I think [Art is] very meaningful, and in many ways the pinnacle of human achievement. My argument as it pertains to that would be closer to "it's so important and meaningful that we can't ask artists to change" than what you seem to have taken away. I would probably have to write half a book to explain my feelings on the matter adequately so take that with a grain of salt..
...
In general I couldn't care less about content created for profit.. it is what it is... whatever.
Why introduce the "art" argument, then, since we are talking about commercial entertainment products? The fact of the matter is that once you commodify and sell your art, you have responsibilities and obligations to more than just yourself.
I think the only actual problem I have with the arguments in this thread is against those saying it's "racist" not to want to change content. I think asking artists to change content is a bad idea (again, now we're talking about art created from vision, not content created purely for profit).
Again, you are opportunistically conflating art and commerce to create a burden of unreasonableness on the people that you are
selling to.
Commercially, a video game is really not very different from a hamburger, and the demographics of characters in the game aren't very different from the demographics of actors in a commercial to sell the hamburger. Do you think it is wrong for minority consumers of McDonald's hamburgers to demand that advertisements for Big Macs and McCafé feature minorities? Because that is the argument you're making.
It's like when people expect models on billboards to have the right skin color and proper body-fat percentage, just so we can feel equally represented or something... it's just... sad to me.. when such things become an issue. Do we really have so little real meaning in our lives nowadays that we have nothing better to work for than that?
You clearly don't understand the issue. Specifically regarding female models, it is about socio-cultural standards of beauty and an enormous beauty industry that spends billions every year convincing women that they need to look a certain way. This creates unhealthy pressures that have been shown to lead to eating disorders and other illnesses, because of the
homogeneity of the models presented.
The problem is not that there are skinny models on billboards. The problem is that there are
only skinny models on billboards. The problem is that it says only skinny, pretty women are valuable enough to be physical role models—but that simply isn't true.
If society expects a "real man" to be well muscled, tall, and do "manly" things, and you're none of those things, how would YOUR self-esteem fare?
If it makes a difference then that's a psychological problem with me.
No. We humans are
social beings. Group identity and acceptance, peer pressure, ostracism, visible difference: these all have significant effect on us, and this is why diverse media representations are a desirable outcome. If media and society appear to only validate people, based on their looks, who you can never look like, is it unreasonable for you to conclude that society doesn't value you?
Young (white) men are so constantly validated, and so much of what is presented is from and for their perspective, that they have no real understanding of how emotionally devastating marginalization can be. As a result they tend to overemphasize individualism—"that's a problem with
me"—and underrate collective effects.