-
6 votes
-
Magnus Carlsen has made a sensational u-turn and confirmed that he will participate in the 2024 FIDE World Blitz Championship in New York City
13 votes -
‘Sonic’ and ‘Mufasa’ brawl over no. 1; ‘Nosferatu’ feasts $40m+; ‘A Complete Unknown’ rockin’ $23m+ five-day
9 votes -
Covid was supposed to kill cinema – but did lockdown and gen Z save cinephilia?
18 votes -
$1.22 billion Mega Millions jackpot won in California
17 votes -
Magnus Carlsen has been disqualified from the World Rapid Championship in New York due to a dress code violation – also withdrawing from the World Blitz
21 votes -
(PDF) Living happily ever after? The hidden health risks of Disney princesses.
16 votes -
The return of non-PC language in the US mainstream
I don't know how appropriate this topic will be or how uncomfortable some users will be addressing it. But I noticed a switch online in the usage of previously determined slurs. When I was a child...
I don't know how appropriate this topic will be or how uncomfortable some users will be addressing it. But I noticed a switch online in the usage of previously determined slurs.
When I was a child in the '00s, it was pretty common for people to say the "r-word" as well as refer to things as "gay" whenever they meant stupid or bad. I remember ad campaigns to stop the latter from occurring (one commercial featuring Hillary Duff and another featuring Wanda Sykes). But both of those things went away as we got deeper into the 2010s.
The Obama and, especially, the Trump years were marked by increased progressive language. I do think the turn was in 2016 when using these terms became widely unacceptable. Even two years earlier the hit song Fancy by Iggy Azalea featuring Charli XCX contained the lyric: "That my flow r***** each beat dear, departed."
I think a lot of the hyper-political correctness of 2016 and onwards was a response to the Trump presidency. I think people on the progressive left felt the need to be hyper-vigilant about that. Once the Biden administration happened these rigid beliefs began to relax.
I'll use a few examples of this shift involving a network TV show, to take this conversation into a more concrete real world. Saturday Night Live.
Shane Gillis, a very non politically correct comedian was hired as part of the cast of SNL in 2019. Lorne Michaels hired him to appeal to a more conservative crowd or to at least not be so catering to its liberal demographic. Gillis, who is largely not a conservative, was caught in a scandal following his casting news. Clips from his podcast surfaced of him making fun of Asians and mocking their accents. Gillis was shortly fired.
Fast forward to this year: Shane Gillis hosts SNL. Not only that, in his opening monologue he says the r-word.
Another SNL adjacent example. Matt Healy, lead singer of the 1975, appeared on The Adam Friedland Show podcast. The podcast, originally called Cumtown, is known for its non-PC humor. Healy participated in jokes making fun of Ice Spice and laughed at the host's more racy humor. Scandal surrounded Healy, who was dating Swift at the time, and he was essentially "canceled." Except, he was immediately the musical guest on SNL not long after the scandal (they were the musical spot for Jenna Ortega's episode). If this was 2019, The 1975 likely would not have been invited to be the musical guests, and/or the host of the episode (in this case Ortega) would have been pressured by her PR team to make some sort of post disavowing their inclusion. This didn't happen. In fact this year Jenna Ortega criticized political correctness herself
The last SNL example I wanted to give was in Ariana Grande's recent episode a joke was included where Grande calls someone a pathetic little gay guy, followed by her saying "I meant gay as in stupid and bad" which was very well received on all corners of the internet.
So what happened here? My perception might be warped since in late 2022 I began using the subreddits r/redscarepod and r/theadamfriedlandshow where this type of humor and the usage of these terms was already normal. So it was a little odd to me when these began gaining steam in the outside world.
If it really was just a response to Biden's presidency I feel like we would now be returning to the hyper-political correctness of the 2010s during Trump's administration. But that doesn't seem to be happening.
Maybe political correctness fell out of style, and that will be the case for another five to ten years when it becomes fashionable again.
43 votes -
HIV/AIDs-centered camp in northern Minnesota is closing, and that's wonderful!
20 votes -
‘The dead zone is real’: why US farmers are embracing wildflowers
34 votes -
Disney recaptured its dominance in 2024 as family films and sequels ruled the US box office
8 votes -
Meet the people running LGBTQ+ youth shelters during the hardest season
24 votes -
The Walmart effect
23 votes -
Oregon house cat died after eating pet food that tested positive for bird flu - food sold and marketed as raw
31 votes -
Disney's Animatronics: A living history
15 votes -
Everybody loves FRED: How America fell for a data tool
13 votes -
US rural electric co-ops secure $4.37 billion in clean energy funding
19 votes -
McKinsey consulting firm agrees to pay another $650 million to avoid trial over US opioid crisis
22 votes -
Making US school cafeteria food from the 1980s and 1990s
11 votes -
The US "Ice Cream Truck Song" is rooted in racism
29 votes -
More liquor stores in Oakland California are selling produce, thanks to Saba Grocers and City tax initiative (2021)
17 votes -
John Denver & The Muppets: A Christmas Together (1979)
10 votes -
‘Hedgehog’ still has upper claw over ‘Mufasa’ with $62m+ in pre-Christmas frame as ‘Lion King’ prequel loses crown
19 votes -
Nordstrom to be acquired by Nordstrom family and Mexican retail group for $6.25B
25 votes -
Tenant unions are coming. US landlords aren't ready.
65 votes -
Two US Navy pilots shot down over Red Sea in apparent ‘friendly fire’ incident, US military says
26 votes -
Louisiana forbids public health workers from promoting COVID, flu and mpox shots
33 votes -
Sionic Energy unveils 100% silicon anode battery with high energy density
11 votes -
US youth drug use defies expectations, continues historic decline
23 votes -
Hank Green on the recent US drone sightings
16 votes -
The Wicked movie that almost was: Imagine no songs, Demi Moore or Whoopi Goldberg as Elphaba—and it came out twenty-five years ago
7 votes -
Three of the biggest US banks are facing a lawsuit for ‘widespread fraud’ on Zelle
32 votes -
Copyright abuse is getting Luigi Mangione merch removed from the internet – artists, merch sellers, and journalists making and posting Luigi media have become the targets of bogus DMCA claims
65 votes -
Should I stay or should I go now?
36 votes -
US President Joe Biden administration grants California waiver to ban gas car sales in 2035
48 votes -
Chrysler only sells a minivan. The iconic American brand’s days could be numbered.
20 votes -
California squirrels are hunting and eating voles, surprising UC Davis study says
9 votes -
Starbucks baristas to strike in US on Friday, union says
25 votes -
Doctor fired after running emergency department warns about effect of for-profit firms on US health care (2022)
40 votes -
MasterCard sells my transaction data in "anonymised" form; but I get targeted spam related to credit card use. How does it work?
26 votes -
North Korea trading soldiers for Russian fighter jets, US says
14 votes -
IKEA names its furniture for Swedish destinations. This American road tripped to visit them.
10 votes -
Lawsuit reveals how US colleges really talk about rich applicants
12 votes -
Lawsuit reveals how United States private colleges talk about rich applicants
12 votes -
Kansas City receives new streetcars for Main Street extension
12 votes -
More riders than expected have used Oklahoma City's RAPID NW bus line
11 votes -
The first US lawsuit against ultra-processed foods
11 votes -
How opioid giant Endo escaped a $7 billion US federal penalty
7 votes -
Uber for nursing: How an AI-powered gig model is threatening US health care
7 votes -
Medicare for all would save 68,000 US lives per year and reduce costs by $450 billion
78 votes