//ojs.bakrie.ac.id/index.php/I-POP/issue/feedI-Pop: International Journal of Indonesian Popular Culture and Communication2022-08-09T06:39:48+00:00Bambang S. Wijayai-pop.editor@bakrie.ac.idOpen Journal Systems<p style="text-align: justify;"><em><strong>I-Pop: International Journal of Indonesian Popular Culture and Communication</strong>, </em>published by Program Studi Ilmu Komunikasi Universitas Bakrie<em>,</em> is an open-access interdisciplinary journal of popular culture and communication in (the context of) Indonesia, about Indonesia (or whatsoever related to Indonesia), and the pop work created by or involves Indonesians. Published biannually, the <em><strong>I-Pop Journal</strong></em> follows a rigorous blind review process, in which reviewers and authors do not know each other, to ensure the objectivity of the assessment. <strong><em>I-Pop Journal</em> </strong>has four typical rubrics: ORIGINAL ARTICLE (research paper or constructive conceptual paper), BOOK REVIEW (review and criticism of the latest book), POP REVIEW (review and criticism of the latest work of popular culture and communication), and REFLECTIONS (reflective experiences and/or exclusive interviews with the creators or actors of Indonesian pop culture work).</p>//ojs.bakrie.ac.id/index.php/I-POP/article/view/122Tante Lala's Comedy2022-08-09T06:39:48+00:00Zulfatun Mahmudahzulfatun.mahmudah@mail.ugm.ac.id<p>Tante Lala's comedy is a video depicting a mother who had difficulties while accompanying her child to study during the Covid-19 pandemic. The video shows the character of a mother who is impatient, angry, and even fails to educate her child. Unfortunately, the video went viral on social media and was even made viral by an infotainment program on TV and some media. This paper aims to reveal how the symbolic annihilation of women is practiced and reproduced and how the media presents stereotypes of women as a spectacle. This paper will also explore how female viewers perceive Tante Lala's video content. The research uses a cultural studies approach and critical discourse analysis as the method. The result shows that symbolic annihilation in Tante Lala's Video was represented by various texts, visual images, and text flow. Within 10:6 minutes, various texts' connotations of a woman character are found, contributing to women's symbolic annihilation. Visually, the camera focuses on the face depicting a fierce and bitchy character. Second, symbolic annihilation is represented in the form of media affirmation of the video through news and infotainment. In addition to the form of affirmation, the media also explicitly uses language that discriminates against women's characters. Informants assessed that the content of Tante Lala's video and media reports and infotainment broadcasts related to the video gave a wrong depiction of women. They argue that the media is also considered to have contributed to stereotyping women based on emotion rather than rationality.</p>2021-02-27T00:00:00+00:00Copyright (c) 2021 I-Pop: International Journal of Indonesian Popular Culture and Communication