IdeasTap columnist audition pieces
Sample columns I've submitted to IdeasTap
It’s unfortunate that girlishness often equates to rubbishness. For all the campaigns against gender-segregating space weapons and Lego sets from styling dolls and mock-up kitchen playsets in order to create the equal-opportunities playroom of our hopes and dreams, you still get the idea that even they wouldn’t touch the girly toys. To me, socializing girls into pink princessiness is not just the problem – it’s also socializing everyone else to denigrate said pink princessiness. This unfortunate tendency is most evident in children’s television. As Transformers proved, any dumb eighties cartoon produced to sell action figures can just about coast along on fanboy nostalgia. There’s none of the misty-eyed recollections of learning to share thanks to the Care Bears. Oh really? Try telling the rabid fanbase of My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic! The 21st century reboot of the pastel pony collection’s Saturday morning cartoons was created to appeal to little girls and their mildly nostalgic mothers, before inadvertently cultivating a more vocal and proactive fanbase of nerdy young men who call themselves “Bronies” (from the rather ungrammatical “bro ponies”). The Bronies had several reasons for adopting the show. At first it was the episodes’ breadth of pop culture references...
Our choir burbled before the big announcement. We knew it wasn’t the Refugee Week show and our all-American Independence Day concert – this was BIG. We just found out that we were playing T in the Park. You’re playing T in the Park?! (Yes, that T in the Park) Ohmygod, my friends are going all weekend, I’ll tell them to go and see you! Even Beyonce might see you! That was us that night. As reality crept in however, we began to worry about travel, camping and audience reactions. I was worried too, preparing for my first ever festival weekend. I last attended a festival one Sunday afternoon eight years ago. All I remember was the weather being okay, comparing the distance from the car park to the show grounds to that from Glasgow to Balado itself, and became irritated about shorts chafing as the day went on. I liked the Mull Historical Society, but not so much the pint-splashing in massed crowds. As much as I liked it, I don’t regret missing out on subsequent years. In fact, watching Radio 1 DJs going on about how festivals are just great have only made me resent the whole goddamn...
It’s Friday morning. I’m hunched at my laptop – mug at one hand, credit card at other, refreshing *insert name of extortionate ticket-merchants here* for Arcade Fire tickets. I want to, no, NEED to hear the best tracks from The Suburbs and all my old favourites but also worry that it may be ALL the tracks from The Suburbs and that £27.50 excluding booking fee in the cavernous SECC is just not worth it. I will still go, and this single-mindedness and lack of doubt reminds me of what it feels like for good Catholics preparing for the state Papal visit. If your family is quite like mine, they sent away their ticket application form with little agony and hassle. Yes, they would have double-checked numbers and made some slight passing comments about the admission fees and controversies in the “liberal media” (UGH), but no actual heart-searching. It’s just what they do. And they’re obviously going. Unfortunately, I’m going too. I still live with my devout Catholic mother, attend work experience in a certain Catholic publication that she buys weekly and attend Mass on Sundays and Holy Days of Obligation as I should. Most good Catholics would see this...
I’d like to think that I have a good sense of humour. Clips of cats winking out of Christmas trees cheer me up when I feel sad. Rants about disgusting fast food and bad songs inspire me to write about my life. Even recaps of how bad One Direction were on last weekend’s X Factor make me feel less alone in this world. What doesn’t make me laugh? Jokes about disabled people. I know what you’re thinking: Oh no, it’s one of those disability activists who tells us off for calling someone an “idiot”! Even though I’m not that informed, I still understand the potential for humour to smash as well as reinforce stereotypes. Growing up with Asperger’s Syndrome, on the Autistic Spectrum, humour helped me cope with social situations. As a child, jokes about word play and pop culture helped me communicate with other people. Even today, a “Best New Party Game” thread on Videogum allows me to recapture that thrill. Yet until now, I’ve never complained about jokes about disability. Unlike those who opposed the depiction of Down’s Syndrome in Family Guy and the “Never go full retard” joke in Tropic Thunder, I worried about coming across...
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