CNN political analyst Erick Erickson, a Republican pundit and right-wing blogger for RedState.com, exclaimed Tuesday night on Twitter that the first night of the Democratic National Convention (DNC), which featured equal pay advocate Lilly Ledbetter and First Lady Michelle Obama, was much like watching “The Vagina Monologues.”, the Raw Story reported.

“First night of the Vagina Monologues in Charlotte going as expected,” Erickson wrote. He later apologized by explaining that he didn’t mean to offend anyone, but did not retract his remarks.
“‘Sorry that I need to believe half the human race has nothing of value to add in order to feel good about myself,’ is another, more appropriate apology,” Raw Story blogger Amanda Marcotte retorted, writing Wednesday for Slate.
She wasn’t alone in her anger, either. A group of feminist activists called UltraViolet joined in by circulating a petition calling upon CNN to end its relationship with the Republican blogger. Their petition was also shared by the Women’s Media Center, which asked why CNN would pay someone who “derides” speeches from women in such a manner. “Fire him!” they demanded.
“He hears powerful, eloquent women talking about crucial issues and that’s his reaction?” UltraViolet’s petition explains. “Perhaps it shouldn’t be that surprising, given his history of insulting women. Earlier this year, he defended Rush Limbaugh’s attacks on Sandra Fluke, saying ‘her testimony before congress that American taxpayers should subsidize the sexual habits of Georgetown Law School students because, God forbid, they should stop having sex if they cannot afford the pills themselves.’”
It’s not the first time Erickson has danced with controversy, either. He once said President Barack Obama won a Nobel Peace Prize due to “affirmative action quotas,” called former Supreme Court Justice David Souter “the only goat-fucking child molester to ever serve on the Supreme Court,” and even jeered that “ugly feminists” should “return to their kitchens.”
Those comments and a litany of others raised alarms at media watchdog group FAIR when CNN announced in 2010 that they were hiring Erickson, prompting them to warn that the network was “scraping the bottom of the barrel” and urge readers to contact CNN and ask that they reconsider. Despite those prior comments and FAIR’s best efforts, the network has kept Erickson on as a regular political analyst.
CNN had not issued a statement about Erickson’s comparison of the DNC’s speeches to “The Vagina Monologues” at the time of this story’s publication, and Erickson did not respond to a request for comment.
“The Vagina Monologues,” a landmark piece of feminist literature and performance art, features women discussing their genitals in a frank, sometimes erotic and sometimes unflattering manner. The DNC’s first night of speeches did not exclusively feature women, and while many spoke about defending women’s health care, the word “vagina” never came up.