Apr. 7th, 2013

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Not Your Mother's Rules, the latest in the Rules franchise of advice books by Ellen Fein and Sherrie Schneider, came out this January, approximately 18 years after the original Rules. [Why won't it die????] As soon as I heard that Fein and Schneider were repackaging their shit for a new generation, I immediately purchased it.

SPOILER ALERT: This is only "not your mother's Rules" insofar as het women reading the original didn't have to deal with the same technology that het women reading this version face. Other than that, it's completely the same.

Onward!

Cover: Wow, they really cheaped out on the cover design. That rhinestone-studded key pendant is available at Claire's, your neighborhood purveyors of tacky shit, for ~$3.99. I know because I have one. Makes a great 1:6 scale key. Is this an indication that this is some sort of half-assed, shoestring project?

"Now with their daughters, too!"

Oh jeez, what fresh hell is this? Some marketing peon no doubt thought that a Rules update should include actual perspectives from the target demographic, so they hauled Fein and Schneider's kids in to shill for their moms' insecurity industry.

Page 3: "But the truth is, all the old Rules still apply!"

Then why does this book exist?

Page 4: "In fact, one of the guys we interviewed said, 'I could never be a girl -- you talk about relationships too much!' LOL!"

You can tell they're totally hip to the millennials' jive because they're using chatspeak.

Page 4: "...[M]en are extremely visual and cannot be attracted to a girl just because she is nice, smart or funny. ... It may sound bad, but physical attraction is everything for a guy."

"May" sound bad? It does sound bad. It portrays het men as stupid subhumans with an inability to think critically or perceive anything beyond the surface. It also perpetuates the bilgey stereotype that men only think about sex, and they do so constantly; thus they are pretty simple-minded.

You know what also sounds bad? Throughout their series, Fein and Schneider refer to woman as "girls," but never to men as "boys." Men are always "men" or "guys." But women are always infantilized and trivialized through their terminology.

Page 8: "We've also included special commentary from our daughters, who grew up with the Rules and can help you apply them to a younger generation and the latest technology. Sometimes a twentysomething can best understand what another twentysomething is going through."

Translation: We brainwashed our kids into accepting our retrograde heteronormative dating bullshit. Also we're woefully out of touch. OMG! LOL!

Page 10: "Our moms never pushed this way of dating on us, but we both have traditional values and believe in old-fashioned courtship, even today."

That's "their daughters" talking [supposedly]. I bet they're contractually obligated to say that.

Page 13: "We ... have come to the conclusion that those who became promiscuous or acted out sexually  did so because they did not get enough attention, affection or approval growing up. ... [W]e ... have been shocked to find out how many of our clients who have trouble dating had disapproving or absentee mothers."

If your daughter's a slut, it's your fault, you frigid bitch.

Page 18: "Don't react or overreact when your daughter tells you something you don't like. ... If she tells you, ... 'I'm pregnant' or 'I think I'm gay,' just say, 'I'm so glad you told me. I love and support you no matter what. It's your life, so how would you like to handle it?'"

Being queer: now just as horrific and shameful as becoming pregnant while a teenager!

Page 24: "When your mother or friends suggest the Rules, do you say, 'I have an MBA. No one is going to tell me what to do'?"

Wow...they're still harping on women with MBAs, even two decades later. Someone ought to tell them that holding grudges is a waste of life.

Page 30: "Alexa, a 32-year-old MBA, called us crying after her boyfriend of 3 years walked out. She was up all night reading the Rules and hysterical after finding out that she had broken every single one of them."

Holy cannoli, here we go again. Will you please stop displacing your own personal frustrations onto women who don't even know you exist? Quit having an external locus of control and take some responsibility for your life.

Yes, I understand -- you have no control over the fact that you didn't get into Harvard Business School. However, if you're that hung up on the concept of an MBA, you do have control over whether you waste your life raging about it or instead do something constructive with your piss.

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Pages 35-37: "We tell clients to grow their hair long or even to get hair extensions.  ... Also, curly dos can look messy, while long, stick-straight hair looks more like one of those luscious shampoo ads.

"...We often tell women who feel blah with brown hair to try highlights or go blond.

"...If you have a lot of facial hair -- a unibrow or even a mustache -- you should get it lightened or waxed. If you have weak nails or bite them, get a gel French manicure that can last for two or three weeks. ... Get your teeth whitened... Wear contact lenses [try blue and green shades!] instead of glasses."

Hate your race. Pursue Aryan perfection.

Pages 39-40: "...[A]ny Rules girl's best accessory is big [three-inch] hoop earrings in silver or gold. ... Little or big diamond studs ... are too dainty and suburban-looking when you are single. ...

"Another great accessory is a chunky gold watch. It's bold, modern and reeks of self-confidence. ...

"Big sunglasses and the au courant bag are also smart investments..."

When did "suburban" move from neutral adjective to sneering insult?

"Reeking" of self-confidence doesn't seem particularly attractive to me.

Page 42: "Sometimes successful women are the biggest Rules breakers. They argue that their MBAs or graduate degrees give them license to pursue men like they pursue careers and condos."

This anti-MBA theme is becoming tedious.

Page 43: "Abby, a twenty-one-year-old journalism major, thought the Rules were so yesterday."

The best way to relate to today's youth is to make sure that your musical references are at least ten years out of date. Lollerskates!

Page 99: "Few guys want to read paragraph after paragraph about a woman's feelings, thoughts, wants or needs."

Shut up! You are a fuckhole, nothing more.


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Pages 202-206:  "Like it or not, we live in a thin-obsessed world where guys have their pick of girls, so most prefer a thin girlfriend, not an overweight one. ...

"We are not trying to make you feel bad -- and please don't get upset as you are reading this -- we just want to be honest about how your appearance can affect you socially. ...

"...[H]alf the battle is changing the way you eat. The other half is changing the way you think. ... Instead of thinking that nothing beats doughnuts dipped in butter cream, think nothing beats being in a bikini on the beach. Think long term. Being disciplined with food will help you be disciplined with ... everything else."

"We live in a thin-obsessed world," but let's not bother to examine critically the problems with this obsession, nor even the possibility of alternatives. Let's just parrot its scripts unthinkingly.

I like how they pretend to be so compassionate and realistic about their fat readers' dating prospects. They're just concerned for those poor tubs o' lard.

Note that Fein and Schneider's view of fatness is that it is an entirely voluntary state achieved by wretched slobs with no willpower.  The idea that involuntary factors affect one's fatness never occurs to them. We don't give a shit if you're a woman with PCOS, a slow-burning metabolism, generations of fat ancestors and a regimen of antidepressants with a side effect of weight gain!! None of these attributes have anything to do with your fatness! You're fat because you're lazy and disgusting, no exceptions.

Page: "You can make simple but effective decisions, like choosing the stairs over the elevator or walking to campus instead of taking the shuttle bus."

People with mobility impairments need not apply.

Page 247: "With all the attention paid to gay marriages today, you may forget how to behave in a same-sex relationship. There are still Rules; they just promote a little more camaraderie and mutuality; there's some more balance. The spirit of the Rules still applies: you should never show all your cards, pursue anyone relentlessly, or erase all boundaries."

What the hell is up with that first sentence? Some of us might be really excited about marriage equality, but that doesn't mean that our personal interest in the subject wipes our minds clean of how to do whatever type of relationship we feel like doing. Contrary to popular belief, it is possible for queer people to think about two things [or even more!!!!] at once.

As for the rest of the paragraph, it doesn't actually say anything, except, "If you're queer, what we just said doesn't apply to you, except when it does, but we're not going to tell you when it does because we have no flipping clue." Here's a thought, Fein and Schneider: Leave us out of your heteronormative manipulative dating bullshit. Your token attempt at inclusion proves its irrelevance to us, and we're not impressed.

The End.

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No, not making smart remarks. Being beautiful. :p

Look...boring pictures. Read more... )
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I made her eyebrows thicker. As is my wont, I'll most likely end up doing her up based on what I think will look best when I have her and my colored pencils actually in front of me. Well, and my paints too. There's no way I'm scribbling on the inside of her mouth. Read more... )

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Since I got some 1:6 scale tombstone magnets from them last year, Dellamorte Co. has come out with more beautiful, detailed artwork.

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