One of the most popular scenarios on televison and in the movies is the hot, skinny supermodel female beating up the hapless white male. This was always there in some form, but really began to blossom in the 1980s, when actresses like Whoopi Goldberg began punching out white males in every movie she made. In the 1960s, you would normally have the women use judo or karate to flip and defeat larger white males. Or they might smash something over the head of the white male. By the 1970s, you might see women kick men in the groin as a method of physically defeating them. At any rate, up until that point, women won fights with white males, but at least they had some kind of secret weapon or advantage on the male. However, we all have watched in recent years as 100 lb females routinely overpower and punch out much larger, often muscular white males. Notice that I always refer to white males; this is because no black male will ever be punched out a white supermodel. Black supermodel, maybe, but never a white one. It's the one kind of racial diversity the media will never show.
What is really sad about the media's anti-white male bias is the way even children are portrayed. White boys often bear the brunt of physical attacks from white girls, and even from their older sisters. Imagine an older brother beating up his little sister. You won't see that on television or in the movies. But then again, you won't see a little brother beating up an older sister, either. As long as the child is male, the crudest humor is permitted. For instance, shows like "South Park" can devote an entire episode to the fourth grade boys being courted by pedophiles from NAMBLA. It was very funny, but can you imagine the protests if they made a show about fourth grade girls being courted by pedophiles? It would never air, and if it did, no one would laugh at the exact same premise. This is also why Bart Simpson, Stewie Griffin ("Family Guy"), and all the male kids from "South Park" (not to mention Homer Simpson and any male adult character from any of those shows) can constantly have their animated bare butts revealed to the audience, always to laughter, but not Lisa Simpson or any other female character on those shows. But then, this goes back to the days of "The Little Rascals" and other movies from that era, where it was okay to have a young boy's pants fall down, to the laughter of all onscreen and in the audience, whereas no one would dare have a young girl's dress fall off or pants fall down, and certainly no self- respecting man or woman would have laughed at that situation.
Anyhow, the females punching out the males onscreen is one of my real pet peeves, and I'm glad some others out there are starting to notice it. I don't watch many current films, but just seeing the trailers for them on television reveals that many, many of them have at least one requisite scene where the supermodel (never a fat or large boned female who might theoretically be able to beat up a male) punches out the always white male character.