The Bechdel Cast - Legally Blonde
Episode Date: May 28, 2020On this special *unlocked* episode of The Bechdel Cast originally released on our Patreon (aka Matreon) in December 2017, Jamie and Caitlin discuss Legally Blonde! Become a Matron at patreon.com/bechd...elcast!(This episode contains spoilers)For Bechdel bonuses, sign up for our Patreon at patreon.com/bechdelcast.Follow @BechdelCast, @caitlindurante and @jamieloftusHELP on Twitter Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16th 2017 was assassinated.
Crooks Everywhere unearthed the plot to murder a one-woman WikiLeaks.
She exposed the culture of crime and corruption that were turning her beloved country into a mafia state.
Listen to Crooks Everywhere on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
That's right, the only, Katherine Hahn is joining us on Las Culturistas.
That's right, the queen of comedy herself.
Get ready for a conversation that's as hilarious as it is insightful.
Tune in for all the laughs, the stories,
and of course, the culture.
Don't miss Katherine Hahn on Las Culturistas.
Listen to Las Culturistas on Will Ferrell's
Big Money Players Network on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Gianna Pradenti.
And I'm Jermaine Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
There's a lot to figure out when you're just starting your career.
That's where we come in.
Think of us as your work besties you can turn to for advice.
And if we don't know the answer, we bring in people who do,
like negotiation expert Maury Tahiripour.
If you start thinking about negotiations as just a conversation, then I think it sort of eases us a
little bit. Listen to Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcasts. Hello and welcome to the Bechdel cast. My name is Jamie Loftus. My name
is Caitlin Durante. And welcome to a very special episode of the Bechdel cast. We have a little treat for you
today. So if you're new to the show, we'll catch you up in a second. But for our loyal listeners,
we are unlocking a much demanded episode of the Bechdel cast today from our Patreon aka
Matreon page. So what you're going to hear today is an episode that people who do not
subscribe to our patreon have been asking for us for years and uh all of our matrons have been
sneakily enjoying for a long time but it's the legally blonde episode yes we recorded and released
this quite some time ago i think it's around two 2018 yeah two years ago at least. So it's one of our older episodes, and it's been behind the paywall.
But we decided, hey, we could use a break.
Now more than ever.
And yeah, what a delightful movie and episode to share with people.
So we decided to share it.
It's unlocked.
Yeah, so it's unlocked. And if you like this episode and you're not already a matron,
it will hopefully give you an idea of what our matron episodes are like.
They're a little looser.
They're fun.
We don't have to go into all the detail about explaining what the Bechdel test is.
You already know if you're a matron.
We're just like, you got it.
But if this is your first episode
interesting choice of first episode but we will get you caught up so uh we since we don't introduce
it this way in in the episode we're unlocking the Bechdel test is a media metric uh invented by
cartoonist Allison Bechdel sometimes called the Bechdel-Wallace test that requires a piece of media have the following qualifications it has an exchange
in which two female identified named characters talk to each other about something other than a
man for two lines of dialogue does it usually happen not so much but today's movie might fare
a little bit better than normal jamie can we can we demonstrate the Bechdel test and how one might pass?
Okay.
Hey, Jamie.
Hey, Caitlin.
Would you join me in a little bend and snap choreographed move with me today?
That's so polite.
That's such a polite way to refer to it.
Would you care to engage in a bit of a bend and
then immediately followed by a snap uh well yes caitlin i would love that oh thank you so much
we're gonna have to do it separately in separate rooms because we were still social dishing of
course but uh i think that would be a nice little activity for us to make us feel closer together.
Amen, baby.
A woman.
Wow.
Wow.
Look at her challenging the status quo, changing the world as we know it.
Girl boss.
Yeah.
So we're excited to be unlocking this episode for your enjoyment.
If you enjoy it, like Caitlin was saying uh check out
our patreon it's patreon.com slash Bechdel cast it's five bucks a month and you get two extra
full-blown bonus episodes of the Bechdel cast a month and it's it's a little casual and it's also
we tend to do less popular movies there maybe stuff that's a little more niche uh little and the episodes are
just they're just silly fun stuff and also there's an episode on doubt in there what's your wait
what's your favorite matreon episode outside of this one because this is right this is a quite
good one if you don't mind my saying so i agree um oh my goodness i I love our Christmas Prince episodes. Yes. There's never a bad time for it. We also have extra Titanic episodes over there. If you
could have possibly needed one, they're there. We just have a lot of fun stuff.
Yeah.
Blue Frame Roger Rabbit's over there.
Into the Spider-Verse is over there. We've We've got, oh, and we, one of my favorite things about the Matreon is we do absurd themes,
such as.
Yes.
Zack Martron.
We've got Pagentuary.
We've got.
Portman July.
Portman July, which we did not observe in July, but we did do America July.
We did Cher March.
Yes.
Cher March recently. And it's a nice place. Also,
the community on the Matreon is really lovely. And I mean, we have the greatest fans on every feed,
but it's a very wholesome, lovely place to be. And you get, I think, over 50 additional full
blown episodes of the Bechdel cast when you sign up.
Yeah, I think we're close to if not exceeded 60.
So you get access to the entire catalog when you join the Matreon now.
So now's the time if you're able.
Highly encourage, highly recommend.
Freaky Friday.
That was a fun one.
Oh, yeah.
We did Ghost Month.
Yes. In which we did not cover the movie ghost because we already did that on the main feed with nicole byer of
course but we did the original ghostbusters movie from 84 or whatever and then we did
the all-female reboot we did pregnancy june everything is just all of our themes are the
worst but in the best way and you have to you know, we highly recommend you join the community because it's really, really fun.
Yes.
Without further ado, please enjoy this very special Unlocked episode, Legally Blonde.
On the Bechdel cast, the questions asked if movies have women in them.
Are all their discussions just boyfriends and husbands or do they have individualism?
The patriarchy's effin' vast.
Start changing it with the Bechdel cast.
Hi!
It's a bonus episode of the Bechdel cast.
It is a bonus episode of the Bechdel cast.
I think we should address what's happening here first.
So we released two, this is a Matreon, Patreon-only episode of the Bechtelcast.
Very exclusive.
We were locked and loaded a month in advance with two bonus episodes for this month,
and then realized that our doubling down on Titanic, that was the original plan.
Maybe someday we'll release some of the moments that hit the cutting room floor,
but altogether we came to the conclusion that both covering the same movie particularly covering the same movie while pretty aggressively drunk was not the premium content
that you subscribe to the podcast right yeah i went back and listened to that titan the second
titanic episode it is a disaster and Isn't that bad?
It's not good.
Okay.
Well, just to give ourselves a pat on the back, we reconvened.
We replanned.
We both had a bad feeling that we were both too drunk and too saying the exact same things,
which is that we like Titanic.
Over and over.
And we've come back with a clear mind and a full heart.
I'm sober, although I'm sick.
I don't know if you can hear it in my voice, but I do not feel well.
I've had two beers.
It's vacation.
Jamie has been activated.
She hasn't been around for literally a full calendar year.
Everyone's going to have to deal with it.
Sure.
But we are fully prepared for today's episode,
which is on Legally Blonde.
Woo!
We just watched it together.
We are in Caitlin's bed.
I feel like that's the bonus episode way, kind of.
Yeah.
The audio is always a little worse,
and we are sitting in my bed recording on my iPhone.
It's, well, we shouldn't tell them that.
I mean, we have really good equipment everywhere we go we're swamped with with the finest of microphones aristotle no i like that
we said we're in the bed and then it's like maybe people were like maybe aristotle is also in the
bed adjacent to the bed anyways all i have to say we are recording and releasing this
on a rather tight turnaround because we were
so prepared that we got drunk
and did a bad job.
So.
But I feel good about this episode we are about to do.
Me too. We both have a
wealth of notes. We sure do.
So what is your history with Legally Blonde?
Legally Blonde, I believe
so this movie came out in 01.
I was too young to see this movie when it came out, for sure.
I think I saw it at some point.
My friend in middle school, I think, had a copy of it,
and we watched it at a sleepover.
And then I think I saw it again in high school, and possibly again.
I feel like I've seen this movie maybe three times.
Like, I'm pretty, I know the general beats of it, but there was a lot of details that i forgot i like this movie
i remember liking it and i think like this was one of those viewing experiences that i was like
kind of clenching my butt a little bit because i was like oh i hope that this movie was as fun
as i remember it being oh sure which generally i think it was generally yeah yes i went for many many
years without seeing this movie i didn't see it until i was a grad student at boston university
where i was getting my master's in screenwriting i don't like to bring it up but i'll be god damn
a classmate of mine did a project on legally blonde so i was like well i guess i gotta see it
and i think I didn't necessarily
avoid it for so long but I didn't actively seek it out because it's the type of movie that doesn't
really appeal to my sensibilities. Well yeah given your history I mean I'm surprised that I wasn't
more into Legally Blonde I think it was just like I wasn't the right age when it came out. Yeah sure.
Yeah because I would I would have been very indelibly blonde if I'd
been old enough to see it when it was released. That makes sense. Yeah. Yeah. Generally it's a
fun movie. I'm trying to think of movies that we have covered. I think Mean Girls is the main one
that jumps to mind of like, I'm very leery of covering movies that, you know, it's like, I try
to read sort of what's been written about the movie, especially in regards to gender-based topics.
Right.
But this is one of those movies where there's 5 million clickbait articles
about why Legally Blonde is a feminist masterpiece.
And I'm always extremely leery of movies that have a million listicles
written about what a feminist masterpiece it is
because usually that means that there is a fundamental issue right because a lot of quote-unquote feminist
masterpieces have to do with like this is feminism that's palatable for a wide audience as opposed to
that said i still think the movie does pretty well that's interesting i have not read any of those
i've heard a lot of them i mean mean girls
there's a billion of them and then there's some about specific characters like lydia deets in
feminist icon beetlejuice oh sure there's a million listicles every fucking halloween about how she's
a feminist icon when she's right and she's not because beetlejuice is. Sometimes they pick the only. Because Feminist Icon, Beetlejuice is the only.
That took a second to hit me.
I know.
I was like, why are you not reacting to the amazing joke?
Vacation Jamie's cards are lowered.
Her brain's operating on a lower.
And you also, you played it so straight.
Wow.
Yeah, obviously, Beetlejuice is the feminist.
Feminist icon?
Beetlejuice is the only feminist icon in the movie.
But all that to say, listicle feminism is stupid.
Yeah.
And I'll say for the five trillionth time, even though they'll still write up some of my shit every once in a while bustle can kiss my
ass in terms of like corporate palatable feminism funded by a male's hedge fund so like it's a
tricky but again legally blind mostly does well okay i'm done okay got it should i do the recap
let's okay l woods is a sorority sister in her senior year of college.
Hot.
What is it?
Delta Nu?
I don't even know what the name is.
I don't know.
She goes to a fake, it's like C-U-L-A, which is basically UCLA.
Kula.
Right.
She basically goes to UCLA.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
A good school.
Uh-huh.
So she is about to graduate.
She has a boyfriend named Warner, who she thinks is about to propose to her.
And she's very excited about it.
And all of her sorority sisters are very excited that she's about to be proposed to.
But turns out he takes her to dinner to instead break up with her because he's like, I'm going to Harvard Law School.
He says something to the effect that like, I need a Jackie and you're a maryland basically yeah it's like you're too like he views her he views her even though we know very
early on in the movie she has a 4.0 gpa at cooler yeah we don't know how hard that is but she has
one she has the highest gpa in her sorority we hear a lot of this but yeah he's looking for a
convention he's looking for an east coast elite right he
doesn't take her seriously she he's like you know i need a someone serious and i just this has been
fun but i cannot take you seriously so she is devastated and she decides that in order to earn
his love back and prove that she is worthy of his love, she's also going to go to Harvard
Law School.
We will get into this because Warner, while the worst across the board, has the right
to break up with someone.
Even if it's for a shitty reason, everyone has the right to break up with anyone else.
That is just something that they do not tell you for some reason that sometimes if
someone says i don't want to be in a relationship with you anymore you have to be like well i don't
feel great about that but okay like right anyways yes that is a fundamental issue with this movie
and so is her behavior after that where she basically shapes her entire future around
essentially stalking him to try to win him back.
It's not essentially stalking, she is following him.
But we'll get there.
So she does put in the work to study for and take the LSATs and, you know, do this video essay.
With the support of her.
And the video essay is iconic.
Directed by a Coppola.
A Coppola.
We learn later in the movie, possibly Sophia. We don't know.
I don't know. She would later go on to direct the worst movie I've ever seen, The Beguiled.
You're being dramatic. But she puts in all the work and she manages to get accepted to Harvard
Law School. And so she shows up and on the first day she's like, hi, Warner. And he's like, oh,
what are you doing here again totally fair reaction
yeah this movie would have you believe the opposite of like yeah of course she's here
like whatever anyways well I mean so many movies depict like a romantic pursuit in the worst
possible ways oh god just hang around long enough yeah, just wear them down until they agree to be in love with you.
The wear them down narrative is honestly terrible.
But sometimes I'm like, maybe there's something to this.
But guess what?
There's not, you know.
Okay.
Sorry.
Yeah.
Okay.
So she's like, yeah, I'm here.
And, you know, I'm showing you that I can be taken seriously. But she immediately learns that he, over the summer,
has gotten engaged to Vivian, the Jackie that he was looking for.
Yeah, Vivian Van Hula Hoop or whatever.
Yeah.
Kensington or something like that.
Kensington the 47th.
And she's played by Selma Blair and she's a by selma blair and hot she's a little b at first but so a huge b at first
to a comical degree that i would argue does not make narrative sense anyways continue agree
so then she's like okay well i will steal him back now that's my new plan but that's not her idea that's jennifer coolidge's idea yeah
jennifer coolidge i've is she not french right so there's this whole sequence she's like oh this is
the worst day of my life my one true love has gotten engaged to someone else i have to get a and then Jennifer Coolidge is like I'm old and I'm alone the UPS man
so hot
hi hi I'm Jennifer Coolidge
she's you know listen
she's a fellow Emerson lion
and I respect her
she's our god fuck
fuck that school I stopped paying any bills
but like also she is
one of the esteemed graduates
of Emerson College Jennifer Coolidge But also, she is one of the esteemed graduates. Oh, amazing.
I remember some college.
I remember college.
Well, yeah, she gives Elle the idea that she needs to steal Warner back.
So she's like, okay, I'll just do that.
So then she starts to really take her studies seriously and prove to her classmates and her professors that she is smart because the thing about her is that
she's like still this you know bel-air raised wealthy blonde white girl who is very privileged
and you know a sorority gal in a very stereotypical way where she's like oh my god like getting into
harvard was hard and no one takes her seriously right
so she's like i need to impact there too she starts to like really buckle down and prove to
everyone that she is intelligent and that she is capable and in so doing she manages to land an
internship with one of her professors calhan played by Mm-hmm. And then that leads to a storyline where she helps with this murder case
where one of her former sorority sisters,
who graduated a few years ahead of her,
is accused of murdering her husband.
Brooke.
Brooke Taylor.
Van Hula Hoop.
Sorry, yes.
Every wealthy woman's name is Van Hula Hoop.
So because they have this sisterhood, Elle and Brooke bond,
and she's like, yeah, I'm going to look out for you.
Meanwhile, Callahan, who ends up being a predatory scumbag,
is like, I think my client's guilty. I'm barely going to help her.
And then...
To be fair, she looks pretty fucking guilty for a while.
What does guilty look like, Jamie?
Like standing over your husband's dead body covered in his blood.
Oh, sure.
But anyways, continue.
So the movie ends with her helping with this case
to the point where Brooke fires Callahan
after he has groped Elle.
And it's been made clear to her several times that he does not believe her.
Mm-hmm.
Brooke is a good character.
I like her a lot.
Yeah.
So she fires Callahan.
She hires Elle, who is still only in her first year of law school, to defend her in this murder case.
Objectively, on paper, terrible idea.
Right.
And as capable and as pro-Elwoods as I am, really a lucky break that she wins the case
and immediately gets a confession from a brunette who promptly goes to jail.
I'm not pro-sending brunettes to jail.
But sure, I mean, maybe it's intentional that she's sending brunettes to jail but sure
I mean maybe it's
intentional that she's a brunette
maybe it's just a coincidence
no it is for sure
because there are barely any women of color in this movie
the way that the movie indicates
don't root for this one
is with brunette hair
that's literally what happened
that's true
the characters we are conditioned to root for are obviously Elle brunette hair. Yeah. That's literally what happened. Anyways, sorry. That's true. Yeah, I mean.
The characters we are conditioned to root for are obviously Elle,
Jennifer Coolidge, Brooke.
Those are the three big ones, and they're all blonde white women.
And Vivian's character, who later comes around,
but at the beginning she has brown hair.
The killer ends up being brunette.
Right.
The poorly handled gay character,id is also well i guess
she's she's got some weird highlights it's unclear what her natural hair color is but i think she's
brunette yeah she's got darker hair basically she gets a lucky break pretty much although it's
through her like sort of skill and deductive reasoning but she manages to like crack the case
they win and everything's great and she has a dumb line
where she's like hair care is essential any cosmo girl would know that or something like that and
then yeah she wins and then there's like the graduation at the end she's like at the top of
her class and meanwhile warner sucks and now she and vivian are BFFs. Best friends, which the story does go out of its way to be like,
by the way, they're best friends and Warner ended up alone,
which is exciting.
I also didn't mention at all the sort of romantic subplot,
although it doesn't really end up being that romantic until the very end,
with Luke Wilson's character.
It's flirte from the beginning.
And a star turn by Luke Wilson's middle part.
Lots of crazy.
2001 was a big moment for the middle part.
Yes.
Yeah.
We've got to take a quick break.
We've got some bending and snapping to do,
but then we'll come right back.
Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist
who on October 16, 2017, was murdered.
There are crooks everywhere you look now.
The situation is desperate.
My name is Manuel Delia.
I am one of the hosts of Crooks Everywhere,
a podcast that unhurarts the plot to murder
a one-woman Wikileaks.
Daphne exposed the culture of crime and
corruption that were turning her beloved
country into a mafia state.
And she paid the ultimate
price.
Listen to Crooks Everywhere on the
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts. guest, right? Well, this week we're taking it to the next level. The one, the only, Katherine Hahn
is joining us on Lost Culture East.
That's right, the queen of comedy
herself. Get ready for a conversation
that's as hilarious as it is insightful.
Tune in for all the laughs, the stories,
and of course, the culture.
I feel some Sandra Bernhardt
in you. Oh my
God, I would love
it.
I have to watch Lost. Oh, you have
to. No, I know. I'm so behind.
Katherine Hanken's thing.
Oh, I'm really good at karaoke.
What's your song? Yeah, what's your song?
Oh, I love a ballad.
I felt
Bjork's music and
I just was like, who is this
person?
I gotta hawk this slalom, Ludi.
Not hawk the slalom.
I absolutely love it.
It was somehow Shakespearean when you said it.
It was somehow gorgeous.
Yee, my slok, you hollum.
Listen to Las Culturistas on Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Gianna Pradente. And I'm Jemay Jackson-Gadsden. We're the hosts of Let's Talk
Offline, a new podcast from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts. When you're just starting out
in your career, you have a lot of questions, like how do I speak up when I'm feeling overwhelmed?
Or can I negotiate a higher
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Think of us as your work besties you can turn to for advice. And if we don't know the answer,
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person who doesn't get the job and the person who gets the job is usually who applies.
Yeah, I think a lot about that quote.
What is it, like you miss 100% of the shots you never take?
Yeah, rejection is scary, but it's better than you rejecting yourself.
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So that's the story.
And there is an awful lot to unpack.
I have pages and pages of notes.
Shall we go by character or topic?
God.
Well, this is the fun part about the bonus episode.
You get to hear part of the process.
Yeah, right?
So I kind of want to start just by saying that I think the reason that I'm kind of lukewarm,
ooh, Luke Wilson, lukewarm about...
Luke, your little middle part.
I fall in the middle part.
Yeah, yeah.
In regards to this movie.
So the first, like, two act, it's really only, only like an act three of the movie where all of her sort
of empowerment happens and she turns around and it goes from her doing everything that she's doing
because she's trying to win back her boyfriend and she's entirely motivated by proving herself
worthy to a man well let's let's start with that then.
Because that is, and there's two prominent examples that come to mind.
I'm sure there's other examples that I'm not thinking of.
But in regards to, I mean, and there's also examples of the opposite
of a man chasing a woman in order to prove himself and wear her down.
But this weird plot, which at the beginning of the series,
Crazy Ex-Girlfriend duplicates exactly,
is a woman who has been scorned or rejected
or is feeling very insecure because of a man,
decides to uproot her entire life
in order to relocate and prove herself to a man and then in doing so
discovers herself in the process i do not like this setup at all and it really frustrates me
because i like this movie but the inciting incident to this movie is just like all i it's
i don't know like there's a lot of moments in this movie in particular where it's like,
there are so many seeds for very wrong thinking that is being implanted into young girls' heads
that I really don't like.
Of just, like, you know, the only way to realize your own potential is to first be rejected by a man
and then change everything about you like
it's almost little little mermaidy like that would be another example of this of like my current form
isn't working so what do i change and let's make all the necessary adjustments and it does like
you're saying like the third act does have l realizing oh i actually am. But logistically, she never would have recognized her own potential
if Warner hadn't broken up with her. And I don't like that. I think that's so frustrating.
Same. Yes. I was trying to think of movies where there is a female protagonist who pursues
something like going to law school and becoming a lawyer just because she's interested in that
already and not because she's motivated by a man and i had trouble thinking of examples well one because
there are just so few movies with a female protagonist and the ones that do have a female
protagonist it's often a rom-com or something where she is just straight up pursuing a man
and that's the main storyline and to be fair that's not to say
there aren't any examples i just no no no i know my like sick sore throat head well i'm having
trouble thinking well i also don't think that like unless there's some sort of like and it's this
the narrative of a woman going to law school because she is interested in law is not a
particularly compelling log line for like a woman goes to law school because she is interested in law is not a particularly compelling log line for like
a woman goes to law school because she's interested in the law and is smart is a great thing but maybe
not the most exciting story so i get but but again that does not justify the ends to to to this true
but it doesn't even have to i mean you know law going to law school and becoming a lawyer is just
an example some but some sort of either professional or creative pursuit that a woman just does because that's what she wants to do
and not because she's motivated by proving her worth to a man.
And even if she meets a romantic partner when she is pursuing that thing, that is a far better precedent to set.
It's like she followed whatever her ambition was and worked hard and happened to meet this great person.
Like, that's the right idea.
Chasing a man in order to discover your own potential is just not a good message to be sending,
particularly if you're aiming at a younger slash teen audience, which this movie is.
Right. Well, it is nice to see a female character like Elle
who has a lot of drive and determination.
Like, she is extremely driven to the point where she,
within a matter of maybe a couple weeks,
studies for and does well enough on the LSATs to get into Harvard.
Although...
Murder the LSATs.
Like, Elle Woods is, with a lot of flaws, does well enough on the LSATs to get into Harvard. Okay, murder the LSATs.
Like, Elle Woods is, with a lot of flaws,
I think a really good character.
I think she's great.
And part of that is, like, nostalgia attachment,
but I really do like her.
I agree.
I like that she is extremely driven and active.
Her motivation at the beginning and throughout most of the movie is misguided and
it does it does turn around because by the end that storyline with warner resolves itself by
he comes around he's like actually i just saw you in that case and you are the woman i've wanted
this whole time i can take you seriously now and she's like well she's like i've been waiting so long for you to hear this but if i
want to be a partner in a law firm by the time i'm 30 i'm gonna need a boyfriend who isn't such a
bonehead and to be honest caitlin clapped and i was crying so however it worked to me that's kind
of one of those moments where it's like cool line cool feminist line and right like so i think that
this more responsibly than a lot of movies of its type but does play into the like you go girl
style of feminism that and here's i'm interested in hearing your thoughts on this because i
my notes kind of looped in on themselves on this topic but so l was there's this whole overarching narrative
in this movie of weird very black and white west coast east coast stereotypes of like everyone from
the east coast is mean and not horny at all and everyone from the west coast is really hot and
rich and like more fun and it's clear like the east coast is like hot and rich and, like, more fun.
And it's clear, like, the East Coast is, like, demonized for the bulk of this movie.
And all the characters who we meet there, with the exception of the East Coast white trash community, which I appreciate.
Regardless, it's like, a lot of this movie, to me, feels like Elle Woods reclaiming the pink reclaiming you know this feminine appearance and
this like very visually motivated oh god I sound a million years old but like this like you know
like reclaiming conventional hotness in an intellectual sense but I it feels like kind of a safe very marketable choice to be like we're gonna reclaim
hot women you know like it right to an extent is like the good thing about it and this is where my
notes caved in on themselves because like oh is she just like reclaiming conventional hotness
that's not particularly interesting like oh hot women can be lawyers
too it's like okay like okay great but with the way ellen her friends on both coasts who are more
traditionally feminine they do seem to be doing it for themselves and it's not that i noticed very
like you don't get those lines of like well if i don do this, a man won't like me if I don't do this.
Like, it does seem like they do it because they just, like, they place value on it.
But the whole, like, she's wearing pink in a courtroom and her boobs are big
does not totally track with me of, like, we're going to reclaim Victoria's Secret hotness,
but in the courtroom.
Like, it just, i don't know who
is that supposed to be empowering you know like victoria's secret models who have higher ambitions
it's just a very small group you know right i also had trouble processing this idea of she's a very
cartoonish character not to say that there aren't some people like that out there similar to i mean
she is and she's a great great cartoon but so she's you know this very stereotypical like
loves pink loves shopping knows fashion loves to get her nails done like but the type of feminine
she's smart right there is a there is a like but the twist is right yeah so she's this like sort of
you know hyper feminine woman and i think the the movie seeks to sort of dismantle this stereotype
that pretty blonde sorority girls can also be intelligent and good lawyers which is true and
fair but who the message that it just seems like a very narrow right it's like who is this for exactly
not to say that like stereotypes shouldn't be dismantled it just seems like a very bizarrely
specific deeply marketable there were barbies of elwoods you know like there it's a very marketable
stereotype to be dismantling and it's not even it's not dismantling it in a visual way at all so the
the visual aspect is kept intact therefore keeping all the marketable parts of it kept intact there
is a part where like her costume choices they change a bit in the middle of the movie where
she doesn't dress quite so pink she has a blue outfit on at one point but then at the end she
wears a beanie at one point you're just like she's lost point, but then at the end... She wears a beanie at one point. You're just like, she's lost herself.
Right.
But then toward the end again,
when she makes her grand appearance
as the new person that Brooke Taylor hired to defend her,
she's got this like...
It is a great...
I mean, her entrance in that scene,
to be fair, they do a full body shot of her,
which I usually take issue with,
but the outfit is more than the outfit in
that scene to me that outfit also represents like she's gonna be herself and do this as well which
I think is a good message like represent yourself the way you want to but you're I will you mentioned
like there was a Barbie of Elle Woods and I had it. I owned it. That's why I know for sure.
Throughout Western cultural history, the beautiful blonde female form has been the most easily digestible feminine form for Western culture to consume.
And that's sort of been the ideal and we all have to
strive for that and da da da right so maybe that's why that choice was made to like represent that
type of archetypal stereotypical character in this movie right i mean maybe okay now no now my mind is
kind of changing a little bit where for sure there are more pervasive, culturally relevant, immediately relevant to people's everyday lives, stereotypes to be dismantled in major releases.
I think it is sort of a sneaky win on behalf of the filmmakers that they're able to make that commentary pretty effectively while keeping all the visual marketing intact. But then,
I mean, now that you, when you said like, you know, the, whatever, the sort of playboy ideal
of shout out to my former employer, playboy, who can truly kiss my ass. Um, but the, the,
you know, like that conventional ideal of the blonde women, I guess it is sort of like where that trope is very much like
as much as the boobs and the hair are critical to that image, what is equally critical to
that image is complacency, doing whatever they're told.
And the way that women who look like that are viewed from just a camera aspect is always
in a way that's supposed to be pleasing
and thought is never implied.
So now that you say that, I'm like, maybe it is.
It is interesting.
I don't think it's the most relevant commentary, but it is interesting.
Today, no.
I don't think for 2001.
2001, we should have been thinking about a lot of things in 2001.
And maybe blonde, wealthy women were not top of the list.
But it is common.
They do comment a lot on it.
I think by the end, it takes a while.
But by the end, it's effective.
I mean, there are moments where she does say, like, you know, no one takes me.
Like, I get sort of discriminated against because of my hair color, because I'm a blonde.
Imagine being an actually marginalized person and saying that.
Like, oh, I'm so fucking sorry that you're so hot and rich.
And you got it.
You still got into Harvard.
Like, well, can we talk about that scene?
Yes, yes, yes.
Let's talk about that.
Ooh, good segue oh i wanted to just
really say quickly that i think that we should right now right here claim the new stereotype
for a female character which is the but the twist is oh where it's like she's either she's very hot
or she's very ugly but the twist is she's smart or she could be hot, maybe.
Maybe take off her glasses and see what happens.
Right, yeah.
It's like she's hot, but the twist is she's smart.
Or she's smart and the twist is she's also beautiful.
There's a really, I have not seen the show,
but my good pal Catherine Cohen in New York does a great one
woman show called But the Twist Is She's Gorgeous. One of my favorites. Great turn of phrase.
I feel like it's a trope that's used a lot. Yeah. Okay. So the scene with the admissions
board at Harvard who are reviewing her video essay and trying to determine whether or not
to accept her. I think the only all malemale scene in the movie that I can think of...
Same, yeah.
With more than...
No, no, there's a few times where Middle Park Wilson and Victor Garber,
or as I like to call him, Thomas Andrews, are...
Mr. Andrews!
Mr. Andrews!
Won't you even make a trifle with Mr. Andrews?
Oh, Rosie.
It's like I told you.
I'm sorry I didn't build you a stronger she's oh and then earlier
she's strong and true you're just like you dumb fuck oh but it's sad when he dies and stops the
clock anyways but there there are a few i feel like one-on-one scenes with luke wilson and victor
carver but in terms of like this is a scene full of men versus the number of scenes in this movie that are full of women in a way that it's just like, woo, great.
This is the only one.
Yeah.
So in this scene, we see around eight, six or eight.
Eight old white guys.
Old, mostly, yeah, mostly older, for sure, all white men basically deliberating on whether or not to accept Elle to Harvard.
And they're looking at her essay, which most of the time she is in a swimsuit, and it's
a weird choice.
But also I feel like that is like an unabashedly Elle Woods choice.
Sure.
That is, for all the implications of it, I do appreciate that she is true to herself
in the video.
I mean, she's playing to her strengths strengths which is that she was the president of
her sorority yes like that's one of my favorite parts of the movie it is an iconic the days of
our lives like the evil stefano and like it's it's great it's i used to watch the soap operas anyways
so basically the whole scene is them i think there's one guy who's like, I don't know. And then all of the other ones are trying to, they have decided they want to accept her basically because they find her attractive.
And they're trying to rationalize why it's an okay decision to let her in.
Right.
Because they're like, well, she cares about animals and she's creative and she likes music because she was in a Ricky Martin video. And it's like, this is a challenging scene.
Because, written on paper,
nothing that is being vocalized is inaccurate or wrong.
Does Elle Woods necessarily deserve to be at Harvard?
At the beginning of the movie, I don't really think so.
I mean, she has the correct scores and she has good grades, but it just, I don't know.
I struggle with the fact that she has, it seems unlikely to me that someone who has a bachelor's degree in fashion management
and has no background or previously indicated interest in law would get into Harvard Law School.
Realistically, no matter who you are, that just seems unlikely.
Especially because Harvard is probably the hardest school in the U.S. to get into.
I think you could get into a law school with those qualifications,
good LSAT scores, 4.0 in whatever you happen to major in.
Harvard Law School school i don't
think so but we also find out later that warner also doesn't totally deserve to be there so
right because harvard's a fucking like you know harvard is like sort of known for that sort of
weird nepotistic right like oh his father gave a call to somebody and then he got in a call i mean regardless on paper that scene
would look in theory like they are naming her qualifications and it ends by saying
ella woods welcome to harvard but the tone of that scene is very she's hot we gotta let her in
you know however it just i feel like it just credits the protagonist a little bit in a
way that's like well so there's a whole lot i want to say about that one i think that is sort of
almost a foreshadowing of what happens later on where she learns that she basically only got that
internship because her professor found her attractive because he like makes a pass at her
and then she has this whole thing where she's like this is crap i lost school was a mistake
i don't even deserve anything i got because it turns out he only wanted me for my looks and
stuff like that which is a whole thing i want to get into later bad garber so it's i think
foreshadowing that however i think a lot of people would come to l woods's defense
and i think that they're right because the thing is that she is extremely
determined and yes she does have the resources to pay for a nicely produced video essay that a lot
of people would not have the resources to do because like her argument we'll get to the class
thing too because the class thing is a major thing in this yeah but like her sort of advocating for herself as a reason that she should be accepted to Harvard in the video essay
are not that compelling of reasons.
Because she's saying, I already use lawyer jargon in everyday use.
Because you see someone catcalling her and then she turns around and she's like, I object!
Another iconic moment in the movie.
It's great.
But I think that her main qualities in the movie that i like her for because i'm not
necessarily as on board with elwoods as maybe you or bigger fans of the movie however i do
appreciate her for her determination because she and i think that quality alone i mean maybe not
alone but that because later on she she does show a lot of improvement when she first gets to law school.
I think by the end she, like, I mean, even at the midpoint in the movie you're like, okay, this woman does deserve to be here.
She's working really hard.
And to clarify, I mean, at the time of this scene.
Sure.
I don't think that it's like by the end it's like, man, she really coasted. Like, she works so fucking hard and does a lot of amazing scene. Sure. I don't think that it's like by the end it's like man she really coasted. Like
she works so fucking hard and does a lot of amazing stuff. I just mean in regards to this
scene the movie is implying that she is perhaps not being admitted for all the right reasons
regardless of who she is as a person and the fact that she clearly, you know, deserves to be there. But this scene kind of negs her in a weird way.
Right.
There's a part where these group of men who are deliberating about this
says something like, oh, well, she's a fashion major,
as if, like, that's a reason why she shouldn't be here.
But then another one says, well, we've never had one before,
and aren't we always looking for diversity?
That sucks. That sucks.
That sucks.
It's clearly not the type of diversity that admissions board people should be considering, but I think that's played as a joke.
I think so, too.
Yeah.
But I think this scene is a comment on how it's so often a group of rich, old, straight, white men making decisions that affect the fate
of a whole bunch of different types of people.
Right.
They end up making the right call for Elle
because she does prove herself eventually.
But it's kind of a fluke on their part.
But yeah, basically, like I said,
they accept her because most of the men in this room
have seen this video of her in her bathing suit
and been like, yeah, I definitely see her here at Harvard. her because most of the men in this room have seen this video of her in her bathing suit and
been like yeah i i definitely see her here at harvard and the implication is that because i
want to see her here at harvard yeah and not because she necessarily has the qualifications
because there is one character who keeps me like well i don't know what about this thing and they're
like no it's uh she's a friend of the animals the thing is like i think that he i okay not to harp on the scene
too much because this is a small scene in the movie but yeah i i don't mean to demonize ellen
anyway in that scene she has no control over how these men are viewing her i do think that the
movie is implying perhaps at the very beginning of the movie and and you could view that as possibly
like maybe she's not a character of any gender who's randomly like you know my ex-boyfriend's
gonna do this i'm just gonna go on their exact career path like they probably wouldn't get into
a graduate school of the career path that's the opposite of what they've been doing just because
they decided three weeks before the lsats that they wanted to whatever elwoods is still a great character to me that scene is weird it's not i
don't even think it's bad because i don't i don't want to like be like oh they're making you know
they're not saying exactly what i want to be said and therefore it cannot be a scene in a movie i
think it's a lot of commentary but i don't like that it negs the main character,
even though she overcomes it anyways.
Whatever.
I'm tired.
This is a very complex movie.
I know.
I just realized how many things we have to talk about.
I'm like, I'm tired.
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And we're back to 2018. Okay, the next thing I wanted to talk about is, while she does have a number of female friends in the beginning of the movie
with her two sorority sisters, one we know, his name is Margo.
I think they both have names.
If the second character of her two main friends in California is named,
blinking you would have missed it because we missed it.
Right, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I was trying to pay
close attention and I never figured
it out. So there's like, there's a
blonde woman whose name is Marco, and I
hate that I'm reducing women to
their hair colors, but
because we don't know their names, I don't know
how else to describe them. Those are the only type, for the most
part, those are the only two types of women we see in this
movie are white blondes and
white brunettes. Yeah. With a few exceptions, but mostly few except but mostly yes right right so they're the woman with like
shorter kind of auburn brunette hair i don't think we ever actually learned her name on screen i hope
we do she does have those friendships and those are two women who support her except that they're
basically supporting l in her pursuit of being proposed to by Warner and not necessarily her pursuit of going.
Because whenever Elle's like, oh, I'm studying for the LSATs.
I'm going to go to a Harvard Law School.
And they're like, why would you do that?
And then there's a phone call later on when they.
Again, to be fair, she's never displayed an interest in law.
That's true.
Never.
Yeah.
But there's a scene whenever,
like, she gives them a call and she's like, has he proposed yet? We want you to come back so that
you can leave law school. That scene sucks. At first, I appreciate how her friends in California
are supportive of what she's trying. I don't think that they should, like, you know, a real
friend would be like, yeah, don't do that. Like, you know, like if you were like, Hey, I've fallen in love with
a carpenter. I need to start working in construction in Indiana tomorrow. I would say
hold the phone. Yeah. Actually do not do that. That's a bad idea. However, they're supportive,
can't discredit them for that. But then when, even when she does go to harvard and starts to you know have a
vested interest in her own education that whole scene they don't ask about school at all and
you're just like the whole scene is about the blonde woman's wedding and we miss you and also
we didn't tell you that one of us is getting married before we went wedding dress shopping
but we're friends right weird anyways that storyline
does resolve itself by the two of them showing up in her big case at the end a lot of third act
magic in this movie yeah but until then it's just a whole lot of like why are you in law school law
school is for losers oh what but all she's ever displayed an interest i know i know like which
is why that does make sense which is part of the problem about a movie where the main character that they're not interested in also it seems
like she was very like i mean even if we go back to that admission scene where she did have all
these fashion industry-based accomplishments seems like you were passionate about that yeah
and then she just abandoned some of that and i mean it's a
testament to her intelligence and her character that she's able to make a total switch and still
excel at it but it's like you seemed like you're doing pretty well like you had a 4.0 in this
industry that you were already working in but sure old wait list chode warner you know whatever
throw all that away maybe though she like gets her law degree
and then she ends up working in fashion law you know that branch of law i'm sure it exists i mean
like well i mean and in terms of like elwoods's character staying always true which i think is
why regardless of all the issues of like uh she's a rich white lady with limitless means. I think that the reason
people connect with this character so strongly is she never abandons her interests and her like the
essence of who she is at the beginning of the movie. We see her grow as a person and grow into
herself a little bit, but like she doesn't. There's not that total princess diaries style 180 from i was like
this and now i'm the opposite and it's better where elwoods remains herself and grows as a
person i think that i mean that's why i like her a lot and even though it's very like god in the
machini at the in the in the scene where she's able to extract a murder confession from a brunette because of her knowledge of how perms work, which is, I think, a really well-written scene and goofy.
See, I think I have some problems think that it's one of those things where, for me, it comes down to, like, from an entertainment aspect, I feel like the right choice was made of, like, that is fun to watch.
Of, like, she's using her knowledge she's had the whole time in order to accomplish a new goal.
I think that that, at its core, is interesting.
I think that, on the other hand, having her be, like, really heteronormative girl knowledge put a brunette in jail you know
that is not as good because like it would be great to see her deftly use the law to put her
as opposed to using perm knowledge right character wise it makes sense to me right exactly because
the movie sets it up that like elle is the only one who could have figured this out because of her knowledge of hair care and fashion and all this stuff.
Right.
Because a similar thing happens where a character that she's trying to sort of incriminate, the pool boy whose character's name I don't remember.
Oh, we'll get into Salvatore.
Yeah.
Because he has made the statement that Brooke Taylor, the person that they're defending in this case,
he and her were lovers.
And she's like, hang on a minute.
That doesn't check out.
And then he says something like...
He knew who a fashion designer was.
Yeah.
He makes a comment on her Prada shoes.
She's like, wait a minute.
He can't have had an affair with her.
He's gay because he knows about Prada.
This movie's queer characters are not treated
well no before we get there i think that the movie does make that commentary of l being uniquely
qualified to law is made time and time again because and again it's set up plot wise it very
easily if the plot had gone literally in any other less convenient direction,
would not be true and we'd see her struggle more.
But when the main legal case of the movie is a sorority sister
who the East Coast elite have trouble communicating with,
Elle, again, is the one who's uniquely qualified to communicate with her.
So to me, because we'd already seen l be positioned as like she is learning and doing
very well in law school and is like accomplishing and doing all the things she should be doing
but the twist is she is also able to communicate with wealthy blonde women to me that tracked
through the end of like where her wealthy blonde woman knowledge was able to put a wealthy brunette woman in jail.
I don't know.
But even if it is a problematic through line, it is a through line.
Sure.
I mean, like I said, the movie does make a point to demonstrate, yeah, Elle's the only one that could have won this case because of her knowledge about, you know, hair and fashion that no one else had.
And she makes all these breakthroughs in this case because her, like, sisterhood with the client and all that stuff.
So it's being like, hey, this type of woman can be an asset in the world.
However, okay, so she does figure out the case by using deductive reasoning and using her intelligence.
She does figuring it out.
Yeah, law. deductive reasoning and using her intelligence she does figuring it out yeah law but like the
maybe not the core of it but her prime skill that makes her figure all this out is like a very
stereotypical hyper feminine thing where it's like yes hair and beauty and vanity kind of thing
bugged me a little bit not so much that I still wasn't on board with that whole scene.
I totally see what you're saying.
But it was just a little frustrating that like,
and the thing that gets her to win the case is marketable hair.
Yeah, like marketable, traditionally feminine qualities.
Yeah.
She is a tricky character because it's very easy to see
almost everything she does in two very different ways.
Again, going back to the movie, really doubling down on like Elle is herself.
And this is what is the cause of her succeeding is like sticking to her guns.
And this sort of, I guess, segues into the East Coast women and Vivian in particular,
is that where she has this very contentious
relationship with vivian for the at least the first half of the movie it's her being herself
by honoring the sisterhood delta new vows between she and brooke that wins vivian's respect so again
it's like l doing a very l thing that ends up winning the respect of someone you
wouldn't expect and i really like that yeah more on that especially her friendship arc with vivian
and then one of the other yeah notable female characters enid so as i said many many moons ago
she has a couple female friendships
that are strong and supportive,
and that's great.
And then she has another one in Paulette,
which we can talk about in a second.
But then she has these,
the movie sort of poises her
against these couple other female characters
who are classmates of her.
So it's basically saying like,
oh, well, these, you know,
Vivian and Elle and enid are classmates and
therefore they're sort of in competition because everyone's going to be vying for the best grades
and the these coveted internships and stuff like that i mean that makes sense and then also that
yeah it does however vivian is introduced and immediately they're enemies because the first
scene you see vivian is her being like yes i agree professor she's
unprepared kick her out of class and then that scene right after that weird thing is yeah the
scene right after that is l learning that vivian and warner are engaged and then there's a bunch
of scenes after that where vivian like makes a point to flaunt her engagement to warner in front
of l so basically even though she's in law school and pursuing law,
and this is a passion of hers that we are meant to believe throughout her whole life,
unlike Elle, who just decided two months ago,
I'm going to go to law school.
Right.
Which is, that's another...
She's still...
That's a fun...
Victor Garber's character sucks, but that's a fun line in the movie.
Wait, which one?
Slightly misogynist, but it is fun.
Where he's like, I do think she woke up one day and was like, I want to go to law school.
Because that is literally what happens.
That is what happens.
But so with Vivian, we're meant to believe is this passionate about law person.
Yet the movie spends so much time showing her being very petty toward Elle and basically only caring about her engagement to Warner.
I think Vivian is a tonally dissonant, underwritten character as a whole.
Again, switching to the other side of this,
the movie has everyone wanting to be firmly in Elle Woods' corner the entire movie. The way Vivian reacts to Elle in the first third to half of the movie is always too much.
Like, it's always too much.
He's my boyfriend now.
And, like, I want you to leave class because I don't like you.
Like, it's too much and they're laying it on too thick.
Fundamentally, I don't think it's fair to demonize vivian to have it seem like how
ridiculous that she feels like it's weird that her fiance's ex-girlfriend uprooted her life
to go to the same school as him right that's uncomfortable and they're forced together over and over the scene where this was clearest to me
because there are vivian for by and large overreacts is too mean goes too out of her way
to make l unhappy like and there's the big plot points of like oh it's a costume party but it's
not actually a costume stuff like that but there is one scene in which it's another just weird, bizarro,
like, okay, 2001 kind of scene
where Elle shows up
because she wants to join Warner's study group.
Yes.
And Vivian is clearly uncomfortable
and I don't think the movie wants us on her side
but it's like, yeah, of course she's uncomfortable.
Like, you don't want this person who
objectively would seem perhaps a little unhinged forcing themselves to be ready like i'm fully on
vivian's corner in that scene and she is not nice about it but in that particular scene she's not
overly rude about it and l to her credit takes the hint and says okay I'm gonna
go yeah and then this very strange thing happens as she leaves the scene where Enid the only queer
female character we see in the movie I wasn't sure if it's like she had heard a rumor that Elle had
said something or like was just making an assumption about Elle based on her appearance or what it was.
But she was basically saying, like, whatever.
She said something like, maybe there's, like, a sorority you can join.
Right, right.
Making fun of her, like you said, based on her, like, the way she presents herself and talks and looks.
Right.
And then there's a weird, like, oh, wouldn't you call me a dyke?
Behind my back kind of thing back and then l makes a very
weird choice after just gracefully exiting a tense situation that she caused yeah says i don't use
that word but vivian probably does and she so she's just like um I know I can't be in the study group. Vivian hates gay people.
Goodbye.
And you're just like, that seems a bit like that.
Because Elle, again, to that character's credit, does not go after Vivian in as rude and antagonistic a way that Vivian goes after her for part of the movie.
Granted, it is a major motivation of her to take quote-unquote warner
from again it's it's a lot like warner should have been just allowed to break up with l and be an
asshole for the rest of his life but then we wouldn't have the movie so right a quick point
i want to make about the way that enid and vivian at least in the beginning in the movie and then
vivian has a like a girlfriend character whose name I don't think we ever learn,
but the three of them are all very mean to Elle.
Law bitches.
Right.
They mock her, the way that she looks and the way that she talks,
which is suggesting that all of these women who are adults and in law school
are so petty that they are judging Elle solely on the
way she presents herself in it you know they're meant to be vilified and most of these characters
come around at the end and say I was wrong to judge you like that but it's basically saying
like look how petty these women are for no reason, which was weird to me.
And then, yeah, definitely that scene
where Enid's like,
you probably call me a dyke.
And El says something like,
for the record,
if you had come to a party,
I would have been nice to you,
which I believe because
that is what we...
El seems like a nice character.
El reminds me a lot of Cher from Clueless.
Oh, I didn't even share.
Cher.
You know.
That Cher.
No, Cher from Clueless.
Who we see as like...
Moonstruck Cher.
Who is like,
I think we talked about on the Clueless episode,
is an example of, you know, a rich, blonde, white girl
who we often see sort of vilified in movies,
but as a nice person who's really sweet.
Oh, that's an excellent, I hadn't even thought of the Cher parallels in this movie,
but there are a lot, especially with the Cher-
The Cher-
The Cher-
The Cher-
The Cher- The Cher-lals? The Shar-a-lals.
The Shar-a-lals.
I accept it.
Because at the top of the movie
especially when they're on the west coast, people can't
stop talking about how much money they have
where Warner's literally
driving beside Elle in a convertible
and she's like, I grew up in Bel-Air.
I'm not white trash
which is like um triggered but we are sort of like oh you know Elle's kind of a rich bitch
which she is she's rich but she's not a bitch and that while again it is not the most pressing
commentary to be making in a movie I think is generally positive of like Elle seems I mean she vocalizes several times she is aware of
her own privilege but still works hard and is by and large decent to everyone she comes into contact
with and the main I mean granted this is a very white movie but we we do see her come into contact with people who are a different class than she is
via jennifer coolidge's character paulette who is sort of like plays into this like white trash
new england trope and l never i mean there's not even an exchange where any judgment is passed about
her class true so you know again's like, this isn't like,
we need to be seeing that rich white women can be good people.
But if that is the protagonist of the movie, I appreciate that choice.
That brings me to a very bizarre scene that happens in the movie,
which is the bend and snap scene.
I love the bend and snap scene.
And if you've seen i haven't
seen it on broadway because i'm not a a millionaire but i have seen videos of it the legally blonde
musical is banging it's really good the bend and snap song rules the bend and snap scene is so
weird because it's sort of like look at Elle Woods teaching these poor women how to do
this weird thing I love that scene well the context of the scene is like that her teaching
these women how to appeal to a man better with something that looks crazy yeah because it's like
the bend over because you drop something and then snap back up and show your perky body.
And it's like really bizarre.
It feels so out of place in the movie.
But it is one of the few scenes where you see any women of color.
But it's like...
They're all bending and snapping.
It's really bizarre.
And then this gay man comes out at the end or someone who we're supposed to perceive as being gay
and he says something like, oh the old bend
and snap and da da da
cuts to the last
ten seconds of this scene. The whole scene
is crazy, but the last ten seconds of this
scene particularly baffling is like
a woman breakdancing after
bending and snapping and then cutting
to a gay man in like a
waiter's uniform
at a nail salon, bringing something
out and being like, oh yeah,
bend and snap, cut to
two dogs panting.
End of scene.
It's bonkers.
I encourage a rewatch
of that scene. You know, if there
is something problematic in that scene,
I was too sensory
overloaded to recognize
it. It was just, it's just a weird
fucking scene. And
to me, one of the best parts of the whole movie
because the only time that
Ben and, also, to the point
of like, this scene probably should have been cut,
the only time the Ben and
Snap scene is brought back is when
Jennifer Coolidge's character tries it and it doesn't brought back is when jennifer coolidge's character
tries it and it doesn't work it fails because she breaks the guy's nose we never see a successful
bend and snap accomplished we see a very long scene of it being introduced to 40 people for
some reason and then the one time it's brought back it breaks someone's nose. But she still manages to quote unquote snag
that guy, the UPS guy
who she was interested in,
which is perhaps a comment on
you don't need to do this elaborate movement
to attract a mate.
You can just, I don't know,
talk to someone and see if they might be
interested in you too.
Can we tackle Jennifer Coolidge?
Yeah.
There's so many female... I mean, this coolish yeah look at because she's there's
so many female i mean this is a good problem to have but there's a lot here yeah um yeah wait let
me we've been recording for about an hour and i still have a lot to say because there's a whole
callahan i've got to expedite i'm exhausted um this going to be a two-hour episode.
Please don't.
It can't be.
I literally will pass out.
Okay.
Jennifer Coolidge.
Yes.
Jennifer Coolidge is our resident poor person in this movie.
Her name's Paulette in this movie.
Elle meets her when she has a full-body panic because she needs... And I think character-wise, she's seeking out something familiar in an unfamiliar place.
I do this with IHOP everywhere I go.
Dunkin' Donuts as well.
Exactly.
Like, yeah, I understand that she's like,
oh, this is somewhere that makes sense to me.
It's a character-based decision that makes a lot of sense.
So she meets Jennifer Coolidge, who's a nail technician at this place.
Paulette introduces herself as, she's like,
I'm a middle-aged woman
who did not graduate from high school i dated the same man for eight years and he randomly left me
this is the worst blah blah blah like she she clearly finds herself to be a very tragic
irredeemable character i didn't even get to celebrate my dog's birthday. Yeah. Right. And she misses her dog.
And Elle, at this point in the movie, is like, yeah, that's pretty fucking sad.
I'm so sorry that this happens.
And then Jennifer Coolidge, I mean, her character, I would argue top to bottom, with the exception of one scene, really does not send the right message at any point.
Where right after being like, you know, she's like one of the only women over 40 we see in this movie.
I'm assuming, I don't know if she, but like her character says she's middle-aged.
You know, she clearly feels she's a spinster.
And without a man, even though clearly a crummy man, because he randomly left her,
without a man, she has no prospects or value.
Right.
Elle seems to agree with this at first and then before we even find
out the next thing about that character jennifer coolidge says you know she finds out about l's
predicament and it's like well if someone as hot as you can't get a man there's no hope for the
rest of us which is like that line fucking sucks and then and then she suggests you've got to steal him from vivian and it's just like well
this character is really derailing anything positive but she's the only poor person and the
only not super young person that we and we have the professor you know we have other stuff yeah
but the main the most main character that is older. The one scene that I would say is really good that she's in is there's one scene focused on her character where she and Elle go to the trailer of her loser ex-boyfriend who looks and sounds like a loser.
Clearly irredeemable and i remember that scene clearly and i forgot a lot about this movie but
i remember that scene because of how paulette's character behaves in that scene really i don't
know like hurt my heart a little bit because it felt real in a movie that does not very often feel
real right she's like psyching herself up to go and talk to her ex-boyfriend she's like this time
i'm gonna you know i'm gonna get what i want and blah blah and he opens the door immediately is obviously
dismissive and asshole calls her ugly basically saying like oh let's see what i'm not missing out
on and it crushes her and she's like clearly very affected by it and starts to back down and you
know like she's clearly planned this big confrontation,
and it sort of devolves into these mumbles.
And that was, I think, a beautiful character moment that was very sad.
And fortunately, Elle's there and spews out a bunch of,
granted, made up, but scares him enough that their friendship is solidified
and that Elle's able to get Paulette, her dog, back.
I like that scene.
That was a great scene to me.
Two, because one, you see Elle empowering Paulette
and sort of uplifting another female character.
And it's the first time you see Elle being super lawyer-y.
There were a few scenes before that where she, like, says the right answer in class.
That's a great point, yeah class and we're beginning to see her
kind of like, oh, she does have a knack
for this law thing. And then this is the scene
where you're like, oh, I do see her potential.
And she's kind of
realizing it herself, too.
Because even though she wings it,
she manages to convince
this guy. And what she's saying is
not total nonsense. It almost
makes total sense. Right, It almost makes total sense.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's close.
Which is, she seemed very lawyer-y in that moment.
And we're like, fuck yeah, she's gonna do it.
And still looked like Elle Woods while doing it, which was great.
I loved, I loved that scene.
I think that that's the peak of Paulette's character.
And I feel like they sell her out later by, you know, she has a crush on this UPS guy.
Which, do they say UPS? Like,
is that product placement? I think they do, yeah. That's so weird. But anyways, she, you know,
ends up, she has a crush on this UPS guy. She breaks his nose with a bend and snap, but they
still end up together. That, I think, you know, like, that is not a negative thing. I just don't
like that it's like, Paulette's clearly in a lot of pain from this really bad relationship
she confronts him
she gets what she wants
and now she can use all this new empowerment
to be in a relationship with another man
and I just
I felt like her character was sold out a little bit
because that one scene with her and Elle
was so great for both of them
that I would have preferred her to
I would have preferred to see her finish her high school degree, you know, like something like that that wasn't
just like, and now she has a new boyfriend.
Which maybe she did, but like that's not, your attention's called to, oh my gosh, she
broke her nose with, it's her boyfriend now.
Which is funny, but I just like, she's a B character, but I think she deserved better.
I agree.
And that's a wrap on Jennifer Gould.
The next character I want to talk about is Professor Callahan,
a.k.a. Victor Garber.
Thomas Andrews.
And how he is a total scumbag.
We start to get a clue of this because at first he seems like he believes in l and that he
you know he sees potential in her and because she she speaks up in his class and he's like oh yeah
she's got some good opinions and i and i value her and she's intelligent but then you get some
hints that he's maybe not so great because he takes on this case of this Brooke Taylor murdering her husband, possibly, case that he is the defense attorney for.
And the whole time he's like, no, I'm pretty sure she killed him.
I think she's guilty.
And, like, basically, I think we can take away that he does not respect or trust his client because she's a young and attractive woman.
One who married an older man, but not for his money.
Basically, she says flat out
because he's got a good D.
Right.
But he's just like,
well, she's a woman
and she's young and beautiful,
therefore cannot be taken seriously.
Because later,
there's the scene where
he makes a pass at Elle,
but under the pretense of like,
here, let's discuss your future
and your career.
What a relevant
scene what a weirdly relevant scene in an otherwise not super relevant movie yes he's telling her
these things and at first he's like oh he's gonna hire her to be a part of his law firm or something
or you know he sees potential in her as a lawyer but then he puts his hand on her knee which i would argue is the equivalent of a surprise
kiss it's not a kiss it's it's a grope but it's unsolicited it is non-consensual and this movie
does a great job of treating how this type of act should be treated which is don't touch me i did not
invite you to touch me and in the moment that's what she says she says yes fuck off and is clearly like and even vocalizes oh so you didn't mean anything you just said to
me about my what i forgot about this sequence that also feels just as relevant is that we see
the immediate that prompts a crisis of faith in herself that makes a lot of sense of like she is
capable we know that we've been watching her develop and do
very well but hearing you know just for the sake of this guy's fucking disgusting inability to
respect a woman like she doubts everything positive she knows about herself and it prompts
her to i mean i think for the sake of the plot immediately abandon any hope
of being a lawyer and and at that point we're like well this is a loss for everybody like it's just
like that was who that was like kind of a devastating sequence to watch yeah it sort of
very closely parallels a lot of things that are happening you know in different industries today
where it's not unsimilar to all the women who quit comedy
because louis ck jerked off in front of them in a hotel room right and all the women that like
left journalism because of people like matt lowry and mark halpert like all the women who did not go
into directing and producing because of harvey fucking weinstein yeah you know every industry
and in this case it's law i'm i feel pretty certain
that it probably does happen in the law community oh i'm sure of it which any industry that men are
a part of it happens which is all industries right and therefore and they're usually in charge of
them too and and seeing that play out is like really hard and then the other thing i forgot that happens is and luke wilson's
character you know he's a good character he's a good like emmett middle part emmett
feminist icon loves l is good at his job pretty across the board both a effective hot and
uninteresting character the thing i thought was really, if from a plot sense did not make a lot of sense,
was that Elle goes to the nail salon to say goodbye to Paulette and say, like, I love you, whatever, but this is too much.
I have to go home because I don't believe I can be a lawyer anymore.
And somehow, we haven't talked about this character yet,
because she's really only in two scenes doing very different things.
Yeah.
But there is an older female law professor who at first is very hard on Elle
in a way that is like, what?
She kicks her out of her class because she didn't read an assignment
that Elle didn't know she had.
Right.
Which I can see happening.
What I can see happening is her being like, Vivian, other character we need to meet at some point, should Elle be forced to leave?
And Vivian says, yes, I think she should.
And I was like, well, that would never happen in a class.
Why would you ask another student for consent to dismiss your own student?
I could see Elle getting kicked out.
Like, whatever.
Yeah, that was bizarre. So we're taught to think, oh, she's very stern. And that didn't seem like
even a gendered comment because all the law professors we see are very stern. But the second
time we see her, she somehow goes to the white trash nail salon that seems a little bit out of the way as well she's in the background i was like
okay sure but at least they make the most of that sort of baffling reveal of remember that weird
scene from earlier she's back and she has that great line of like if you're letting this what
what is she if you're gonna let one stupid prick ruin your life,
you're not the woman I thought you were.
Which empowers Elle to be like, you're right, I'm going to go back.
And that's the sort of catalyst that makes her return to Brooke.
And finish the movie.
Yeah, Brooke hires her to be her defense attorney.
And then the whole sequence plays out where she solves the case and wins.
And I think that that was like a really cool choice because at that point we've already seen luke wilson say no you're great you
should you should stay and he's right but i think that that is like kind of in in the intricacies of
how a situation like this plays out hearing another man say you're great you should stay
it makes sense to me that
Elle would be like, thank you, I appreciate that, but it doesn't carry the same weight of a successful
female lawyer saying, no, you should be here. And so that, I got all choked up. I thought it was
such a cool moment. Even if the fact that Professor Strongwell, high-powered lawyer, goes to the same white trash nail salon that Elle Woods stumbles into,
I'm assuming it's in Malden, by accident.
Makes no fucking sense.
That was, like, one of my favorite moments in the whole movie.
Yes, I do like that.
Also, not to give any male characters any credit for anything,
but the sequence plays out where Callahan surprise touches L.
She has the reaction that we're always hoping to see,
which is like,
Ooh,
are you hitting on me?
Bad.
Immediately.
Yeah.
Cause he said something like,
what?
I'm just a man who knows what he wants.
And she responds with,
and I'm a law student who just realized her professor is a pathetic asshole.
And she gets up.
And then she runs into
Luke Wilson
and tells her like,
this whole thing was a mistake.
Me coming to law school
was a mistake.
And he's like,
what are you talking about?
What?
And then she tells him,
Callahan just hit on me
and he believes her.
Immediately.
And is like,
clearly upset by the news
but does not doubt her at all.
Right.
And then in turn, and this was like a good character moment for, again, I think the not super well-written Vivian character, where Vivian, another lots of fun, convenient moments
taking place in the late second into the third act of this movie. But just as Elle Woods is surprised, touched by Victor Garber,
Vivian sees that touch happen, does not see what happens immediately after,
which is Elle making it clear that that is unwelcome.
Right.
So Vivian, there's this moment where she's like,
she confronts Elle in an elevator and is like,
oh, so you almost had me fooled.
I almost thought you were a good, capable lawyer,
but it turns out it looks like you're fucking the professor.
And that's another sort of wrench thrown into their friendship
that was developing at that point.
So that's, you know, whatever, that's a plot point.
To Vivian's character's credit, later in the movie,
when Brooke finds out l quit luke wilson middle part just his
part is just oiled and shiny just a beam of light is coming out of luke wilson's middle part
in every scene he appears in but he says you know she quit and the main reason she quit which again is like
credit to that character the main reason she quit is because victor garber hit on her and she wanted
no part of it right and immediately vivian says oh my god i didn't realize that i've made literally
arrested development style i've made a huge mistake which is good and and again tracks with the
character of l who even when the like log line of this movie is not good she is an honest character
through like she doesn't lie to anybody ever and that's like sort of the part of like that's part
of her core so it makes sense that like of course you would believe her because victor garvey's character is notoriously fucking
sus as hell you know like yeah and earlier in the movie vivian even makes a comment at one point
where she's like do you ever notice how callahan will make you get him coffee but he never makes
any of the male interns get coffee and then they have a conversation about how men are useless and
this is sort of the spark of the beginning of their friendship because they kind of like bond over like Warner being an idiot,
men being useless.
Warner being a little weightless bitch.
Yeah.
I love it.
And then the catalyst that gets Vivian to turn around from like hating Elle
is that she sees Elle sort of protecting the client
because, you know, there's the whole thing with her alibi
and, like, I can't reveal what my alibi is
because it would ruin my career.
Right.
And Elle's like, sure, I will keep your secret as safe as I can.
And Vivian's like, that was actually pretty classy.
So that makes her respect Elle.
And opens the channel for her.
That, like, made me feel great I've had not to be
like this is like my fucking life right now but I've had experiences like that too where it's like
you just get off on the wrong foot with someone usually because of a man and then later like
realize that perhaps the man is the big fucking idiot and it is good and we can be friends even though we're
different that scene really did it for me loved that scene and was a good moment for vivian i just
vivian in the beginning of this movie just like she i feel like her character is exploited to set
up fun scenes i don't think that it is something that tracks with her character to be like, it's a costume
party, see you there.
I mean, that from a
studio notes standpoint is because
people want to see Reese Witherspoon
dressed up like a bunny. That is why.
They managed to fit it into the plot
but sort of at the expense of Vivian's
character in that moment, I think.
I think there's a few other clues that
so this, I think it's worth noting that moment right i think there's a few other clues that so this is i think
it's worth noting that this movie was written by two women karen mccullough and kirsten smith and
it's based on a novel written by another woman amanda brown however it was directed by a man
robert luke headache or something let's see what else and i think there are clues sprinkled
throughout the movie that it was in fact directed by a man.
Basically, the opening montage of the movie is this whole thing where people are signing a card for Elle,
which is basically just like, congrats on probably getting engaged tonight, which doesn't end up happening.
And there's all these shots of her sorority sisters, and sometimes they're wearing next to nothing.
And they're in a steamy bathroom
getting showers or they're like exercising or just like sexualized and the way weird shots
and like yeah the whole visual medium like the way women the way the sorority girls are framed
is very exactly how you'd think sorority girls would be framed nothing is subverted right and
that which is weird because i think the whole point of the movie is to sort of
try to subvert the
stereotype of, you know, a blonde
sorority sister that
Elle's character is.
Fucking dodoi, yeah.
But actually all these other sorority
girls, they're still all
white heteronormies who are
hot and blonde and we're gonna
frame them like they're basically pieces of meat wearing bikinis.
Speaking of bikinis, there's another scene where Elle is, like,
outside sunbathing in what's probably, like, September, October in Boston,
which is not appropriate weather to be sunbathing in.
But she's got this, like, sequined bikini.
It can be.
Maybe, but, like... It can be. I don't know. she's got this sequined bikini.
Maybe, but like... It can be. I don't know.
I'll advocate for her in that sense.
The point is, she's outside.
She's wearing a sequined bikini
or something. It's basically
to show Warner
what he's missing out on
because he's playing football with all these other
dude bros outside.
And they all just basically stop playing football and just leer at her dude bros outside. And they all just like basically stop playing football.
And just leer at her for a good 20 seconds.
And she just like gives a smile like, yep, I'm glad that you're all leering at me.
And it's like, ah, weird choice.
I just did the most cursory amount of research on this director possible.
And found out some truly insane information.
If you don't mind me sharing. So, director Robert Luketic was, first of all, was 27 when this movie came out.
Whoa.
This was his first major release.
Young director.
Young director.
He was given this opportunity because of a short film he had that went to Sundance, which
what an exciting male experience to do one fucking thing and then be given a massive opportunity.
Wow.
What an amazing thing that will never happen to us.
But the movie that he debuted at Sundance and other places
was called Tiziana Booberini.
Booberini.
Just again, if you didn't hear what I said the first time,
at age 23, Robert Lou Kedick made an 11-minute movie called Tiziana Booberini.
And people saw Tiziana Booberini,ini and they said this guy's going places give him a
feature i am losing my mind tiziana buberini and so i was like well what could tiziana buberini
be about and it's not what you think it's about but it's still bad it's about shaming women for
a different part of their body than the title tiziana buberini would i guess i would imply
this sounds fucking crazy it won best film at aspen shorts. It won all these awards. And without Tiziana Buberini,
we don't have Legally Blonde.
How crazy.
Which, you know,
maybe was an original working title
for Legally Blonde.
Tiziana Buberini 2.
Okay.
It's a musical comedy
with the story focusing on
Tiziana Buberini,
an Italian checkout girl
at a suburban supermarket
who is ridiculed by her fellow employees for her stute upper lip.
Meaning she has a dark, she has like a light mustache.
As do I.
Let us vote.
Right.
So it's about a girl with a dark upper lip.
The resolution to this 11 minute film?
Tiziana.
Is that the character's name it's a weird italian
joke tiziana buberini there tiziana gains new confidence and acceptance when she discovers a
hair removal treatment oh and the movie so she it's sorry that was the most insane Googling for his entire life. Tiziana Bouberini.
What else is there to say?
I'm speechless. We wouldn't have this.
So we cannot possibly consider
Legally Blonde a feminist
masterpiece as Bustle.com would lead us to
believe because it wouldn't exist without
Tiziana Bouberini.
I can't. He also directed
Monster-in-Law,
which is a J-Lo rom-com,
which is my shit.
Also, Jane Fonda
shines in that movie.
It's not a good movie.
Haven't seen it.
But it wouldn't have happened
without Tiziana Boomerini.
No.
I cannot fucking believe that.
Okay, we're good.
Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah.
This episode is officially
longer than the movie.
It's officially longer than the movie.
Definitely,
because the movie's only
an hour and 36 minutes, which I appreciate. Keep it tight. Love a the movie. It's officially longer than the movie. Definitely, because the movie's only an hour and 36 minutes, which I appreciate.
Keep it tight.
Love a short movie.
Keep those titsy on a boomerang nice and tight and hairless.
What the fuck?
Oh, God.
That's crazy.
Titsy on a boomerang.
Just a few final thoughts.
Sorry, yeah, I'm lightheaded.
About Legally Blonde.
I know it's so late and we're dying.
I wanted to say that Aristotle
gets mentioned. Yeah, that was exciting.
But we were like, Aristotle!
So, shout out to our producer, Aristotle.
Also, I, uh,
we touched on this before, but
there's only really three main
male characters.
Warner, Emmett, which is Luke Wilson's
character, and Callahan, Victor Garber. The rest of the characters with speaking roles, of which there are many, Warner, Emmett, which is Luke Wilson's character, and Callahan, Victor Garber.
The rest of the characters with speaking roles,
of which there are many, many, many, are women, which is great.
But I would say, before we call this a women's movie,
we have to call it a white woman's movie.
Yes, absolutely.
The only really notable woman of color in the movie is the judge.
Which is great. Yes.
That is great. There were however many opportunities for other characters
to be women of color.
Other students in law school
women in her sorority
women anywhere else in the movie.
Fortunately there's no
lack of women in this movie.
No excuse for
them to not be women of all shapes, sizes, colors.
Right.
And in that vein, and we've already touched on this too,
but there are two notable queer characters in the movie
and neither of them really get fair treatment.
The movie is really subscribing to some pretty problematic stereotypes
in the way that they portray the lesbian character Enid
and the gay guy's name
is salvatore right um because like the gay guy knows about fashion and that's what's incriminates
him right and the lesbian is like this shrewy woman studies male hating feminist her thing
right where especially enid's character falls into, I mean, both of these characters are literally handicapped by their own queerness by the plot.
Where Salvatore is not able to pull off his little scheme because of his queerness.
Right.
In a scene that I do think is very funny where Luke Wilson's like, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, what's your boyfriend's name?
And then he's like, whatever he's like, Chuck. Chuck. And then Chuck is there? Chuck's there. He's like, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. What's your boyfriend's name? And then he's like, whatever he says.
Chuck.
Chuck.
And then Chuck is there?
Chuck's there.
He's like, what the hell?
He's like, Chuck, why are you playing party to this?
Chuck, you deserve better than this, Chuck.
Salvatore is a little sneak.
But anyways.
Because he says something like, oh, I misunderstood.
He's just a friend of mine.
And then Chuck stands up and he's like, you bitch.
I was like, wow, Chuck is drawing a line in the sand which chuck deserves better obviously yeah also chuck why are you there
buddy like is it a money thing that's the only thing i could think of but salvator is literally
handicapped by his own queerness bad enid she does not fail in the movie and quite in the
spectacular fun way that salvator fails but you really don't see her
speak in a scene where she just she can't stop talking about the fact that she's a lesbian like
she's just like a it's a cartoon character although I did I enjoy the moment where she's
talking to Luke Wilson who is for I guess at this I think the movie tricks you into thinking that
he's a law student and then later there's this reveal
and it's like, no, he's actually
an associate at this law firm.
No, he's just hanging out at a law school.
But he's just hanging out with a bunch of law kids.
Anyway, so he's at this party with a bunch of
law students and
Enid is talking to him and she's like, oh, the whole
semester is a
male term. I'm gonna petition
for them to be called Ovesters from now on.
And I was like, that's the type of thing that I would probably say.
So I get it.
Or I would at least tweet as a joke.
But anyway, the very few people of color in this movie, the very few queer characters you see, are not done justice at all by the movie. Right. I will say that I enjoy that there are several female characters and most of them are white
who are law professors at the most prestigious school in America.
The prosecuting attorney in the courtroom scenes is a woman.
Yes.
The courtroom, as with most industries, but it's like, you know, it's not necessarily
like a statement to have a nail salon with a lot of female characters inside it.
Sure.
It's certainly not a statement to have a sorority full of a lot of female characters.
The courtroom thing felt like, oh, cool.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because it's a judge who's a woman and the prosecuting attorney who does most, and granted
she's clearly poised as this character who does not, like many of the characters in the movie, take Elle seriously.
Right.
And whenever she's like, yeah, let this first year law student try to defend her, I'm fine with that.
Counterpoint Elle's outfit.
You know, it's like, it makes sense.
It makes sense.
It's not an illogical character trait.
Okay.
Do we have anything else to say before we end?
Lord, I fucking hope not.
It passes the Bechdel test, obviously.
In fact, I stopped...
There are many scenes where women are talking,
where they are talking about any number of male characters,
oftentimes Warner and some other people,
but I stopped being able to even keep track of the scenes
where women are interacting and saying things that pass the Bechdel test.
Which is great.
Because there are so many.
My only criticism is that this movie has trouble.
I can't, I don't even know if it's like the issues
there's just not enough male characters
to have this be an issue for them as well.
But the movie is like not great at naming their characters.
But there are so many.
So it takes a while for it to pass our version of the Bechdel test.
Because there.
A lot of those sorority sisters don't have names.
Right. But it passes handily sorority sisters don't have names. But
it passes handily. Although
there are several times where
two women are talking to each other, but
they're being really mean to each other, which
like, I don't, like, that technically
pounds. But there's like one scene in particular
where like, Vivian says to Elle,
nice outfit, when she shows up in the bunny
costume. And then Elle says,
thanks, you too,
except that when I dress up as a frigid bitch,
I try to not to look so constipated.
And it's like, wow, feminism.
And then the last line is, you have the ring.
You're just like, fuck, how does this scene manage to pass the whole time?
The other thing I did want to say about that is that I really,
I feel like we were robbed
of a scene where l and vivian kind of reconcile because it leaves off where vivian realizes she's
made a huge mistake because she misinterprets what she saw happening between callahan and l
but then we don't really get to see any sort of apology or reconciliation there. Cut a minute out of the 45
bend and snap sequence
and give us that.
I also would have, speaking to
let's write Vivian a little
bit better, I would have liked to see
Vivian confront Warner
as well.
Because clearly there's a lot to unpack there
and we find out midway through the movie that Vivian
doesn't take Warner seriously either.
Right.
Should we rate the movie?
Why, Bob?
Do we rate them in the bonus episode?
I think we have, yeah.
Okay.
I'm going to give it...
Oh, dear me.
I'm going to say this is like a three nipple.
I feel like I lost blood.
I've lost a lot of blood this week.
My larynx is literally torn to shreds.
Anyway, okay, so I'm going to give this movie three nipples.
It might deserve higher.
It might deserve lower.
I'm not really sure.
To me, it's still like it's a movie in which the character in the third act is very empowered,
and she ends up realizing the thing that she was
pursuing for the wrong reasons is her calling and that she is good at it and that she is passionate
about it and that's great however the whole first very long chunk of the movie is her pursuing
something for the very wrong reasons so that's a little frustrating to watch also we had the
whole discussion about a movie that's kind of trying to like
dismantle and subvert the tropes
and the stereotypes of a blonde
hot sorority
girl. We have to rethink.
But she's also smart.
But the movie is just so fucking
pink. To me it almost reads
as like those like Bic brand
pens that were like these are for women
because they're pink and it's like okay this, these are for women because they're pink.
And it's like, okay, this is a movie for women because look how pink it is.
There is a level of corporate feminism to this movie that isn't as egregious as it could be, but it's present.
It's there.
Yeah.
The product placement is there.
I'm with you.
Sorry.
I don't know why I'm like this.
What if I just passed out?
We are both having a stroke.
So, yeah, there's certainly some problems.
I do like the third act of the movie when basically there's the whole turn of her coming into her own
but not necessarily abandoning who she is as a person,
but she's empowered and she's found her calling accidentally
slash by stalking her ex-boyfriend but it works out so
that's good i guess yeah so three nipples one of them belongs to bruiser the dog love bruiser i
usually hate movie dogs as you know i mean i think bruiser should have been a cat in in which case i
would have given the movie eight nipples and all of them would
have been to the bruiser the cat in cat facts or whatever, whatever I usually say.
But one of them goes to bruiser and the other two, one to Paulette, and I'm going to give
one to Professor Stromwell, the strong, independent woman who empowers Elle at the end to not quit law school and to be the lawyer she was meant to be.
Yes, queen.
Queen, yes.
We love it.
I'm so tired.
Okay, so what do I have left?
What do I have left? What do I have left?
We're so close to the end.
What do I have left in my body that hasn't already been stolen from me at this point?
I think I just have a heavy crisis.
Okay, I have to give this movie two and a half nipples.
As much as I do genuinely like it and think it's generally it is coming from the right place i would be lying
if i said that oh god what is the name of the movie again legally blonde no no no no
what if you just forgot what we've been talking about i've been bullshitting
no the iconic film that came before it, Tiziana Buberalli.
I would be lying if I said that the reveal that Tiziana Buberalli led to this movie being made didn't impact my general view of it.
I hope it affects yours, too.
That's a pretty horrifying rug to have pulled out from underneath you that's like finding out that like moana wouldn't have been made if there wasn't like dick rangers for like the director of dick rangers for hadn't made
a snapchat video that had won an award it's sundance i just it's upsetting my main issue
with this movie for all the little stuff we picked apart, which is valid,
not to make our job sound useless, for all that fucking bitching we just did, moment
one, I don't like the message this communicates to its very young audience that an appropriate
way to deal with a breakup as a young person is to not accept a breakup. That is such a horrible
idea. And I embarrassingly did this exact thing in high school because I'd seen movies like this
where it works out. For me, I took a bus to Connecticut. It did not work out. It was deeply
embarrassing. I think about it easily once a day. But I mean, like speaking to that larger thing, I am not alone in having done
something like that because of movies like this that convey the message, just basically empowering
unhealthy behaviors. And even though it is positive, obviously, that Elle's plan to win Warner back does not work out and does not work out for the right reasons, the fact that she still does have this new fulfilling life because of this deeply flawed problematic plan is just not a good message to be sending to children who don't know anything.
Just remember, they will believe what hot people
tell them like that's just how children very easily influence and the reason we do this podcast
is because movies do have a significant impact on our development right in the way that we for
better or worse yeah so the fact that so many movies portray romantic relationships is like or
breakups is like well the uh the way i'm gonna win him or her back is to stalk them for a long time
and sometimes in movies that works and it's like it happens and i can't think of an example top of
dump but there are a lot of examples of men doing this to women in movies as well probably more
yeah it's just not good.
It's like right up there with my least favorite movie setups,
right up there with the let me kidnap and re-educate a woman and then we'll be in love.
I just don't like the foundation of this movie to me,
along with Tensiana Buberalli, is deeply flawed.
I can't deal with it. woods i think is an awesome character
most of the female characters have elements of great characters but are not fully fleshed out
possibly because the narrative is a little saturated with a lot of characters anyways
i like the movie i'm so tired two and a half nipples I've given one to Elle Woods she fucking earned it
I'll give a nippy to Paulette as well
because she deserved better
and I'll give my last half nip to Vivian
no inspired awards here
just giving it to people who earned them
sure sure sure
well also I wanted to
no
I literally had a physical response to you saying also
so that's our way way way way too long and I'm sorry I literally had a physical response to you saying also.
So that's our way, way, way, way too long.
And I'm sorry, but I'm not sorry.
Just so you know, this is a far better product than we were originally delivering,
which is us drunkenly slurring about how we like Titanic.
Yeah.
For maybe a half hour.
You're welcome that you're not listening to that garbage. I feel physically winded. I'm just like
yeah, we gotta go to bed.
I hope you enjoyed this.
I think you fucking should.
That was a lot of nuanced critique.
We did. In fact, I feel like
if we had cut it any shorter
we would have left out some
valuable discourse. Yeah.
So here we are, giving it to you straight
to all you matrons out there. We're straight shooters.
We'll try not to make
all their episodes this long but
hey. They don't care. Who knows what'll
happen. They love it. Do you love it?
They're addicted to it. They're sick.
Alright well
Guys I hope you're not too tired.
And uh
Happy New Year Oh yeah it's gonna be before the news. guys I hope you're not too tired and happy new year
oh yeah just come back before the news
and good tidings
to you good job
bye oh wait oh no
and a happy
Tiziana Bubarelli
so that was our
unlocked Matron episode
available now on the main feed
on the film Legally legally blonde and like we said
earlier used to it don't get used to it all the other ones are they're staying there they're
they're locked in the disney vault except the bechdel the bechdel vault but yes thank you for
listening we hope you enjoyed it it was fun for us to revisit as well um and just like there's no better like legally it's a good
time to watch legally blonde and now in history's darkest hour it's a fun time to watch legally
blonde indeed so thank you for listening uh you can find us online in all the normal places you
can find us on instagram and twitter at bechdel cast you can can, of course, join the damn Patreon. Patreon.com slash Bechdelcast.
There's other stuff. I just remembered
another theme we did.
Ooh. Revenge Burr?
Oh, yeah.
Every title, the titles
are horrific.
I love them so much.
But we've done a lot.
And then we'll also do
annual Oscar roundups and stuff like that.
So a little more niche fun stuff going on over there.
So we hope you enjoyed this.
And you can also get our merch at tpublic.com slash the Bechtel cast.
And we'll see you next week, gang.
Bye.
Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist
who on October 16th 2017 was assassinated
Crooks Everywhere unearths the plot to murder a one-woman WikiLeaks
She exposed the culture of crime and corruption
that were turning her beloved country into a mafia state
Listen to Crooks Everywhere on the iHeartRadio app
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
That's right, the only, Katherine Hahn is joining us on Las Culturistas.
That's right,
the queen of comedy herself.
Get ready for a conversation
that's as hilarious
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Tune in for all the laughs,
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Don't miss Katherine Hahn
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Listen to Las Culturistas
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Hey, I'm Gianna Pradenti.
And I'm Jermaine Jackson-Gadson.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
There's a lot to figure out when you're just starting your career.
That's where we come in.
Think of us as your work besties you can turn to for advice.
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Listen to Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.