VanishIntoMe 3,924 Posted 1 hour ago Share Posted 1 hour ago I have a boyfriend that is mildly disabled. As a day-one Gaga fan, I felt it was my duty to educate him on her entire career. After going through everything all the way up to attending the Mayhem Ball, he asked: Why has she used canes and cruthes so much throughout her career? What do you think? Is it because of her fibromyalgia in recent years or is it more of a stylistic choice? If it's not functional, could it be seen as somewhat ableist? This is not a question to shame but a genuine question from someone with lived experience and authority on the subject (him, not me). Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
gagzus 19,829 Posted 59 minutes ago Share Posted 59 minutes ago (edited) It’s to do with style and story. The crutches for Paparazzi are because she was supposed to have been thrown from a balcony and smashed into the steps of her mansion so it’d be odd if she could still walk imo. Her use of the cane in Shape on TDWP2/ The Grammy’s is a sign of wealth and power with style which is because it’s made by Versace and that’s their m.o. for women’s fashion to make women feel as powerful as men. Yes in modern times canes are used as walking aids but they originate from aristocratic men who used them to show status and would often use them to fend off or beat poor people who came too close to them to beg. The distance from one’s hand to the end of the cane (usually 3-5 feet) was the distance that poor people were expected to stay away from the aristocracy. So it’s also a weapon to a degree and used to be made of heavy metals such as gold or lead for weight and power. Edited 57 minutes ago by gagzus 2 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
AVeryGagaHolyDick 30,526 Posted 56 minutes ago Share Posted 56 minutes ago I’m pretty sure it’s just a metaphor for being hurt but determined to heal 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
JustAnotherGayASMR 374 Posted 55 minutes ago Share Posted 55 minutes ago I see it as her form of artistic expression. In Paparazzi it was symbolic of the fall from stardom of an artist & their journey of recovery. While touring Mayhem I felt that it was in part a reference to the MV & when she threw them it was a sign of overcoming struggles & freedom. After all it's just another gay x https://www.youtube.com/@JustAnotherGayASMR Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
gagzus 19,829 Posted 49 minutes ago Share Posted 49 minutes ago 2 minutes ago, JustAnotherGayASMR said: I see it as her form of artistic expression. In Paparazzi it was symbolic of the fall from stardom of an artist & their journey of recovery. While touring Mayhem I felt that it was in part a reference to the MV & when she threw them it was a sign of overcoming struggles & freedom. This also the Mistress is sort of shown as an almost aristocratic ruler during The Mayhem Ball even the use of an Opera House sets the time period up in line with it. She’s supposed to be seen as almost cruel and decrepit and holding onto her life like how fame and the industry and the public perception of Gaga’s persona is (she’s this because we say she’s this etc) which is in line with her vision of the album’s sound as explained in that Rolling Stone breakdown video where she explains how people put her in a box. Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
TimotheeChalamet 6,749 Posted 48 minutes ago Share Posted 48 minutes ago (edited) No, it's not ableist at all: all these elements have to be considered beyond their surface value and inserted into various contexts. In Paparazzi and its live performances, the crutches are both a recognizable gimmick (like the disco stick for LoveGame) and a metaphor for being hurt by fame and all the story clearly displayed in the music video; the mistress of Mayhem carrying a cane is both about what @gagzus said and a stylistic feature of the character displaying her as being her dark, twisted and hurt part (she also has a cast on her left foot, as per the Manifesto of Mayhem). Pretty sure there is nothing intentionally harmful about it, although I get why some people may see them as what they are not. I have a disease that will likely require me to use crutches or a wheelchair in a few years, so I get where you're coming from. Edited 42 minutes ago by TimotheeChalamet Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Electric Venom 191 Posted 40 minutes ago Share Posted 40 minutes ago This is her new disco stick since she knows we millennials have sore knees & backs jk yup, definitely a performance flare + all the metaphors you can connote to it Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wet Fire 8,214 Posted 8 minutes ago Share Posted 8 minutes ago (edited) I've seen quite a few disabled people praise Gaga for normalizing the representation of crutches and wheelchairs, considering that her metaphor is rooted in her own history of being incapacitated by hip injury. The idea of not being bounded or defined solely by it is nicely delivered in the Mayhem Ball Paparazzi performance IMO. Edited 7 minutes ago by Wet Fire Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ladle Ghoulash 42,845 Posted 3 minutes ago Share Posted 3 minutes ago 53 minutes ago, gagzus said: It’s to do with style and story. The crutches for Paparazzi are because she was supposed to have been thrown from a balcony and smashed into the steps of her mansion so it’d be odd if she could still walk imo. Her use of the cane in Shape on TDWP2/ The Grammy’s is a sign of wealth and power with style which is because it’s made by Versace and that’s their m.o. for women’s fashion to make women feel as powerful as men. Yes in modern times canes are used as walking aids but they originate from aristocratic men who used them to show status and would often use them to fend off or beat poor people who came too close to them to beg. The distance from one’s hand to the end of the cane (usually 3-5 feet) was the distance that poor people were expected to stay away from the aristocracy. So it’s also a weapon to a degree and used to be made of heavy metals such as gold or lead for weight and power. I do also think there’s something to be said for the Mistress representing the part of her that is so singularly focused on the pursuit of her vision and fame to the point of self-harm (ie the performance injury she incurred on the BTWB tour). The Mistress is ruthless to the point of self-destruction, which is, by the end of the show, mediated by EtherealGa’s embrace of vulnerability (à la the “birth” and attempted healing in the Disease vid) We have forgotten our public MANNERS Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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