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Women's mags: proof misery sells
christian Science Monitor ^ | March 10, 2004 | Rondi Adamson

Posted on 03/10/2004 2:58:41 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife

TORONTO - Like a repentant cattle rancher turned vegetarian, Myrna Blyth appears to have turned on her former self. The retired editor of Ladies' Home Journal has written a book dishing scorn on women's magazines - "Spin Sisters: How the Women of the Media Sell Unhappiness and Liberalism to the Women of America."

Ms. Blyth accuses an entire magazine genre of marketing anxiety in order to perpetuate the myth of women as victims - and the fur's flying.

Cosmopolitan's editor, Kate White, accused Blyth of "dragging other people down with her self-loathing." Cindi Leive, of Glamour, said that Blyth was "trying to burn down the whole category of magazines." Ellen Levine, editor at Good Housekeeping, calls Blyth's condition "serious Ann Coulter envy."

Meow.

It is fair comment to point out that this book was written after a successful career in the field the author condemns. I wouldn't pretend to know Blyth's motives. Or who she envies. But I'm certain she is right.

Women's magazines fall into two categories, with occasional overlap. There are the fluffy, and there are the fear-mongering - reflecting the bifurcated legacy of feminism: be sexy while you file for divorce. The former fill their pages with eyeliner, Armani, and Beyonce's luscious curves. They are, I believe, harmless. The latter fill theirs with infidelity and infertility, and I cannot, for the unfulfilled life of me, see what good they do.

My experience writing for several such magazines in Canada - Chatelaine, Modern Woman, Flare, Homemaker's - confirm Blyth's claim that editors skew facts, court alarmism, and reject the positive. There's no better (seemingly bottomless) swamp to draw from than the one filled with insecurity and victimology that mainstream feminism has created. At times, I've played along - the pay's good. But one tires.

Three years ago, I pitched what I felt was an empowering (to use a word I hate) story to several women's magazines. I got the idea from my gynecologist, who, dismayed at my extreme fear of breast cancer, gave me a good talking to about what he termed "the breast cancer hysteria." The 1 in 9 statistic, he said, should read more like "1 in 9 if every woman on the planet lives to be 100." And three times out of four it will not be fatal, he said.

I hoped to explore in this article the politics of the disease, showing how the threat of breast cancer is disproportionate to the amount of attention and money it receives, and that attention takes away from other problems and, indeed, from the quality of life.

Editor after editor rejected the idea with no comment, except one at a magazine called Elm Street who snippily e-mailed: "There is no way this story can do anything but trivialize the plight of women with breast cancer."

That this woman failed to see how condescending she was being to her readers - as though females cannot grasp nuance - should not have surprised me. Ultimately, I wrote the piece for an online Libertarian magazine. This argument has been made elsewhere, notably in "PC, M.D.: How Political Correctness Is Corrupting Medicine," by Sally Satel, a Yale psychiatrist.

On another occasion, an editor at Homemaker's hired me to write a feature about the division of housework. I gathered up statistics and anecdotal evidence and found that men were helping and were particularly involved with childcare. Madame Editor was grim. She told me to "find evidence" men didn't help, but not before going off on a rant about her second or third husband never having lifted a finger.

She instructed me to interview a friend of hers whose husband was "useless," and specifically told me to begin my piece with a description of this woman "having a meltdown." I attempted second and third drafts, neither of which conveyed sufficient misery for the editor. I gave up. The story appeared in the magazine, bylined by another, replete with meltdowns and lazy lunks, months later.

Still another time, I proposed a story to several magazines. I wanted to write about having a mother who was in her 40s when I was born. My focus was positive: about how much it benefited me and how close I am to my mum. Homemaker's bit on the idea.

I got back, with the first draft, a request that I add some statistics about older mothers and birth defects, the "dangers" of old eggs, and that surely I could think of instances when my mother was "too exhausted" to play with me. I refused but was promised the story would run, nonetheless. It didn't. An e-mail and a call from me went unanswered by the magazine, so I sold the story to the Life section of a newspaper for Mother's Day.

And that was the last time I bothered with women's magazines - except to read them. But I go for the fluff. I'd rather read the story under the headline that says "Six Ways to Sexier Lips" than the one under "You're Going to Die Barren and Alone and Even If You Don't Your Husband will Probably Leave You" any day.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: feminism; liberalism; magazines; myrnablyth; spinsisters; victimhood; victimization
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To: NYC GOP Chick
Tattletale.
41 posted on 03/10/2004 5:41:01 AM PST by sauropod (I intend to have Red Kerry choke on his past.)
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To: LizardQueen
Exactly. I've flipped through them while on line at the checkout in the grocery store and am astounded by how stupid they are, all of them. It's either sex, me, sex, me or "lose pounds/make desserts, lose pounds/make desserts". There's no actual substance in any of them.

LOL! And don't forget the perennial:

- Find the swim suit that's right for your figure! (Yes! It does exist!!)

- 10 Things you must tell your doctor!

- 10 Signs that your child might not be eating right!

- Can this marriage/family be saved? (<- a hundred varieties of this but essentially the same song-and-dance, YD.)

- She's fighting for YOU! A side of (fill in the blank) of her that you've never seen!

42 posted on 03/10/2004 5:45:31 AM PST by yankeedame ("Oh, I can take it but I'd much rather dish it out.")
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To: hellinahandcart; sauropod
My motto is: Men -- can't live with 'em, can't shoot 'em! ;)
43 posted on 03/10/2004 5:46:18 AM PST by NYC GOP Chick ("This situation absolutely requires a really futile and stupid gesture be done on somebody's part!")
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To: sauropod
Hey! You pinged her first!
44 posted on 03/10/2004 5:47:00 AM PST by NYC GOP Chick ("This situation absolutely requires a really futile and stupid gesture be done on somebody's part!")
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To: goldstategop
I subscribed to Cosmo while in my twenties, until I tired of reading articles about how to give a BJ and have the best orgasm....

Now they have "Cosmo Girl" for teens. I saw a copy while waiting for my daughter at the orthodontist; this particular issue contained an article about hickeys....

Most women's magazines are trashy, IMO.
45 posted on 03/10/2004 5:47:05 AM PST by OldBlondBabe
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To: NYC GOP Chick
I'm a man....

But I can change...

If I have to...

I guess.

46 posted on 03/10/2004 5:47:11 AM PST by sauropod (I intend to have Red Kerry choke on his past.)
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To: sauropod
Can we clone you? Please???
47 posted on 03/10/2004 5:47:59 AM PST by NYC GOP Chick ("This situation absolutely requires a really futile and stupid gesture be done on somebody's part!")
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To: NYC GOP Chick; sauropod
Can we clone you? Please???

Eeeek!

48 posted on 03/10/2004 5:53:36 AM PST by Lil'freeper (By all that we hold dear on this good Earth I bid you stand, men of the West!)
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To: LizardQueen
Do the media companies really think we're that stupid?

Well, er,-yes, they do.

Warren Farrell's book Why Men Are the Way They Are has, in the introduction to Part 2, the best analysis of women's magazines (Lifetime TV did not exist in 1990) that has ever been done.

Borrow a copy and read it, you'll like it.

49 posted on 03/10/2004 5:54:25 AM PST by Jim Noble (Now you go feed those hogs before they worry themselves into anemia!)
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To: martin_fierro
Thanks for the LINK.

~gloom, despair and agony for me...~

50 posted on 03/10/2004 5:57:38 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: independentmind
How does one compare Cosmopolitan to Good Housekeeping?

Get this book, and read "Introduction to Part 2" for the answer.

51 posted on 03/10/2004 5:57:49 AM PST by Jim Noble (Now you go feed those hogs before they worry themselves into anemia!)
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To: sauropod
take a look at your computer monitor...

take a look at your fancy big-screen TV. It had a nice BLANKET to keep it warm this winter...

52 posted on 03/10/2004 5:58:38 AM PST by hellinahandcart
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To: LizardQueen
Do the media companies really think we're that stupid?

Ha! It's not just the media companies. Try the rag trade.

- Generally speaking those industry pays more to those who sew men's clothes then those who sew women's clothes.

-Outside of such things as blue jeans, raincoats, etc. women's clothes fall apart faster, are more poorly constructed,requires more mending, and are far more likely to be "dry clean only" than men's clothes.

99% of women's clothes have built in obsolescence: styles that we would die-for today, we wouldn't be caught dead in to tomorrow-- or so the fashion mavens assure us.

-The rag trade doesn't seem to have a clue as to how 96% of American women live and want, i.e. try to find a shoe with arch-support that doesn't look like something worn by Ma Kettle.

53 posted on 03/10/2004 6:03:57 AM PST by yankeedame ("Oh, I can take it but I'd much rather dish it out.")
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To: sauropod
To be expected. Look at how they drive.

Look, buddy, if you don't like the way I drive stay off the sidewalk.

;)

LQ

54 posted on 03/10/2004 6:04:48 AM PST by LizardQueen
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To: backhoe
PC is not just in women's magazines. I've gotten to the point that I by-pass library books/novels authored by women!
55 posted on 03/10/2004 6:06:17 AM PST by Carolinamom (Currently re-programming my thinking to positive mode.)
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To: sauropod
"Bow your heads for the man's prayer!" :lol:

I love Red Green - that's one of the shows that's on Canadian daytime TV that I like. Sure better than the stupid soaps on US channels.

LQ
56 posted on 03/10/2004 6:07:42 AM PST by LizardQueen
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To: sauropod; hellinahandcart
To be expected. Look at how they drive.

Using my advanced Snappy Remark Penalty Calculator, I can see that this is going to cost you, so next time you really ought to go ahead and include the address for donations to the "Help 'Pod Get Out of the Doghouse" fund. ;)

57 posted on 03/10/2004 6:11:11 AM PST by general_re (The doors to Heaven and Hell are adjacent and identical... - Nikos Kazantzakis)
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To: general_re; sauropod; NYC GOP Chick; Lil'freeper
He knows how to get out of the doghouse.

He only has to sit up, beg, roll over, and give paw.
58 posted on 03/10/2004 6:16:25 AM PST by hellinahandcart
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To: The Energizer
The Life-Time Network (gag) runs from pure sappiness to the vicious, leftists "victimized by bad men" mentality to tragety-mongering. I haven't bought a womans magazine in over 25 years, and still can't figure out the psychological presumtion that housewives want to flip through a magazine of partial female nudity and exceptionally gorgeous models (are housewives/working women attracted to women? No, not in general--so what-th?) and then coincedently, full page anti-depressent advertisements. The mags invented and promoted the "super-soccer-mom" (ie: "you can do it all") movement and then made a fortune selling "Reducing Stress" articles. The mags are a roller coaster of emotional/psychological manipulation and one of my longest standing pet-peeves of all time.
59 posted on 03/10/2004 6:16:32 AM PST by two23
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To: LizardQueen
On Saturday nites here 11:30 pm in the People's Republic of Maryland.

Red Green is my role model ;-)

60 posted on 03/10/2004 6:38:02 AM PST by sauropod (I intend to have Red Kerry choke on his past.)
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