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What is the origin of 'pale, male and stale'?

English Language & Usage Asked on February 13, 2021

The major Cabinet reshuffle of Prime Minister David Cameron this week has been seen by much of the press as an opportunity taken to dispose of ministers who are white, male, middle-aged, middle-class, and hence perceived boring, in favour of more young people, more females and non-whites. And all this in readiness for next year’s election.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/cabinet-shuffle-in-britain-culls-the-male-pale-and-stale/article19628249/

The term ‘pale, male and stale’ has been applied to departees like Kenneth Clarke, Dominic Grieve etc. (It has also been seen as an opportunity to dispose of Euro-enthusiasts in favour of Euro-sceptics, but that’s another story).

My question is about the idiom ‘pale,male and stale’. Did the expression exist previously? Who can be credited with having coined it?

I ask as one who perhaps fits the description, but am happy to wear it with my old-fashioned shirt and trousers.

2 Answers

The eldest reference that I could find was from a book about American Women and Flight Since 1940, saying

In 1992 NASA administrator Daniel Goldin declared that the agency was too "pale, male and stale."

But I also stumbled about some uses of "male, pale and stale" while looking for that.

Correct answer by skymningen on February 13, 2021

I also found an earlier incidence of this quote in a journal article: Lawler, A. (1996). Goldin puts NASA on new trajectory. Science, 272(5263), 800-803. The quote you cite appears on page 800.

"Although Goldin was part of that community - he worked at NASA briefly before joining TRW to climb the corporate ladder - his Jewish background, brash manner, and unconventional ideas set him apart from what Goldin gleefully dubs the 'pale, male, and stale' coterie at NASA and in industry."

Answered by Sam Young on February 13, 2021

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