User blog comment:Linusblanket2100/My Rant on why TDRI is the most Sexist Total Drama Season/@comment-1874924-20130908212313

Frankly, I think you're overanalyzing, seeing dark conspiracies where none probably exist. Let's take these points one at a time.

All in all, this blog sounds a lot like the people who used to accuse TD of racism because all of the major antagonists in the first three seasons were racial minorites: Heather (Asian or half-Asian); Justin (ambiguously brown but allegedly Polynesian); Coutney (ambiguously brown but allegedly Hispanic); and Alejandro (Hispanic). TDROTI was the first season to have an unambiguously white main antagonist in Scott.
 * 1) What would you prefer? A series of cookie-cutter seasons that all follow a strict quota system? Your point is based on a logical fallacy called "hasty generalization", defined as drawing conclusions from too few data points. Having two boys (or, for that matter, two girls) in the Final Two is not in and of iself sexist by any rational definition of the term.
 * 2) So the ROTI storylines focused mainly on male characers. Was TDI sexist just because its storylines focused mainly on female characters? Or is it only sexist if males are dominant? (Hint: the latter attitude is sexist in its own right.) Also, Jo wasn't really an antagonist, notwithstanding her sometimes snotty attitude toward Brick and Lightning. She seemed more of a strategybot, if I understand that term correctly. She was handed a Villain Ball in the episode where she was eliminated, but that had nothing to do with sexism or any other larger issue.
 * 3) It was a short season and a late merge. Again, hasty generalization. The reason Jo and Zoey never won individual invincibility is because main antagonist Scott and forced underdog Cameron needed them to stay in the game past their natural time. That is not sexism, it is contrivance to force unlikely but predetermined results.
 * 4) Completely irrelevant to the subject of this blog, and resting on false premises besides. First, the creative team is not responsible for how the viewers vote. Second, Lighthing wasn't really an antagonist except at the very end (and that was just a personal grudge), and Heather wasn't the antagonist in the season she won. Depending on how willing you are to forgive her past misdeeds, the TDWT Heather was either an antihero or a Villain Protagonist.