The title to this post is a question that many are asking given NBC News' continued inability to note or reference athletes who are gay throughout its coverage of the 2016 Summer Games. I and others are not saying that every gay athlete needs to be labeled, but when same sex relationships are hidden away, apparently deliberately, while straight relationships are note, one does begin to wonder what the network's problem is with same sex couples and LGBT athletes. A piece in
Slate looks at NBC's seeming homophobia. Here are excerpts:
On
Monday night, NBC did something that viewers who tune into the Olympics to
watch sporting competition have long demanded: They passed over a
human-interest story to focus on the action. Apparently, all you have to do to
get the network to ignore you is be gay.
NBC’s
rare moment of restraint came during its coverage of the men’s synchronized
10-meter platform diving event. As the British team of Tom Daley and Dan
Goodfellow exited the pool after their third dive, the camera scanned the
crowd, alighting briefly on two people wearing bright red Team Daley T-shirts.
No attempt was made to identify the pair, who were cheering politely; instead,
color commentator Cynthia Potter analyzed a slow-motion replay of the Brits’
three-and-a-half somersaults.
Who
were the members of Team Daley? Daley’s mother, Debbie, and his fiancé
Dustin Lance Black. That’s right, the screenwriter who won the
Academy Award for best original screenplay in 2009 for Milk. Was NBC homophobic not
to mention Black’s name? Could the network have resisted lingering over an
Oscar-winner affianced to an Olympic medal-winner if the relationship didn’t
involve two people of the same sex? Let’s weigh the evidence.
On
the “not homophobic” side, we should acknowledge that diving is one of the
Olympic sports NBC does well by. Thanks to gravity, it’s a fast-moving event,
so the network is able to show most of the dives made by the top four or five
contenders. Diving coverage is typically light on soft-focus stories, only
pointing out the American divers’ families cheering in the stands. And although
Black is American, Daley is not. Besides, all Oscars aren’t alike—a
screenwriter is about two steps away from a journalist, for heaven’s sake.
Then again, do you really think they wouldn’t point out a
diver’s celebrity fiancée if it were Marion Cotillard, Brie Larson, or another
Oscar-winner whose fame level was roughly commensurate with Black’s?
You don’t have to be the kind of person who sees homophobia
everywhere to think the commentators were reluctant to bring up a star
athlete’s homosexuality, especially as the camera lingered lovingly on the
divers’ insanely ripped physiques, their minuscule swim trunks, and their long
skin-to-skin hugs of celebration.
I can’t wait to see NBC ignore straight athletes’ family
members in the weeks ahead.
1 comment:
In September NBC Universal arranged for their LGBT employees group to march under their banner in the annual NYC St. Patricks Day parade. The fight to do this had persisted over a 20 plus year period. So in 2015 the NBC Universal local affiliate broke a barrier in standing for the community. Of course this was because they were broadcasting and sponsoring the parade. Money speaks! Sad to see they ignored my boy (aka Tom Daley) at the olympics. The official olympic app, however, does mention Dustin Lance Black as his fiancé.
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