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In lieu of Lightning Round, lager!

Last week, Dana pondered whether Gates-gate had anything to do with masculinity. While I admit I didn’t immediately see the Gates arrest in terms of gender, Obama‘s choice to defuse the tension by inviting them over for a beer did seem gendered to me. You know, just dudes and brews. Hangin’ out. Shootin’ the shit. Guy stuff.

Would this stunt have been received the same way if a woman were at the table? Or if it was staged by a female president? Like so many other day-to-day choices we make, booze preferences have gender connotations. Think Homer Simpson with his six-packs of Duff, or Carrie Bradshaw perched on a bar stool with a cosmopolitan in hand. I know men who sheepishly order sugary cocktails, and women who are called tough or manly because they drink whiskey on the rocks. While I don’t think beer, in and of itself, is a strictly “masculine” beverage, I do think the idea of putting aside differences over mugs of beer is not an image that we typically associate with women.

Obviously Dana Milbank thought the idea of a woman at that table was also ridiculous, as he suggested in a silly video that Hillary Clinton, were she invited to the summit, would be “served a bottle of Mad Bitch.” A screengrab:

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Full video here, via Brian Beutler. (As my colleague Adam Serwer quipped, “Obviously, this is the kind of hard-hitting journalism Nico Pitney wouldn’t be incapable of.”)

In recent political history, candidates have declared their love for beer (and always the cheap, domestic stuff) as a way of signaling they know how to connect with “real” (usually white, working-class) Americans. That’s why Adam’s assessment — that the beer summit was Obama’s way of assuring white America he was just like them — is spot on. But there’re also a gender slant on this. In the Democratic primary, Obama poked fun at Hillary Clinton‘s inability to look authentic with a mug of beer:

“Around election time, the candidates can’t do enough. They’ll promise you anything, give you a long list of proposals and even come around, with TV crews in tow, to throw back a shot and a beer,” Obama said, stirring laughter from an audience of steelworkers and steel industry executives.

Obama chose dive bars as the setting for his embarrassing faux-folksiness, too. But Hillary got way more mocking for it. I’d argue that’s because of the gender connotations associated with certain types of booze — it was easier to conclude the female candidate looked awkward chugging a mug of Bud Light. Maybe she should have ordered a white zinfandel. At least in my experience with white, working-class America, that’s a common female-identified drink.

–Ann Friedman

Ann Friedman is a columnist for New York magazine’s website and for the Columbia Journalism Review. She also makes pie charts for The Hairpin and Los Angeles magazine. Her work has appeared in ELLE, Esquire, Newsweek, The Observer, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, and many other outlets. She lives in Los Angeles, but travels so often the best place to find her is online at annfriedman.com. Follow @annfriedman