More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Barbara Dozetos

GET UPDATES FROM Barbara Dozetos
 

Why the LGBT Media Matters

Posted: 08/09/11 03:18 PM ET

As the general population grows more accepting of our community, is the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) news media still relevant? Do we really need newspapers, radio shows, web sites and television shows that are all gay all the time? Do we really need to perpetuate a media ghetto?

My answer now, as it has been since 2000 when I first considered the question, is an emphatic yes. Now, then, and in the future, we will need the LGBT media. It is one of the threads that hold together the crazy quilt that is our community.

Historically, there's no denying the critical role community media has played in the political and cultural advances we have achieved. But even if that were the sole justification for its existence, we certainly can't say that all the battles have been won. While we may be thrilled about recent victories, it remains true that many U. S. states can legally discriminate based on one's sexual orientation in employment, services, and many other areas. Even fewer states are transgender-friendly, and outside our borders, many, many countries are just plain dangerous.

Even in the places where we have won, we can't pretend that we don't need a strong and constant spotlight on fairness and equality to maintain the ground we've gained. The general public, as well as much of the LGBT community, remains uninformed about the challenges we face. Polls have shown a disconnect between actual and perceived legal landscapes.

Our publications are an important resource for politicians and others who should serve the community. News that breaks in LGBT outlets or blogs informs mainstream coverage, and often spurs the coverage itself. Prominent journalists and bloggers are "go-to" commentators for mainstream media.

While mainstream media outlets report on LGBT issues, it is only through local LGBT sources that the community gets a full picture of what's happening close to home -- particularly in a time of cutbacks at mainstream publications and broadcasters.

LGBT news outlets provide us with much-needed context, not only for the hot-topic issues, but also our lives in general. Members of other cultures, races and identities are often brought up surrounded by family and friends of similar backgrounds. Very few of us were fortunate enough to be raised in predominantly LGBT communities or even households. So we turn to community media as a place for validation, confirmation, and information. There we learn that we are not alone and find our common culture.

The LGBT media also remind us of the shoulders upon which we stand. It shows us those who went before us and how we got where we are today.

The ultimate proof of the necessity of the LGBT media is in its continued existence. From the largest national and international publications to the hyper-local, the LGBT media is our archivist, clarion, advocate, authority, and voice. We find each other in our media, and in finding each other, we learn. We learn who we are and where we've been. That helps us see where we're going. We will always need that.

 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 11
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Glowbeanie
04:19 PM on 08/10/2011
I still miss Keith Olbermann, on MSNBC...not the same without him on it.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Glowbeanie
04:18 PM on 08/10/2011
Barbara, darling, don't jump start the gun, we are not at the LGBT winning line. We need to make sure we are not in the way of the political GOP pendulum's way and end up struck clean without our trusted LGBT media in place to speak truth to facts from the likes of Michelle Bachmann, facing the LGBT community. We need a balance and not to end these resoures before they are truly obsolete.
photo
Gyrlznluv
It's Not What They Call U,It's What U Answer too!
11:51 AM on 08/10/2011
...the general population grows MORE ACCEPTING of our community...???
More accepting is not something we will ever accept.
We will not stop until we have full equality. When we are equal, at that point I dont care if you accept or not.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Horatio
Wordsmith seeks others for salacious mental trysts
09:50 AM on 08/10/2011
It's interesting that you would choose the word "ghetto" because what we need more than a LGBTQ press and media is one that is more - decidedly more - committed to issues for and about people of color.

For someone who has written about the gay Adult Entertainment Industry for almost seven years, I can tell you that Racism is alive and kicking among our own. So it should come as no surprise that there exists an appalling ghetto-ization amongst the GLBTQ community especially in the way we are portrayed to each other and out into the larger world.

Bilerico.com is something of exception. Their coverage of transgender issues is to be lauded. But Bil Browning, who I love and adore, continues to push a white aesthetic when he posts pictures and stories from the adult community, perpetuating a false construct about male beauty in this country.

Thanks for the piece, though.
08:34 PM on 08/11/2011
Dare I ask, what is "Q"?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Horatio
Wordsmith seeks others for salacious mental trysts
09:18 PM on 08/11/2011
Q=curious.
photo
pdxist
Feel free to copy my avatar! (Or ask me how.)
08:43 AM on 08/10/2011
Of course we still need media that focuses on our community. Mothers, Ohioans, and fitness buffs are all completely accepted by the general population, yet they have media dedicated to their communities.
08:14 AM on 08/10/2011
The author makes many good points, but I think the truly important point is never made.

While it's true that "the general population grows more accepting of our community," it's fairly ridiculous to imagine that the LGBT community is "accepted." Anywhere.

DOMA is still federal law and will remain so for the foreseeable future, the vast majority of same-sex couples do not have access to legally recognized civil unions or marriages, lots of states still have no measures to bar discrimination in housing or employment, and lots of states are seeing serious efforts at rolling back the few gains LGBTs have made in the last 10 years.

We've got Tennessee's "don't say gay" ban on public school teachers. And an upcoming presidential election in which GOP politicians and their media backers will be going on full-throttle, red-meat anti-LGBT diatribes to galvanize their supporters and raise those campaign donations. And they'll all be supporting every kind of wing-nut anti-LGBT legislation that anyone cares to propose.

The LGBT community has had a itsy-bitsy teensy-weeny taste of the possibility of a hint of equality and acceptance - and nothing more.

It's way premature for anyone to be asking if the LGBT community still needs its own media. That doesn't make sense even as a rhetorical question.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MissTake1989
Equal means equal, hypocrites.
05:05 PM on 08/09/2011
What happened to the Q?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
07:28 AM on 08/14/2011
It had a translinguistic operation accident and is spending time under witness protection :3
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KaraC
Trans lesbian, atheist and humanist
05:03 PM on 08/09/2011
Barbara Dozetos makes some good points. I would particularly like to see less infighting - we have enough to contend with from the Teabaggers and Fundies without inflicting own-goals. I also believe that the T part of LGBT is about 20 years behind the LGB part in terms of public acceptance and understanding. Part of this is our own fault. Trans people have not always been as forthcoming supporting the LGB community as we should have. I think LGBT Media can play an important role helping to make advances for all of us.