Early last month, cat-and-dog duo Mooch and Earl celebrated the arrival of spring while chatting with some of nature’s most skilled pollinators — bees!

One of the strips within this week-long series caught the attention of actress Geena Davis, known for her roles in films such as Thelma & Louise and Beetlejuice, as well as for her advocacy for women in media.

Ms. Davis, who in 2004 launched the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media, sent us a kind and insightful note to point out an error in the MUTTS strip that ran on Thursday, May 2. The original comic strip and Geena’s insightful letter are below.

Can you spot the blunder?

Strip-050219

The Letter from Geena:

Hi there! This is Geena Davis. Let me start by saying I am a gargantuan fan of MUTTS and Patrick McDonnell! I have to see it every day.

I have had a research institute for a dozen years now that looks at how female characters are portrayed in media made for little kids. It’s actually pretty appalling not only how female characters are presented to kids — mostly narrowly stereotyped and valued for their looks — but how FEW female characters there are! I believe we are training kids to see women and girls as less valuable by not showing them taking up half the space and doing half of the important things.

So I notice everything, even tiny instances where we could do a teeny tiny bit better. I noticed in the strip today (very funny) they were talking to a bumbling bumble bee. I would like to point out to Mr. McDonnell that worker bees are ALL female; pretty much any bee you see out and about is female. Also, only female bees have stingers. Therefore, the bee in the strip today is definitely female, though it is referred to as male.

This is such a tiny point, as I said, but it’s useful to illustrate how easily we default to male. I was once in a park with my twin boys when they were young. I saw a cute squirrel, and thought about how we usually refer to all animals and bugs as “he.” So I said, “Look at the squirrel, she’s so cute!” Both boys swung around, alarmed, and said, “How do you know it’s a GIRL?!?”

We all constantly default to male simply because we were all raised to have unconscious bias. No matter how enlightened we think we are, it’s very hard to root it out unless you pay very strict attention. Nothing to feel bad about — it’s unconscious!

***

Patrick and our team are so thankful for Geena’s letter and for her organization’s work in helping to create a world in which women are represented equally on screen — and in print!

A new version of the May 2 comic strip is below. (This corrected image will appear in our MUTTS Shop as well as in the next annual MUTTS Treasury book.)  And we’re pretty sure that those bees will be buzzing around MUTTS again soon.

Female Worker Bee Comic Strip

Thanks, Geena!

 

 

Comments (69)

how wonderfully politically correct.

michael edwards

While I appreciate that the strip is now entomologically correct, the correction seems to play into the damaging old stereotypes of women being charmingly confused “bumblers.” When I read it originally, I was pleased that the bumbling bee was male! It’s a great strip no matter the sex of the bee, but perhaps Mr McDonnell could balance things by doing a strip sometime down the road wherein a female worker or queen bee displays how smart she is…? Thanks so much for Mutts, Mr McDonnell! It’s the only comic I get delivered to my inbox daily and it never fails to make me smile. We need a lot more kind and gentle humor — and animal advocacy — especially right now…

Lisa Warhol

If this was a female bee she would not be bumbling! Girls are smarter!

Adele

She is so right. I would of never got on to that. I know I personally don’t think about things like that. I will now. But I also call things boys and girls. If it’s really cute, it’s a girl lol.

Martine

Yesh! Go Genna! This also goes for worker ants!

Eloise Gadus

Hooray for Geena, and for MUTTS taking the ball and running with it, to use a usually-male-but-could-be-female metaphor.

Helen Engledow

While all the bees collecting pollen in one way or another are indeed female – as is the one in this strip, it should be noted that male bees also visit flowers for their nectar.

Carolyn Gritzmaker

That was an AWESOME THING YOU DID Patrick!!!! I am a 70 year old Retired Nurse… Nurses are 90% of the time referred to as she… It has become a VERY BIG Profession for MEN NOW TOO!!!

pennysdachshund

I am impressed Patrick that YOU took the time and MADE the effort to Make this Right!!! YOU ARE a Great Person and Friend to Animal’s !!! Bless YOU!!!

pennysdachshund

Thank you Geena (love your acting) and Patrick for this situation – and for teaching me something I didn’t know and for these comments adjusting it along the way. I’m an older female and enjoy females/males learning and accepting differences but with both empowered in those differences, not just one controlling things. Also I echo that Patrick, this is the only comic strip I receive daily and NEVER miss….shared with me years ago by my lovely daughter….and it gives me a smile each day….with its poignant and funny moments that remind us of the delights, realities and responsibilities we experience and hold towards the animal kingdom.

Rhen