Contents:
- MORN FAY’S BIG, GAY (AND IMPORTANT) WEDDG
- ‘MORN FAY’ WRER REVEALS EMOTNAL BACKSTORY OF ‘HISTORIC’ GAY MARRIAGE PROPOSAL (EXCLIVE)
- THE MORN FAY EFFECT: POP CULTURE’S ROLE THE GAY-MARRIAGE REVOLUTN
- ‘MORN FAY’ CONSIRG A GAY WEDDG AFTER SUPREME COURT RULGS
- 'MORN FAY' AND GAY MARRIAGE: IT'S COMPLITED
- ‘MORN FAY’ FALLY THROWS THE GAY MARRIAGE EVERYONE WANTED
MORN FAY’S BIG, GAY (AND IMPORTANT) WEDDG
In what is, at the most, a major moment televisn history and, at the very least, a quiet step forward for the marriage equaly movement, TV’s most award and send most-watched edy seri aired a gay the bate over the legalizatn of gay marriage makg headl on a daily basis, ’s hard not to read to the fact that 10.
” Ever sce Morn Fay accintally beme televisn’s go-to polil lightng rod, the show’s gay uple and the ton they’ve passed together on screen have llaterally bee bean’s of progrs when to what uld broadly be referred to as “acceptance” by the public at might argue that what two televisn characters do on a s should hardly be nsted as “important, ” but as we’ve long learned, polics and pop culture are often extribly tertwed. Now, ’s apparently OK for two guys to share that bed, ’s impossible to quantify how many words have been voted to the progrs—or, some opn, the lack thereof—when to pictg gay characters on mastream TV. There are some who reject the ia that Mch and Cam, two characters who are broadly drawn and arguably perpetuate margalizg stereotyp of gay-ish character tras, are the unwtg poster gays for the equal-rights movement, at least some of the more uniated segments of the one thg that’s never been broadly drawn when to Mch and Cam, and much of this is owed to the warm chemistry between stars Jse Tyler Fergon and Eric Stontreet, is their love.
‘MORN FAY’ WRER REVEALS EMOTNAL BACKSTORY OF ‘HISTORIC’ GAY MARRIAGE PROPOSAL (EXCLIVE)
”From the time that Morn Fay’s brilliant pilot buted and Cam was thstg newly adopted Lily to the air while “Circle of Life” om The Ln Kg played the background—a geni moment one of the most perfect pilots om the last 10 years—Mch and Cam and their gayns were also thst forward, their every actn and even their mere existence, on a mastream seri stantly embraced by crics and viewers alike, was a gay love story that we actually jo the middle. There were no plots, as there ually are on work TV when gay characters are volved, about g to terms wh their own sexuali, g out of the closet, or nvcg their fai to love them.
It was the polil maniftatn of a Sefeld joke, reassurg voters that they don’t hate the gay muny—a verable “not that there’s anythg wrong wh that…”Then me the clamorg for what people wanted Mch and Cam to reprent, more than what they maybe actually did. And that was, neglectg the fact that they were s characters, a “real” gay uple.
And, fally, the petn to have them fally make legal (you know, once California, where the show tak place, ma so a legal gay marriage was actually possible) other words, this was a very special episo of the show, and a landmark episo of televisn, general. ”)There was also the edy of errors stemmg om the mismunitn between Mch and his father, Jay, who he thks isn’t on board wh the ia of the gay weddg but, of urse, uldn’t be more proud.
THE MORN FAY EFFECT: POP CULTURE’S ROLE THE GAY-MARRIAGE REVOLUTN
Jay, a b obtely standg for the ntgent of Amerins who happily endorse gay marriage but don’t know the rrect or acceptable terms for discsg , keeps parg Mch and Cam’s ceremony to a “regular weddg. When the two men actually said “I do, ” the only thg borrg on a natural disaster was the flood of tears by the guts ’ve seen gay upl get married on TV before.
‘MORN FAY’ CONSIRG A GAY WEDDG AFTER SUPREME COURT RULGS
Now, wh Proposn 8 and the Defense of Marriage Act DOMA feated, the seri is about to cement the public image of a happy gay nuclear fay wh the weddg of long-term boyiends, Mchell and Cameron.
Although the reprentatn of gay and lbian characters on Amerin screens is beg creasgly mon, is easy to fet how recently US televisn was a straights-only doma.
In the 1960s and 1970s, homosexualy on televisn was treated like a social problem, or an exotic disease. The low pot of this sort of programmg was CBS’s 1967 hour-long vtigatn The Homosexuals.
'MORN FAY' AND GAY MARRIAGE: IT'S COMPLITED
It opened wh a poll statg that Amerins saw homosexualy as “more harmful to society than adultery, abortn or prostutn”, and did ltle to dispel those fears. While there were also more thoughtful treatments of homosexual characters, such as the ABC TV movie, That Certa Summer, even the tend to portray gayns as a personal misfortune.
As gay rights groups grew more vol, televisn grew braver pictg gay characters. Shows like Hill Street Blu and LA Law featured gay characters, typilly one-off storyl or “special episos”. Here homosexualy was still an issue, though was more likely to be a personal or emotnal one rather than the social problem of earlier tim.
‘MORN FAY’ FALLY THROWS THE GAY MARRIAGE EVERYONE WANTED
But notable exceptns like Soap’s Jodie Dallas asi, gay characters tend to have a limed shelf-life. Unwillg to show the velopment of gay relatnships, works only showed them g out, and later, stgglg wh the implitns of AIDS. By the 1990s gay and lbian characters were almost rigur on prime-time ss.
Ron Becker has argued that gay TV characters the 1990s beme a kd of stat symbol for viewers who wanted to showse their own progrsive polics through the culture they nsumed.