There’s an Angle to Get This In A Butt. I’m Sure of It.

Hollywood continues to groom the public like the rapacious, sexual predator it really is in its heart, by creating foolish teen-oriented “dramas” like The Bold Type.

None of these women have a ticket to ride. Not one of them.

A show that explores the following, and I quote:

Putting together a magazine is not an easy task, requiring a lot of teamwork to finish the job and get the publication on newsstand shelves. That’s why the staffers responsible for producing global women’s magazine Scarlet lean on one another as they try to find their own voices. While working together to publish each issue of the periodical, they struggle to find their identities, manage friendships and find love. The drama series is inspired by the life of longtime magazine editor and executive Joanna Coles, who serves as an executive producer.

To no one’s great surprise in the media landscape of incompetence we live in, there are four seasons of this dreck on a streaming channel you’ve never heard of called Freeform, and apparently, one of the many areas that Joanna Coles has had a problem within her real life has been the “patriarchy.”

Of course.

From the trades:

Thursday’s episode, “To Peg or Not to Peg,” was all about how the liberal boogeyman known as “the patriarchy” is responsible for everything, from women not wanting to discuss their private parts with each other, to a man not feeling comfortable dating a woman who is more dominant, to Kat (Aisha Dee) having some hesitation when a man asks her to dominate him via “pegging.”

Ms. Coles, and all her ilk, are going to explain it all to us. Just you wait, you member of the “patriarchy.”

Let Me Explain What The ‘Patriarchy’ Is

There are two characters on this show, and one of them doesn’t want to date a woman who is more dominant than him.

This, in the worldview of the degenerates who put this show together, is a massive problem, not of taste, but of repressive male culture.

Look at all this resentful incompetence on display.

This means, of course, that it needs to be torn down and replaced. Violently if at all possible.

From the trades:

Alex went on a date with a woman who is much more successful than he is, as well as domineering. When he tells the girls he doesn’t think he’ll keep seeing the woman, Kat interjects and explains that they’re both afraid in their relationships. Because that’s what “the patriarchy” taught them.

And, here’s a clip of the whole exchange below from our friends at MRCNewsbusters.

What Are We To Make of All of This?

Paging Ms. Cole, the writers on this show, the people who greenlit it, and the people who decide to keep it going, there’s just a few points we’d like to impress upon you.

Look at these kents. All of them lined up in a row.

We understand that you believe in your warped worldview that the “patriarchy” is to blame for your tastes and desires, because, of course.

But we would also like to point out that the “patriarchy” is also to blame for your apartment, your makeup, your role in the show, and the salary you get paid for showing up to say the words you say.

The “patriarchy” is to blame for the clean water you drink, the vaccines that keep you alive, the roads that got you to work, and for the garbage getting picked up while you are sleeping the slumber of the “dominant” woman next to somebody who used to call themselves a man, but is now “gender” neutral.

The “patriarchy” has been busily attaining the competency necessary to overcome the natural world or the last 5,000 years of human history so that you can live long enough to complain about it and try to tear it down.

So you keep going with your crappy, tone-deaf, incompetently executed and written show, lecturing to teenage girls—and “boys”—slowly trying to erode competency of all kinds that you can’t replicate, including of the sexual nature, because of your overwhelming envy at what has been accomplished by that self-same “patriarchy.”