The Leering Male Paper Clip

I might have been the only weirdo to like Clippy (the MS Word paper clip assistant), but these people are simply deranged:

Most of the women thought the characters were too male and that they were leering at them. So we’re sitting in a conference room. There’s me and, I think, like, 11 or 12 guys, and we’re going through the results, and they said, ‘I don’t see it. I just don’t know what they’re talking about.’ And I said, ‘Guys, guys, look, I’m a woman, and I’m going to tell you, these animated characters are male-looking.’

When an animated paper clip in a Microsoft program begins to look male and starts leering at you, that’s your clue that mental health assistance is urgently needed.

11 thoughts on “The Leering Male Paper Clip

  1. I hated Clippy.
    I didn’t impute leering to Clippy though. I just didn’t like constantly being interrupted by a non helpful widget so I turned it off.
    When software developers anthropomorphize inanimate objects by turning them into cartoon characters, people will project onto the humanoid parts of the animation.
    shrug

    Like

  2. I miss that MS Word Paper Clip! I didn’t even know it had a name. But he reminds me so much of that kangaroo from Hang-A-Roo. They’re both so fantastically sassy. I think Clippy is sort of asexual. 😉

    Like

  3. I liked the cat better, so I usually changed it. I’ve never thought of any of them as inherently gendered, though. Maybe it’s because I was a kid and didn’t care?

    Like

  4. Thinking back, I realise that I did ‘read’ it as male… but that was for the very sexist and stereotyping reason that it was blooming annoying and assumed it knew better than I did what I was doing/what I wanted, not because of any ‘leering’.

    I tend to refer to annoying things as ‘he’, for all inanimate objects. I am working on my internal bias… but it’s a long road

    Like

    1. That’s how my Spanish professor taught me that the word “problema” (problem) is male in Spanish: “Whenever you want to use this word, ask yourself, where do all the problems originate? The answer is obvious: men. So the noun is masculine.”

      The method worked, by the way. I never forgot the gender of “problema.” 🙂

      Like

Leave a reply to cliff arroyo Cancel reply