Amy (
such_heights) wrote2011-03-07 08:24 pm
Entry tags:
some character stats from FSCMM
I made some tallies on the characters over at
f_march_madness the other day, looking at the gender and race of the characters chosen to represent the 64 fandoms present in the original polls.
A note before I start - I'm not attempting to draw anything particularly conclusive from any of this for a number of reasons, not least of which that I don't think these polls are necessarily that representative of general fandom behaviour patterns. However, it is interesting.
The list of original 64 characters can be found here. These were selected after preliminaries between characters of the same fandoms.
Of those 64 characters, 34 are women, and 30 are men.
And of those 64 characters, 58 are white, and 6 are characters of colour.
That first statistic is cheering! The second ... less so.
Those six characters of colour, incidentally, are Troy Barnes (Community), Kelly Kapoor (The Office US), Burton Guster (Psych), Kalinda Sharma (The Good Wife), Kono Kalakaua (Hawaii 5-0), Annie Sawyer (Being Human).
That's three from the comedy bracket, two from the drama bracket, one from the SFF bracket, and none from the teen bracket.
We are now down to the last sixteen, which breaks down as 15/1 white/character of colour, and 10/6 male/female.
Talking about race in fandom and which characters become fan favourites is naturally complicated, and this poll skews particularly towards US shows with very white-dominant casts - the Teen bracket, for instance - that don't necessarily reflect LJ/DW fandom's interests even just looking at Western media fandoms.
Naturally, there's a number of factors here - both in characters of colour being written and decently-portrayed in the first place, and then the way that fandom reacts to those characters. But although white women are doing pretty well this year, it seems that chromatic characters are still lagging behind in these kinds of polls. Food for thought.
*waves Troy flag*
A note before I start - I'm not attempting to draw anything particularly conclusive from any of this for a number of reasons, not least of which that I don't think these polls are necessarily that representative of general fandom behaviour patterns. However, it is interesting.
The list of original 64 characters can be found here. These were selected after preliminaries between characters of the same fandoms.
Of those 64 characters, 34 are women, and 30 are men.
And of those 64 characters, 58 are white, and 6 are characters of colour.
That first statistic is cheering! The second ... less so.
Those six characters of colour, incidentally, are Troy Barnes (Community), Kelly Kapoor (The Office US), Burton Guster (Psych), Kalinda Sharma (The Good Wife), Kono Kalakaua (Hawaii 5-0), Annie Sawyer (Being Human).
That's three from the comedy bracket, two from the drama bracket, one from the SFF bracket, and none from the teen bracket.
We are now down to the last sixteen, which breaks down as 15/1 white/character of colour, and 10/6 male/female.
Talking about race in fandom and which characters become fan favourites is naturally complicated, and this poll skews particularly towards US shows with very white-dominant casts - the Teen bracket, for instance - that don't necessarily reflect LJ/DW fandom's interests even just looking at Western media fandoms.
Naturally, there's a number of factors here - both in characters of colour being written and decently-portrayed in the first place, and then the way that fandom reacts to those characters. But although white women are doing pretty well this year, it seems that chromatic characters are still lagging behind in these kinds of polls. Food for thought.
*waves Troy flag*

no subject
So yeah, I'm happy about the increase in the presence of female characters, and on some level the increase in characters of color, but the voting trend is still a bit depressing for me.
no subject
(Probably my corollary to your Eleven vs. Scully thing is my own bitterness that CJ lost out to Sherlock. Whyyyy. ;_; In any case, I totally concede I have Doctor Who-related bias.)
So I agree that it hasn't progressed enough, absolutely, but I suppose from at least the gender angle I ended up being pleasantly surprised by the amount of women making appearances, especially from fandoms where I was expecting the sketchy guy with manpain to take the front in the preliminaries - Vampire Diaries, Being Human, etc. But, er, fandom being less actively misogynistic than I was expecting isn't necessarily much of a compliment, so.
I don't know, maybe Buffy will win it again this year, that would be amazing.