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ironman202 nailed it. It's not that the premise of the show is homophobic -- it's that I feel like I'm watching five gay Stepin Fetchits.
My visceral reaction to Carson Kressley, especially, is the same as my reaction to Jack of "Will & Grace": I want to slap him.
Positive portrayals of gay men and lesbians are few and far between (and with the demise of "Queer as Folk," "Six Feet Under," et al., gay folks are rapidly disappearing from the small screen again). So when we are visible, it galls me that shows like QEFTSG and W&G present such one-dimensional characters -- or, more accurately, caricatures -- presumably to make gay men more palatable and less threatening to the general public.
(There's a reason Will can't have a lasting, meaningful relationship -- but a discussion of that would go far afield of the original topic. Suffice to say, if Will -- the "normal" gay guy on W&G -- ever found true happiness, he wouldn't need Grace anymore, and his neurotic, practically infantile dependency on her would be replaced by a real, live, grown-up relationship with another man. And then how uncomfortable would straight audiences be? Very.)
With lesbians, it works in reverse. Apparently, real lesbians are so much more threatening than gay men, we're airbrushed into Penthouse-style unrecognizability (i.e., "The L Word").
The use of the word "queer" is also problematic. Remember the Simpsons episode where Homer was complaining about gay folks' use of the word? "That's OUR word for YOU!"
It's one thing when gay people use it, and another thing when straight people use it -- because, 90% of the time, when a straight person uses the word "queer," it's not meant as a term of endearment.
I use the word "queer" freely -- but I can. I'm not black, so I wouldn't dream of using the N word -- and I don't profess to even begin to understand the "proper" context of the N word among African-Americans. All I know is that the N word makes me very, very uncomfortable, no matter who says it, or in what context. So, I suppose that the word "queer" in the title of the show has the same effect on a lot of straight people.
That's what I gather, anyway, judging from the horrified reaction I've seen from time to time from straight DUers who don't know what to do with the word. My advice: If you have any doubt about a word, pick a different word. "Gay" works, and doesn't offend anyone (unless you're a 14-year-old using it as criticism; i.e., "That's SO gay!").
They could have just called it "Gay Eye for the Straight Guy."
In the end, maybe QEFTSG does have some positive purpose, even if it's only to reassure straight folks that five gay men plus one straight guy does not equal gang rape.
I wrote at the beginning of this post that it's not that the premise of the show is homophobic. I'm not sure I was correct. I think there's something inherently wrong with any show whose novelty appeal is based solely on the minority status of its stars.
Can you imagine the howls over "Christian Eye for the Jew Guy"?
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