Earlier this month, something happened that changed pop music in
America forever. The music video for a new song called “All-American Boy” was
released on YouTube, and within 10 days has reached more than 1,000,000 views
and made a permanent shift in our culture. The most amazing part is that it’s
just the beginning… for the change that this song has created, and just the
beginning for what will be an incredibly successful career for the young
musician who wrote and sang the song: Steve Grand.
Now in order to explain why the video and song mean so much for me
personally, I have to reach back to the summer of 2009. I was a gay teenager,
just sitting on my couch at home watching Kris Allen perform Keith
Urban's "I Wanna Kiss A Girl" on American Idol.
I remember being so depressed watching Kris's performance. While
Kris was on stage proudly singing to the girls of America, there was no gay
equivalent to him, no idol or role model I could look up to. Why wasn't there a
gay singer out there who was willing to do the same; who sang about wanting to
“kiss a boy”?
It seemed blatantly clear to me that there was a double standard,
and ever since then I’ve been waiting for that gay idol to come along. This
month, he finally came. Steve has not only become an idol for gay youth, but I
have no doubt that he will become a role model for all people who believe in
real talent and artistry in a time where music has become so superficial and
shallow.
As Steve put it himself in the description of his YouTube video, “I
feel like most music industry people wouldn't like the idea of me
‘pigeonholing’ myself by telling this story as I have. But I don't believe the
world sees change until it sees honesty.”
Steve is the real deal, and here's why:
With Steve, there's no watering down or ambiguity. He's gay, he's
proud, he's up-front and honest about it, and there's no shame or hesitation
about expressing it whatsoever. There is zero filter; there is zero
differentiation between the way that he sings to a guy in his song and the way
Kris Allen (or Keith Urban) sang "I Wanna Kiss A Girl."
If straight men can talk about girls and how much they love them,
then why shouldn't gay men have that same ability as well? It seems to me that
even among our youth today, there is a certain hesitation, and in some cases
shame, that a lot of gay men have when it comes to talking about men.
Apparently straight men can talk freely about their attraction to
women, but if a gay man talks too honestly about their sexual attraction to
men, there’s something “uncool” or “gross” about it. This also applies a
population of the young, supposedly out, progressive, gay men who live in Los
Angeles and New York but still can't feel proud of their identities or feel
like they can express it. It's as though being exclusively attracted to men
isn’t good or cool enough.
Steve's song and music video have challenged the status quo. He is
a young, cool, incredibly good looking guy who isn’t in the least bit hesitant
to be who he is. He came out at age 13, and he doesn't need to validate himself
by talking down his gayness or saying that he's slept with women to appease
straight audiences. His strength and confidence are a testament to the kind of
role model young gay people need.
His genuine courage is already paying off, and no doubt he will
continue to serve as a role model for others. Isn’t it possible that the reason
this video has gone viral is because he embodies a confidence and courage that
we as a community wish we had? And we’re attracted to that? The fact is that
the courage he has already exists within each of us. The sooner that we all
realize that, the sooner we will become free and equal—not just in the eyes of
the straight world, but in our own eyes as well.
Steve's hit song has already had an incredibly successful impact.
If he’s been able to reach more than a million people in just a few weeks,
imagine what he’ll achieve in the next few months or years. What he has done is
something nobody has ever done—he’s defied the status quo not just in the
straight world but in the gay community, too.
Move over Tim McGraw, here's a country music hunk we can really lust after!!
ReplyDeleteon so many levels :-)
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