Entertainment Weekly this week has the boys of Queer Eye for the Straight Guy on the
cover.
They deal briefly with the stereotypes issue , here's a pargraph:
Quote:
''Queer Eye'' hasn't made everybody happy. Influential Washington Post TV critic Tom Shales accused the show of peddling a ''patronizing mentality,'' while the New York Post's Linda Stasi argued that the show demonstrates that Americans are ''afraid of gay men who act normal.'' Collins dismisses the rancor (''Hey, there are worse things than...having style, taste, and class, right?''), while Kyan, the grooming guru and resident hunk, charges Shales and Stasi with pinning the Fab 5 into a no-win scenario. ''If gay people decide that they can't be flamboyant and funny because straight people aren't going to like it, then what's the point? Either way, we're not allowed to be ourselves. I want to be gay on my own terms.''
The magazine seems to be of the opinion that since
There is also a
review of it later on and the woman who wrote it went all out and said that
Quote:
As mordant as Carson and the other's observations are (upon first learning Zalta's parabolic measurements, he blurts, ''Ooh, Tragikistan!''), they are also surprisingly kindhearted and tender. ''Queer Eye'' may be just more of the same televised proselytizing about better living through shopping, but after witnessing a series of helpless straight guys -- and not a single metrosexual among them -- cheerfully submit to the hands-on ministrations of five gay men, the subversiveness of it all hits you. (''Have you ever had a man undress you before?'' Carson asks Schepel, who happily goes along with the day of shopping, salon styling, home decorating, eyebrow tinting, and spray tanning before a big unveiling at his first gallery opening.) ''Queer Eye'' is a show about people who need people. It's a gay-straight version of a Michael Jackson-Paul McCartney duet. ''Queer Eye'' is glasnost
The magazine also has a follow up article called "Super Queer," On the state of yes , "gaysploitation." Their take on Queer eye for the straight guy:
Quote:
"QEFTSG is terrific and groundbreaking because it upends the saintly stereotype: These men are flawed and fabulous. They're strong, pushy, and intolerant of those who don't listen to them. And unlike Will & Grace's Jack, they aren't the butt of jokes - indeed, they actually excel at something."
The article chronicle's gay men's accomplishments on tv and how it's now a trend reality tv brought on as many of the reality shows are the ones who have gay men on. They call this trend "gaysploitation:"
Quote:
Before you go all Foxy Brown on me, a bit of history. Blaxploitation films (most notably Sweet Sweetback's Baadassss Song and Shaft) were made by African-American filmmakers out to exploit an untapped audience, not their casts. Then genre embraced black stereotypes (virility, strenght, ass-whupping ability) and exaggerated them. (Sound familiar, Carson?) To hear executives talk, today's gay programming decisions come from a similar place."
And what about lesbians you ask?
Quote:
Pleaste take a moment to pity the poor lesbian who has completely missed this current TV revolution. After rididng the lesbian-chic wave into the mid '90s and cresting with Ellen's coming out in 1997, she's been shoved back in the closet, longing for the days when Cidny Crawford shaved k.d. lang on the cover of Vanity Fair.)
We're out man,

, but I think they got it wrong, I think it crested when ER, Buffy, and AMC had unspoiled great lesbian main characters on the air, when everthing was new and exciting and you had choices, heck I might even metion that non lesbian, lesbian Original Cindy for good measure. I will agree it's a dry landscape right now.
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