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Archives for May 2013

“Skirt Chasers” 5k makes me want to hide, not party

May 1, 2013 By HKearl

Update 5/3/13: Aaron McConnell, President, TransRockies Events, said they held a successful Skirt Chaser 5k yesterday. He also told me, “Decisions around the name and messaging lie with Skirt Sports in Boulder CO, who own the Skirt Chaser concept and name, and they are the appropriate party to respond to this. The series has been operating for 6 years with successful events in many US cities, so it is quite interesting that our first Canadian event generated so much attention. We have had extensive dialogue with Skirt Sports as a result of the feedback, and I understand that there will be some level of change in the messaging going forward, but again, decisions rest with Skirt Sports.”

Fast on the heels of the victories this afternoon against sexist ads/products by Lego and bareMinerals & the creation of the new list of Companies that Trivialize Street Harassment, @DaniParadis told me about what is now SSH’s latest “Current Offender.”

Companies: Skirt Sports & the companies that license their product

Ad or product: A 5k race called “Skirt Chasers” that is billed as a “party that that happens to have a 5k in it.”

Why it’s problematic: While there is nothing wrong with the event itself, the name is very problematic. In the SSH survey of 811 women, 75% had been followed or chased in a public space by someone they didn’t know. Aside from a man physically harassing them, this was the form of street harassment that was most scary.

Plenty of women runners have been chased (and even abducted, raped or murdered), including me. As a woman who is not a survivor of rape, being chased through a park at dusk was the scariest experience of my life because I feared that if I was caught, I would be raped. Fortunately, I outran him.

Why would I, or any other woman who has had this experience, want to go to a party/5k where people are encouraged to “chase” and “catch” us?

On their website, Transrockies Race Series, a Canadian Licensee, addressed someone else’s concern with the name: “We understand that at first look the name “Skirt Chaser” may have some connotations to a time when sexist behaviours were accepted by society, but so far, there has been a universal acceptance that the use of this name is meant only in fun. We reject the notion that the name or format of the Skirt Sports Skirt Chaser 5k promotes sex crime or sexism or sexual discrimination.”

Unfortunately, the time when sexist behaviors were accepted is still the present time, and while some people have no problem with the name, I’m sure plenty of people do who just haven’t spoken out yet. I don’t understand why it would be so hard to change the name to something that doesn’t offend anyone?

And if they haven’t changed the name simply because no one else has complained, well, I am. The name needs to go. It is offensive and scary.

What you can do: Tweet to @SkirtSports, @SkirtSportsCan explaining why “Skirt Chasers” is not an acceptable race name and contact them at customerservice@skirtsports.com.

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Filed Under: offensive ads, street harassment

Petition: BareMinerals: Ditch The Sexist Campaign Slogans

May 1, 2013 By HKearl

Update via Collective Action for Safe Spaces: “BareMinerals by Bare Escentuals just let us know over Twitter that they will STOP using their sexist, pro-street harassment signs at women’s marathons.

BUT IT’S NOT OVER YET.

We want a formal apology and a promise not to degrade women runners and support street harassment and objectification. Please keep tweeting and sharing!”

“At the Nike Women’s Half Marathon in DC on April 28th, 2013, BareMinerals by Bare Escentuals enlisted a group of fraternity brothers to hold up inappropriate and sexist signs to promote their Go Bare Tour of America. Signs that say “You Look Beautiful All Sweaty,” “Hello Gorgeous” and “Cute Running Shoes” have no place at women’s running races because they trivialize women’s athleticism and echo the street harassment that women endure each day….It turns out the signs are part of BareMinerals by Bare Escentuals’ “Go Bare” campaign and tour of America.” – Change.org

UGH. As if it isn’t enough that women runners face so much street harassment (and the fear of sexual assault, abduction and murder) when we train, now women may have to face it during some races?! Women runners are not trying to look beautiful sweaty, we’re trying to exercise, push our bodies, and achieve goals.

At the end of a long race, someone holding up a sign of encouragement can feel really great — but not a sign with a message that reinforces sexism or tells women that no matter what they achieve, it’s only their looks that matter!

Sign Sara Alcid’s Change.org petition & here’s a sample tweet “Dear @bareMinerals: Women didn’t run the @runnikewomen marathon 2b objectified & leered at by random men http://tinyurl.com/cr3dyat #GoBare”

Read More: Sara wrote a guest blog post about the Go Bare campaign for Collective Action for Safe Spaces.

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Filed Under: offensive ads, street harassment

“No one has the right to invade my space”

May 1, 2013 By HKearl

College students at the University of Southern California put together a great video about street harassment, sharing why it’s a serious problem.

“It got to a point where I was active in my invisibility, I was active in creating my own invisibility and really adamant about being invisible to all men around me. I think that’s probably the most devastating thing about catcalling is that it affects every single part of your life even if it seems like it’s just a simple, fleeting moment. It affected my entire behavior of how I walked to school and how I dressed every day, so it’s a profound phenomenon and it’s not going anywhere until we address it.”

Female students shared stories about street harassment and the impact it has on their lives and male students talked about what their sisters have experienced and how their friends tried to pressure them into harassing girls.

Their conclusion? “We need to fight back and protest!”

USC: Take Back the Night – “Cat Calling” from Hunter Elijah Bryce on Vimeo.

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Filed Under: Resources, street harassment

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