i am not stupid and i know that democrats are not going to magically fix racism and sexism and every queer discrimination issue ever, but i also know we just put a lot of women, people of colour (women of colour!), and queer people into elected positions and that damned well is an improvement so shut the fuck up and let me be greatful for the first breath of relief i’ve had since 2016.
we’re fighting to survive and we have to start somewhere realistic.
Thor, turning to Tony: He says this stupid damn city needs more flowers and pollen-bearing plants because you’re making him have to work a 16-hour shift every day just to feed his wife and kids
Tony: What the fuck Thor we’ve talked about this
Dog: *Bark bark bark*
Thor, sternly: No, Captain America’s pants are not fit for consumption
Steve, with no idea that Thor can speak dog: ???!?!????!!!??
Fly: *hums*
Thor, leaping from his chair: Oh what the FUCK did you say about my hair?? Oh you want to fuckign go do you?? Is that what you fucking want??? Well Step the FUCK UP then you stupid ass buzzy BITCH *summons lightning*
DUM-E: *Beep boops*
Thor, patting Tony on the back: well done my friend
Tony: For what?
Thor: Your robot is telling me all about how well his dad oiled up his joints this morning and keeps saying ‘I love him’ on repeat. He has been doing this for an hour.
Tony, immediately tearing up: oh my fucking god Thor
I keep seeing Elementary described as “good” or “okay” or “solid”, but not “great” – its reception seems to mostly be as a decent, but not extraordinary procedural.
Except on places like Tumblr and Dreamwidth, where the majority of people discussing it are women – where, I think, the audience is more aware of the problems with a lot of other portrayals of (mostly male) antisocial geniuses. The trope regularly conflates intelligence with dominance. The assholishness is an expression of that. Treating other people like crap is a dominance display; the character is demonstrating that others are below their consideration, and for a large part, the narrative itself buys into it.
It’s a very gendered trope. Think of awkard female geniuses in popular culture. Temperance Brennan from Bones is a good example. She can be clueless about others’ feelings, but she’s not an asshole; part of her characterization is that she is, in fact, caring, even though she’s not great at expressing that sometimes. She’s not constantly set up as a dominant figure even though she’s the protagonist. Other characters make valuable contributions to cases, she has friendships she values, and becomes romantically involved with a non-genius.
The portrayal of Sherlock Holmes in Moffat’s Sherlock is a male power fantasy. It just doesn’t involve guns and ripped abs. Instead, it involves subjugating others through vast intelligence. When you’re so much better than everyone else, treating them terribly is justified. It’s the one steady piece of characterization that you can rely on in that inconsistently written, over-produced pile of shit. Sherlock is better than everyone, even – or perhaps especially – women like Irene Adler, who outsmarted him in the books but couldn’t be allowed to do so in the show. She had to be stripped (literally) of her power and made, instead, to be in awe of Sherlock’s massive peen intellect.
The portrayal of Sherlock Holmes in Elementary could have been a male power fantasy. Instead he’s more like Temperance Brennan. His intelligence is treated as an extraordinary asset, but the show doesn’t buy into the myth that this makes him better than everyone else. Other characters make valuable contributions. They’re allowed to solve things, too, instead of just being hindrances to be mocked. Sherlock himself grows. He faces consequences for being an asshole, and learns from them – he even apologizes. He has social connections that he values. The show frequently undercuts or subverts what you normally expect from the “antisocial male genius” trope.
I’m not saying it’s the greatest procedural ever made, or even the greatest interpretation of Sherlock Holmes. I’m just saying that some of its choices are a lot more radical than (mostly male) critics seem to recognize.