Posted on 10/11/2008 2:07:09 PM PDT by wagglebee
If youre noticing your TV screen turning pink, its not just your imagination.
The new broadcast TV season includes 22 series featuring a total of 35 openly gay characters, according to the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD). GLAAD, which rides herd over all Hollywood scripts dealing with homosexuality, says the number of series with homosexual characters is a record. These series are on ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox and the CW networks. The total figure does not include shows on cable, like The L Word on Showtime, or MTVs all-gay LOGO network.
A new Eye on Culture report from the Culture and Media Institute, Lavender Propaganda, reveals the depth and breadth of the current media campaign to promote homosexuality to average Americans. But Hollywood became a uniformly pro-gay industry well before Will & Grace or the slew of 2008-9 network shows.
In 1996, the year before Ellen DeGeneres came out as a lesbian on Ellen, Los Angeles magazine writer David Ehrenstein boasted in a May cover story, More than Friends:
There are openly gay writers on almost every major prime-time situation comedy you can think of In short, when it comes to sitcoms, gays rule.
Here is an excerpt from my book The Age of Consent: The Rise of Relativism and the Corruption of Popular Culture about the gay influence on TV:
Ehrenstein, a professed homosexual, cheerfully admits that gay writers are attempting to influence viewers with a homosexual agenda:
The gay and lesbian writers of today have been pushing the envelope any chance they get. In fact, theyre encouraged to do so. Since current comedies are positively obsessed with the intimate sex lives of straight young singles, who better to write them than members of a minority famed for its sexual candor as a result of the influx of gay writers, even the most heterosexual of sitcoms often possess that most elusive of undertones the gay sensibilityFrasier being a case in point.
The gay sensibility consists, according to two homosexual writers, of a very urban, very educated, ironic, detached, iconoclastic attitude. Plus, a deliberate overdose of sexuality.
In her 1989 book Target: Primetime: Advocacy Groups and the Struggle over Entertainment Television, Kathryn Montgomery explains why homosexual activists have been particularly effective in Hollywood:
Gays had one important advantage over other groups. They referred to it as their agents in place. According to gay activists, there were a substantial number of gay people working in the television industry who were not open about their life-style. Some held high-level positions. While unable to promote the gay cause on the inside, they could be very helpful to advocates on the outside, especially by leaking information. These agents in place became one of the linchpins of gay media strategy.
In January 1973, Ron Gold, the New York-based Gay Activist Alliances Media Director, wrote to all three networks, requesting meetings. Gold, who had been a reporter for Variety, also helped stage a hostile confrontation at ABC that was strikingly similar to the strong-arm tactics employed at the American Psychiatric Association convention in 1971, when gay activists openly threatened psychiatrists who viewed homosexuality as a treatable disorder.
As Montgomery reports:
Before a meeting had been scheduled with ABC, GAA members were smuggled a script by one of their agents in place. It was for an upcoming episode of Marcus Welby, M.D., entitled The Other Martin Loring and it concerned a married man who asked Dr. Welby to help him with his homosexual tendencies. Welby assured the man that as long as he suppressed his homosexual desires, he would not fail as a husband and father.As Gold remembers, GAA leaders blew a cork when they read the script. .Instead of waiting for an appointment with ABC executives, the activists with the help of another network insider took over the network executive offices. Recalls Gold: We knew somebody who worked there who gave us a kind of place of the place and we did a little scouting in advance and we managed to sneak into the offices. The confrontation at ABC headquarters was hostile and explosive.
It ended with the arrests of several activists. Montgomery notes that although the program in question still aired, it did have an impact on later decisions .ABC executives decided to invite gay activist comments on any new scripts dealing with homosexuality. Since gays had their own ways of getting scripts anyway, this approach was even more essential than with other groups.
The other networks soon followed, and the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation now routinely vets all TV scripts dealing with homosexuality to make sure that the public sees only what the activists want. That means, among other things, no programs showing ex-gays, people who have overcome homosexual temptations, unless it is to mock them.
Montgomery summarizes: In time, the gay activists gained a reputation within the industry as the most sophisticated and successful advocacy group operating in network television.
The stakes go far beyond television. A September 2008 fundraising mailer from GLAAD proclaims:
History proves that social change drives legal and political progress. To succeed as a community, we must transform the way millions of Americans feel about us.
With a record number of homosexual characters on television, and only pro-gay story lines, its not surprising that polls show that Americans are becoming increasingly accepting of homosexuality.
The activists are well on their way toward their goal of recasting traditional sexual morality as a form of bigotry. The next step will be to bring government muscle down on traditionalists just like theyre doing right now in Canada and Europe.
Robert Knight is director of the Culture and Media Institute, a division of the Media Research Center.
I can’t remember the last time I watched one of those mindless shows on the alphabet networks. It might have been during the Reagan presidency...
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We lived in an area that had very poor TV reception. Without an antenna reception was impossible. So...To get rid of the TV we merely canceled the cable.
We did have a monitor with a VCR and later DVD. We would go to the library an pick up PBS, Nova, National Geographic, and History Channel productions. The children could watch these any time.
Once a week ( if the kids did all their chores) we would rent a video.
We had a few educational video games. Their favorite was "Sim City".
Yes, the children saw TV and played video games at the homes of their friends and when they visited relatives. I considered this OK and it was enough for them to keep up with what they needed to know about TV and games in our culture.
The children are adults now. Two are married with kids and none have TV in their home.
With literally hundreds of options on satellite TV, cable, netflicks, You Tube, texting, Face Book, message boards, games, etc. people simply are not all watching the same programs as they once did when I was a kid. It is **normal** not to have the biggest hit of the season because it is assumed that you are watching different "biggest hit" of the season or doing something else electronic.
But how do you successfully raise a child to be a nonconformist when a toxic culture is furiously, even violently, trying to make everyone conform?
I strongly recommend that you homeschool your children. It is an amazing and wonderful process to see how the intense and sustained effort that put into play eventually become their passionate adult work.
If they have a safe home with caring parents ( with whom they primarily identify rather than their friends) the toxic culture will not stick. Homeschooling is the best way to achieve this.
There is a huge difference in a character being gay to advance a plot line and a character being gay to advance an issue in the political landscape. I think Oscar is the former. He is gay to advance the issue of Micheal being an idiot not anything else.
I think his sexual orientation is far more an issue of what is funny than what is politically correct.
I’m also honor bound to say Go Cowboys tonight, so Go Cowboys. It is nice to be cheering on the bowl eligible team from Oklahoma tonight for once.
We don’t watch all that much TV but we do watch TV. We joke, oh who’s the homo character, etc. It seems many of the shows we watch always have a homo character or a homo storyline, briefly.
Even the shows we watch on HGTV have more homos. House Hunters is a fave of my youngest and me but seems they’re having lots of homos on lately.
Thanks for the thoughtful reply.
Ironically, the sodomite character on Heroes you refer to is now playing John Conner on the Terminator show.
That’s him? I didn’t even make the connection.
Alcoholics, arsonists, gamblers, sex addicts of all tastes, and others with destructive or aberrant appetites are everywhere as well. We do not celebrate or endorse them.
If a sinner is a republican, swell. We are all sinners. But I’ll not excuse or endorse or excuse or ever accept deviant sexual behavior.
Alcoholics, arsonists, gamblers, sex addicts of all tastes, and others with destructive or aberrant appetites are everywhere as well. We do not celebrate or endorse them.
If a sinner is a republican, swell. We are all sinners. But I’ll not excuse or endorse or excuse or ever accept deviant sexual behavior.
What? Don’t all heterosexual people love to hear all about gays and their lifestyle...over and over and over and over again?
Funny thing, the gay people I personally know are almost all against the Hollywood agenda. They just want to live their lives in peace and co-exist. Then there’s the one that’s not so peaceful, and not so willing to co-exist. She’s pretty loud. And not so pretty.
Greetings to you, lentulusgracchus!
I’m back and it’s good to see familiar - screen names, even if not faces!
“Im also honor bound to say Go Cowboys tonight, so Go Cowboys. It is nice to be cheering on the bowl eligible team from Oklahoma tonight for once.”
Congratulations to your Cowboys!! That was quite the Mizzou coup! And since you are an OSU fan, I can only assume that you didn’t mind the hurting that the Horns put on the Sooners. I LOVED IT! And even my beloved alma mater, Baylor, pulled out a conference win! Go RGIII, go! It was the best football day I’ve seen in ages!! Can’t wait to see how the top 25 rankings shake out. :o)
The Texas-OU game was pretty exciting as well. I’m actually pretty worried about the game with Baylor next week. It is pretty much to the point where there isn’t a bad team in the Big XII South. Every week is just a battle.
s/
"LG"
I hope you and yours are well and happy - we’re still kicking! And plan to do a bit more kicking, especially now that I’m back on FR! ;-)
(Is sinkspur still around?)
What’s RW - I forgot! (I need to kick myself in the brain a little - amazing how I forget stuff if I don’t immediately need it.)
Don't kick yourself! ;)
I guess I forgot what RW meant since I so rarely visit it.
:-]
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