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- Path: sparky!uunet!meaddata!markw
- From: markw@meaddata.com (Mark Wasson)
- Newsgroups: soc.motss
- Subject: GLB-TV
- Date: 28 Jan 1993 00:05:15 GMT
- Organization: Mead Data Central, Dayton OH
- Lines: 62
- Distribution: usa
- Message-ID: <1k77vrINNiig@meaddata.meaddata.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: linguist.meaddata.com
-
- My Tuesday night TV kind of jumped out at me in how prominent gays/gay
- issues were featured. I expected it from the Maria Shriver special,
- (The Gay Nineties: Sex, Power and Influence), but the other shows did
- just as much.
-
- NBC Nightly News
-
- In addition to a fluff piece that essentially was a promotion of the
- Shriver special, John Chancellor's commentary was four-square in favor
- of lifting the ban on gays in the military.
-
- Key West (new series, FOX, 9-10, EST)
-
- I thought I'd give this new show a try, since I saw part of some
- episode being filmed when I was in Key West last fall. There is some
- ongoing subplot in which someone was elected mayor after raising the
- incumbent mayor's homosexuality as a campaign issue. When she first
- meets with the civil service staff, they challenge her on having
- raised the issue. She awkwardly asks if there are any gays among the
- staff, and about 1/2 raise their hands. The most vocal gay in that
- meeting eventually helps out the mayor in a situation with a large
- contributor who didn't get his way on some decision. The mayor's
- storyline will apparently be ongoing, since it was not connected to
- the protaganist's, and yet one of the scenes I saw being filmed had
- them talking.
-
- Considering how exaggerated (to the point of caricature) that most of
- the characters were portrayed, the featured gay man seemed quite
- everyday.
-
- (General review - "Key West" seems to be a Northern Exposure wannabe
- without being so intellectual. Far more woment walking around in
- bikinis than I saw on my visit, presumably as part of FOX's attempt to
- sell young male viewers to advertisers. It's mindless TV that I'll
- probably stick with, at least until I see what I watched being filmed.)
-
- The Gay Nineties: Sex, Power and Influence (NBC)
-
- A rather catchy title - I'm sure it brought in the viewers. Basically
- it seemed to be a reasonably good attempt to present ordinary everyday
- gays to mainstream America in order to get past some of the
- stereotypes. There were some stories on everyday life, problems
- encountered in a hostile community, and growing political influence.
- ----
- Just an everyday normal night of TV? Not yet. The nightly news
- did a good job last night, but has often been sensationalistic in the
- past. It should seem normal for shows like Key West, Melrose Place
- and Roseanne to have gay characters, but three shows in one TV season
- does represent progress. And specials like Shriver's that focus on
- family or work issues should include same-sex families and gay workers
- as part of the broad mosaic of families and workers - neither singling
- them out for special attention nor ignoring them altogether.
-
- But all in all, congratulations to the broadcast medium for at least
- one night of GLB-representative TV.
-
- Mark
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