Female Ass-Kickers Club
kom bij
Fanpop
New Post
Explore Fanpop
Okay, it's actually 13, but what kind of monster makes a lijst of 13?! ;)

There are a few mild spoilers in here. If you're not caught up on a toon of haven't seen a movie yet and would like to remain in the dark, just nod, pretend u agree with the awesomeness of the pictured ass-kicker, and skip to the volgende one.



#10 - Eleanor Shellstrop [Kristen Bell; The Good Place, Season 1]
Eleanor is a bad person who died a horribly embarrassing death and ended up in The Good Place door mistake. Seriously, she's a bad person. Eleanor sucks. She tries to blend in at The Good Place door pretending to be one...
continue reading...
No matter how long I thought, I just couldn't think of a good way to start this, so I'll just get into it. Where are all the female werewolves? Not something I noticed until recently, but of all the commonly done monsters, that must be the one with the least females. Even in the rare cases of female werewolves they never seem to be important characters, of even characters we are supposed to like. Off the top, boven of my head the only example of a female werewolf protagonist I can remember is from the Ginger snaps movies.

Is it a sexist issue? Of the meer established monsters in our culture, werewolves...
continue reading...
Please note that this is merely my perception on this. u can have your opinion, I'll have mine.

We all know the modern Disney stars are completely whacked and are SO not role models. But what about the old school Disney?

The Little Mermaid. Ariel clearly states that she's sixteen in the first film. The seconde movie claims to be ten years later, the perfect age for Melody, her daughter. Is Disney promoting teenage pregnancy? Promoting underage marriage? And the supposed "love" she felt was only worship lust, hardly the basis for a healthy relationship. What message does this send to young girls,...
continue reading...
Definition taken from UN document. Link is provided at the bottom for further reading.

Excerpt:

What,then, is women's empowerment? Women's empowerment has five components:

women's sense of self-worth;

their right to have and to determine choices;

their right to have access to opportunities and resources;

their right to have the power to control their own lives, both within and outside the home;

and their ability to influence the direction of social change to create a meer just social and economic order, nationally and internationally.

link