Posted on 05/08/2002 4:28:03 AM PDT by AppyPappy
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NBC's sitcom Will & Grace debuted in 1998 with a promise to advance the agenda of homosexual activists. Since the first episode, it hasn't slowed down. April was a typical month, with its typical homosexual humor, promotion of promiscuous sex and jokes about alcohol and substance abuse.
In one episode, Glenn Close is featured as a bisexual photographer with an apparently voracious sexual appetite. Her character kisses both Will and Grace - both of whom are complete strangers to her - and then simulates sex with them with vulgar movements. NBC used this clip in a promo for the program, repeatedly airing the passionate kisses. NBC knows that the more the audience sees of homosexual activity, the more familiar and thus less repulsive it becomes.
April 4 episode:
Will, Grace, Jack and Karen are the four regular characters. The men are homosexual, the women straight. In the April 4 episode, Karen remarks, "I got a little misty - down there" (indicating her crotch) after she saw Jack perform as a straight man in a mattress commercial. Jack grows fearful that now no one will cast him as a homosexual.
April 11 episode:
On April 11, Will took Jack's 12-year-old son to a father-son event because Jack has a conflict. The episode is filled with sex jokes, public nudity jokes, condom jokes and more.
April 25 episode:
Detective Gavin Hatch (Michael Douglas) hits on Will in the April 25 episode after Will's lap top computer is stolen and Hatch investigates. He and Will go to a homosexual bar where Jack sees them slow-dancing and warns Will that Hatch is nutty. There is reference to Jack's inviting "three hot guys over for a 'fourgy,'" and jokes about Karen's substance abuse are frequent. Other joke lines focus on stool samples, urine and Det. Hatch's penis.
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