Gay lib: Televised fantasies, political realities
Charles Demers/ Seven Oaks Magazine | 10.03.2004 00:07
So while I was able, in the former Klan stronghold of Marietta, Georgia, to watch Anna Nicole’s queenish attendants cattily argue about the quality of throw-pillows, I was also able to find a more valuable contribution in the struggle to extend basic human rights to North American homosexuals -- the Southern Voice, a queer publication whose front page featured a full-colour photo of UPS workers protesting the company’s anti-gay policies. Picket signs read “UPS: We want our DP benefits” and “UPS Unfair to its Gay Workers” -- the word “fabulous” was nowhere to be seen. Inside the paper was an impassioned editorial about the importance of gay marriage rights -- now so heavily under rhetorical and, potentially, legislative fire in Canada and the United States -- which went so far as to shrink the importance of pop culture victories in the face of real political battles: “Whoa! Slow down there, homosexuals,” wrote Chris Cain ironically. “Yeah we’re enjoying a great gay run… Even pop culture is going gay… ABC’s ‘20/20’ declared ‘it’s in to be out’ and the cultural arbiters at VH1 last week debuted ‘Totally Gay!’ But let’s get real. Gay marriage? In this country? Now? You better think twice about that” [Chris Cain, “It’s all about marriage,” Southern Voice, August 22, 2003].
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Charles Demers/ Seven Oaks Magazine
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