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Tuesday, May 5, 2026

5/4/2026 Female Heterosexual Desire

I am sure there is no lack of discourse on this, and that I am just not reading enough books on the subject, but I feel the contentiousness of having a woman desire a man is poisoning romance. 

Men may argue, blatantly or unconsciously, as they have done through their art for thousands of years, that women cannot experience the desire that they do. Men may do so by reducing the woman to her body; by positioning her constantly as beloved object and never as loving subject; or by implying or outright stating that women lack interiority and the capacity to feel and love nearly as passionately as men. This is the logic behind the courtly love song of the troubadour. It is the archetype of the pining lover and the cruel, frozen-hearted, statuesque woman he loves. 

Women may argue, then, that female heterosexual desire is a pillar of patriarchy. They may call women who pursue men male-centered and insecure, position a woman prizing a man as readjusting the spotlight on an already visible demographic. They may dismiss a woman's perspective of a man she desires as completely unreasonable by emphasizing the unworthiness of the man, by calling her delusional, etc. And I understand the merits of this latter pattern of behavior - not only because I, too, have been flabbergasted and frustrated seeing a woman I esteem restructuring her life around an evil man who doesn't even care for her, but because I cannot pretend that this view is the font of all patriarchy. It is not nearly as harmful as the view men have of women. I also understand it would do better to let in more discourse on romantic and sexual love between women, instead of doing this gender war bullshit.

I mostly want to talk about this because I think the instinct of everyone to dismiss women's desire, hetero- or homosexual, is misogynistic, and it ruins romance. I am sick of pretending that the popular fictional heterosexual dynamic of "man is madly in love with and obsessed with woman who is... well, it doesn't matter" is woke, or even very interesting. Here the dynamic subversion comes not from reversing the typical male desiring subject/female desired object roles, but by reframing desire as embarrassing and humbling. And desire is like that! Desire makes you feel subservient and weak. But desire is also beautiful and enjoyable, and women deserve to feel all of those things, too. Perhaps they even deserve to both feel desire and feel equal to the object of their desire, instead of associating that feeling with the real risk of becoming property.

I was inspired to write this stupid post by fiction. I have seen fictional heteroromantic dynamics with mounds of chemistry made hollow and nonconsensual by the fear of women's desire. It's a disease. It's a strange impulse I will never ever fully understand. How can I get writers to grasp that I do not wish to see a woman respond to a man's desire with discomfort or borderline disgust? If I'm supposed to project onto the female main character, it's even worse, because I would not do all that!

A manhwa I am oddly obsessed with, "Lee Seob's Love" or "Iseop's Romance", which absurd scenarios could be made infinitely better by the woman being into it, is getting a K-drama adaptation soon. I can only hope the drama does not make the same mistake as the comic by almost eliminating any semblance of desire from the female lead's inner voice as soon as she and the male lead get together. What was once (and still somewhat is) an interesting look into the relationship of two recklessly passionate people now feels strange to read. For the love of God, let women be people. It fixes everything.

Friday, May 1, 2026

5/1/2026 "It's Me" by ILLIT is Literally Fine

I do not believe that the music of girl groups under HYBE Entertainment is causing the downfall of civilization, as many people seem to imply with every passing tweet. I also do not believe that slop is a useful word that means anything in the world of art criticism, as of right now, May of 2026. 

Here is "It's Me" by ILLIT (pronounced EYE-LIT). This song has been all the rage on Twitter lately, especially since it is currently being promoted alongside two other songs - "Celebrate" by LESSERAFIM and "Pinky Up" by Katseye - from the same entertainment supercompany, HYBE. At first, I personally disliked "It's Me". The People pointed out that the song was very different from ILLIT's previous releases, speculating that the trio of songs released in the same time frame are manifestations of HYBE's greed, its desire to capitalize off of some kind of EDM craze.  

I think there are some things to criticize about "It's Me". For one, the chorus is essentially that of BLACKPINK's "Jump". For two (???), I don't like the way "I'm the one, I'm your idol" is delivered. For three (??????), I don't like that choreography - it feels ridiculous and too on-the-nose for the silliness of this song. 

But I'm not even interested in criticizing the song anymore, because as much as I hate HYBE Entertainment for being a huge media conglomerate, and as much as I will not listen to this song through official means because of the ongoing HYBE boycott, I'm very sick of the way art is treated these days. I am sick of things being arbitrarily judged as "high-effort" or "slop", "authentic" or "cheap"; I'm very sick of the miserable way in which people dismiss anything that challenges their taste as below them. I know I sound ridiculous as someone who criticizes music all the time - and I think people are absolutely allowed to dig into music that they hate, even so far as to accuse it of having a corporate sheen on it. 

It's just incredibly annoying seeing people moralize constantly about art as if art isn't one of the most subjective things out there. It's come to the point where I am sick of seeing people who don't understand the subjectivity inherent to art attempt to make moral critiques of society through art. People through the ages have always been saying that music was better when they were a kid. I feel like we as a society should have progressed past that. People should be able to say that they don't get what the kids are picking up these days without calling new things "degenerate slop" - or worse, beginning and ending their political critique with "music is bad nowadays because the world is bad." You can easily make an argument for art being affected by the sociopolitical climate in which the artist functions; you can even say "music from the Reagan administration sucked because the world sucked more than usual." You can easily say that shit without annoying the fuck out of me. And yet you have managed to annoy the fuck out of me!

ILLIT fans have (perhaps rightfully!) buried all the tweets I wanted to show as evidence of what I'm talking about, so I sound like I'm making shit up. But I am not, truly I am not. I feel as though this discourse is unavoidable. Do people have no other things to criticize capitalism for, but that it kills some mythical "soul" of art? There is nothing in it; art is nothing. Art is not as strong and all-important as people seem to believe. Art is in the eye of the beholder. Everything is in the eye of the beholder. This post is entirely subjective. Even morality is subjective. Isn't that fucked up? We need socialism. These are things I believe every artist and critic should understand.

Anyway, I do feel that "It's Me" aligns with ILLIT's general identity because it is, at its core, very cute. Who's your bias? I'm your bias! I love the song now, out of spite. Your criticisms have had the opposite effect. Take that!