"'Just so you know, the words 'just' and 'cramps', they don't go together.'- Ginger, Ginger Snaps"
Thanks, We'll Make Our Own Media by Adele M. Stan
http://www.womensmediacenter.com/ex/040408.html
I really liked this article about women in media and wanted to share. 
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Thanks, We'll Make Our Own Media by Adele M. Stan
April 4, 2008
At a time when women of substance can seem barely present in mainstream media, there's a movement of women who have defined this as the feminist media opportunity: the moment when women can change the shape of public discourse by making their own media. At last weekend's Women, Action & Media conference (WAM!) in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the creative urge was spread with evangelistic fervor.
"I think that there is an increasing impatience with allowing the corporate media to set the agenda even on what the topics of importance are," said conference director Jaclyn Friedman. While the WAM! agenda featured plenty of big-think, content-analysis topics, a nearly equal number of sessions featured how-to sessions for independent authors, bloggers, internet-television producers, and audio podcast-makers. Indeed, a growing number of women seem to be saying, if you can't get the media you want, then make it yourself, dammit!
Media technologist Deanna Zandt, who provides the tech magic for such sites as Feministing, AlterNet and Hightower Lowdown, is unshakable in her conviction that a singular moment for feminist media has arrived. "I think women tend to look at things, or have looked at things in the past, like, oh, well, 'that's tech,' or 'that's nerdy and I don't get that.' You know, the 'I'm not good at math' problem," Zandt explained. "And that's just not true anymore. You just can't say that it's too hard to do."
Indeed, with new tools-many available for free-like YouTube for the presentation of Web-based video, and older, but equally user-friendly tools for creating blogs and Web-based audio, a whole new media world is available to anyone who has something to say.
At the WAM! conference, whatever your favored form of media, you could find a workshop to help you learn how to make it on your own. Call it DIY media. Christine Cupaiuolo, former blogger for Ms. magazine and founder of PopPolitics.com, presented a soup-to-nuts introduction to not only making your blog, but promoting it as well. Zandt gave a presentation on using the latest Web tools to enhance feminist blogs. Margaret Pickering of the Participatory Culture Foundation, together with foundation colleague Dean Jansen, conducted a hands-on workshop on how to produce and upload videos to the internet. (Sound like fun? Here's their step-by-step guide: MakeInternetTV.org.)
Lisa Jervis, who co-founded the magazine Bitch: Feminist Response to Pop Culture in 1996, was gratified to see at WAM! the feminist "indie" media in new iterations promulgated by a new generation. Feminist blogs, gaming and videos are being produced by women with little more than ideas and a computer. "It's incredibly exciting and inspiring to see all the young women flooding into feminist media work in all genres," Jervis said. Bitch began as an earlier form of DIY media: a print magazine made on a copy machine. Today, make/shiftClamor mag) as one of her all-time favorite DIY media projects, is the new kid in town. It's totally homemade, explains Jessica Hoffman, one of the editorial forces in the collective that publishes make/shift, except for the use of an outside printer.
For her part, Hoffman names the internet video series, "FemWatch" as one of her favorite DIY media projects. Hosted by the blogger known as Sudy, FemWatch's first episode is devoted to the topic of "Say It Ain't So Feminism"-writings on feminist blogs where scribes have revealed unbecoming traits, like classism, racism or shallowness. Hardly without humor, Sudy acts out the words of the offending bloggers.
Homemade videos like this one, where anti-abortion protesters are asked how they would penalize a woman who had an illegal abortion, can make a point rarely addressed in mainstream media political talk shows. And as CNN's nod to the power of YouTube showed during the heat of presidential primary season, homemade media will continue to have an impact on elections. Kay Steiger, associate editor of Campus Progress, was among the attendees at WAM!, having just launched the Web site's election-focused "I'm Voting For," which features homemade videos on a range of issues up for discussion in the presidential contest, including these on reproductive rights. (You're invited to submit your own.)
Independent radio, too, has found a home on the Web, and offers great DIY possibilities in its digital form. The National Radio Project, a non-profit producer of audio content and led by WAM!-goer Lisa Rudman, recently produced this series by Tena Rubio on the neglect of the health care needs of women prisoners incarcerated in California. (The National Radio Project offers instructions on how to freelance for their site.)
Other favorite DIY media named by attendees at WAM! included La Chola, by the blogger who calls herself brownfemipower, and the Feminist Peace Network blog by Lucinda Marshall.
During her workshops, one of the things Deanna Zandt has participants do is shout out major moments or breakthroughs in communications history. People will call out everything from drumming to the invention of the printing press and television, said Zandt. "And I ask people what happened to all of those tools over time; in whose control did they end up? Whose domain did they end up in? Certainly not ours.
"[That's why] I require women in my workshops to participate in this particular moment," Zandt explained. We can't have that again. We can't lose our access to these tools. We can't lose what we can do with these tools. I mean, it's so democratized now."
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About the Author: Adele M. Stan is a columnist for The American Prospect Online and author of the weblog, AddieStan. Stan began her journalism career at Ms. magazine.
About us:
The Women's Media Center strives to make women visible and powerful in the media. From our founding in 2004 by Jane Fonda, Robin Morgan, and Gloria Steinem to our advocacy and media relations work today, we are part of a strong feminist tradition that seeks to hold the media accountable for presenting the world as we know it. Our mission is to assure that women and women's experiences are reflected in the media just as women are present everywhere in the real world; that women are represented as local, national, and global sources for and subjects of the media; and that women media professionals have equal opportunities for employment and advancement. In addition to the WMC founders, current board members include Loreen Arbus, Cristina Azocar, Jodie Evans, Gloria Feldt, Carol Jenkins, Teresa McBride, Pat Mitchell, Jessica Neuwirth, Rossana Rosado, and Helen Zia. For more information, please visit www.womensmediacenter.com.
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After much media hype, I think abortion is about as milked as possible. There just seems to be something awry in feminism. The first fifty years, women gained the power to vote and work at jobs making viable wages! The second half it seems to be all about birth control and abortion. And anything "women oriented" continues to celebrate these topics after nearly 50 years. Can't we move on?
What about the glass ceiling? There are so many issues facing women today that these just aren't cutting it. Sure, it's good women can choose. Doesn't put food on the table. Doesn't insure the uninsured.
And another thing I've noticed, women are stereotyped regardless. Pro-Choice women are always sluts. Pro-Life women are fanatics. There's no gray area of "normality." Those who are Pro-Life are always Christian fanatics, even though there are many religion's in America that don't condone or support abortion. I think women in the media have also helped these unshakable stereotypes sustain themselves. It's little wonder why crimes against women have skyrocketed in these recent decades.
Also, why are successful women, like Martha Stewart, portrayed as these horrible villains when Donald Trump is worshiped? Like he's got a sweet personality and makes sparkling dinner conversation?
There seems to be an eagerness in the media to portray successful women as "bad" or something is "wrong" with them whereas successful men are adored. The male executives are fun-loving, brilliant, happy, fulfilled. The female executives are slave drivers, frustrated, miserable, and socially inept. The same with high school. A male student who is studious and driven is ambitious and applauded. The female student "can't get a date."
Just some thoughts. Thanks for listening. I agree. Thank God for the internet. Now we can come together and plot to overthrow the male oppression... I mean network! We can network with like minded individuals. 
The male executives are fun-loving, brilliant, happy, fulfilled. The female executives are slave drivers, frustrated, miserable, and socially inept. The same with high school. A male student who is studious and driven is ambitious and applauded. The female student "can't get a date."
I couldn't agree with you more more more. This is exactly the way it is.
Why? women and men both have these preconceived ideas we both stereotype both males and females. Ugh. Make slife harder (like I need that)
But to be fair, I wasn't driven or studious in high school, and I totally couldn't get a date, either. So that just shows how lame these stereotypes are.
I have to say that I was extremely driven and studious in high school. I've been writing since 13.
BUT, and sadly there was a but. My family was poor. I had no help from teachers, no real mentors, etc. I showed my work to three teachers and one replied "you wrote THIS?" Like I had plagiarized.
I didn't really trust any more.
So, I had to wing it. But, it's pathetic that kids have to go through that. I've been going at it ever since and everything I've learned is self-taught, no college or anything.
There was a big difference between the genders. The poor boys who were studious, like I mentioned earlier, were celebrated and loved, regardless of family status.




Good article. The digital revolution isn't exactly what was televised to the masses. Instead, it's allowing for the creation of more niche content and giving those who were previously locked out of the media a voice of their own.
Jessica