+1 Lowers my opinion of Sidwell. Seems like a hostile environment. |
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Standing on a corner watching all the girls go by
Brother you don't know a nicer occupation Matter of fact, neither do I Than standing on a corner watching all the girls Watching all the girls, watching all the girls go by Brother if you've got a rich imagination Give it a whirl, give it a try Try standing on a corner watching all the girls Watching all the girls, watching all the girls go by Brother you can't go to jail for what you're thinking Or for that woo look in your eye Standing on the corner watching all the girls Watching all the girls, watching all the girls go by -- from "The Most Happy Fella", which opened on Broadway in 1956, words and music by Frank Loesser |
You'd lose the bet. Blair and many others do not have this feature. "Cutest couple," yes, with photos of couples doing cute things together rather than trying to look hot. |
| This thread is hilarious. As a recent sidwell alum there was no harm in this silly feature. I was never one of the bachelor/bachelorettes and I didn't care. My friend was an eligible bachelorette and she didn't feel objectified. No one really cares, its not a hostile practice, please stop getting so worked up |
| But did the practice stop is my question…. |
+1. Wow! |
I agree with this. It's one thing if kids do it informally, which they will definitely do. It's another thing when the institution sanctions it. The message it: it is acceptable and normal to single out girls purely on the basis of being sexy, because this is what matters. The reality is: it DOES matter. But we as the adults should be trying our hardest to send young girls the message that they shouldn't hang their self-esteem on their body and looks. |
Of course you're a recent alum. Wait until you are a bit older, and you realize what institutional sexism is, and then you get a bit older, and you realize how pervasive sexism is, and how damaged girls are by it, and then you'll be 45, and you'll realize that in the workplace, no one sees you as having any value whatsover, and the roots of this are in low-level, low-key things like "hottest girl" features. It's sad that you didn't learn any critical thinking, or non-mainstream thinking while at Sidwell. You definitely didn't learn anything about the history of feminism. |
This is so spot on. Thank you. Anyone at Sidwell care to re-think this "harmless" tradition? |
It's gotta be a parody issue. Who from Sidwell would qualify as a desirable Bachelor or Bachelorette? |
| Has Melia been featured as a hot sexy single? I wonder how Michelle might feel about that. |
| I went to boarding school years ago and there was no official listing in the year book of the top ten hottest girls, but everyone knew when a list was made based off the Facebook pictures. The girls made one too. There was nothing the school could do to stop teenagers, doing this sort of thing, but I think it is different when it is printed in a school sponsored publication. |
| And by face book, I mean the actually directory, not anything online... |
| I guess I'd file this under 'impact vs. intent.' The intent is to be, 'ha ha this is so funny and we're popular and pretty and stuff.' The impact is sexist objectification. You can argue all you want, but that's the fact. I'm surprised a school with Quaker founders would allow this? Is it the faculty advisor's fault for not being tuned in to the mission of the school? |
| What the ..? Administration there is asleep at the wheel! |