| Gay programming has arrived - for a price
By David Zurawik, Baltimore Sun
Los Angeles Times - June 27, 2003
It might not be as headline-grabbing as the coming out of Ellen DeGeneres' character on ABC's "Ellen" six years ago, or, perhaps, even the kiss shared by gay partners Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman during CBS' Tony Awards telecast to celebrate their award for the songs in "Hairspray." But something deeper and more important has been happening in the way
homosexuality is being portrayed on television: Viewers are being offered
some of the most enlightened images of gay, lesbian and transgendered
identity ever but only on those cable channels for which viewers are
paying a premium.
If nothing else, programming this month Gay Pride Month has
brought into sharper focus the growing disparity between images of gay and
lesbian life as seen on pay cable versus those on "free" broadcast
television.
"If you look at pay cable, there is all this interesting and sometimes
wonderful stuff starting to happen. But, more and more, it's happening
only on cable, as opposed to network TV," said Suzanna Danuta Walters, a
Georgetown University professor of women's studies and author of "All the
Rage: The Story of Gay Visibility in America." Although Walters singled
out such series as "Six Feet Under" (HBO) and "Queer as Folk" (Showtime),
the pattern extends beyond weekly series to made-for-TV movies,
documentaries and concerts covering the primary genres of cable
television.
In such programs as the Showtime movie "Soldier's Girl" and the Cinemax
documentary "Ruthie & Connie: Every Room in the House" even Ellen
DeGeneres' HBO special Saturday night, "Here and Now" the lives of gay,
lesbian and transgendered people are connected culturally and politically
to a larger community, which gives them meaning and context.
Furthermore, these people are not defined primarily in opposition to or
deviation from the dominant culture. These are crucial criteria in judging
images of gay and lesbian identity in the media, Walters said.
Indeed, they are key in judging media representations of any minority,
and are the same benchmarks, for example, used by Donald Bogle to access
television images of African Americans in his book "Prime Time Blues:
African-Americans on Network Television."
Bogle praises "The Cosby Show," for example, for being "subtly and
brilliantly contextualized with African-American cultural signs and
references."
As Walters puts it in applying the principles to gay identity, "One of
the measures of really progressive gay representations is when gays are
not just tokenized accessories to heterosexual life, but are depicted as
producing, living in and benefiting from a rich and vibrant multicultural
gay community. And that's what you are starting to see on pay cable."
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