The Phnom Penh Post

LGBTQ representa­tion on TV ticking up, but barriers remain

- Thomas Urbain

BACK in the era of the 1969 Stonewall Riots, the LGBTQ community was practicall­y non-existent on the small

screen.

And even if obstacles remain, significan­t strides have been made since then, especially in the past two decades.

In past fictional series gay characters were often ridiculed or caricature­d, and sometimes portrayed as deviant or dangerous.

The 1967 television documentar­y The Homosexual­s lays bare how television treated the community, says Robert Thompson, a media scholar at Syracuse University.

“Essentiall­y it was still treating the idea of homosexual­ity as a disorder, that it was something that gone wrong,” he said.

The Television Code – a set of moral standards introduced to American TV in 1952 – implicitly prohibited any reference to homosexual­ity in a positive light, an injunction that was abolished only in 1983.

The taboo also existed behind the camera.

“When I came to Los Angeles to write, you could not be an out writer on a staff. It just wasn’t done,” said Stan Zimmerman, who began screenwrit­ing there in the early 1980s.

In that time there were more LGBTQ roles, though many were written as a way to focus on their sexual orientatio­n rather than out of interest in the character.

In the early 1990s, American cinema – which until then had taken a similar attitude to television – made a decisive pivot with a series of films including Philadelph­ia and My Own Private Idaho.

Telev ision’s watershed moment was in April 30, 1997: for t he first time, t he main character of a primetime sitcom, Ellen, came out during an episode that went down in histor y.

The effect was heightened by the fact t hat t he act ress herself, Ellen DeGeneres, opened up about her own homosexual­it y at the same time.

The ultra-conservati­ve pastor Jerry Falwell dubbed her “Ellen DeGenerate”, as the episode prompted some advertiser­s to pull out, religious groups to organise and some sporadic demonstrat­ions.

But reactions were largely positive, as the movement for better representa­tion on television accelerate­d.

LGBTQ characters appeared on the series Will & Grace, and later ER, Dawson’s Creek and Spin City. In February 2001, the show Buffy the Vampire Slayer showed a lesbian kiss, a first for a hit series.

The public proved largely open to this sexual diversity, allowing viewers to feel represente­d for the first time.

“The bottom line with network television: it is all about money, so if they feel they can make money, they’re going to put it on,” Zimmerman said. “A lot of television works from fear.”

Cable, streaming open doors

The new v isibi l it y of LGBTQ cha racters on telev ision coincided wit h t he emergence of more complex, ci nematic telev ision, i ncluding The Sopranos and The Wire.

The advent of cable and streaming also opened up a new creative Ellen, space – the media environmen­t now counts nearly 500 series, versus less than 100 when large networks had the monopoly.

The freedom of producers “not trying to appeal to a huge, mass audience” prompted major changes, Thompson said, with many more characters.

A touch over one per cent of recurring characters on major US channels were LGBTQ in 2007-2008, according to the GLAAD gay rights associatio­n.

By 2018-2019, the proportion had jumped to almost nine per cent – almost double that of American adults who, according to a 2017 Gallup poll, say they identify with the community.

Since 2013, television has also opened up to transgende­r people, via Orange is the New Black, Transparen­t and more recently, Pose.

But more representa­tion doesn’t always translate to the real world, according to Candace Moore, a gender studies scholar at Carleton College in Minnesota.

“More positive representa­tions of LGBTQ lives on television give us the false, but self-affirming, sense that we’ve obtained a cultural acceptance that is in fact fictional,” Moore said.

Moore noted that since Donald Trump’s presidenti­al election the US has faced a renewed hostility toward sexual minorities, so “LGBTQ representa­tion in scripted television probably presents a slightly sunnier version of what’s actually going on in America right now.”

Even on television, some barriers remain. In March 2018, the CBS series Instinct was the first on a large network to feature a gay main character, but leading roles still generally elude the LGBTQ community.

Youth programmes have proven sensitive territory.

A few series featuring teenagers have dared, including PEN15, Sex Education and One Day at a Time, but LGBTQ representa­tion is even more rare for children’s programmin­g.

In May a local affiliate of the PBS public television network in the southern state of Alabama refused to broadcast an episode of the cartoon Arthur, in which a recurring character marries another man.

Still, Zimmerman says progress is palpable.

“Now you do have gay, lesbian, trans writers, directors, actors,” he said.

“Because we’re all getting more opportunit­ies, hopefully those opportunit­ies will show up on screen or in film, to see how we’re represente­d in all parts of our lives – good, bad, funny sad – not just onedimensi­onal characters and not just sidekicks.” also

 ??  ?? MTelevisio­n’s watershed moment was in April 30, 1997 – for the first time, the main character of a primetime sitcom, out during an episode that went down in history. came
MTelevisio­n’s watershed moment was in April 30, 1997 – for the first time, the main character of a primetime sitcom, out during an episode that went down in history. came

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