Old Man,
Well, again, I'm not getting into that topic. It deserves its own thread entirely, and I'm not sure I'm the best one to make that argument anyway. Since our source is anime, I think any of discussion of objectification of characters in AMVs would come as a section under a wider exploration of those themes in anime in general. Maybe General Anime would be a better place for such a topic?
At this point, I am largely more concerned with how AMV creators treat other editors, and specifically how women AMV creators are treated. Misandry isn't an institutionalised reality, but certainly if individuals have problems they see with gendered discrimination against male editors, I'd like to hear about it. Misogyny, however, is an institutionalised reality, and therefore in my personal experience, it is quite pervasive in fandom spaces. Including in AMV communities.
I know that there are other fandoms which are worse. I know that the gaming communities are... well... I would describe what I've seen in them and heard about them to be horrific and toxic. The comments on Kotaku, as an example, are so bad, I can't even read the site anymore without risking head injury from the desire to headdesk repeatedly. However, just because AMV communities have substantially fewer issues than other fandom areas, this doesn't mean that the incidents we do have are unimportant and unworthy of attention. It's a matter of degree, but that's all. I mean, when I get catcalled in a drive-by situation, it's a lot less of a threat than some guy following me down a dark street while catcalling me (something which actually happened to me while I was living near Piedmont Park in ATL). The first seems minor in comparison, but it's
still an incident which is important to discuss and to do something about.
I'm grateful that we don't have issues which are as serious as other fandoms, but that doesn't give us a magic fandom waiver to ignore the issues we do have.
On your other observations, I find those very interesting although I am not sure I have much to add. Otohiko and I have discussed gender/sexism/feminism in a Russian context before, and although I have no wish to speak for him, I think I remember him saying some stuff which would explain why some folks on Russian sites, like AMVNews, might see your style/genre choices as fitting into a gender paradigm. I don't see your stuff as particularly gendered, I just see it as stuff I genuinely
like. Of course, I'm a woman, so an essentialist might say that of course I'd like your girl-oriented videos. I'd think the essentialist was being silly, of course.
Serious commentary ended, I find this sort of relevant:
