Double Standard Rape (Female on Male): Difference between revisions

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* Somewhat of a subversion in [[Pink]]'s music video for "Please Don't Leave Me", where the singer holds her boyfriend captive after he attempts to leave her. Although rape isn't explicitly shown, it's strongly implied. She's portrayed [[Yandere (disambiguation)|as a total madwoman]], but at least gets her comeuppance at the end.
* INXS' video for "Taste It." It's either this or some particularly bizarre BDSM. It does not help when Hutchance is screaming "Never! Never! Never!" as his clothes are being cut off.
* In [[Britney Spears]]'s "Womanizer", the singer seduces her husband using several disguises, possiblepossibly to test his fidelity. Nothing too bad at first. But her advances gain force as the video progresses, till she's violently taking him against his will. At the end of the video, she beats him into submission, and all three of her personas rape him.
* In Pretty Ricky's "My Body", the first verse begins ''"I don't know why, but the ladies call ol' baby blue the sticker/They take me and rape me and make me they victim--"'' [[Word of God]] is that lyric wasn't supposed to be taken literally, but it's hard not to.
* In [[Katy Perry]]'s "Last Friday Night", her alter ego Kathy Beth Terry is seen stroking the abdomen of an unconscious jock and then later peeking into his underwear to check out his package. Technically, this is considered sexual assault as sleep negates consent.
* In the [[Filk Song]] ''[[Banned From Argo]]'' by Leslie Fish, in which the crew of the [[Star Trek|Enterprise]] get, well, [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|banned from Argo]], Nurse Chapel uses an "odd green potion guaranteed to cause [[Mate or Die|Pon Farr]]" to take advantage of Spock. This is [[Played for Laughs]] and treated no more seriously than Scotty and Chekov's drunken parking violation.
* "Physical", the 1981 Grammy-winning single for [[Olivia Newton-John]]. The lyrics essentially lay out a plan for an evening that will culminate in a date rape, in which the singer's partner pretty much has no choice about what she has planned. Were it sung by a man it would be profoundly disturbing.
 
 
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