observes in the New York Times, the latest crop of Democratic female candidates have largely avoided the phrase. Why? Linguist Robin Lakoff speculates that it just âseems tired.â Whartonâs Adam Grant, meanwhile, wonders whether the candidates are avoiding the phrase because they believe talking about the glass ceilingâand the biases it conjuresâwill just serve to put those biases front and center in votersâ minds.
Of course, thatâs not to say that todayâs female politicians arenât talking about the unique challenges women face in their fieldâtheyâre just using their own language to do so. (See: Elizabeth Warrenâs âshe persisted,â AOCâs âbuild our own house,â and Kamala Harrisâs pledge to âbreak things.â)
For me, the most fascinating aspect of the story is the deep dive into the origin of the term. Bennett reports that âthe glass ceilingâ first made its way into the lexicon in the late â70s thanks to female workers at Hewlett-Packard and the New York Telephone Co. It quickly spread to the media, the political realm, and now the culture at large, becoming a go-to shorthand for any situation where womenâno matter how talentedâjust never quite seem to be able to make it to the top.
Personally, I think âglass ceilingâ is still useful, though I donât often deploy it myself. (Looking back, the Broadsheet has used the phrase a couple dozen times over the past four years.) And I wonder whether the candidatesâ attitudes toward it will change as the race thins out. If we end up with another female nomineeâand the race boils down to one man against one womanâmight we start hearing about that transparent barrier again?
What do you think Broadsheet readers? Does âthe glass ceilingâ metaphor hold upâand if so, does it still have a place in our conversations about gender? Or is it time for fresher, and perhaps more nuanced language? If you have a take, please let me knowâwe may use your comments in a future edition.
Kristen Bellstrom [email protected] @kayelbee
ALSO IN THE HEADLINES
â The new Theresa May. Itâs official: Theresa Mayâs replacement as U.K. prime minister is Boris Johnson. He got a congratulations (with a typo) from Ivanka Trump. (And thus ends the Broadsheetâs Brexit coverage? Stay tunedâŠ) Fortune
â Renting pains. Rent the Runwayâs growth has led toâyou guessed itâgrowing pains. Subscribers to the monthly unlimited subscription service have in recent weeks reported dissatisfaction with clothing availability and customer service, while the company has also faced trouble with its technology systems. At the center is a debate among executives over âhow much to spend to improve each customerâs experience at the expense of profits.â Wall Street Journal
â Sheltonâs standard. Judy Shelton is one of President Trumpâs leading candidates to serve on the governing board of the Federal Reserve. In this story, the rundown on her provocative views (gold standard, anyone?) and what they mean for the Fed. Washington PostÂ
â Career change. For Fortuneâs series about entry-level jobs, Sarah Entwistle tells us about her career change from Goldman Sachs to testing recipes for Blue Apron. She says being happy in her job was worth the pay cut. FortuneÂ
MOVERS AND SHAKERS: Peloton hired Karina Kogan of TBS & TNT as SVP and general manager of Peloton Digital.Â
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
â Missing in action. For two months, no one has seen Pakistani womenâs rights activist Gulalai Ismail. Sheâs accused by her government of inciting rebellionânot because of her advocacy against forced marriages and gang rape but because of her support of the Pashtun rights movementâand is on the run, avoiding contact with friends and family. New York Times
â Womenâs rights in Venezuela. The New Yorker examines the recent report on human rights in Venezuela from the office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet. The former president of Chile, Bachelet has been criticized for her policies toward and relationship with Venzuelaâs government during her time in office. Bachelet is also the former executive director of the UN Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women, and her report breaks ground by documenting the lack of access to contraception and abortion in Venezuela and the effects of food shortages on women. The New Yorker
â Game on. Five years after Gamergate, where does womenâs representation in gaming stand? Only 5% of games at the E3 Gaming Expo in 2019 had female protagonists, not to mention the unrealistic and misogynistic portrayal of women that persists in many games. The lack of women in the gaming industryâdespite the fact that women now make up half the gaming populationâcontributes to the cyclical problem. Financial Times
â Secret style. The next big fashion show at the Metropolitan Museum of Artâs Costume Institute will feature the collection of Sandy Schreier. Schreier isnât famous, but over her 80-plus years she quietly amassed 15,000 pieces to build âone of the most important private fashion collections in the United States that most people have never heard of.â New York Times
Todayâs Broadsheet was produced by Emma Hinchliffe. Share it with a friend. Looking for previous Broadsheets? Click here.
ON MY RADAR
Megan Thee Stallion files to trademark âhot girl summerâ Billboard
The Harvard professor and the paternity trap The Cut
Norah OâDonnellâs ambitious debut Columbia Journalism Review
Cynthia Erivo shines as Harriet Tubman in new Harriet trailer Elle
QUOTE
âI donât always agree, but I love their insistence on being heard.â
-Connie Schultz, journalist and wife of Sen. Sherrod Brown, on the views of younger women
Credit: Source link
The post Presidential Candidates Ditch the âGlass Ceilingâ: The Broadsheet appeared first on WeeklyReviewer.
from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.com/presidential-candidates-ditch-the-glass-ceiling-the-broadsheet/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=presidential-candidates-ditch-the-glass-ceiling-the-broadsheet from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.tumblr.com/post/186515546617
0 notes
Text
Presidential Candidates Ditch the âGlass Ceilingâ: The Broadsheet
Good morning, Broadsheet readers! Rent the Runway suffers from growing pains, a Pakistani womenâs rights activist hasnât been seen in months, and presidential candidates ditch the âglass ceilingâ talk. Have a wonderful Wednesday.Â
EVERYONEâS TALKING
â Turn of phrase. When Hillary Clinton ran for president, the proverbial âglass ceilingâ had a starring role in her campaign. Clinton not only invoked what she called âthat highest and hardest glass ceilingâ repeatedly, also but used it as a visual metaphor (remember that shattered glass animation that played before she addressed the Democratic Convention?)
But as Jessica Bennett observes in the New York Times, the latest crop of Democratic female candidates have largely avoided the phrase. Why? Linguist Robin Lakoff speculates that it just âseems tired.â Whartonâs Adam Grant, meanwhile, wonders whether the candidates are avoiding the phrase because they believe talking about the glass ceilingâand the biases it conjuresâwill just serve to put those biases front and center in votersâ minds.
Of course, thatâs not to say that todayâs female politicians arenât talking about the unique challenges women face in their fieldâtheyâre just using their own language to do so. (See: Elizabeth Warrenâs âshe persisted,â AOCâs âbuild our own house,â and Kamala Harrisâs pledge to âbreak things.â)
For me, the most fascinating aspect of the story is the deep dive into the origin of the term. Bennett reports that âthe glass ceilingâ first made its way into the lexicon in the late â70s thanks to female workers at Hewlett-Packard and the New York Telephone Co. It quickly spread to the media, the political realm, and now the culture at large, becoming a go-to shorthand for any situation where womenâno matter how talentedâjust never quite seem to be able to make it to the top.
Personally, I think âglass ceilingâ is still useful, though I donât often deploy it myself. (Looking back, the Broadsheet has used the phrase a couple dozen times over the past four years.) And I wonder whether the candidatesâ attitudes toward it will change as the race thins out. If we end up with another female nomineeâand the race boils down to one man against one womanâmight we start hearing about that transparent barrier again?
What do you think Broadsheet readers? Does âthe glass ceilingâ metaphor hold upâand if so, does it still have a place in our conversations about gender? Or is it time for fresher, and perhaps more nuanced language? If you have a take, please let me knowâwe may use your comments in a future edition.
Kristen Bellstrom [email protected] @kayelbee
ALSO IN THE HEADLINES
â The new Theresa May. Itâs official: Theresa Mayâs replacement as U.K. prime minister is Boris Johnson. He got a congratulations (with a typo) from Ivanka Trump. (And thus ends the Broadsheetâs Brexit coverage? Stay tunedâŠ) Fortune
â Renting pains. Rent the Runwayâs growth has led toâyou guessed itâgrowing pains. Subscribers to the monthly unlimited subscription service have in recent weeks reported dissatisfaction with clothing availability and customer service, while the company has also faced trouble with its technology systems. At the center is a debate among executives over âhow much to spend to improve each customerâs experience at the expense of profits.â Wall Street Journal
â Sheltonâs standard. Judy Shelton is one of President Trumpâs leading candidates to serve on the governing board of the Federal Reserve. In this story, the rundown on her provocative views (gold standard, anyone?) and what they mean for the Fed. Washington PostÂ
â Career change. For Fortuneâs series about entry-level jobs, Sarah Entwistle tells us about her career change from Goldman Sachs to testing recipes for Blue Apron. She says being happy in her job was worth the pay cut. FortuneÂ
MOVERS AND SHAKERS: Peloton hired Karina Kogan of TBS & TNT as SVP and general manager of Peloton Digital.Â
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
â Missing in action. For two months, no one has seen Pakistani womenâs rights activist Gulalai Ismail. Sheâs accused by her government of inciting rebellionânot because of her advocacy against forced marriages and gang rape but because of her support of the Pashtun rights movementâand is on the run, avoiding contact with friends and family. New York Times
â Womenâs rights in Venezuela. The New Yorker examines the recent report on human rights in Venezuela from the office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet. The former president of Chile, Bachelet has been criticized for her policies toward and relationship with Venzuelaâs government during her time in office. Bachelet is also the former executive director of the UN Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women, and her report breaks ground by documenting the lack of access to contraception and abortion in Venezuela and the effects of food shortages on women. The New Yorker
â Game on. Five years after Gamergate, where does womenâs representation in gaming stand? Only 5% of games at the E3 Gaming Expo in 2019 had female protagonists, not to mention the unrealistic and misogynistic portrayal of women that persists in many games. The lack of women in the gaming industryâdespite the fact that women now make up half the gaming populationâcontributes to the cyclical problem. Financial Times
â Secret style. The next big fashion show at the Metropolitan Museum of Artâs Costume Institute will feature the collection of Sandy Schreier. Schreier isnât famous, but over her 80-plus years she quietly amassed 15,000 pieces to build âone of the most important private fashion collections in the United States that most people have never heard of.â New York Times
Todayâs Broadsheet was produced by Emma Hinchliffe. Share it with a friend. Looking for previous Broadsheets? Click here.
ON MY RADAR
Megan Thee Stallion files to trademark âhot girl summerâ Billboard
The Harvard professor and the paternity trap The Cut
Norah OâDonnellâs ambitious debut Columbia Journalism Review
Cynthia Erivo shines as Harriet Tubman in new Harriet trailer Elle
QUOTE
âI donât always agree, but I love their insistence on being heard.â
-Connie Schultz, journalist and wife of Sen. Sherrod Brown, on the views of younger women
Credit: Source link
The post Presidential Candidates Ditch the âGlass Ceilingâ: The Broadsheet appeared first on WeeklyReviewer.
from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.com/presidential-candidates-ditch-the-glass-ceiling-the-broadsheet/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=presidential-candidates-ditch-the-glass-ceiling-the-broadsheet
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Even more incorrect quotes shenanigans, because Iâm going to do everything in my power to cheer my dear @katkastrofa up, even if school almost completely exhausted my mental capacity :)
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#no extensive tags bc Iâm tired but canât take a nap bc I have a thing to do in 2 hours#however. some brief notes:#the first one is what happens when you romance a wannabe lawyer. youâre gonna get infodumped on :P#though honestly itâs much more tolerable than her usual hot but stupid act so⊠pick your poison#Shezan is a menace both to herself and society at large and we all love her for it#Gulalai is horny. Qader is blunt and a little scary. Daneli is adorabl. and Phailin.. exists#lmao I promise she appears a lot more in the next bunch I have saved up#she deserves more âscreen timeâ. so to speak#these girls well and truly live in my head rent free now. Iâm obsessed with them your honour#original characters#kat and nia and their multiverse of madness#yo thatâs a suggested tag now thatâs neat
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