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Thursday, June 28, 2007
Did we go too far?
The latest element of our Evil Mastermind advertising
campaign is a Flash banner ad which is currently running over at DotNetJunkies. It should appear at
the top of the page, but our ad is just one of several in a rotation, so you
may have to hit reload a few times to see it. Or, spare the DotNetJunkies
people the extra server load and go see the ad on our website.
I have a serious question about this ad, but you need to see
it first. So go watch it now.
And if you haven't read our full-length comic book, you need to
at least skim it. Come back here when you're done. I'll wait.
Done?
Good. Now I have a question to ask, but I'm having trouble
figuring out to phrase it. Try this:
Did we go too far?
Wait, that question isn't specific enough. Try this:
How do you feel about the way the
female characters are portrayed in our comics?
Prior to the full-length comic book, I believe we were
completely above reproach. The only women in our comic were minions (the minions
are the smart people). All the minions dress the same, in T-shirts and jeans, regardless
of their gender.
But the full length comic book is a little bit edgier:
- On the first page there is a character named London
Hampton. She's a spoiled celebrity heiress to a billionaire hotel
fortune. She's fully dressed, but her clothes are not exactly modest.
- Later in the story we introduce a character named Ada
Deadlock. Ada is an outside consultant brought in as a project manager to
keep the minions in line. She is a female counterpart to the Evil
Mastermind. Once again, she is fully dressed, but her closet is
apparently devoid of anything with a high neckline.
These two characters have raised a few eyebrows. Not
everyone approves.
Background
Our industry isn't exactly gender-balanced. I still
remember the year that Julie Lerman
scanned the Tech-Ed speaker list and noticed that the female speakers were
outnumbered by the speakers named Brian. I don't want our company to be
contributing to the problem.
I have two daughters. I bristle a bit when I think about
the subtle ways that the world may be steering them away from certain kinds of
opportunities.
So I get annoyed when I flip open a magazine and see a
software company using provocative pictures of women in their ad. If you're
advertising a grid control or a reporting tool, show me the product, not the
model you hired.
Back to my question
Anyway, I'm hearing people complain about our comic in
exactly the same way that I complain about booth babes at trade shows. Have I
become a hypocrite? I hope not.
Personally, I don't think SourceGear has crossed the line.
- We're dealing with female characters as part of a story,
not a product ad with a completely gratuitous photo.
- Our stuff is extremely tame in contrast with what is typical
of the comic genre today.
- I'll admit that London Hampton is cut from an unfortunate
stereotype, but we're poking fun at a specific real-world celebrity who is
apparently cut from that same unfortunate stereotype.
- Ada Deadlock is drawn as an attractive woman, but she is
also smart and powerful.
So I'm pleading "not guilty", but I still consider this
issue to be important. I'd be interested in the opinions of my readers on this
matter. Am I wrong? Did we go too far? Feel free to post a comment here or
send me an email.
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