... Steven was a pleasant surprise. I heard "historian"
and I prepared myself to be bored senseless. Instead he
was enthusiastic, funny, and extremely personable (he even turned
his body so he spoke to the audience). He was a treat!
He praised the producers on the work that they're doing, and
on "breaking ground" in a way that's not only mind-boggling,
but fulfilling for many gay men and women who grew up without
images that they could identify with on television. He
spoke about PBS which, though in the 80s made great strides,
hasn't evolved very much since then. You won't see a station
like that picking up QAF or the L-Word.
Gay men and women
are used in mainstream shows, he said, usually as either a complication
in straight people's lives, as comedic relief, or as the neighbour
who sits and gives advice when needed. QAF and the L-Word
are the first shows, he said, where gay people actually know
other gay people. You couldn't hear the line that followed
over the laughter and applause! It's the first time, he
said, that gay people are actually important enough to warrant
their own show, their own story, and where straight people aren't
the core characters, but the complication.
The other thing
that was funny (well not really) and Dan touched on this as
well, was that the Network Television embrace gay characters
as long as they are "non-threatening:" the flaming
hairdresser, the homicidal lesbian....anyone that "entertained"
or who the audience could look at and say "well of course
she's attracted to women, she's a pychotic killer, CLEARLY she's
not normal." But when you have same-sex couples,
living and loving and having intellectual conversations it forces
people to reassess their beliefs that something's "wrong"
with gays, so the networks shy away from that. ...