Gay Rights

Assessing the State of LGBT Characters on Television

Published July 27, 2009 @ 01:28AM PT

The L Word

The Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation has released their third annual Network Responsibility Index, surveying the state of LGBT characters across the span of television. The results show that two premium cable channels certainly know how to get their gay on, while two major television networks languish far behind in the amount of LGBT representation they feature in their programs.

Home Box Office (HBO) and Showtime take the cake this year for being the most inclusive networks when it comes to spotlighting LGBT characters in their shows.  For HBO, GLAAD showed that 42 percent of its total programming featured content relating to the lives of LGBT folks.  Showtime also showed a respectable number - albeit far behind HBO - with 26 percent of its programming featuring LGBT content.

This all makes sense when you think about the shows on both of these premium channels.  True Blood (HBO), The L Word (Showtime), Entourage (HBO), The United States of Tara (Showtime), The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency (HBO), and Weeds (Showtime) all covered LGBT issues or had LGBT characters.  And it makes a difference in terms of the quality of programming, at least according to Rashad Robinson, a senior media staff person at GLAAD.  Here's what he told the AP: "Television shows that weave our stories into the fabric of the series present richer, more diverse representations."

NBC and CBS were on the opposite sides of the spectrum.  Despite being the network that aired possibly the most popular LGBT sitcom ("Will & Grace"), GLAAD found that NBC only had about 8 percent of its programming reflect LGBT issues.  CBS faired even worse, scoring a staggeringly low 5 percent.  Guess it's a little hard to work in an LGBT storyline on The Unit (another ramification of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"?).

For more information, you can check out GLAAD's "TV Gayed" page on their Web site. Ironically, the AP article that we're linking to throughout this post even scooped the GLAAD Web site, so there's no link yet available for the 2009 Network Responsibility Index.  Once it's updated on the GLAAD Web site, we'll put a link here.

UPDATE: Here's the release from GLAAD.

Share this Post

Related Posts

Comments (2)

  1. Edwin Bonilla

    It's good that HBO and Showtime air at least a quarter of their programming for shows that feature LGBT actors or feature dialouge on LGBT rights. Although NBC aired a popular LGBT show, NBC is still not off the hook for providing below 10 percent of their programming on the basis of the criteria based on by GLAAD. CBS should also air more LGBT programming because quality programming can definitely include LGBT actors.

    Posted by Edwin Bonilla on 07/27/2009 @ 01:59PM PT

  2. Reply to thread
  3. Thomas McHugh

    Im not much of a Tv watcher but its still good to see that HBO and showtime aint homophobic or homohating...Now if the rest of the media would get on board...

    Posted by Thomas McHugh on 07/27/2009 @ 03:29PM PT

Add a Comment

For your comment to be published, you will need to confirm your email address after submitting your comment.

If you already have an account, click here to log in.

Comments on Change.org are meant for further exploration and evaluation of the ideas covered in the posts. To that end, we welcome constructive comments. However, we reserve the right to delete comments that are offensive, abusive, or off-topic; that contain ad hominem attacks; or that are designed to subvert or hijack comment threads rather than contribute to them. Repeat offenders may be permanently removed from the site at our discretion.

Author

Twitter Feed

Michael Jones

Michael is the Communications Director for the Human Rights Program at Harvard Law School, and previously was Communications Director for Pax Christi USA, a progressive Catholic human rights organization.

close

This user's Profile page is not public. They have restricted it to only their friends.

Already a Member?

Create an Account

You must create a Change.org account to complete this action.
If you already have an account click here.