Latest News Roundup - All posts tagged 'lesbian'
Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Glee: Being gay is all about entertaining straight guys

BY ROB SALERNO - Like a pimple just about ready to pop, the "Santana's a lesbian" plot-line came to a big ugly head on last night's Glee, as Santana dealt with being outed in a Congressional campaign by coming to terms with her sexual identity, confronting her family and reestablishing her relationship with her girlfriend by being sang at by various members of the two glee clubs.

Now, I generally think the show's goal of making sure that all its viewers know that gay people are okay and deserve love and affection is laudable, but I was pretty horrified by how this episode repeatedly presented being gay as something that straight characters react to instead of the lived experience of one of its main characters.

From Rachel's early admission that she was scared to go to college in New York without her "best gay" Kurt to the announcement that the glee club's assignment of the week was to sing songs by women so that Santana would feel better, it was like the gay kids just exist in the show as set pieces around which the other characters dance.

At least Santana realized the absurdity of the "Make Santana feel less isolated by singling her out and singing about how messed up her life is now" assignment. I also cringed through Kurt and Blaine's rendition of Pink's anti-suicide song "Perfect," and I'm glad the writers didn't try to sell that on its face. 

Finn seems to be so worried that Santana will commit suicide that he makes an oblique reference to Jamie Hubley and Jamey Rodemeyer before mumbling a maudlin version of "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun" at her. Points off for that, Finn. "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun" was written by a man.

The worst scene of the episode came when a previously never seen sophomore football player finds Santana and offers to take up the "challenge" of "straightening" her out. This leads the entire female cast to tell the dude to bug off because being gay isn't a choice and lesbians don't just exist to titillate straight guys. They do this by singing Katy Perry's "I Kissed a Girl," which is a song about straight girls teasing lesbianism to titillate straight guys.

Fun fact #1: This isn't the first time Glee has tackled this song, although in the pilot episode it was mostly for laughs. 

Fun fact #2: This isn't Perry's most homophobic song. Before she became the poster child for It Gets Better, she had a song called "Ur So Gay (And You Don't Even Like Boys)."

Anyway, this sequence mysteriously makes Santana feel better, even though it's an example of all the discrimination she's going to face for the rest of her life. At the end of the song, she announces that she's already come out to her family and everything was okay, which, what? That's a pretty major event in this story and the writers decided to do it off camera? I guess Santana's story doesn't really matter at all unless the boys of New Directions can mumble intently about it while the girls gyrate.

Okay, there's also a fairly well-written but ultimately meaningless scene where Santana comes out to her grandmother, who kicks her out. But since we've never even heard of this character before and it's not like Santana doesn't have other family, it's hard to see why I'm supposed to care all of a sudden.

Actual lesbians appeared in the soundtrack, with Puck rocking a pretty great acoustic cover of Melissa Etheridge's "I'm the Only One" and Santana and Shelby pulling off a solid duet of kd lang's "Constant Craving." 



Two weeks ago, I wrote, "I also hope they can find a new direction for Santana rather than having her turn her bitchiness up to 11 in order to protect herself while hate-singing "I Kissed a Girl" at the male members of New Directions." There's still some time on this storyline to work that out, but it's becoming a big mess the deeper it goes. 

One final thought: why does no one seem to care about Brittany being a lesbian? 


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Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Who's the child here again?

Seems a young woman in a tuxedo, arm in arm with her girlfriend at a prom, was too much of a vision of the 2012 kind for some truly inspired Mississippi parents.

Inspired, because they actually dreamed up a particularly vicious plan to derail lesbian student Constance McMillen’s wish to celebrate her graduation with her date and the rest of her cohort.

Wrap this around your conspiracy-theory grey matter, people: they sent her a fake invitation to a fake prom, while staging an actual prom at a “secret location” for Constance’s graduating class — without her.

Constance (pictured below with her dad) and her date ended up with five other students — two with learning difficulties — at the “fake” country club event, McMillen told The Advocate

Constance’s reaction?

“They had the time of their lives. That’s the one good thing that’s come out of this, [these kids] didn’t have to worry about people making fun of them [at their prom].”

“The Child is father of the man…” William Wordsworth wrote in "The Rainbow."

And in her approach to what has degenerated into nothing less than a psychological hazing worthy of drunken frat boys, Constance has proven to be worthy of the title, adult.

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Andrea Houston
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Natasha Barsotti
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