So sayeth Jessica Wakeman, a former associate blog editor at the Huffington Post. And she should know.

The stats:

  • The site highlights 13 “featured blog posts” on the home page at a time, and that selection is updated regularly. Extra! recorded those featured bylines twice every weekday for nine weeks and coded them by gender.* During the study period (7/7/08-9/5/08), only 255 of 1,125 bylines-23 percent-belonged to women.
  • Of the 89 times bylines were checked during the study, not once did the number of women’s bylines equal those belonging to men. Only eight times did women account for more than a third of all bylines. And Arianna Huffington, appearing 57 times, accounted for more than a fifth of all women’s bylines; 45 of those occupied the most visible top post. Only once, in fact, did a woman other than Arianna Huffington get her byline in the most visible top slot-Post editor-at-large Nora Ephron

Wow.  GO Jessica Wakeman.  Read the full article, here.

Yep, you got that right. Barack and 50 Cent in the same sentence. Or rather, post title.

Last night I went to KGB bar with Shira Tarrant to hear her read from Men Speak Out, along with one of her contributors, filmmaker Byron Hurt, and learned about Byron’s latest–a short doc examining the contrasting styles of manhood exhibited by Barack Obama and Rapper/Mogul Curtis Jackson, aka 50 Cent. It’s part of The Masculinity Project, a web-based endeavor launching in January 2009 devoted to redefining what it means to be a man. Here’s the 10-minute short, which has been released only at Byron’s website and is being spread virally:

Read more about it here. Word.

Courtesy of our gal Rebekah at WMC again:

Potential Treasury Secretary Sheila Bair Is A “Woman To Watch” 11/10/08
Jezebel.com: Despite being the lone government employee on the list, Bair tops it not just because of her work in finance as the chair of the FDIC but because, more importantly, her name is bandied about as a black horse candidate for Treasury Secretary in an Obama Administration.

Women Seek Voice In Cabinet As Obama Team Short On Female Faces 11/10/08
Globe and Mail (Canada): The dominance of men on Obama’s transition economic advisory board begs the question: are women being overlooked?

Latinos And The Obama Cabinet 11/12/08
Washington Post: Latino political advocates, citing the importance of Latino votes in President-elect Barack Obama’s victory, are pressing him to appoint at least two and as many as four Latinos to his administration’s 20 Cabinet-level positions.

A quick tidbit to share from a recent dialogue on women’s leadership between Naomi Wolf and emotional intelligence guru Daniel Goleman, entitled “The Inner Compass for Ethics and Excellence.”

Naomi, among many other things of course, is co-founder of the Woodhull Institute for Ethical Leadership, where I’m a Fellow. During the dialogue, Naomi says something in reference to some of the young women who pass through Woodhull that may be tres a propos for GWP readers:

“Something we see a lot, is that young women come in, especially if they are highly educated, with a false voice – a false demeanor as a leader. You were talking about the visionary who speaks from the heart to the heart, but you can’t get there if you are presenting or accessing a persona that is artificial. People feel it and they are not moved. And you don’t produce as well as you could if you are putting all this energy into presenting a false front. It can be young women who have spent time in the academy, who tend to talk in an academic, stiff, jargoned way; women in the nonprofit world who tend to use abstractions; women from a male-dominated workplace, or who are surrounded by scientists in a male-dominated atmosphere, who feel like they have to repress the range of knowledge and interaction they have as women in order to be taken seriously. What’s really beautiful, is that when you bring out your highest ideals and aspirations and talents, and you send it out in the world, that’s when you are most effective. You see this amazing transformation.”

I’m thinking young men who come out of the academy and wonkland tend to speak stiffly too. But not, IMHO, Obama! Then again, he’s been said to have a “feminine” style of leadership–whatever that is.

Also from Naomi this fall is a new book: Give Me Liberty: A Handbook for American Revolutionaries. And to that I say hells yeah–we sure could use more revolutionaries of late!

(Thanks to Matt for the heads up.)

I am ridiculously thrilled to share the news that Shira Tarrant is joining the GWP team as our latest editor! Shira and I are teaming up on an evolving web project, called The Man Files, and we are “seeding” it here on GWP.

The Man Files–for now, a monthly column here–will bring together some of the most provocative thinking about feminism and masculinity on the web. Our shared aim as hostesses/editors is to continue the conversation Shira launched with Men Speak Out: Views on Gender, Sex, and Power and to foster the kind of the intergenerational conversation around the aftershocks of feminism I put out there with Sisterhood, Interrupted: From Radical Women to Grrls Gone Wild. The Man Files column tackles a range of subjects, from sex to work to fashion to fatherhood. Our goal is to engage scholars, bloggers, and readers in a popular online forum about what it means these days to “be a man.” We got plans. Stay tuned!

If you have ideas for a guest column for The Man Files, please email me at deborah at girlwpen dot com.

And in the meantime, for anyone here in NYC, you can catch Shira reading TONIGHT at KGB Bar, along with Men Speak Out contributor Byron Hurt. The topic: Masculinity, Sex, and Hip Hop. Doesn’t get much better than that!

By the way, I’m sitting here with Shira and when I typed the title of this post Shira says to me, “Wow – that’s loaded.” Hehe.

These three researchy news items just in, courtesy CCF:

The Television Got Me Pregnant, by Tracy Clark-Flory, Salon, Nov. 4, 2008 — A new study published Monday in the journal Pediatrics. They found that, among sexually active teenagers, those who spend the most time watching racy programming like “Sex and the City” are twice as likely to become, or get a partner, pregnant. Researchers interviewed 718 sexually active teens aged 12 to 17 once a year for three years and, based on an analysis of 23 TV shows, estimated the amount of sexual content (including kissing, petting and sex) that they had been exposed to. About 12 percent of those who viewed the least amount of sexual programming became involved in a pregnancy, compared to 25 percent of those who consumed the most. A total of 58 girls got pregnant and 33 boys got a partner pregnant during the study.

Pregnancy Discrimination Complaints Jump, Especially for Women of Color, by Theresa Walsh Giarrusso, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Nov. 6, 2008 — Workplace discrimination against pregnant women is on the rise in a stunning way according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. The National Partnership for Women and Families found that in 2007 working women filed 65 percent more complaints of pregnancy discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission than they had fifteen years earlier. The report also finds this new wave of discrimination affects women of color at a much higher rate than white women.

The Economics of Single Motherhood, by Kat Bergeron, Biloxi, Miss., Sun Herald, Nov. 6, 2008 — No other state has a higher rate of children born to single mothers than Mississippi, at 53.7 percent. That compares with the lowest state, Utah, at about 18 percent. Last year 46,456 Mississippi children were born, 24,939 to single mothers, and the numbers are rising. About 15 percent of those births are to teens aged 15 to 19. That is a slight drop from a decade ago but the trend is again upward, as are the rest of the unwed-mother statistics. Pete Walley, an economic analyst who studies and reports trends to state leaders, says that if Mississippi doesn’t change the numbers, it will permanently become No. 50 in income, health, education, economy, even in per capita traffic deaths.

Today we bring you Elizabeth Curtis with her monthly column, Blog U, coming to us from her newly established home on the left coast. We miss you, E! -Deborah

I hope that many of you out there are as giddy as I am about the U.S. presidential election results. I can’t pass up this opportunity to reflect on the power new media technologies had in the election this year. From building a Facebook group of 3,010,494 supporters to making important announcements via text message, the Obama campaign mobilized their (proven successful!) efforts using emergent technologies. And now that they are transitioning, the Obama team is keeping the American public updated with their very own blog.

But blogging isn’t just a powerful medium for politicians. Historically, blogs have allowed individuals to self-publish and share their message. As former FCC Chairman Michael Powell has stated, “The Blogosphere has added spice to our democracy, making it more appetizing to more people.”

Of course, some of you may still be skeptical about what blogging can accomplish and where blogging can take you personally. The personal is political and all.

I started my own blog as a part of my M.A. thesis, which focused on online social activism in the feminist blogosphere. The research I was pursuing and my own blogging connected with many great feminist bloggers – and even brought me here to GWP. While I have been more devoted to blogging at some times than others, I have maintained a constant presence in the blogosphere – and people noticed (even if I didn’t notice they noticed). When a major feminist blog showed me some link love, I was honored to know that my blog held A-list bloggers’ attention and excited that my advocacy around women’s studies status in the academy was getting more readers’ attention. As I kept blogging, I had the opportunities to share my message – by publishing a articles and presenting at conferences.

A break came when Naomi Wolf asked me if I would be interested in submitting a short essay to her new book about how average people can get civically engaged. What better platform, I thought, to use to advocate for my cause and – through such an amazing opportunity – for my career?

I know I’m not the only one out there with a personal story that proves why blogging is powerful. With 36.2 million active lady bloggers out there right now, I am sure that there many more impressive stories about why you should not give up on blogging turning into something much, much more. So, GWP readers, share your stories in the comments section – and I’ll highlight your expertise in a future full-fledged post.

And, if you’re feeling inspired and looking to gain a little next-step know-how on how to take your own blogging to the next level (or just get started!), check out ProBlogger. Or, bring Deborah to your campus, group, or organization to tell you more!.

With all the pre-election hoopla over here across the pond, I seem to have missed this gem by Alison Flood at The Guardian the other week, when she asked “Where are the books by women with big ideas?”. “Books like Freakonomics, defining significant cultural or economic trends with a punchy title, never seem to be produced by women. But why?”

The article quotes Julia Cheiffetz, blogging at publishing website HarperStudio, as saying, “It is hard to know whether women are better at telling stories than propagating ideas (I’m thinking of Susan Orlean, Mary Roach, Karen Abbott), or whether the intellectual audacity required to sell our hypotheses about the world simply isn’t in our genetic makeup.”

Ok, righto. Have at it, Penners. And for a nice critique, check out Feminocracy, who credits Flood for her observation that disparities in publishing have something to do with the gender disparities in both economics specifically and academia in general. But still…

There’s just so much post-election goodness out there in the analysis department, we’re posting links as we see them. (Thanks, Virginia, for that Katha link!) S’more:

Alice Walker’s letter to Brother Obama, at The Root

FlowTV’s Special Issue on Sarah Palin, which includes columns titled “In the Feminine Ideal, We Trust” by Janet McCabe / Manchester Metropolitan University; “Palin’s State,” by John Streamas / Washington State University; “Reading Sarah Palin,” by Bernadette Barker-Plummer / University of San Francisco; and “Sarah Palin: Castration as Plenitude,” by Nina Power / Roehampton University (Thanks to Mary Celeste Kearney for the heads up.)

Gloria Feldt at Heartfeldt Politics on Sarah Palin Clothinggate, and how the emperor has no towel (this one made my day)

And a great link round up, as always, from Ann over at feministing

One of my favorite moments during last Wednesday’s National Feminist Town Hall –somewhere between the pizza and the ice cream Gloria Feldt served Kristen Loveland and I as we all tried to figure out that newfangled Mogulus video/livechat thingy–was when participating bloggers started using the chat feature to throw out suggestions for President-elect Obama’s cabinet. We probably won’t know for sure about many of these appointments til after Thanksgiving, but it sure was fun to speculate.

But what’s even MORE fun to think up right about now are all the new offices and agencies we’d like to see–like the visionary ladies who participated in NCRW’s Transition Forum on Friday were asked to do. WHP President Marie Wilson thought there should be a Presidential Commission on Women and Democracy. NWSA Executive Director (and GWP blogger!) Allison Kimmich called for the creation of a Federal Department of Women’s Affairs. Women’s eNews founder Rita Henley Jensen threw in for an Office of Maternal Health, a Title IX Taskforce, and a Special Advisor on Judiciary Appointments.

During the next 11 weeks, we’re gonna hear a lot of names thrown out. Here’s a cheat sheet, courtesy of Yahoo News, and another via CBS, listing some of the names currently being floated around. (Thanks, Lucinda Marshall, for the heads up.) While you’re at it, be sure not to miss GWP blogger Veronica Arreola’s post over at the WMC, , titled “Larry Summers Was Not the Change I Was Expecting.” aHEM.

So…what kind of change are we expecting? I say we all weigh in, and dream large. Who do you want to see as Cabinet members, and what new offices, task forces, and commissions do you think there should be? Below is a list of currently available cabinet positions, but don’t feel constrained–feel free to make up your own, cause things are just way more fun that way:

Secretary of State Secretary of the Treasury Secretary of Defense Attorney General Secretary of the Interior Secretary of Agriculture Secretary of Commerce Secretary of Labor Secretary of Health and Human Services Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Secretary of Transportation Secretary of Energy Secretary of Education Secretary of Veterans Affairs Secretary of Homeland Security