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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1995-01-31
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<text id=94TT1751>
<title>
Dec. 12, 1994: Public Eye:Female Chauvinist Pigs?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Dec. 12, 1994 To the Dogs
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
PUBLIC EYE, Page 62
Female Chauvinist Pigs?
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Margaret Carlson
</p>
<p> It's got sex, power and--as an extra added attraction--that other American obsession, dieting. It's the reverse-discrimination
suit filed by eight men from Boston who found the Jenny Craig
weight-loss organization too full of, well, female chauvinist
pigs. The girl talk in the office, says plaintiff Joseph Egan,
about "who to marry, who is pregnant, how to get pregnant" was
offensive, and it was sexist to ask his male colleagues to shovel
the snow and insensitive to tell another he was "sensitive for
a guy." These men found themselves on a slower track than their
female colleagues, and so some of them quit, others were laid
off and all of them filed complaints. Last week three of the
plaintiffs cleared the first hurdle: the Massachusetts Commission
Against Discrimination determined that there was probable cause
of gender bias and ordered mediation. The other five are awaiting
action.
</p>
<p> All are in great demand, however, and not by accident. The first
thing they did, after hiring an all-female team of lawyers,
was hire a public-relations firm, which alerted the press about
the case before the commission ruling. Although last year, according
to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, women filed
11,000 sexual-harassment complaints and men fewer than 1,000,
this case made the front page of the Wall Street Journal the
next day. And before you could say sweeps week, the Today show,
Entertainment Tonight, A Current Affair and CBS This Morning,
among others, were on the phone to the men's Boston publicist,
Paul Dugan. There was much debate among the advisers about how
high or low to go on the media food chain--should the guys
go for a slam dunk with a supersensitive host like Maury Povich
or risk potentially tough questions on network programs? But
not to worry. After accepting air fare and hotel accommodations
to appear on Today last week, three of the Jenny Craig Eight,
prepped like witnesses at the Simpson trial, came off like a
bunch of wounded Alan Aldas, shocked--shocked--to be exposed
to off-color comments.
</p>
<p> Now, there should be nothing wrong with this picture: as women
gain power, they may misuse it and sex, as badly as some men.
In fact, sexual harassment won't really be taken seriously until
it affects men. But the sheer inequality of attention to this
case--as opposed to the other 91% of cases filed by women
that do not happen to involve a sitting President or a U.S.
Supreme Court nominee--can also be seen as one more example
of the inequality that made antidiscrimination laws necessary
in the first place. All this attention also suggests a man who
is sexually harassed has a greater claim on our sympathies--a notion coming this week to a Multiplex near you in Disclosure,
a movie in which predatory executive Demi Moore accosts sweet,
sensitive Michael Douglas. Jenny Craig plaintiff Tracy Tinkham
looks more like Joey Buttafuoco than Michael Douglas, but never
mind. Perhaps he was succeeding handsomely at counseling overweight
women and should have been promoted instead of being let go
for breaking a trivial rule. We are asked to believe that these
men's having to listen to jokes about push-up bras or being
asked to lift a heavy box makes for a winning case and worldwide
media attention, when women have been listening to penis jokes
and making coffee for decades. Sure, complaints about failing
to be promoted simply because they were men in a women's world
are serious. But before the Jenny Craig Eight pour their heart
out to Sally Jessy Raphael, they should check with all the women
who have looked up the corporate ladder and seen 10 men for
every woman and wondered how they could prove their lack of
success was due to some failure in the corporate culture, and
not in themselves.
</p></body>
</article>
</text>