“Steve Jobs,” Aaron Sorkin’s latest screenwriting effort, is the story of a very special
man and the noble men and women who, whether they like Jobs or not,
slavishly orbit around him, lapping up the rays of genius that flick
off of him like a wet dog shaking himself dry.
If this
synopsis sounds familiar, that might be because if you Madlib the names
and dates, every Sorkin project starts to sound eerily
familiar. Even if you love Sorkin’s work, it can be hard not to notice
that — to borrow a beloved Sorkin metaphor — the chess pieces never
change.
The
type: Sorkin has long been a subject of feminist ire, and the Decoy
Feminist is largely why. The Decoy Feminist is ostensibly set up as the
intellectual equal of the Tortured Genius, a kind of in-house service
for anticipating and answering your feminist objections. But she is a
straw woman who, with no warning, forgets a vital piece of historical
trivia, has frivolous feminine interests, or goes on a Machiavellian
power trip, ultimately ending up utterly degraded.
Who else?: In “The Newsroom,”
Jennifer Johnson, aka Sorority Girl, a woman who newsman Will McAvoy has
publicly mocked, explains her desire to become a “Greater Fool” in Will’s righteous “mission to civilize.” She is joined by
Darius Hawthorne (Columbus Short) in “Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip”
and Charlie Young (Dule Hill) in “The West Wing.”
Who else?: Eduardo
Saverin (Andrew Garfield) in “The Social Network,” Danny Tripp (Bradley
Whitford) in “Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip,” Leo McGarry (John Spencer) in “The West Wing” and A.J. MacInerney (Martin Sheen) in “The American President.”
READ MORE: Review: Danny Boyle’s ‘Steve Jobs’ is Like Its Subject — Flawed But Fascinating
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