As the sexist tone reaches a fever pitch with networks chase ratings in this historic presidential election, the Women’s Media Center is speaking out with a new video illustrating the pervasive nature of sexism in the media. Titled “Sexism Sells, But We’re Not Buying It,” the video shows 30 examples of gendered, sexist coverage from the mainstream media.
If you haven’t already, please watch the video, and tell us what you think. Then be sure to sign our petition at http://www.womensmediacenter.com/sexism_sells.html.
In a statement released today about the video, Carol Jenkins had this to say:
We know that media companies today are under tremendous pressure to build audiences and drive ratings, but this type of vulgar, sexist commentary is not the way to do it. Women wield tremendous financial power in the United States. Our message to media companies: if you think that sexism sells, think again, because women in America are not buying it.
As our new video shows, the media’s sexism is not specific to a candidate or campaign. But the presence of a woman, front and center at last on the national political stage, has sent shockwaves through a media grappling with ongoing problems of diversity. Hillary Clinton’s campaign has cast a spotlight on the institutionalized sexism that The Women’s Media Center was founded in 2005 to combat, providing us with a unique moment to examine ourselves and the media we consume. This is about the inherent and unnecessary obstacles that women face every day in speaking out and participating in the national dialogue.
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57 Comments
I am so with this call to action and power! Enough is enough! I have a new doc out, “What’s Your Point, Honey?” that is geared toward younger women so we can get this conversation started again, in a huge way, and demand our equal rights.
I’m a hair short of chaining myself to the White House fence in protest.
Every single feminist must get on each other lists, blogs and out in front of the masses to bring justice and rights to 51% of the US population. It is illogical that we are not equal and I am all for demanding attention to our 80% of the purchasing power; I’m all for only working with women-owned businesses; I’m all for charging a premium for contributing to raising the future workforce of this country.
If you buy a DVD of “What’s Your Point, Honey?” and have a hosting party for young women — it’s getting the message out loud and clear. 30% of DVD profits goes to The White House Project, the Ms. Foundation and Girls Inc., split evenly. Go to http://www.whatsyourpointhoney.com and help me to wake everybody’s daughter up today!
Amy Sewell
writer/filmmaker
Mad Hot Ballroom (2005)
What’s Your Point, Honey? (2008)
This blog is a great idea and the video is so well done. I have been feeling very sad about this election cycle and the horrible sexism that has been accepted and encouraged. I’m glad to be able to do something rather than be depressed. The video is on my blog and I will do everything I can to spread the word about the petition. Thanks for your GREAT work!
Long, long, long overdue!
I watched the video. On the statement I just signed I find the words “we’re not buying it” catchy. But the last line about the snooze button is empty. It sounds like a semi-threat. This certainly doesn’t bother me. But what’s the plan? What are we planning to do about it? What will be the consequences? Are you suggesting a boycott?
Great stuff, although Ive seen worse on cnn and msnbc- and npr- and did anyone see Bill Mar joke about the polygamist women having one eyebrow as the highly esteemed Cornel West laughed??
I think calling people on their crap is a powerful first step, and hopefully some level of education and consciousness can rise above an ignorant self defensiveness and tendency to call everything that challenges “politically correct”
Thank you, thank you, thank you. the only thing that keeps me going during this time of overt misogyny that has erupted during Senator Clinton’s campaign is the hope that it engages women again in action against such treatment of women in the media, and in the country.
about the video, I say, BRAVA!!!!
What about the NYTimes calling a US Senator Mrs. Clinton!
“We don’t buy it” should be aimed at advertisers who fund these shows. If the advertisers think they are losing money, they will pressure the media.
This video is part of the needed response to the sexism in all media. Let’s keep it going. The boycott idea sounds right on – can we identify the major sponsors on the top news outlets and let them know we’ve had it. Enough already.
Thank you for all your great activist work.
If you click on this link you can comment on the video at Youtube’s site. It’s getting negative comments. You can also rate it and add it to your favorites.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-IrhRSwF9U&eurl=http://womensmediacenter.com/wordpress/?p=178
Great video. I can only imagine how difficult it was to put together this compilation – there has been so much to choose from this campaign that I’m sure the editing room floor is crowded. Thank you!
This is what I posted on the comments section of the YouTube page this video is on:
I’m horrified. As an American woman who has lived in the UK for the last 5 years, I have to admit that I’m way out of touch with the American media and how they’ve been (mis)treating women – least of all Hillary Clinton. Seeing something like this makes me GLAD I don’t live there anymore.
You know, it’s stuff like this that makes me ashamed to admit that I’m an American when I’m asked.
I just came here through a link on Shakesville. Great video, thanks for producing it.
I think MSNBC is the place to boycott. It’s not the only offender, but it is certainly the worst this cycle.
I just sent them a letter telling them, my family is switching channels and I told them why. I know a lot of other people have stopped watching that network,too. I hope they will find the time to shoot off a letter or email. A boycott doesn’t make much sense if the target doesn’t know you’re doing it.
Why is it that when a man sees a woman he reduces himself and her to what is in their respective pants? Why is it men stick together and so many women stick with them and sisterhood is…where? Frankly, I haven’t felt much sisterhood in twenty years. I’m ready for another shot of it. It is high time that women stand up for women. Thanks for this opportunity.
I would gladly boycott the advertisers who help fund the media cesspool. While growing up and taking courses to become an educator, I remember being told to never praise a girl because of her looks, rather we should focus on her brains and good deeds. If racism isn’t okay, why is sexism?
Hola WMC,
Muchas, muchas, muchisimas GRACIAS por este video y por la idea de la peticion. What is happening during this campaign is so offensive and it really hurts. Honestly, I was not aware of how behind we were regarding women’s rights in this country. It is hard to believe that so many media people can make such openly sexist comments and simply get away with it. How is that possible? Isn’t there anybody to sue them?
Just want to report that I’ve posted about this campaign on my website, http://www.GloriaFeldt.com, on BlogHer, and WIMN’sVoices Blog. I’m putting this comment here to urge everyone to blog about the subject and link to the campaign, so that it will spread virally until it achieves its goal.
A sad thing about the current election campaigns is that the media highlighted and fronted the “great divide” – siphoning voters into black/white, male/female – in order to generate pundit-worthy soundbites. The horrifying aspect is that the American Voter bought into this with a vengeance. As I look at the female pundits making miscogynistic comments, I often wonder why they hate themselves so much. . .
This is an absolutely fabulous video. I’m so tired of sexism, and I’m really disappointed in women, especially young women, who don’t stand up and say that it’s wrong. It’s as if we’re starting the battle all over again.
We haven’t come as far as we thought we had, I guess. Thank you for doing this. I signed the petition, happily.
I’m glad someone with some authority is finally addressing this issue. While I agree with earlier commenters that the video didn’t include the most glaring examples of sexism I’ve come across, it’s a start and I applaud it.
I’ve been personally horrified that it’s still acceptable to call out “iron my shirt!” at campaign rallies; to ask “how do we beat the bitch?”; to refer to female reporters as ’sweetie’ when one wants to dodge their questions. But what strikes me most is the imbalance in the discussions of the topic of gender.
It is unfortunate that issues of racism and sexism must both be confronted in the same elections cycle, and that instead of bolstering these twin efforts, the issues have gotten into competition with each other. That doesn’t have to be how things go, but unfortunately it’s the way things are going.
I don’t mind if someone makes a sexist comment on an opinion program if they’re taken to task regarding it. Unfortunately, far too often nothing is said to combat the negative message.
I will gladly sign the petition.
No apology is ‘enough’ when it comes to sexism or racism. I note that the gentleman in question is of some sort of Italian or Hispanic heritage; if anyone had made a nasty comment involving that, he’d be outraged & should be. Sexism is the last area where people still feel comfortable making nasty comments, and/or not paying attention in order NOT to make them. It kills me how people (mostly men) always act surprised & even miffed when nailed for a sexist comment… I wonder if it will ever end. We must call people on every single one of these comments, in our private lives (the toughest version to deal with) as well as in public commentary. He’ll have no further consequences from his Hillary remark, whereas he’d be appropriately blasted away if he’d made a racist comment. They just don’t get it.
OMG!!!!!!!!!! I want to slap the faces of the “ho is a Ho guy!” and the one that said men let women take over!!! the NERVE!!! I wanna spit on all of them!!! I know that’s nasty but that is how they have made me feel!!!!!!!!!!! they should all be FIRED!!!!!!!!!! and I will not buy any products or give business to any of the sponsors!!!!!
SICKENING!!!!!!!!!!
I wonder what their mother’s think????
no wonder I cant stand men any more!!!
Francine Donahue
I was a young woman in the 60’s during the feminist movement. It seems to me that women are worse off now then we were then. At least back then, men knew when they were being sexist. We used to joke about it with our male friends.
I have heard more than I care to about Hillary’s butt and her bring a “nutcracker.” Someone needs to pull these media jocks up short. They need to know that women and men won’t tolerate it.
While I support this campaign to stop sexism in the media, I also hoped that this same vigor, commitment and call to action could have occurred when the women targeted by such hateful and oppressive sexism were of a darker hue. Hiliary’s campaign isn’t the first time sexism was placed front and center nationally in a major way and it likely that it won’t be the last time. So in joining this campaign to end sexism in the media, I’m counting on you WMC to also step up and challenge the racially-loaded sexist attacks aimed at women of color in the media as well with a similar rigor — don’t buy it no matter how it may be packaged!!!
Valandra!
Thank you for giving us a chance to voice our opposition to the sexism in the media that has become so prevalent in the past year. It is amazing to me that anyone who cares about the treatment of women, no matter which candidate they prefer, can continue to support a network like MSNBC where Keith Olbermann and Chris Matthews regularly demonstrate their bias against women. It was shocking to see Howard Fineman from Newsweek sit and politely nod while Keith Olbermann suggested someone should take Senator Clinton into a room and deal with her until she couldn’t come out. Have either of them ever heard of violence against women? We are already seeing vicious comments against Michelle Obama because she is a strong woman who is not afraid to voice her opinions. Keep up your wonderful work.
I have added the wonderful video to my blog. Thank you so much for giving us this wonderful video to work with! I am all for boycotting….whatever we need to boycott. I’m so sick of it. It’s like we haven’t progressed at all since the 60’s. Maybe it’s a prime example of George Santayana’s famous quote ” those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” Please let us all remember and teach our sons and daughters a different way.
You can’t unring a bell. In broadcast over the public air waves, the ring goes out to millions of listeners. No amount of apology can ameliorate the torrent of outrageous sexist messages put out from the television set throughout the primary election year.
As with the thesis in Susan Brownmiller’s book, “Against Our Will,” that the rape of one woman is the rape of us all. The sexist media assault against Senator Clinton effected all of us.
Thank you for this forum. Between the blatant sexism on MSM, in commercials, now in politics, everywhere please add the concern of exploitation of young women especially (many of them think its fine to act like Girls Gone Wild) these girls have been poorly educated. Reality TV hasn’t helped women at all.
It is way past time to act on this media bias! Every attack on Hillary, was an attack on every women listening or watching. I have been e-mailing MSNBC to no avail. But together we can end this reign of terror against women. Together!
I also feel that attacks on Hillary are on attack on all women. I am depressed by the lack of outrage among women, especially younger women! I was so glad to find you site – let’s work together (as women) and stop sexism
I hope that Clinton supporters can unite behind Obama even though Hillary got some nasty comments from the media. I avoid the media for reasons like this. It would be useful for me to see a list of sponsors for these programs so that I could write to them. And to be honest the men saying they would cross their legs etc were demeaning to men as well. Not all men are such sensitive narsicists who can only be happy if women are submissive.
I’m a college student and stood with the majority of my generation in supporting Obama. At the time, I thought I was exercising the ultimate post-gender privilege of voting for my favorite candidate, unencumbered by gender. I’m still confident that I made the right choice by backing Obama, but I was shocked and appalled by Hillary’s treatment by the media. It was a wake up call for me and, I believe, for many young women who had previously felt above the gender wars.
I want to do something. Like a lot of people, I have no desire to hold elected office. But I do want to make strides in the board room and the living room. But how? Getting women’s names on the ballot is the easy part. Living our lives in order to change the culture is hard. Imagine a million women changing the power dynamics in their lives. Who’s writing a book about that?
I supported Obama’s nomination, but was disturbed by the unbridled sexism by the mainstream media towards Hillary Clinton. The only way this country will ever have over 30% women in elected to the federal legislative branch of government such as that of the Scandinavian nations, Belgium, Spain, Germany and the Netherlands is to change the system to one of proportional representation. In the book “Reflecting All of Us: The Case for Proportional Representation,” Harvard Law professor Lani Guinier writes: “What America needs is a system that disperses power more broadly. Ultimately, proportional and semi-proportional systems reflect ideas of cooperation and rotation-the importance of public access to power . . . It is about transforming how power itself is exercised and shared.”
There will be no unity in the Democratic party until the voices of the 18 million voters who support Hillary Clinton are heard and heeded. Until the voices of Pumas are once again listened to by the leadership of the Democratic party. We believe that there was sexism in the DNC. PUMApac will not tolerate this from the Democrat party.
I just returned from Hillary Clinton’s rally in Washington, DC where she suspended her campaign and endorsed Senator Obama only to hear Angela Mitchell try to say that the hall was selected because there was a nearby Run for the Cure race to provide a ready-made audience! As though there weren’t enough Hillary supporters (who came by invitation only from all parts of the country–I personally drove 6 hours one way and spoke with others who had flown in from California and Boston, etc!). Maureen Dowd called her a thesbian following her speech. Clearly, it doesn’t end until we make it end. We need not forget–if you are one of those 18,000 million cracks in the ceiling, direct everyone you know to the Women’s Media Center and Sexism Sells…by educating others, we will help to put a woman in the White House and one day, Sexism won’t sell.
I run a company, Her Family Jewels. We’ve embossed the names of women from the first US census (1790) on dog tags to honor these woman who never had a chance to vote. At the Texas Democratic convention, one name was a runaway hit – Patience Foot. Women were buying it saying, “Patience, my foot!” – clearly angry over their participation in a party they felt no longer represented them. I think this is the tip of the iceberg. Women cannot and should not let another critical period in history pass without their full participation in it. This is the rebirth of the Women’s Civil Rights Movement now and we DO have the power of the ballot.
Jillian, you are wise beyond your years! I smiled reading your note. You are already doing your part – never remain silent. Ali
I have been incensed since the moment I viewed this video. It keeps playing in my head while I’m at work,in the grocery store etc. My past experiences concerning sexism have been few,or so i thought. It’s amazing the comments/gestures/insinuations you let go or ignore because they have become so much a part of your everyday
encounters. We are all guilty in some way or other for allowing sexism to continue to thrive. My eyes are wide open and I will never shut them again.
I wish you would also pull up Dennis Millers comments on Hillary during the campaign also. I was so shocked that someone would speak of a women like that, and showed my husband the rerun of the program to see what he thought. He was angered and surprised that this man who has been praised as being smart and funny would be so vicious and gender biased towards a woman. My daughter had also walked into the room and over heard part of what he was saying and asked why we were listening to such obvious bias towards women. I lost all respect for Dennis Miller after seeing that and will never watch him in anything on TV again. I sent a email to the show but it was typical MSNBC television. Oberman has had a women comediane on lateley that making jokes at Hillarys expense. It is especially sad to see women participate in the gender bias like the comedian and like the woman Meeka, on Morning Joe as on some of you clip. .
I was horrified by Hillarys treatment by the media. I was also horrified by Obamas typical white women comment inferring they are all racist. I was insulted by his sweetie comment to a reporter and insulted by the sexually explicit Obama girl videos that were put on TV for small children to see. Something needs to be done. Women will never win this battle until women quit supporting this type of bias.
Thank you WMC for taking this on. The level of gender bias was astounding and it is my hope that a bit of distance from the contest will illuminate the fact that this was not just an attack on Senator Clinton, it was an attack on us all.
Early in the contest for the Democratic nomination it was apparent that a “no holds bared” approach in attacking Senator Clinton was to be the order of the day. As the whole thing progressed and sexism, and outright misogyny, flourished nearly unchallenged and rarely unchecked, my irritation and anger grew.
Sending regular comments to CNN and MSNBC, writing letters to the editor of the NY Times, my local papers and commenting online to stories in the Washington Post, has brought some cathartic relief. This effort by WMC gives me a focus for action and I will be telling all in my network to log on, go to WMC and sign on. Bravo, bravo, bravo to you all.
I want to show this video to everyone I know. I’m a 19-year-old feminist, but I know that many girls are afraid of the word “feminist” because for some reason people in my generation see it as synonymous with hating men, which of course is NOT what it means. Everyone at my college loves Obama so much that they feel the need to dislike Clinton, which is really upsetting. So people are affected by this awful “news” media without realizing it. Somehow we need to turn our society around so that it’s ok to be a feminist and it’s not ok to be a misogynist.
At least some good coming from Mrs. Clinton’s ordeal. So many people are finally speaking up over the non-sense that was/is being said about her in a sexist tone and attitude. On Rush Limbaugh’s show today he flat out told his listeners that it wasn’t a big deal that Fox news used Obama’s Baby Mama as a story caption. He said this was her fault for using the term babies daddy when she once introduced her husband to a crowd. Of course he doesn’t think anything is wrong with describing Senator Obama as Curious George either. The good thing about conflict is CHANGE! I wasn’t okay when the media was sexist toward Hillary Clinton and it is worse to add racism to the mix! I will never watch Fox news again!
Maybe you could start a list of advertizers on the first page of this site so we can write the advertizers of sexist news media and boycott the products of these advertizers. I like to take action right away. Thanks! I think I wrote all the superdelegates four times during this primary season. I am really for action!
I am appalled by many of the clips but one that especially disturbed me was the young woman who commented on Hillary’s “haggard appearance” and stated she looked “92 years old”. “If this is the face of experience, voters will be frightened off” as if appearance is the only deciding factor in a vote.
I believe,unfortunately, our greatest opponents are other woman. There are numerous reasons why woman in this country did not support Hillary in numbers that could have won her the nomination. The association of a strong woman; one that may identify herself as a feminist, could be the reason she had mature woman backing her and not woman of the current generations.
I recently took a Gender class in college and when the Professor asked the class if they classified themselves as feminist not one other person, even woman in the class, was willing to raise their hands. I discussed this disturbing incident with the prof. afterwards and we concluded it was because young woman percieve a negitive conotation with feminism (lesbian, bitch, aggressive). This made me aware of the sad state of affairs pertaining to this topic. Young woman, in general, too easily take for granted the progress this country has made in woman’s rights. And this very vunerable strong hold could quickly change if the media continues to perpetrate these sterotypes.
This presidential race is a call to arms for woman of all ages and ethnic groups to put a stop to these insidious imagines. We need to support all our sisters because it is sadly obvious our brothers are not ready to do so.
After months of travelling with the HRC campaign, I can report that this video shows the least of the insults and rabid anti-female sentiment expressed by male and female reporters. The media insults and negative commentary are not the only reason this campaign did not succeed. It is painfully obvious that younger women take for granted the work that has been done to advance the rights of women, and older women are, well, tired of the effort. The question is, where to go from here?
The video is powerful because it batches every single sexist comment I’ve heard about Hillary. Seeing the talking heads spout their disrespect one-right-after-another has made all the difference. Infuriating. I’d seen and heard each insult as it occurred in real time. I probably winced at the sexism I was hearing but not until I saw and heard them back-to-back did it really impact me.
I felt the way I did when I was only half-listening to MSN one morning and heard “nappy-headed ho’s” and almost fell off my sofa. In a flash I was across the room and posting on a message board. Thankfully, so did millions of you. It was like the sound heard round the world by nightfall.
Since I was a teenager I’ve been baffled by the sexist remarks we endured but at least then it wasn’t 24/7 on the airwaves. Why, then and now, are men so blatantly comfortable with this crap? Aren’t most of them fathers of little girls?
I’m grateful for this blog, the video, and all that it inspires. The passivity of women is part of the problem… maybe this will be the beginning of the end of it.
Bravo! Hoping for a groundswell from this…
Hi. You left out David Shuster, MSNBC, emmy award winner, who not only accused the Clintons of “pimping out” Chelsea, but also handed Tucker Carlson a pen with the head of Hillary on it that cackled when one manipulated it.
Thanks for this video. People have been telling me for months that I am imagining all of this.
I am astounded by this video. I cannot believe the sexist men that actually hold postions in OUR media. They all should be fired so that the message gets across that what they said and stated was definitely NOT OK and won’t be accepted, period. However, I must say great job on the video, WMC! Let’s spread this around to get the message out that we need to change if we are ever going to have a fair and equal society.
Finally a validation of what my mother and I were outraged about all during the primary season. This is the reason I will vote for John McCain in the fall.
I also hope that this will be the end of Chris Matthews job, clearly he hated Hillary.
I will say the thing that most disappointed me was the women across the nation that bought into Obama instead of supporting a woman. She clearly was the experienced one but women especially young women deserted her.
Thank you for bring this to the public’s attention, I hope some heads roll. We lost the best possible chance to make a woman president.
The campaign certainly brought out the young vote which is good. However, their reasoning was lame when they “liked Obama’s message.” As one young person said to me: “During my voting life I have only had the choice to vote for a Clinton or a Bush in the main election. I want to vote for someone else!” How self centered and self serving can that be! Yes, they do take for granted what it took for them to have their rights as a women. However, they have a long fight ahead. They need to get into politics and run a city or a state and see what it takes. And be on the receiving end of the comments when they try to succeed. Bravo for our brave political women to date. We need more and at my age all I can do is support them which I do.
Excellent, provoking video. I am going to show it to several of those who have told me they had not observed sexism or misogyny from the media during the 2008 campaign.
I attended yesterday’s conference at the Paley Center and was impressed with both moderators and panels. I look forward to working together to hold media accountable and eradicating sexism, racism and ageism in the near future.
Women’s Media Center 6-19-08:
In 1776, Abigail Adams wrote her husband: “…by the way, in the new code of laws which I suppose it will be necessary for you to make, I desire you would remember the ladies and be more generous and favorable to them than your ancestors. Do not put such unlimited power into the hands of the husbands. Remember, all men would be tyrants if they could. If particular care and attention is not paid to the ladies, we are determined to foment a rebellion, and will not hold ourselves bound by any laws in which we have no voice or representation.” Despite her pleas, it was 144 years after the Declaration of Independence that women were even given the right to vote.
Also, Madeleine Albright said it right that “there’s a special place in hell for women who don’t help other women.” It’s way past time that women, instead of the Supreme Court, decide for themselves the fate of their own bodies, just as men have always done. It’s time women earned the same pay as men for doing the same work in this 21st century and the Equal Rights Amendment should be reintroduced. More attention needs to be paid to solving the problems girls and women face every day in America, including the rapes, battering, stalking, harassment, abductions and murders, etc., with no hint of blaming the victim.
Maybe an Abigail Adams movement would be appropriate with updates about TV news media sexist remarks and slants and the names of the sponsors of the shows, along with petitions for women and men to sign regarding various issues. Perhaps a gentle but firm “rebellion” against the “tyrants” is now in order through the awesome power of public opinion.
I couldn’t even finish watching it. It didn’t interest me at all. It just turned me off.
As a woman, educator, and feminist…I was appauled by these clips. I’m concerned for the next generation.
If we are to ever see change It must come organically from the young woman and girls of our society. As a society we have taken several steps backwards. The media is exploiting the “female”once again. Yet, our society allows for these explicit examples of sexism, and ageism. It’s as though the world is at war with the female once again!!! What’s next ..more salem witch trials???? My prayer is for the next generation of woman and girls to nurture the values of the feminist ideals once held so dear by our feminist pioneers. It’s our responsibilty to teach them. I don’t think they really understand the fight that was faught on their behalf. The young ones don’t have anyone inspiring & empowering them to mobilize and act!
Dear All,
I hope that others sign the petition. I write as an International Baccalaureate teacher in Beijing, China. An American citizen, I am encouraged by the strides toward social justice that I see in my students on a daily basis. Best of health to all!
Sincerely,
M.B. Kaufman
You dont know how absolutely delighted & relieved I am to find Womens Media Center. I don’t know many feminist women & I was thinking I was alone in my fury. I watched TV for hours during the campaine & the Hillary bashing I saw was criminal. I felt all the horrible put-downs as if they were said to me directly. As soon as I could I turned MSNBC & CNN off & they will continue to be off for the duration. I am sick about the way things turned out. I’m 85 & I may not ever see a female President of the United States (unless Hillary runs again in 4 years- – -I might make it). I’ve been a feminist always. I became active in the 60’s & marched a couple of times. If I had the evergy I’d like to march again in August!! I thought Hillary would get all the women’s votes & we’d have an easy win but the young ones seem to be going over to the male side. Wonder what they’re being told in the College class rooms? Thank you for taking action on the media. I was frustrated as hell!!! Go girl.
Cool design, great info!
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