Posted on 12/22/2018 11:16:33 AM PST by Kaslin
Conservatives are used to losing culture war fights.
Remember when ABC finally served up a show that treated Trump Nation with some respect? Months later Roseanne was gone, a victim of one God awful Tweet.
Or how the right-leaning Last Man Standing nearly snared an early retirement after it didnt get big enough ratings for ABC.
That didnt happen with Baby, Its Cold Outside. The 1944 yuletide classic came under assault, again, but this year felt different. The #MeToo wave, a worthwhile movement hijacked by the Left, targeted the film for cultural extinction. And Social Justice Warriors have more muscle than ever before.
Just ask Kevin Hart.
It looked grim for this yuletide favorite. And weve seen this story play out over again.
Beloved 80s movies? Now deemed problematic.
Modern comedies? They must walk the woke line or face the PC Police.
A funny thing happened with Baby, Its Cold Outside, though. A handful of stations yanked the film, fearing the usual SJW outrage. It should have ended there, even if those offended by the song were tiny in number. The Vegas odds surely leaned in that direction.
Instead, radio audiences fought back.
Hard.
The stations in question quickly backpedaled, putting the song back into regular rotation. A Denver station said the response in favor of the song hit 95 percent of respondents.
Need more? One station went so far as to play the number nonstop for two hours. It was a deliberate thumb in the eye to the monster that is PC Groupthink.
Right-thinking souls won. What made it official? GQ, a consistently leftish site, waved the white towel.
The magazines op-ed, titled, The "Baby, It's Cold Outside" Discourse Is Boring as Hell, tells the story. You barely have to squint to read between the lines.
Oh my god, I am so bored of the Baby, Its Cold Outside discourse. Play it or dont. Its not a grand political position!
The article provides the necessary context behind the song, admitting its not remotely rapey. Then, in the next gulp of air, suggests it still could trigger a listener.
Im all for erring on the side of making sure more people feel supported and included than not, and if the song is triggering and traumatizing then by all means, lets not play it...
But what you think about Baby, Its Cold Outside represents just thatnot that youre more woke or more reasonable than those who disagree with you, not that youve aligned yourself with larger political strands. Just that you heard the song and, for all the reasons we are either drawn to or repulsed by art, landed somewhere.
Game. Set. Match.
The irony here is that magazines like GQ could be making similar arguments in any number of other PC Police cases. Just look at the uproar over the racist Clint Eastwood movie The Mule.
Guarantee you wont find GQ rushing to the screen legends defense.
The racist scenes in that movie are nothing of the sort, or simply reflect an old timer using language made popular decades ago.
Few, if any, liberals will rally around this screen icon, though. Eastwood made that impossible several years ago when he accurately mocked President Barack Obama as an empty chair.
Once again, movie fans are fighting back against PC film critics. The Mule earned $17.5 million during its opening weekend, a handsome sum for a movie featuring an 88-year-old star. Thats even more impressive when you consider the film opened in 2,588 screens. Most wide-release films earn well north of 3,000.
Dr. Seuss The Grinch, for example, played in 3,680-plus screens last weekend its sixth weekend of release.
Podcaster Adam Carolla offered a smart battle cry against the PC movement recently on his podcast. You retreat, they encroach, he said of these humor-free scolds.
Carolla is right. And, for once, fans of Baby, Its Cold Outside refused to retreat. And well be hearing the song over and again for years to come. Lets hope we learn the right lessons from this small but important cultural win.
I think weve all been missing the obvious:
How can it be cold outside, with all that global warming going on?"
And Dodie Stevens was only 14 when that song was released.
About 25 years ago, I met Dodie Stevens at a party in the home of a rock and roll historian, disc jockey and teacher who is a friend of mine.
That's how!!!
That’s pretty cool. Hard to remember how young she is, given that “Pink Shoelaces” was released when I was not yet 4 years old.
and if the song is triggering and traumatizing then by all means, lets not play it...
No. Change the station, twinkle toes.
L
I wanted Roseanne gone after she had a kid cross dressing.
What do you expect from that idiot?
Ha. Yup.
Libs are scandalized about double entendres in a SONG??
Poor babies...
'Specially in Australia, where they've moved Christmas to a much warmer month.
Boring = We lost.
While I do not consider it an authentic Christmas (as in, Christ Mass) song, I know it to be nominally associated with the Christmas holiday season - at least in urban California.
I am a semi-professional chorister, and I sang in a secular Christmas-season concert nearly ten years ago. The seasonal repertoire included this song, with a different duet for each verse.
I personally do not recall ever hearing it on the radio except during the Thanksgiving-to-Christmas period.
These were good, checked them all out. Fun and funny!
Not really sure defending a song that just plain sucks should be considered a victory. Really, feminist complaints aside, the song BLOWS and the world will be a better place when it’s forgotten.
You are correct, it shouldn’t be referenced to Christmas.
Youre just saying that to be obstinate, you science denier!
Indeed, apes may never forgive her for comparing them to Valerie Jarret.
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