Los Angeles Times

Bruce Jenner interview reactions largely positive

- By Lorraine Ali

When Bruce Jenner revealed to Diane Sawyer what many had already speculated — that the 1976 Olympic champion now publicly identifies as a woman — nearly 17 million people were watching.

It was a groundbrea­king event for the athlete turned reality star, and for an estimated 700,000 transgende­r Americans.

“It’s become a national teachable moment,” said Mara Keisling, executive director for the Washington, D.C.-based National Center for Transgende­r Equality. “Somebody made us realize we weren’t alone.”

During the two-hour interview on ABC’s “20/20,” an initially nervous and teary Jenner told Sawyer, “For all intents and purposes, I am

a woman.”

The show scored a 5.2 rating — about four times higher than is typical among viewers in the 18-to-49 age group on a Friday night, according to figures from Nielsen.

On social media, the interview elicited a largely positive reaction. “All of us deserve the right to be loved for who we are. Bravo #BruceJenne­r,” tweeted Oprah Winfrey. Public figures from Billie Jean King to Lady Gaga posted on Twitter and Facebook to show their support.

Talk show host Montel Williams, a self-proclaimed conservati­ve, voiced his support on Facebook despite heavy criticism from some of his fans. “Don’t like my support of Bruce Jenner or of #lgbt individual­s broadly?” he wrote. “No one is forcing you to be here.”

Among those who took issue was talk show host Wendy Williams, who referred to Jenner as a “fame whore” ahead of the Sawyer interview. More than a few negative tweets with religious overtones following the show called Jenner an “abominatio­n.”

Given Jenner’s recent role as the befuddled husband on the reality blockbuste­r show “Keeping Up with the Kardashian­s,“many in transgende­r circles and beyond expressed concern that the public coming out would be viewed as a publicity stunt, underminin­g a recent swell of otherwise-humanizing television dramas and news regarding their community. Jenner also revealed Friday that a docu-series chroniclin­g his life as a transgende­r woman will premiere on E! on July 26.

Jenner, 65, had been dogged by the paparazzi over the last year, producing photograph­s that noted the former athlete’s changing appearance, which has included skirts, nail polish and surgically enhanced feminine features.

Dressed in a simple button-down dress shirt, black slacks and deck shoes with white socks, a low-key Jenner took his long hair out of its ponytail early in the interview, a move symbolic of his newfound freedom. Jenner advised Sawyer to refer to him as “he” since he hasn’t yet publicly revealed his female name or completed his transition.

A series of transgende­r facts, short comments from experts and lessons on pronouns and terminolog­y peppered segments in between the interview.

At least a few of Sawyer’s awkward questions and surprised reactions reflected the larger prevailing confusion about what it means to be transgende­r.

“Are you gay?” she asked. “No,” Jenner answered patiently, his expression calm. “Sexual orientatio­n and gender identity are not the same thing.”

Acutely aware that his past as a gold-medal-winning Olympian and member of the Kardashian TV clan gave him a rare public platform, Jenner also said he wanted to use the opportunit­y to shed light on more marginaliz­ed corners of the transgende­r community.

“I appreciate the fact that Bruce Jenner mentioned the disproport­ional amount of discrimina­tion and violence that is experience­d by transgende­r women of color,” said Johanna Olson, medical director at the Center for Transyouth Health and Developmen­t at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. She said she was confident in the interview’s power to “raise national awareness and hopefully break down barriers for the transgende­r community.”

For a large majority of the American public, the power of pop culture in making sense of complicate­d, urgent social issues cannot be underestim­ated.

“Polls show that 9 out of 10 Americans personally know someone who is lesbian, gay or bisexual, but [only] around 8% say they know someone who is transgende­r,” said Nick Adams, director of programs and transgende­r media for GLAAD, an LGBT monitoring group that addresses discrimina­tion. “So for 92% of Americans, everything they know about a transgende­r person they’re learning from the media.”

Yet the recent attention focused on the transgende­r world has presented critical challenges for both the community and the media.

Covering trans issues is a minefield of seemingly new rules and terminolog­y. It’s for this very reason that organizati­ons such as GLAAD publish guidelines on respectful ways to write about the transgende­r community. For example, under its “terms to avoid,” GLAAD lists “sex change,” “pre-operative” and “post-operative” as problemati­c. The preferred term is “transition.”

At least one high-profile transgende­r woman says that the advocacy guidelines and talking points can feel confusing and restrictiv­e, even to her.

Zoey Tur, a freelance reporter for “Inside Edition” who transition­ed in the public eye, compared transgende­r terminolog­y to fibromyalg­ia diagnoses, in that it often overshadow­s the issue it’s meant to improve. “If you don’t know what something is,” she said, “you put it in the fibromyalg­ia box, because it sounds really good and now you know what you’re treating. But it could be all kinds of things.”

Jenner’s reveal comes on the heels of a series of breakthrou­gh moments on television that signal that attitudes toward transgende­r people had already been shifting.

On network TV, recent transgende­r storylines on “Glee” and “The Bold and the Beautiful” appear lightyears removed from the old variety show model of the cross-dressing comedian. The success of streaming series such as “Orange Is the New Black” and “Transparen­t” suggest there is an appetite for more nuanced and realistic storylines regarding transgende­r characters.

At least two network pilots are now in the works starring transgende­r actors in major roles: the CBS legal drama series “Doubt” with Laverne Cox, and the NBC pilot “The Curse of the Fuentes Women” featuring “Transparen­t’s” Trace Lysette.

Several cable channels, too, are or will soon be airing series centered around transgende­r main characters. Discovery Life’s first original series, “New Girls on the Block,” features six transgende­r women; TLC’s forthcomin­g “All That Jazz” is about trans teen YouTube activist Jazz Jennings; ABC Family’s “Becoming Us” is about a parent’s transition.

“We’re no longer just a punchline for comics, or just limited to that sphere,” said Dana Beyer, a transgende­r rights advocate and executive director of Gender Rights Maryland. “Stories about us are now of interest to the mainstream media, and not because we’re special but because we’re not just marginaliz­ed and ridiculed. We’re actually newsworthy.”

According to a study conducted by GLAAD over the last three years regarding “Trans Images on TV,” transgende­r roles on scripted television over the last decade have been typically limited to those of psychotic killers or murder victims. The most common profession? Sex worker.

But things are improving, particular­ly on reality TV, Adams says. “Reality television has been somewhat of a bright spot in terms of incorporat­ion of transgende­r people because they’re able to be themselves and tell their own stories.”

Former “Grey’s Anatomy” producers Tony Phelan and Joan Rater are excited about the new frontier of transgende­r issues on mainstream TV.

The couple is behind the CBS pilot “Doubt,” which costars Cox of “Orange Is the New Black” fame.

The actress plays one of three attorneys, Phelan said, “but [her gender] is not the first thing you notice about the character. Sure, it’s part of who she is, but that’s not the only thing that defines her as a person. That’s very true to the transgende­r people we know.”

One of those people is Rater and Phelan’s son Tom, an actor who also happens to have played the role of a transgende­r teen on ABC Family’s “The Fosters.” “Our kid is transgende­r, but our kid is also funny and smart,” Rater said. “It’s one part of who he is.” The couple hope to see more trans actors working in Hollywood. “It’s important to us,” Rater said.

Zoe Dolan is a real-life transgende­r defense attorney who’s worked on highprofil­e terrorism cases and was recently part of the team representi­ng Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, a son-inlaw of Osama bin Laden. For years she’s been trying, on her own blog and the Huffington Post, to draw attention to many of the issues now being played out on reality TV, scripted dramas and the news media.

“The transgende­r community makes up a fraction of a fraction of the population,” Dolan said, “but we do what everybody else does, so the challenge for the media and the entertainm­ent industry is to portray that world in all its complexity.”

Still, Dolan says that the acceptance of transgende­r television characters hasn’t yet translated to broad tolerance for transgende­r people. “That mask of acceptance has yet to melt down into the epidermal layer and into people’s hearts,” she said. “The way we are considered in our work lives in society is a very different question from how people accept us on a fundamenta­l, interperso­nal level. That’s the ultimate test.”

 ?? Jason Kempin
Getty Images ?? A MUSIC FAN holds a placard bearing the face of gold-medal Olympian Bruce Jenner with reddened cheeks and lips during the first weekend of Coachella in Indio this month. Jenner revealed to ABC’s Diane Sawyer that he now publicly identifies as a woman.
Jason Kempin Getty Images A MUSIC FAN holds a placard bearing the face of gold-medal Olympian Bruce Jenner with reddened cheeks and lips during the first weekend of Coachella in Indio this month. Jenner revealed to ABC’s Diane Sawyer that he now publicly identifies as a woman.
 ?? Janette Pellegrini
Getty Images ?? BRUCE JENNER said he wanted to use the “20/ 20”interview to shed light on more marginaliz­ed corners of the transgende­r community.
Janette Pellegrini Getty Images BRUCE JENNER said he wanted to use the “20/ 20”interview to shed light on more marginaliz­ed corners of the transgende­r community.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States