Monday, November 30, 2009

Is Cuteness Trendy? Sour Grapes from Vanity Fair


There I was on an airplane to California, stuck with the December 2009 print issue of Vanity Fair because I couldn't get my credit card to work for a video on-demand feature. (Julie & Julia, if you must know.)

OK, I can deal, I thought. VF is a guilty pleasure, anyway, and I might even read the cover profile about Robert Pattinson of Twilight fame. I noted the blurb at the bottom of the cover—"How Grandmas and 12-Year-Old Girls Are Corrupting American Culture"—thinking, huh, that sounds sexist, probably about Twilight, whatever, not what I'm in it for.

Turns out this piece by Jim Windolf was not about Twilight or that particular void of an interview; instead, Windolf's article about girl oldsters and youngsters is called "Addicted to Cute"—with a tag line of "America has been flooded by a tsunami of cute."

To which I put it to you right now: Really?

"Addicted to Cute" stoked my ire about trend stories. This one falls into the frothing-at-the mouth category. It's a mere reaction to something that may or may not be a trend, showcasing the writer's slick use of words and pandering to the audience by running all sorts of pictures of puppies and pandas. Read me! Read me! I hate this crap but READ ME.

I happened upon cuteness not by searching through VF's table of contents, which is always buried in a swath of ads, but by random page-flipping. When I started seeing Pikachu, puppy piles, and dogs in human clothing, I realized I'd found the grandma/12-year-old piece, although within the article itself there are only the slyest of references to this being a female phenomenon—a sexist warning flag.

I object to the idea that cuteness has now become a "broader cultural movement" for two reasons: (1) While we may indeed be awash in cute critters on the Internet, Smart Cars, and cupcake boutique bakeries, the love of cuteness doesn't seem like a new trend at all.

(2) Even if it is a trend, who cares? Why is it so bad that a sushi chef has crafted a creation out of colored seaweed showing President Obama's "cute" face? Or that the media gush about the Obama dog?

Windolf opens with the "Hahaha" baby video, which shows a baby laughing helplessly as his off-screen dad says "Bing!" and "Dong." He notes that at the time of writing, this was one of the most-watched YouTube clips at about 100 million views. Here's the video:



Here's the VF takeaway:
"Cootchie-coo behavior used to be reserved for private moments in the home. But now, with the Internet's help, people feel free to wallow in cuteness en masse, in the company of strangers."
Just who these "wallowing" people are remains an open question.

A page or so later, Windolf has trotted out the not-stunning news from experts that human beings are hardwired to go "awwww" when they see infant-like characteristics: big eyes, round head, chubby cheeks, cuddly puppy fat. He notes (via Stephen Jay Gould) that Walt Disney got the point decades ago, as Mickey Mouse morphed from a skinnier rodent to the rounder head and ears. (On VF's website, we even get Windolf discussing "the roots of cute.")

So what's the trend, if the tendency goes back to the dawn of human consciousness—or at least to savvy animators like Walt Disney?

Think of It's a Wonderful Life, which would surely qualify as a cuteness fest in Windolf's terms, with guardian angel Clarence and Christmas tree ornaments jingling when angels get their wings. Frank Capra knew the power of cute, just as surely as the website founder of Cute Overload and Hayao Miyazaki and other purveyors of Japanese cuteness (or kawaii) do.

Sure, sure, sure, Windolf grumps, long before Hello Kitty, there were the Monkees and the Osmonds and Bambi. But "the cute acts of today," he writes, "aren't controlled by a corporation or impresario looking to cash in; they're cute by choice."

This is a problem? Excuse the sarcasm, but I am not convinced that cuteness in the hands of corporations has less impact or that the appearance of "more than 150 other cute-animal sites catalogued by the recommendation engine StumbleUpon" proves there is a new and soul-killing trend on the loose.

There's more of everything on the Internet—foodie sites,  political ravings of every persuasion, fan clubs for every bit actor in Hollywood history. I could just as easily claim there's a trend in belief in the paranormal or wizards.

The "moreness" numbers of the Internet don't reveal anything except the very large trend of what it means to contend with so much cultural input in a virtual social setting. I'd like to see an analysis of that, or many cuts at this very big subject, but it isn't here.


Let me come clean and say that I share Windolf's loathing for Disney's Winnie the Pooh and pictures of cats in little arm casts. I've never been a girly girl, and I cringe at terms like "puppehs" (lingo from Cute Overload) and "cutegasm." When Windolf writes, "What is the antonym for 'cutegasm'? Because that's what I'm having right now," it gave me a vicarious thrill.

Yet that's about all this trend story amounts to—a vicarious thrill for hipsters and the cultural elite—and it's not enough to support its larger claims about this "tsunami" we're all suddenly being assaulted with.

Windolf does raise some interesting questions about the uneven power dynamic in a cute response—the baby being "dinged"  has no control over what the adult is doing, and we love to watch people doing pratfalls or otherwise losing control. But the inherent sadism in everything from stand-up comedy to parading bears in top hats is about more than cuteness.

The sour grapes of this article, with its longing for more "edge" in the cultural zeitgeist rather than everyone buying more candy bars (another dubious  contention) is really about girl stuff.

Windolf doesn't talk to any feminists about this issue, and I have to ask why a male writer is so "depressed" about the supposed triumph of the emotional and sentimental. The female sensibility that cuteness evokes is anything but monolithic.

Exhibit A: an actual twelve-year-old girl. A few mornings ago while in the Bay Area, my "niece" (her term; awwwww) gave me a tour of her bedroom. This included photos of lion cubs and seals and puppies taped to the wall beside her bed. She had sparkle pillows and stuffed butterflies amid the bookshelves and family photos. She loves cute—as we joked—but she's also very funny and very opinionated. She has a calendar of cute dogs, but on this month's selection, she had taped a piece of "CAUTION" yellow tape across the dogs' snouts.

Why? "It seemed like a warning against cuteness," she said.

This reality of strong girls who like emoticons but also LOL obviously worries the guys at VF. Windolf concludes: "I would not doubt the power of cuteness. It will bat its lashes and crinkle its nose, and it will smother its critics with its softness."

Funny thing about the smothering of opinion, though. Besides Windolf's anti-cuteness manifesto, this VF issue includes only one female feature writer. The editorial content is surrounded by high-fashion ads of poreless young faces. James Wolcott's diatribe about reality TV is called "I'm a Culture Critic...Get Me Out of Here!"

I'm with him in his disgust, but dissing reality TV isn't exactly cutting-edge commentary. When Wolcott says of the annoying Gosselins of Jon & Kate plus Eight that "We are now stuck with them for the foreseeable future," my response is that maybe Wolcott thinks he is but the rest of us can easily decide to flip channels or just turn off the TV.

The snarky bitterness emanates a whiff of something else: anxiety. All these male cultural critics are railing at the readers who have run away to the Internet, whether we're reading the Daily Kos or a wonderful blog about the literary scene called Ward Six  or Cute Overload.

That's a problem for VF, a glossy that surely counts on female readers. Based on the Audit Bureau of Circulations, VF's circulation numbers for the past five years can most charitably be described as flat—and that would be when viewed through a pair of Dolce & Gabbana rose-colored glasses. Without the grandmas and twelve-year-olds, magazines like Vanity Fair have to remake themselves or go under.

I submit that requires a major shift in conventional thinking and audience and culture. I can see why Wolcott and Windolf are worried. But their fears are masked by high-gloss condescension, because as we women know, anxiety is not cute at all.


This post originally appeared on Open Salon. The bunnies are from "This teacup is too big..." on Cute Overload.

6 comments:

  1. On the mark, Martha. It is as easy to be reflexively sarcastic as cute.

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  2. Nice analysis, Martha, of the Vanity Fair piece. You need to keep on counting how many female authors in an issue - that was powerful to read. Couldn't agree more on the idiocy of the article topic, the threatening tsunami of cuteness!!! Which may vary some, across culture and time, but is hardly a threat, God knows. At the beginning of your blog, I was feeling a bit that having so much indignation at the article was mirroring its own inflated sense of importance - the proper response to the ubiquitous idiotic articles in periodicals like that should be contempt and then a swift shift to something more interesting - since, as cuteness is to popular culture, so are idiotic articles pretending to be about something that matters a staple of magazines, especially ones that are about movie stars and fashion ads. I'm not 100% sold that there is a direct link between this piece and anxiety over both gender and the internet, but I get it--and what really hit me over the head was that there was ONLY ONE FEMALE AUTHOR IN THE ISSUE.

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  3. Just to be exact, that's only one female feature (or long article) writer. There might be a female co-author on one of the other short pieces and a female photographer or two--but it truly is a dearth of women in a mag that's supposedly all about women. What's more, the one female feature writer did the interview of the swoon-idol vampire from *Twilight*, not exactly a heavy subject.

    It is very useful to focus on the numbers. Some feminist commentators have been raising a ruckus about the all-male "Best of" book lists that have recently come out from Publishers Weekly and the like.

    You're also right, Heidi, that in some ways the "cute" piece doesn't rate this much analysis--except if we don't get in a high dudgeon, who will? Besides, high dudgeonliness (awwww, what a cute made-up word) can be a great tonic for the impending winter blues.

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  4. What does this remind me of? Oh, yeah, H. L. Mencken's "Sahara of the Bozarts" essay, along with all those other complaints published down through the decades about network TV and Norman Rockwell and dime novels, about "kitch" and vulgarity and the relatively small market (sometimes hyperbolized as a complete lack of a market) for works that are "edgy" or complex or though-provoking or whatever the author's preferred virtue is. I agree with you that some of these authors are producers of the latter, less popular works and that their complaints are motivated by professional anxiety.

    However, there's something else here, a particular expression of a more general phenomenon: the stance of the intellectual who resents works that appeal to the emotions because s/he resents the power of emotions. There's usually some justifying prose in there about how people in general should use their "higher brain functions" instead, but we all know what it's about when a man wants to run from the room at the sight of a happy baby, on video or live: fear of family life with its responsibilities and humblings. Well, that and adult male insecurity, the fear that cuteness may attract adult female attention more successfully than heterosexual lust. (Hence the covert agenda behind the title: if we tell our adult female readers that the taste for cute is a kids-and-grannies phenomenon, maybe they'll be embarrassed by it, give it up and pay more attention to us.) More generally, hostility to popular taste, with its emotional appeal, is an expression of contempt for the populace, that is to say an expression of snobbery on the part of a person with an expensively cultivated intellect. Yes, it's also about the money, but this attitude is bigger than money, and probably older.

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  5. You're right, Joan, I think it comes down to a gut-level kind of sexism and fear of emotions--or expression of emotions. The fear of strong emotion is probably behind our love of cuteness, too, as everything gets diminished down to a socially acceptable size.

    What I really object to in something like VF, with its pretensions to cultural power-brokering, is the veiled nature of the real agenda, be it sexist, elitism, or fear of strong feelings like love and maternal attachment.

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  6. So we now need a new warning on movies and internet content. Caution, may contain random acts of cuteness?
    I am very much over sensationalist journalism that insists on dramatising non-issues.
    Thanks for sharing this post.

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