Jimmy Iovine, a Man, Thinks Women Can't Find New Music to Listen to on Their Own
Entertainment“Women find it very difficult at times to find music,” a totally credulous Jimmy Iovine said Thursday on CBS This Morning, while seated next to Mary J. Blige, a woman who has a decades-long body of work about being self-sufficient in life, love and—yes—music.
Iovine, the head of Apple Music, was attempting to explain the “just kicking it with ya girls” commercials starring Blige, Taraji P. Henson, and Kerry Washington, which do in fact seem like a dream best friend hang, but whose first commercial together relegated them to talking about how Apple Music was like a boyfriend.
“It was a genius idea to have girls, because that’s what we do, we listen to music,” says Mary J. Blige, a grown adult woman who was surely capable of choosing her own music before Apple Music, and will certainly be capable after. Iovine does not directly address that statement, perhaps because he is immune to the notion that apparently is not within his belief system, that women are not sitting around, hoping a man will come along and guide them through the process of “finding” music.
I have never met Mr. Iovine, but I have been writing about music as a profession for many, many years, and one of my favorite things to do is to “find” music. Before I started writing about music, I was capable of finding it as well. It certainly sounds like a conundrum, impossible I know, but it happens. If only Apple Music’s premise was not sexist at its very core, I might subscribe to it.
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Image via CBS/screenshot.