Men Are Uncultured



"''Don't send flowers

Or take showers

But I'll be there to pull your weeds, oh yeah

I don't read books

I don't French cook

Or stroll around in galleries

I hate opera

I hate Oprah

Don't fill my head with poetry''"

- Alice Cooper, Fantasy Man

You've Seen It a Million Times, primarily in Sit Coms: Men absolutely loathe opera, classical music, visual arts, and books. But they LOOOOOVE sports. If they don't act in this manner, there's either something wrong with them or they're Camp Gay. Never mind that virtually all Opera and classical music - and most literary books - were written by men specifically as manly diversions, those things aren't manly!

This is one of the many ways that the Grande Dame will make life an utter Damnation de Faust for her Henpecked Husband.

Compare Men Don't Cry, Women Are Wiser, Mars and Venus Gender Contrast. Contrast Real Men Wear Pink. When the man is a slob, this trope is almost always included also, but the opposite isn't always true.

Anime and Manga

 * Protagonist Train Heartnet from Black Cat. He pretty much only lives for fighting and bounties. He's unable to get through even the index page of a book, and hates fancy Dancesand Balls. He is, of course, the complete opposite of Big Bad Creed, who is Wicked Cultured. And Ambiguously Gay.
 * Inverted in Sailor Moon, Mamoru is far more cultured than Usagi.
 * But then again, Usagi isn't exactly the most cultured of the women.
 * Inverted with Austria in Axis Powers Hetalia. He loves the fine arts and music, and hates the outdoors--and is definitely more cultured than his Hot Amazon wife Hungary.
 * Unlike the rest of his male comrades who are enthralled with the extravagance that the taxpayers' money give to the Midland aristocratic-held ball, Guts doesn't seem very impressed with his surroundings (noblewomen and all) and spends the majority of the time supporting the wall away from the commotion.  Guts also isn't big on reading, so the only chance he'll be picking up one of those sleeping pills is if there is an array of pornographic art in it. But what do you expect? He's a mercenary.
 * Dragonball does this with Goku. But what do you expect? He's a Noble Savage. It continues into Dragonball Z, though: Goku is far less concerned with Gohan's academics than Chichi.

Comic Books

 * Subverted in a story in the furry Beatrix Farmer series. When Beatrix, a cute bunny femme, is moving into her cat friend's apartment, she is surprised when her coquettish friend enlists the aid of several handsome males to help them. Although Beatrix doesn't care for the idea of being suddenly surrounded by strange men apparently being old fashioned chivalrous, things improve when she breaks out her massive book collection and finds to her delight that all the men are even more intrigued with her sophisticated taste in literature and they spend just as much time browsing through her books as they put them away.
 * Donald Duck constantly has to prove his cultural capital to impress Daisy.
 * Tintin: The Calculus Affair has Tintin and Captain Haddock hiding in the Klow opera. Tintin wakes the Captain up at the end with a disapproving Grande Dame looking on.

Film

 * Hilariously subverted in Black Dynamite. The main character and many secondary characters, uber-manly militant Black-Supremacist commandos, have some pretty in depth knowledge of Classical Mythology and symbolism. They also pretty much geek-out when discussing it.
 * Jamie MacDonald, the Violent Glaswegian spin doctor from In the Loop is uncultured and proud:
 * When he hears an MP listening to Debussy, all he can ask is: "What's the name of the fuck with the fiddle?"
 * He's not a fan of opera either: "It's just VOWELS! Subsidized foreign fuckin' VOWELS!"
 * It goes beyond music: he was also disappointed with There Will Be Blood: "There was hardly any fuckin' blood! It's a fucking great title - you couldn't have a better title for a film, except maybe There Will Be Tits."
 * In Repli-Kate, a journalist who comes to interview two scientists is accidently cloned. The clone is a blank slate, and the lead's wacky friend decides to educate her to prefer football and beer and other blokey things. He ends up as the henpecked boyfriend to a boorish Ladette who doesn't care about his feelings. (The lead and the real Kate are much happier together.)
 * More or less a basic assumption in The Hangover, but the opening shows a jarring dissonance between the immaculately-preened bride preparing in a large and extravagantly decorated mansion, and the groomsmen on the other end of a cellphone, dishevelled and confused somewhere in the desert.
 * Touched on in Batman Begins, where when Bruce asks his father to leave the opera because of his fear of bats, Thomas turns to Martha and says it's him that wants to leave because "a little opera goes a long way."

Live Action TV

 * Oscar Madison on The Odd Couple. And Felix is the opposite, obviously.
 * Tim Taylor of Home Improvement is the patron saint of this trope. He often teases his more sensitive assistant Al. Subverted in one episode where it turns out he actually did read and understand the copy of The Feminine Mystique that Jill gave him (though he refers to it as The Feminine Mistake).
 * Married With Children, though most of the women aren't any better.
 * Doug in The King of Queens resists as much as he can when Carrie tries to take him to classical music concerts or ballet. The trope was at least played with a bit when Carrie, upon actually going to a classical music concert, wound up being so bored she fell asleep.
 * A variant in Noahs Arc: Masculine guy Wade invites the artsy, feminine Noah to watch the movie he worked on. Its turns out to be a cheesy, low-brow Buddy Cop Show film, during which Noah quickly falls asleep.
 * Subverted in Angel:
 * When Gunn, who had fought from moment one against going to a ballet ends up going and loving it. The seemingly more cultured Cordelia sleeps through it. And snores. LOUDLY. Classy lady.
 * For being a badass, leather jacket wearing vampire, Angel was pretty psyched. A badass, leather jacket wearing vampire who has been known to do karaoke versions of Barry Manilow because he "thinks it's pretty".
 * Awful, mangled versions of "Mandy".
 * Angel gives an impromptu lesson about Baudelaire to a bunch of museum tourists while tracking a humanoid demon (who had told a security guard that Angel was stalking her--meaning he also had to evade the guard). It was an impressive Establishing Character Moment in the otherwise execrable episode She.
 * Spike: When he was human, he desperately wanted to be a Romantic poet, and (as we find out when the gang is told to go enjoy their last day on Earth), still kind of does.
 * And again by Spike (and possibly Angel): Spike tells Angel that if he sees Les Misérables, he'll lose his soul because it'll make him perfectly happy.
 * This trope is also subverted by Angel's parent show, Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Giles is by far the most cultured of the group (with Willow a close second), also being likely the smartest. However, he's also a major badass and loves classic rock.
 * Played with in Emergency when the personnel of Station 51 are visited by a female TV reporter who assumes they are not cultured. Indignant, they set out to prove her wrong by showing all the sophisticated arts hobbies they indulge in. Unfortunately, they do too well as the previously promised football game tickets she promised them and they were eagerly anticipating were switched out for opera show ones by her on the assumption that they would prefer them.
 * Completely averted in Frasier, where Frasier and Niles are both very, very cultured. Their father Martin, less so. Daphne also finds opera boring. But subverted behind the scenes where John Mahoney (Martin) is a very cultured man, and in fact introduced David Hyde Pierce (Niles) to opera.
 * Put through the wringer in The Red Green Show, in which in later episodes the Possum Lodge members recited the Man's Prayer at the end of every episode-- "I am a man / But I can change / If I have to / I guess." Many of the men, including Red himself, were uncultured to varying extents. The only exception was Red's nephew Harold, who was Proud to Be A Geek.
 * Virtually all the male detectives and lawyers on the Law and Order franchise, save Det. Goren of Criminal Intent. Expect copious Lenny One Liners if the victim or suspect is from New York's art scene.
 * Often highlighted with Diane and Sam in Cheers, but in particular, the episode where Sam convinces the bar regulars to go with Diane to the opera. In a genre-savvy moment, Woody is assigned to be the "keep everyone awake" guy, having drunk lots of coffee and wearing his extra-tight shoes. Cut to the viewing box at the opera, and everyone is sound asleep and snoring, including Woody and Diane.
 * Sam attempts to subvert this in one episode where he has to hang out with a bunch of Diane's cultured friends, so he prepares for it by reading War and Peace. He becomes understandably furious when they all dismiss the book as overrated. And also when he finds out there was a movie version he could have watched instead.
 * Averted in Black Books: Bernard is extremely cultured and despises all popular culture, while Fran has little time for high art. Manny, however, plays this trope fairly straight. However, all of this is sometimes ignored for Rule of Funny purposes.
 * Played with and averted on ((Peep Show)). Mark is quite cultured and absolutely loves History as well as loving Video games. Jez is completely uncultured but thinks he is. Ben isn't and is quite vocal about it. Most of the women (Elena, Zahra, Toni) like to act cultured but are usually shown to be just as shallow and fake as the men.

Music

 * Katy Perry's "Ur So Gay" mocks her poseur boyfriend for, among other things, listening to Mozart and reading Hemingway.

Mythology

 * Inverted in Norse Mythology by Odin, who, aside from being god of war, prophecy and death, is also the god of poetry.
 * Played straight in the Epic of Gilgamesh, in which Enkidu is ultimately the most uncultured, and his first taste of culture is a woman. This makes it so that he can no longer talk to the animals.

Video Games

 * Your initial party in Chrono Trigger. If you get technical, Crono is the only human male of the bunch. He's also not nearly as intelligent as Lucca, or a noble like Marle.

Web Comics

 * Inverted here.

Western Animation
"Homer: Peh. They're butchering the classics. Could that bassoon have come in any more late?"
 * The second episode of The Simpsons has Homer and Bart suffering through a performance of Carmen. This is often subverted in later seasons where either Bart or Homer become involved in the arts and find to their great surprise that they actually enjoy it.
 * Homer will often also subvert this whenever it's funnier for Homer to have random knowledge and sophistication when the audience isn't expecting it. A critique of the music from Star Wars:


 * In another episode, Marge is astonished at Homer's receptiveness to a night at at the ballet. He replies, "I enjoy all the meats of our cultural stew!" However, a mind's-eye glimpse reveals that Homer, for some reason, thinks ballet involves a bear riding in a little car (and so does Carl).
 * The family does enjoy the work of Gilbert and Sullivan whenever Sideshow Bob is around.
 * The school bullies surprisingly enjoy ballet, and Nelson is a huge Andy Williams fan.
 * King of the Hill's Hank Hill. Dear God, Hank Hill all the way. Subverted by Boomhauer, of all people.
 * The South Park episode "Quintuplets 2000" has the boys bored by "Cirque Du Cheville" aside from the titular quintuplets, and Stan's grandpa worries it will make the boys gay. The other adults enjoy it though, making this more an example of Kids Are Uncultured.
 * Fairly Oddparents had an episode where men and women were separated. The men's half of the world turned into a barbaric Mad Max style wasteland. The side with the women became an advanced civilization of fine arts similar to Ancient Greece.

Real Life

 * The role of ballet in many operas was to make the men more willing to attend (lots of scantily clad young women doing acrobatic dance). Now of course it is difficult to get men to go to the ballet.
 * And then there were ballets like Coppelia, where all the major male roles were played by women, en transvestie. The wealthy patrons, who were overwhelmingly male (The Jockey Club being especially influential), were interested in seeing attractive women on the stage. Eugénie Fiorce, who was considered especially fetching in men's clothes, became famous for these parts.
 * Averted by the fact that the majority of artistic works considered to be the height of Western civilization have, indeed, been created by men. Of course, socially-accepted concepts of what makes a person a "proper" man or woman are constantly in a state of flux.