While women are more commonly stereotyped, being male comes with certain negative connotations as well. In Time magazine, these male gender biases are underwritten in the diction of an article by Alana Satlin. She selects words commonly found in an (anti)feminist narrative to evoke images of an misogynistic, cocky man who seeks to posses women. Satlin begins the article by calling Cosby a “cultural patriarch”. While this word can mean “leader, father, or person or influence” (Oxford Dictionary), the word has since evolved with elements of misogyny and sexism. She also plays on gender biases by emphasizing the youth of the women at the time of the alleged assault and calling Cosby “embattled”, eliciting imagery of a tough, hardened man against a the innocent, Jell-O cup eating …show more content…
It represents the position of many Cosby supporters who compare the inconsistencies in Cosby’s behavior with what is commonly known about him: his power, his generosity and his wholesome television and comedy shows. However, many fans, old co-stars and writers use his status to put Cosby on a pedestal and imply that the good he is know from doing makes him immune from the sexual assault