I’m not sure why this is being downvoted because setting unrealistic body standards is absolutely terrible for society
Comment on Sexualized video games are not causing harm to male or female players, according to new research
Jakule17@lemmy.world 1 day agoThey are causing harm, but not by being sexual. By posing unrealistic standards
wellheh@lemmy.sdf.org 11 hours ago
kadup@lemmy.world 11 hours ago
It’s not the onus of a piece of fiction to be “good for society”.
wellheh@lemmy.sdf.org 10 hours ago
Who said that was a requirement? It’s still a fact that it causes harm
kadup@lemmy.world 10 hours ago
It’s still a fact that it causes harm
You can’t declare something as a fact just because you want it to be one.
Who said that was a requirement?
It’s embedded into your argument. If you do not consider it a requirement, then your discussion is irrelevant.
elterly147@literature.cafe 8 hours ago
yes, sadly
MotoAsh@lemmy.world 6 hours ago
It really depends on the character, IMO. Like Superman or Batman or Black Widow better be at least fit as hell, because their characters are fit as hell and are supposed to be much more capable than the average person.
Not that they should be super unrealistic, either. Like Christian Bale as Batman was totally fine. He doesn’t have to be a meathead or gymnast, and neither should Black Widow. Though, with that said, it would be cool for Hollywood to hire more actually fit women than every woman being a pretty twig… Black Widow and Batman probably should have gymnast level builds if they’re to truly be realistic for the physical feats they pull off.
faythofdragons@slrpnk.net 23 hours ago
I propose it’s not the fiction that’s posing unrealistic standards, but the people who can’t tell the difference between fiction and nonfiction. Fiction, is by definition, unrealistic.
wellheh@lemmy.sdf.org 11 hours ago
Fiction can easily be realistic- You’re thinking of fantasy which is unrealistic. Fiction means it’s not a true story, not that it can’t be realistic
TomAwsm@lemmy.world 11 hours ago
If you swap the words “fiction” and “fantasy” in your post, it still works.
wellheh@lemmy.sdf.org 10 hours ago
Have you ever read historical fiction? Stories like jane eyre are not real but they’re sensible. A story can be fiction and realistic. You can write a short story based on stuff you’ve researched and seen and it’s still fiction.
ulterno@programming.dev 6 hours ago
“can be” ⇏ “has to be”
And it’s not fiction that sets high standards, but the people watching it, that are doing so.
Now you may say that the people are setting those standards only because they are watching said stuff.
But that is just rephrasing, “the people watching fiction are incapable of having their own imagination”.
Back in school, I had a classmate that had a much greater height than others, due to steroid usage.
Now if you say that his parents did that because they watched “JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure”, I’ll say it was not released yet and I have no reason to believe that they bought comic strips from another country and went ahead and made a ‘gag’ piece a basis for their standards.
faythofdragons@slrpnk.net 11 hours ago
Nah, fiction needs unrealistic elements. You can have realism in fiction, but fiction is defined by its deviance from fact. If a movie were completely realistic, itd be a documentary.
upandatom@lemmy.world 11 hours ago
This can’t be your honest take…
wellheh@lemmy.sdf.org 10 hours ago
It is possible to have a realistic story in fiction. For example, Mad Men is a tv series that’s pretty grounded in history but the characters and everything that happens to them are the product of the writers and their research. It’s not a documentary, it’s fiction, but quite realistic.
LettyWhiterock@lemmy.world 14 hours ago
The issue is the many people who complain when a game or other media have women that look like actual women. Calling them men because they don’t look like the perfectly sexualized women in media that they’re used to.
Yes they can’t tell the difference, but they’re still doing real harm.
faythofdragons@slrpnk.net 12 hours ago
Yeah, I really think it’s a type of media illiteracy, and it’s much larger than just sexualization.
Like, I grew up in the church, and remember when they adopted the Left Behind novels into church canon as prophecy. It’s the same kind of not being able to tell fact from fiction, and my parent’s church encouraged it because they were a bunch of con artists.
MotoAsh@lemmy.world 6 hours ago
Yea that’s all churches. Even the good ones with preachers/etc that try to help. They could have the community without the brainwashing, but then there wouldn’t be devout fools opening their wallets every week!
Jakule17@lemmy.world 14 hours ago
You said sexualised movies, I thought you meant movies in which human actors are jacked, sometimes to an unhealthy extent. That’s also the problem with a lot of actresses and also influencers, who are after plastic surgeries, in the perfect light, with a lot of makeup on, posing unrealistic standards for impressionable kids
faythofdragons@slrpnk.net 13 hours ago
Somebody else said that, not me. But regardless, it’s still a problem with people not being able to recognize fact from fiction. Makeup is not the problem, the problem are people who expect you to to look like that without makeup. Boob jobs are not the problem, the problem are people who think there’s something wrong with you if you’ve not had one.
If they replaced everything with mocap tomorrow so actors didn’t have to look the part any more, the problem would still be that people look at Marvel and think it’s an accurate depiction of reality.
xep@discuss.online 8 hours ago
Then the problem surely is media literacy?