TL;DR: I did not know that I have this title and now I want it back!
God damn it, I was Information Officer? Here you go:
And redpill people see her as the enemy and what is wrong with the world. (People who see the male as the poor victim of today's society)
What to get that title back!
Here have some more informations on Anita:
Born: 1983 (age 34–35)
[
Nationality: Canadian-American
Education: BA (communication studies)
MA (social and political thought)
Occupation:
- Media critic
- blogger
- public speaker
Website: feministfrequency.com
About
Anita Sarkeesian is a pundit, videoblogger and media critic best known as the host of Feminist Frequency
[1][2], a web series in which Sarkeesian reviews and analyses common tropes in popular culture from a feminist viewpoint. In 2012, she was introduced to a larger audience after launching a
Kickstarter campaign to fund a new web series exploring the negative tropes surrounding women in video games.
Online History
Anita Sarkeesian’s first Feminist Frequency video was uploaded to YouTube on May 20th, 2009. Titled “Dollhouse Renewed? Why not Terminator: Sarah Connor Chronicles?,” the video discusses Fox’s decision to renew the “Dollhouse” series and cancel “Terminator: Sarah Connor Chronicles,” comparing the misogyny found in the former to the empowered female characters found in the latter. Sarkeesian’s YouTube video was later reposted to the Feminist Frequency blog
[11] on June 22nd, 2009.
In March 2010, Sarkeesian launched a Facebook fan page
[17] for Feminist Frequency, which has gained more than 24,000 likes as of January 2013. In March 2011, Feminist Frequency paired with Bitch Media
[13] for a six-part series titled “Tropes vs. Women”
[12] in which Sarkeesian analyzes different tropes found in pop culture and the negative female stereotypes they perpetuate. In the premiere video, Sarkeesian analyzed the trope
Manic Pixie Dream Girl.
Criticism
Sarkeesian has seen strong opposition online, as many viewers have criticized her feminist viewpoint as being too radical. On October 23rd 2011, YouTuber
TheAmazingAtheist released a video titled “Everyone’s a Cry Baby” (shown below), in which he argues Sarkeesian’s viewpoint as extremist. Other bloggers have shared criticism of the series on their personal blogs as well as in comments on gossip blog Oh No They Didn’t
[15] and Yahoo! Answers.
[16]As of January 2013, there are nearly 50 search results on YouTube for “Feminist Frequency criticism.”
[14]
Kickstarter and Harassment
On June 4th, 2012, Sarkeesian announced a spin-off series that would focus specifically on video games, along with a Kickstarter fundraiser
[3] to finance the series. The proposal of the series instantly elicited hateful responses, with Sarkeesian receiving death threats and hate mail from angered members of the video game community and other anti-fans. On June 7th, she published a selection of the thousands of hateful comments left on her Kickstarter video.
[18]Three days later, she documented the vandalism that appeared on her Wikipedia page
[19], which was defaced with pornographic images.
Throughout June, the overwhelming amount of hateful comments and harassment targeted at Sarkeesian was documented by the Daily Dot
[20], Carbon Games
[21], Destructoid
[6], the Mary Sue
[22], Wired
[23], 16×9
[8], the New Statesman
[24] and Kotaku.
[7][25] On July 5th, 2012, Newgrounds user Bendilin Spurr
[4] posted a flash game titled “Beat Up Anita Sarkeesian”
[5], however the game was taken down from the site on the following day. Despite all the negativity, the Kickstarter proved to be a success, raising $158,917 over the course of a month. Sarkeesian was then invited to video game studio Bungie
[9], as well as TEDxWomen 2012
[10] in support of the project.
On September 4th, 2012, a Redditor submitted an image to /r/Gaming
[26] pointing out the fact that the Kickstarter-funded web series didn’t launch on time and accusing Sarkeesian of soliciting backers for information relating to games using damsels in distress, which the poster perceived as doing the ground work for her. The post generated more than 1,200 comments regarding the web series as well as the the general failure of Kickstarter projects launching on time as originally promised. On the following day, the gaming news site Gameranx
[27] responded to the Reddit post, noting that the series was still in production and that Sarkeesian anticipated the launch of the first video in late fall or early winter. However, by mid-January, none of the videos had been released. A discussion of the Kickstarter’s failure to follow through appeared on the Escapist forums
[28] on January 17th, 2013.
-Know Your Meme (aka the Wiki the Internet need)