For the first
time in years, LGBTQ+ representation on television has fallen.
According to
GLAAD's lates Where We Are on TV report, 70 of the 773 series
regular characters on 2020 broadcast TV's scripted prime-time shows could be
classified as members of the community (9.1 percent). That's a dip from last
year's all-time high of 10.2 percent.
More
troublingly, these characters are clustered in shows helmed by only four
Hollywood power players: out creators Greg Berlanti, Lena Waithe, and Ryan
Murphy and ally Shonda Rhimes. Collectively, their 16 series accounted for 17
percent of all LGBTQ+ representation (62 of 360 characters).
Megan
Townsend, GLAAD’s director of entertainment research and analysis, noted that
some of 2020's biggest critical and commercial hits, including Schitt's
Creek, The Hanting of Bly Manor, and Veneno, centered
on LGBTQ+ stories. Thus, networks and streaming services should take note in
creating new content so that inclusion doesn't stay "concentrated"
and continue to decline.
“It must be a
priority to introduce nuanced and diverse LGBTQ characters in 2021 and beyond,
ensuring that this year’s decreases do not become reverse progress as the
industry continues to evolve and adjust to this unique era’s challenges,"
Townsend stated in a release.
This
representation is essential as television plays a growing part in people's
lives during a pandemic, which worldwide has drastically limited in-person
entertainment options. Viewers over age 18 are now watching upward of 37 hours
of TV per week, according to a Nielsen survey of the first quarter of 2020.
Sarah Kate
Ellis, GLAAD’s president and CEO, stressed, "In the midst of a destructive
pandemic, a long overdue cultural reckoning with racial injustice, and a
transition into a new political era for this country, representation matters
more than ever as people turn to entertainment storytelling for connection and
escape.
“This time of
unprecedented change matched with increased demand represents an opportunity to
break new ground with stories we have not seen before and create LGBTQ
characters that do not reinforce harmful stereotypes.”
Specifically,
the report singled out the near absence of HIV-positive characters on
television as an area for improvement. There are only three characters living
with HIV on air — all on FX's Pose — a decrease from last
year's count of nine. This is despite GLAAD's prior
findings that nine in 10 Americans believe stigma is still an issue.
In response,
GLAAD is asking the entertainment industry to introduce at least three LGBTQ+,
HIV-positive characters in broadcast or streaming shows.
“Hollywood
must tell these stories that not only entertain, but which also have the
opportunity to inform and educate its audiences,” said DaShawn Usher, GLAAD’s
program officer–communities of color and HIV and AIDS advocate. “While there
have been so many advances and developments in HIV education, prevention, and
treatment, I cannot say the same when it comes to Hollywood telling these
diverse and compelling stories.”
Read the full
report at GLAAD.org.
SOURCE: ADVOCATE
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