Maybe you've seen it: the doctored photo with Sarah Palin's face above a bikini-clad, gun-toting body. It arrived in my email in-box forwarded down the line of provenance from--I am not making this up--my husband's mother's cousin's friend's friend who lives in Wasilla. Maybe, if the friend in Wasilla actually exists, she might have believed the doctored photo was legit. I don't know.
I actually like the photo. I like the idea of Sarah Palin. I'd like her even better if she were a fictional character. One might argue that her several public personae sort of are fictional characters, but that's not what I mean.
I mean I want her to be the heroine of a Joss Whedon movie, or maybe a Joss Whedon series on, say, HBO. One in which aliens attack the earth, or our civilization collapses in the face of climate change, or we travel some centuries forward in the Buffyverse to find that a born Slayer is serving as Governor of a state with a serious vampire problem.
In that Joss Whedon series, Palin's retrograde ideology would be a fatal flaw, something she'd have to struggle to overcome, something that would come around to bite her on the ass again and again until she'd paid painfully enough for her mistakes. And then she'd surprise us, grow in some new and weirdly inspiring direction, while keeping her entertainingly vicious sense of humor. You know how Joss Whedon loves to kill off characters and disrupt family structures--if he wrote a family with five kids, you'd know that not all of them would live to see the first season finale. We'd dread the fateful episode, we'd have to pass around the tissues as the credits rolled, and we'd root for Sarah Barracuda as she tried to pick up the pieces and give those space aliens/vampires/mutant moose what for.
I'm a big fan of the Chicks Kicking Ass Genre. Before I saw the abysmal John Carpenter film Ghosts of Mars, one of my mottoes was that I'd buy a ticket to any movie in which the women had weapons. The doctored Palin photo, captioned correctly and with the right director's name under it, would certainly have lured me out to the local cineplex. Alas, the work in Whedon's oeuvre that Palin's career most resembles would have to be the "Jaynestown" episode of Firefly. Anybody want to sing a few choruses of "The Hero of Canton" with me?
Sarah Palin's most telling act as Mayor of Wasilla was firing the town librarian for refusing to censor books. In Sarah Palin's world--the one she'd write and direct and star in--we wouldn't be able to find the works of Joss Whedon in a library, or perhaps anywhere else.
I actually like the photo. I like the idea of Sarah Palin. I'd like her even better if she were a fictional character. One might argue that her several public personae sort of are fictional characters, but that's not what I mean.
I mean I want her to be the heroine of a Joss Whedon movie, or maybe a Joss Whedon series on, say, HBO. One in which aliens attack the earth, or our civilization collapses in the face of climate change, or we travel some centuries forward in the Buffyverse to find that a born Slayer is serving as Governor of a state with a serious vampire problem.
In that Joss Whedon series, Palin's retrograde ideology would be a fatal flaw, something she'd have to struggle to overcome, something that would come around to bite her on the ass again and again until she'd paid painfully enough for her mistakes. And then she'd surprise us, grow in some new and weirdly inspiring direction, while keeping her entertainingly vicious sense of humor. You know how Joss Whedon loves to kill off characters and disrupt family structures--if he wrote a family with five kids, you'd know that not all of them would live to see the first season finale. We'd dread the fateful episode, we'd have to pass around the tissues as the credits rolled, and we'd root for Sarah Barracuda as she tried to pick up the pieces and give those space aliens/vampires/mutant moose what for.
I'm a big fan of the Chicks Kicking Ass Genre. Before I saw the abysmal John Carpenter film Ghosts of Mars, one of my mottoes was that I'd buy a ticket to any movie in which the women had weapons. The doctored Palin photo, captioned correctly and with the right director's name under it, would certainly have lured me out to the local cineplex. Alas, the work in Whedon's oeuvre that Palin's career most resembles would have to be the "Jaynestown" episode of Firefly. Anybody want to sing a few choruses of "The Hero of Canton" with me?
Sarah Palin's most telling act as Mayor of Wasilla was firing the town librarian for refusing to censor books. In Sarah Palin's world--the one she'd write and direct and star in--we wouldn't be able to find the works of Joss Whedon in a library, or perhaps anywhere else.
no subject
Date: 2008-09-06 07:34 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-06 11:17 am (UTC)and he gave to the poor
Stood up to the man
and he gave him what for
Our love for him now
ain't hard to explain
The hero of Canton
the man they call Jayne
"I was wrong...this is what going crazy must feel like..."
XD
no subject
Date: 2008-09-06 12:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-06 07:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-06 07:26 pm (UTC)http://www.snopes.com/photos/politics/palin.asp
no subject
Date: 2008-09-07 04:17 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-07 04:37 am (UTC)PS Sorry for not proofreading the previous comment.
Thanks for putting it in words
Date: 2008-09-07 05:19 am (UTC)Interestingly, the surveys I've seen so far find that she is viewed much more positively by men than by women.
no subject
Date: 2008-09-07 05:31 am (UTC)I saw CNN's interview with the brother-in-law Palin tried to get fired. When I first heard about that conflict of interest, I assumed the worst about Palin, but the brother-in-law freely admits to having tazed his stepson with his police-issued tazer, and to having illegally shot a moose when he was a wildlife officer. He denies the various other things Palin accused him of, but the ones he admits to on national television sound to me like good reasons to dismiss a state trooper, even to the point of calling his supervisor twenty times to press the matter. Nobody who thinks it's a good idea to taze a 10-year-old and then justifies it by saying, "The kid asked me what it would feel like," ought to be an officer of the law.
You're right, Palin's no Zoe, but I think of what Whedon did with Faith over the years. Even Palin could be made heroic, with the right plot arc.
no subject
Date: 2008-09-07 05:38 am (UTC)The person who sent it down the chain of email forwards that landed it in my box, though, intended it to push all my east coast liberal elite geek girl buttons, to remind me of the cheerleaders I didn't like and the bikini-clad models I resent, as well as the guns I think ought to be regulated. And I have to say, as much as the photo has amused me, the intent behind it is not cool.
Re: Thanks for putting it in words
Date: 2008-09-07 05:46 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-07 06:46 pm (UTC)And she asked the Librarian three times "If I ask you to censor the books would you do so?" Then she threatened to fire her. The towns people rallied behind the Librarian. Palin later claimed to be "only testing her loyalty".
Which to me seems like a lame reason or a fast excuse.
no subject
Date: 2008-09-08 08:57 am (UTC)Enough with the old white boy network!!
Still, fake as it is, the picture did make me chuckle. :)
-Tom
Re: Thanks for putting it in words
Date: 2008-09-08 04:30 pm (UTC)And I think she may be more appealing as an idealized other than she is as an idealized self. That is, I think men would want to be _with_ her more than women want to be her. Though recent polls suggest she may be getting some sympathy over the media feeding frenzy about her pregnant daughter, which helps her standing among women.
I'm hoping that people will get a clearer image of her as the election approaches, and that her reversals and outright fabrications may cause a fall from grace--polls suggest she is currently more popular than either McCain or Obama, but I'm not sure how much public attention her flip-flop on the Bridge to Nowhere has gotten.
But did she eat the moose?
Date: 2008-09-08 04:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-08 04:52 pm (UTC)I heard an interview a while back with a guy who'd written a book called "Deep Survival," about people who survive situations where the odds are stacked against them, and the really macho types don't do nearly as well as people who are more flexible. In fact, I think he said the people who do best are usually children.
And I think Wheedon's heroines reflect this--the ones who get the big power tend to start out as airheads (Buffy), nerds (Willow), or mistreated waifs (River). The ones who are too full of machismo, or who, um, 'cling to guns and religion' tend not to do so well. Think of the tough-guy jock who's always beating up on Xander and Willow, but as soon as Xander stands up to him, admits he's gay.
I think the fact that firing a gun and skinning a moose are so front-and-center on her personality--well, that kind of suggests she'd get some kind of what-for later, though not necessarily as much as if she were a guy. Her path to heroism, if she has one, would likely resemble that of Cordelia or Wesley.
no subject
Date: 2008-09-09 02:57 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-09 02:58 am (UTC)Re: But did she eat the moose?
Date: 2008-09-09 03:06 am (UTC)My Adirondack heritage is recent enough that, although I personally have never shot an animal or eaten a moose, I don't object in principle to hunting for legal game with applicable licenses, even if the game is charismatic megafauna, as long as the creature in question is killed quickly and humanely, and gets eaten. If either of the guys on the ticket I favor wanted to learn to field dress a moose, I would have no objection.
Poaching, however, and working to weaken wildlife protections, are not cool.
no subject
Date: 2008-09-09 03:15 am (UTC)Hm. I'll have to check that out. The version of the story that I've read is that Palin actually fired the librarian and then reinstated her days (or was it weeks?) later. Intriguing.
The claim of a loyalty test does sound pretty dubious. Why does it matter whether the town librarian is personally loyal to the mayor?
Anyone in public service whose first loyalty is to their boss rather than to the public shouldn't be in public service. If Palin really did care that much about where the librarian's loyalty lay, to the point of thinking head games and loyalty tests were appropriate when she was the mayor of a town of, at the time, about 5,000 people, that would suggest some major paranoia on her part.
no subject
Date: 2008-09-09 03:17 am (UTC)Your grandson is probably safer with guns than I am.
Re: Thanks for putting it in words
Date: 2008-09-09 03:29 am (UTC)Imagine being 17, being unexpectedly pregnant, and suddenly having everyone in the world know about it. Imagine knowing that Vladimir Putin has been briefed on the political implications of your pregnancy, and that he has some sort of opinion about it. Odds are that getting knocked up by her high school boyfriend will still, fifty years from now, be the most publicly memorable thing about Bristol Palin.
Now, what kind of mother puts her daughter in that position? I can imagine being pissed off at my kid for doing something I'd raised him not to do, but not so pissed off about it that I'd be willing to humiliate him permanently on the international stage, even to further my own career.
no subject
Date: 2008-09-09 03:36 am (UTC)The gay football player character turned out okay, if I remember correctly. Coming out to Xander did him a world of good.