girls with bows pt. 27

26 March, 2014

Hasbro bow

Interesting article in the New York Times this week entitled Today’s Girls Love Pink Bows as Playthings, but These Shoot, about the rise of weapon toys for girls in the brave new Katniss / Merida world. As the writer slightly wearily points out, “it’s the same type of toy that has been marketed to boys for years, except these are mostly purple and pink.” Several manufacturers have brought or are bringing out versions of their ‘boys’ toys for girls, including Hasbro and Zing with its Air Huntress line.

The Nerf Rebelle isn’t even really a bow, of course – it’s more like a vertical toy crossbow. There is also an actual crossbow and a multi-barrel sci-fi gun, all firing soft ‘nerf’ slugs. You can get an extensive, dissembling insight into how these things are actually marketed at the blog My Last Dart:

NerfRebelle3

 

The Air Huntress is essentially a pink version of the same toy for boys. You can even see the two side by side here:

From the NYT:

Barbie, ever pretty in pink, has naturally gotten into the act with a Katniss doll that slings a bow and arrow in authentic brown. The action figure shelves at toy stores now display a Black Widow figure (modeled after Scarlett Johansson) alongside the new Captain America…. All of this is enough to make parents’ — particularly mothers’ — heads spin, even as they reach for their wallets. While the segregation of girls’ and boys’ toys in aisles divided between pink and camouflage remains an irritant, some also now wonder whether their daughters should adopt the same war games that they tolerate rather uneasily among their sons. The Rebelle line was introduced last summer, and a dozen more of the toys are on the way this year.

“Basically, I’m a total hypocrite because it’s a weapon and it’s pink, but they really enjoy it and it’s something they play together,” said Robin Chwatko, whose 3-year-old daughter got a Nerf Rebelle a few months ago after coveting her 5-year-old brother’s Zing bow.

Sharon Lamb, a child psychologist and play therapist who teaches counseling psychology at the University of Massachusetts, Boston, says toys that stimulate aggression are healthy for children.

“I don’t see this as making girls more aggressive, but instead as letting girls know that their aggressive impulses are acceptable and they should be able to play them out,” she said.

But, she added, “What I don’t like is the stereotyped girlifying of this. Do they have to be in pink? Why can’t they be rebels and have to be re-BELLES? Why do they need to look sexy when aggressing, defending the weak or fighting off bad guys?” … At Zing, which started out making toys marketed only to boys, the idea for its Air Huntress line bubbled up from customers on sites like Facebook and Amazon — as well as employees who had read “The Hunger Games”.

Clearly, not much has changed in the toy world, or the retail sector in general, where ‘shrink it and pink it‘ remains the mantra for selling to American women. The manufacturers are, of course, merely responding to the cultural changes and their focus groups, and they aren’t going to start challenging stereotypes anytime soon. The actual benefits of actual archery for kids – discipline, control, confidence, strength – remain elusive with these plastic weapons. The difficult made easy. Still, for someone somewhere this might be a gateway to the real thing, and that’s still good.

hunger-games-barbie

 

 

 

oh, katniss

22 March, 2014

Well, the DVD of Catching Fire is coming out, and I took this picture of one of the posters on the London Underground:

IMG_2878

…and she’s still doing that looping-her-finger-round-the-arrow thing in the publicity shot. Ouch. Of course, in the actual filming almost all the arrows are CGI’d on afterwards, because it’s too dangerous to actually fire arrows around on the set. Stage bows often use rubber bands instead of actual strings – which is probably the reason she can hold at full draw on her fingertips (above). Obviously the arrow was falling off the rest. But they could have put a clicker on for the publicity shot. Or, hell, a bit of tape would have held the arrow in place. Yes, it’s an improvement on the poster where she’s got her fingertip over the end of the arrow:

9edf7756-6c2f-4668-a87c-fd725360c47a_hunger-games-catching-fire-poster-big

And the well used publicity shot from the first film, which looks more like an M.C. Escher painting every time I see it. I mean, is the arrow superglued to the back of her hand or something? And her bow arm angle versus the arrow is very strange…

640px-Jennifer-lawrence-stars-as-katniss-everdeen-in-the-hunger-games

I should stress that a) I liked the films (although the last act of Catching Fire really dragged) and b) they’ve done a ton for archery. My problem with most of the bad archery in ads and film is that it’s basically as easy to get it right as it is to get it wrong, and the general public recognise when something is authentic. Why get the publicity shots so wrong? I mean, they paid for Khatuna Lorig to train her how to shoot properly, right? That’s Hollywood for you though – get the headline story, and then… ah, whatever.

how a bow is born

19 March, 2014

Found these excellent videos on YouTube about traditional Korean bowmaking, constructing the gungdo (각궁) of bamboo, sinew, horn and various woods. Unfortunately, all the videos are in Korean, the only option is YouTube caption subtitles (click on the little icon below the screen that looks like an addressed envelope, and select ‘on’, ‘Translate Captions’, and then English or whatever language you like). While the captions are great at producing barely comprehensible joys as ‘Longing stroke / the sound of shoes voc robbed’, they do mostly give you the gist of what is going on, and occasionally deliver real insights (the ‘cloven hoof’.) Anyway, get stuck in:


Half a world away, I found this excellent slow and steady series of English longbow making videos from Bickerstaffe Bows, full of explanations, detail, and seriously hot woodworking. Enjoy.

(well, I say half a world away. Did you know that Britain and Korea share a megalithic culture? That you can find the same kind of mysterious late-Neolithic flowerings in Cornwall and Gochang? You do now…)

 

that archery thing they’re all talking about

18 March, 2014

More archery as rugged individualism selling consumer products, as covered before on The Infinite Curve archery blog… but this time they’ve got it right! Full disclosure: this man taught me how to shoot. He is Lee from Experience Archery – north London’s finest. As well as teaching archery, he also works as an actor (amongst many other things, he played an archer in this). Anyway, enjoy:

(Eagle-eyed readers may notice that he uses a different arrow – a Jazz – at the end for the shot into the tree. I asked him about this and he said “Yeah, not shooting my ACE’s at a tree!”. Haha…)

 

 

 

“Extreme Archery”

3 March, 2014

Whenever I mention archery to people, it’s amazing how often you get a “oh, yeah, I like doing that in Skyrim” or “I’m really good at that on the Wii.” Some people even think their virtual archery skills might even translate directly into real archery skills. Awww. Bless! Still, I did enjoy this video. We all like to dream. Although, of course, I wouldn’t call it ‘extreme archery’. This is extreme archery.

(Thanks to @discobloguons for the tip)

Archer Addy: inspiring stuff

Archer Addy Pencil Test 3

There is an excellent Kickstarter project running intended to launch the first in a series of illustrated children’s books around the subject of archery, dreams, determination and self-reliance. The full book is going to be 17 chapters and 14,000 words. Have a full read about it right here (and if you’d like to donate, get on it soon):

Archer Addy, The Real Life Adventures – Book, ages 8-12

Erik was kind enough to share a few chapters with me, and here’s a short extract where Addy goes to her first tournament:

Dad and I head to check-in. “What’s your name?” The lady at the desk asks me. She doesn’t smile.

“Addy,” I whisper. Being at the tournament doesn’t make me nervous but all the adults do.

“Female Bowman Compound Freestyle?” she asks. She wants to know what category I’m in. I know the answer but look up at Dad anyway. Sometimes looking at Dad makes things better. He nods to me that it’s correct.

“Yes,” I say. The no smiling lady looks at me again.

“Go get your equipment checked for safety.” She points her pen into the next room full of people and bows.

I look up at Dad again. He nods at me and toward the equipment check. Dad walks in front of me but at the door he steps aside to let me go first. I stop….I hear Dad behind me. “Addy, this is your tournament. You have to do things yourself.”

This is one of the things about archery. In archery, you have to do things yourself. The adults help you but they don’t do anything for you. It’s not like real life where your parents wake you up, make you breakfast, drive you where you want to go, carry your stuff.

In archery they always say, “We’re not teaching you archery. We’re teaching you about life.” I don’t get it. I never see anyone walking around in real life, with a bow and arrow. What does shooting a target have to do with teaching me about life?

Addy is a real person! Her Facebook page is right here, she’s also on Twitter and Instagram. Here she is getting interviewed by ArcherZUpshot in Vegas:

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I’m generally a bit wary of the kind of generic ‘inspirational’ platitudes that attach themselves to a lot of archery culture; not because they are wrong or too ‘hippyish’ but because they often remain just that: platitudes. Words. I personally think the things that actually change your life for the better are usually delivered as narratives, as stories, whether taught to you by someone else or brought to life in your own head. So I can get behind this book. I’ve pledged a little something. Maybe you could too.

the joy of Google

13 February, 2014

Welcome-to-the-internet

Some of the several thousand Google search hits that have come through to my WordPress dashboard here at theinfinitecurve.com in the past eight months or so. Italics mine.

“joy of archery” come right on in

“how much is a pitcher of beer at the lakeside frimley green?” can’t remember, had too many

“archery fog” whuh

“why is darts such a big spectator sport?” read this, third paragraph from the end

“archery sexy girl” also “sexy girl archery”… and “girl sexy archery”

“the nothing and the infinite” booom

“deaths related to archery 2013” waaahh

“ridiculousness.pec”  try it yourself

“william shatner without his toupee” not sure how 

“korean women soho london” hmmmm

“i’ve come from the the *venezuela” hola

“pulled pork kimchi rolls”  yes please

“engelbert humperdinck crazy” eh?

“be don’t try to become”  I blame Yoda

“can arrows curve in flight?” they always curve in flight

“how to say “I like archery” in korean”   양궁 처럼, natch

“curve cu alune” appears to be Romanian for… well, why don’t you try translating it?

“神主 イラスト”   never very sure of a lot of SE Asian online translation, but this appears to mean ‘Priest illustrations’

“bbc sport darts coverage is rubbish” still better than Sky, mate

and sweetest of all:

“I want to be ki bo bae” 

Just makes me wonder what gems are hiding in the 3,600 other search terms that Google hasn’t deigned to pass on.