Does displaying the sexiness of fangirls benefit or demean them? When geek girls show off, are they liberating themselves or pandering to men? Do some "fake fangirls" blend sex appeal with nerdiness just to appeal to the growing geek/nerd market, or is that question itself unfair? And what's up with all the Slave Leias? Action flick chick
Katrina Hill (ActionFlickChick.com) asks
Bonnie Burton (Grrl.com),
Adrianne Curry (
America's Next Top Model),
Clare Grant (Team Unicorn, "G33k & G4m3r Girls"),
Kiala Kazebee (Nerdist.com),
Clare Kramer (
Buffy the Vampire Slayer),
Nerdy Bird - Jill Pantozzi ("Has Boobs, Reads Comics"),
Jennifer K. Stuller (
Ink-Stained Amazons, GeekGirlCon) and
Chris Gore (G4TV's
Attack of the Show!) to discuss whether fans can be sexy and geeky at the same time -- and if they should!
http://www.comic-con.org/cci/cci_search_results.php?strShow=30&strRec=3283