The Weekly Geek: Barbie gets geeky
Oscar season is always exciting for movie geeks — this year, especially so, since sci-fi films were well represented (Avatar and District 9 were both in the running for best picture). Somehow, something even better happened — Kathryn Bigelow became the first woman in history to win an Academy Award for best director — and best picture.

So, The Hurt Locker may not exactly be a geek fest, but Bigelow has a storied history of making nerd-friendly films. If you’ve never seen her 1987 horror masterpiece Near Dark, you should go Netflix that ASAP. Even better (at least for guilty pleasure purposes) is the classic Patrick Swayze and Keanu Reeves “epic” Point Break — the best movie about surfing robbers ever made, hands down. Another cult/geek favorite in her filmography is Strange Days, which, in my opinion, competes with Lawnmower Man for best virtual reality schlock of the mid '90s.
Strange Days

I offer my humble congratulations to Bigelow for the honor — and also to Sandra Bullock, for being the first person to win a Razzie (raspberry award, for “worst actress”) and an Oscar in the same year.
The other biggest news of the week was almost as exciting. Nerdy girls, get ready for Computer Engineer Barbie — complete with a pink laptop and totally cute pink glasses.

The new for 2010 Barbie won the popular vote (the “girls vote” went to News Anchor Barbie), and despite the fact that I was more of a Legos and action figures girl growing up, I am positively tickled by how cool this is. Once upon a time, Barbie was just another pretty face with perfect curves. Now, she’s a totally hot computer scientist — and I, for one, think it’s a very good thing for little girls to see.
Of course, she’s so into pink that there’s been controversy, but I’m with Rebecca Zook of Mashable, who wrote this insightful post on Barbie’s newest career:
While some have embraced coder Barbie, others have attacked the concept, saying that her pink laptop, sparkly leggings, and trendy glasses are “too feminine” to be realistic. The critics imply that real coders aren’t feminine, and feminine coders aren’t real. But women shouldn’t feel like they have to stop being feminine to work in technology.
She notes that the very first programmer, Ada Lovelace was a woman — and a total fashion diva to boot:
This false dichotomy — that you have to choose between being feminine and ‘looking the part’ of a mathematician or scientist — might be part of what turns girls off from math and science in the first place … As a female math tutor, I used to feel the need to “tone down” my feminine style. I’d wear black slacks when working with my students for fear of appearing “unprofessional.” But then I decided to show my true fashion colors and wear my homemade dresses and sparkly barrettes when tutoring.
Since then, some kids have been openly relieved when they met me and found I didn’t look like their stereotype of a math tutor. The “math geek” stereotype in their brains was more intimidating and less fun than the real-life tutor wearing fuzzy pink boots.”
See? It’s ok to love “girly” fashion and computers, young ladies. Don’t believe the haters.
- Danielle Riendeau's blog
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On the other hand...
Women should always be beautiful, right? If you're an ugly woman, you're failing at life. If you pursue a career, you are still expected to be a woman - which of course means stylish dress and the makeup. What's a woman if she's not fashionable?
It's a double-edged sword.
Never played with Barbie... want to now though!
That Barbie rocks! I'm an IT Apps manager so I feel very proud and will get one for all the boys in my office to play with (it's the only girl action they'll probably ever get). Dont kids aspire to be atronauts or GI Joe etc though? Or is that just me?
"mummy... when i grow up i want to be an ASP.NET Web Developer" ????
*Sigh*
^ Word.
^ Word.
Off Topic
I'm genuinely surprised (in a good way)
10 years ago you'd never have seen anything like that (Barbie). It's progress, albeit in an unexpected form..
Yes! Thank you for this!
The same can be said about the lesbian community too, and moreso, how people on the outside view it. Femme-identity is often thought to be 'not looking gay' and women feel pressured to change to fit in.
I've always been a firm believer that a woman shouldn't have to choose between being smart and being sexy/beautiful/feminine. Or between being seen as queer and their femme-identity.
Yes!
I agree with everything you wrote Joey. Femme-idenfied lesbians are always looked down upon by other lesbians and yes, even straight people.
A woman shouldn't have to choose betwen being sexy/beautiful/femme and being smart. Why can't a woman be both? Is the concept that hard to grasp?
I think
First off I'm a big supporter of 'wear whatever you want'. Whether it's dresses and high heels or a suit or boardshorts and a t-shirt.
I wear mostly men's clothes, first of all because I'm too tall for women's clothes, but also because I like baggy-er clothes more than tight fitting stuff. I like the way I look and I feel comfortable. But for some reason people always feel the need to tell me I need to look more feminine. And I get called 'Sir' and 'Dude' an awful lot.
Here's the thing, I don't agree at all with the whole "femmes should dress more gay", but don't forget that nearly every group that deviates even a little bit from the norm gets put down by someone. In beauty school they'd probably run me off with pitchforks and torches, but while studying maths at uni, most girls were very girly and no-one looked at them funny. So the femmes have actually already gotten a lot further.
So don't forget, the knife cuts both ways. More than both ways actually, since everything that is even a little different than the stereotype is likely to get cut off.
I agree
Don't let anyone tell you how you should look. To hell with them! I look at it like this, you don't pay my bills nor put food on my table, I don't care what you think about me.
The knife does cut both ways but it kind of seems like femme girls gets degraded a bit more by gay and straight society(that's just me speaking).
Those are all good points...
But I have to clarify that I most certainly do NOT forget 'that nearly every group that deviates even a little bit from the norm gets put down by someone.' For the record, nothing turns me on more or fascinates me more than a butch woman or anyone who IDs as genderqueer or somewhere outside the gender binary. So I'm ALL FOR those kinds of women or trans folks who'd get 'run off from beauty school,' as you put it. My girlfriend gets 'sirred' on a daily basis, so I find myself proudly living side-by-side to that world.
I'm VERY aware that the gender performance that feels comfartable to me is also what society deems appropriate. (I'm a woman, I look femme, check mark.) And that's not fair to a LOT of other people, which is why it's so important to be a trans-advocate and supporter, as well. The flip side is that in this culture (and in most, I'm sure) my sexual orientation doesn't match my gender ID, and I'm therefore invisible in the queer community. So I'm not sure what you mean by 'the femmes have already gotten a lot further.' I see both positives and negatives to 'looking gay' and to 'not looking gay.'
Haven't explained that properly I see
You're very right, femmes do get overlooked (or worse, ignored) a lot by the queer community and in the straight community you obviously don't fit in either. I know that a lot of straight and gay people assume they're straight or act more like "sure, you're gay, yeah okay..." My girlfriend is very femme and she often feels like she has to "gay it up" to go to a gaybar, which I think is just absolute nonsense.
I have to explain though that I didn't mean femme lesbians by the ones that have gotten a lot further, maybe I should have used another word, what I meant was feminine women in general. Like I said, feminine women aren't really frowned upon anymore, whether they study maths, engineering, join the chess-club, or whatever. But for the more butch women, it seems like they can only study the "nerdier" subjects. So what I meant is that feminine women are now pretty much accepted anywhere and if someone does act weird about it that's frowned upon, the barbie just proves that, but butch women don't have that wide a playing field yet so to speak.
So I wasn't talking about lesbians, because I know that in the gay community femmes definitely have the short straw, although they probably come out above transgenders, who are often treated even worse... In no way was I saying "pft I have it so much worse!" or "you femmes have it easy, stop bitching!", because I know how un-inclusive some lesbians like to be and that is something I hate with a fiery passion.
Gotcha.
I see what you're saying. And yes, I agree that women who don't look feminine have a tough time. I think we're all taught that women should all look a certain way and when there's a deviation from that, social structures get challenged. Most men probably feel threatened by a masculine woman because to them, she may appear to be reaching up to this 'higher power' that they have simply because they are men and have a higher rank on the social ladder.
In a perfect world, masculinity and femininity would exist side-by-side on equal ground and would be free for everyone to explore as much or as little as they wish.
I'm such an admirer of
I'm such an admirer of Kathryn Bigelow now. She's amazing.
Go here for my view on all things lesbian: http://allthingslesbeau.blogspot.com
Barbie
Heh, I like that Barbie idea - it's probably the first in ages that I haven't shook my head and said 'ridiculous' at. Anything that gets young kids thinking that girls can be anything that boys can be, that's good in my book.
Never ever played with Barbie as a child, but I like this idea.
Consider it sold!
I'm studying Computing at undergraduate degree level right now and only 4/100 students in the subject are girls!
What's going on?
I sort of hope that this is a shift towards the stereotype-breaking of "geeky girl" and encourage more women to be smart AND beautiful, the two concepts are not exclusive!
If it makes you feel any better?