Notice that I qualified it pointing specifically to people using the term without any hint of irony (and I didn't say "all" either). The fact that Linkara put quotes around it himself indicates to me that he's not really big on the term either, and a big reason is because "SJW" has now become a term used by internet trolls to refer to anything they don't like (usually involving a minority of some kind), which is why I don't take most people using it seriously. Even self-identified SJWs like Linkara are clearly using it with a hint of sarcasm (leading to jokes like "I'm more of a Social Justice Rogue, thanks very much" etc).Fixer wrote:So, if people declare themselves SJWs and then people call them SJWs that's bad? Is it only the context of whether or not they support or oppose the politics that matters because by your own statement just now says that Linkara's isn't worth listening to.
If you know the early uses of the term "SJW", much like the terms "fake news" or "cultural appropriation" (amongst many others), it was used to refer to a specific thing. Said terms were later co-opted (almost always by right wingers) so they could use the term disingenuously. For example, the term "fake news" was formerly very specifically used in left wing circles to refer to literal fake news- articles that would show up on your Facebook feed or whatever that were obvious forgeries coming from completely unreliable sources which weren't even news organizations (but were formatted in a way to make them appear as such, thus "fake" news). It was then slowly co-opted to mean "poor journalism that results from the effects of a 24-hour news cycle", and now it often just means "news that tell me thing I don't like to hear". I'm likely not going to take anyone using the term "fake news" that seriously anymore either, because the original intent of the term has been stretched so far as to render it meaningless. Again, it's not that I won't take anyone using said terms seriously, but they'll have an uphill battle.
First, the Daily Dot is, as far as I know, a crappy editorial site, so my first reaction to that would be to assume that it's just a shitty clickbait article. Supported somewhat by the fact that whoever wrote the article is clearly misinterpreting a lot of what James said. Not quite what I would take as some kind of wider condemnation of the guy (especially considering how his video seemed to do just fine).Your example is the Ghostbusters movie. Look at what happened, James Rolfe AVGN, made one video saying he thought the movie looked awful from the trailer. Instead of doing what his fans expected, he said that he wasn't going to watch it and then make a video talking about how bad it was. He was just not going to see it and explained why. After that he said hey it could even be good. In response he was labeled a sexist, misogynist woman hater that was just hiding his sexism.
https://www.dailydot.com/unclick/ghostb ... to-review/
Second, even ignoring all that, I don't see anything in that article accusing him on being some crazy woman hater, although it does say (rather obnoxiously) there are some implicit biases at work here by pointing out how petty are lot of the reasons he gave actually are. I'm a big fan of James and the AVGN, but don't lose sight of the fact that the article isn't wrong to point out that a lot of his reasoning for not reviewing this specific movie were still rather insubstantial, at least in light of the fact of...well, everything Hollywood typically does. That's ignoring the fact that James has reviewed numerous other bad, cynically-driven reboots himself. Hell even recently in his review of The Mummy he essentially said that he was going to be a sucker for any Universal Monster movie no matter how bad it ended up being because he was just loves the property too much.
I don't know why you're ignoring the context of the fact that the Ghostbusters trailer became quite possibly the most disliked movie trailer ever just hours after its release. It was an awful trailer yes, but again, there's been mountains of other crappy remakes and reboots out of Hollywood which also get dunked on, but not to the degree Ghostbusters did. We all know trolls were getting ready to pounce on the project the minute it was announced, especially after that "grr girl power" photo involving the staff started making the rounds on the internet.
Being that I didn't follow this aspect very closely at all, can you tell me any point where the studio or people actually involved with the film criticized fans in any capacity other than "well, misogynists exist and they suck", which shouldn't really be something disagreeable regardless of how you felt about the film itself.The Ghostbusters backlash was increased exponentially by a feedback loop of an overly hyperbolic defense which attacked the original movie's fanbase. To the point that you had to declare your support for a pretty awful looking movie or be declared a heretic by the end. To which a lot of people who would have been ambivilent for the movie were now actively wishing for it to fail.
I don't have any trouble declaring that I think the movie's a piece of shit myself. I just also recognize that there was a very sexist bent to the sheer volume of criticism it received.