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What's worth learning from QAF? LOL. It's softcore porn. We're not talking a documentry about third world hardships here.
Really? I didn't know that.Part of the problem was by the shooting of the last season, the cast basically hated each other in "real life". There's a reason Rosie O'Donell's scenes were shot only with "the Mom" in the show.
Sure you can vote. In this case I was using gay as a synonym for GLBT.Are bi people qualified to vote? Wasn't sure, so I didn't.
I didn't watch it because of the gay subtext in some of the episodes. Ultimately, it was about the humanness of the characters, and I found their stories interesting to watch.
. I don't watch TV very much anymore, but when I do the shows I watch are mostly educational and travel stuff on the Science, History, and Discovery channels.
Sure you can vote. In this case I was using gay as a synonym for GLBT.
Why didn't you watch the episodes with a gay subtext? I think it showed them in a very boy-next-door realistic way.
I'm a big fan of nonfiction TV, too (not to be confused with reality TV)
I think he meant he watched the show, but not only because it had gay subtext. He watched all the episodes.
It is too much of a complete overblown stereotype of what it is to be "gay."
stacyp said:Even as a straight female I know that there are way too many discrepancies in the way the characters and situations are portrayed. Not all gay men are concerned with being drunk, high, tanned and at the gym, they don't spend all their time worrying about the next club opening. They aren't out to bed every hot guy in town.
stacyp said:They did show a great deal more of the gay bashing/political issues than many shows have, but there was too much of the bitchy queen stuff to even notice, if you are watching it to learn about what being gay is about, you are only seeing the over dramatized way the creators are showing each issue.
stacyp said:Learning what it means to be gay by watching it on television, whether it be cable or not, is a poor way of learning. If it were more reality based, nobody would watch. Therefore there is too much overblown and I fear that a lot of the people in society who rail against the community are basing their knowledge on these shows. And not on what it is like in reality.
stacyp said:There is way too much of a broad spectrum in this world and not enough people know realize that truth. This thread is further proof that the OP has no clue of how the real world works, and only wants to believe what being gay looks like in his head, and on TV.
You take way too much for granted.
Spend some time looking through this site at the advice and posts that Lube has contributed to this site and then come back to me when your head is out of his ass.
You can pretty up your posts and his posts all you want, but there isn't anything that is going to change my view. That might be a shitty way to be, but I've tried to be reasonable. But reasonable does not work in this case.
stacyp said:I am not an idiot and I know that these shows are dramatizations. But you ask anyone in the Mormon church or the far right or whoever else is standing in the way of gay rights what they think a gay person is and I'll be dammed if they don't describe Brian Kinney to a "T." Half of America thinks being gay is wearing pink chiffon and singing show tunes. Because that's what movies and television show us.
There wasn't enough tea consumption. As a gay man who consumes a lot of tea, I didn't find the shows representative of my "lifestyle" at ALL.

I thought Ted was cute, so that helped me be more into his storylines. I saw some of myself in Michael, Ted, and to a much lesser extent, Justin.
You don't have to be a bear or cub for me to appreciate good qualities in a gay man."Queer as Folk" and "Six Feet Under" are two American cable TV shows from the early 2000's. Completely different shows, although they are both soap opera-ish. Oh, the drama!![]()
They both cover many, many issues that gay men have to deal with, in one case as the main theme of the show, in the other case as one of several themes.
Yes, I understand that they are not realistic. They are TV shows after all.
But the writers of both shows purposefully wrote many difficult situations into each show on themes of coming out, accepting yourself, accepting femininity, accepting diversity in the gay community, and many other issues that gay men have to deal with.
As these shows fade into history, it seems like many younger guys have never seen them.
Do you think it's important that gays watch these shows and think about them? (Please don't take my "required watching" comment literally: I don't think we should be chained up and forced to watch them.)
In light of recent comments about the show being unrealistic, or the stupidity of saying any show is required, it's interesting to review my very first post in this thread, where I predicted the synthetic drama that was to ensue:
*sheesh*
A roomful of gay men sniping at each other ! Who would have thought that could ever happen ?
I don't think your comment on QAF is a fair one. Yes, there was lots of soft core porn, but that was only one small aspect of the show.
There was plenty of commentary and insight about the complexities of gay relationships, the good times and the bad, mixed in with a healthy dose of homophobia from the "public" and the way they perceived "Liberty Avenue".
The writing certainly stumbled more than it's fair share, but there are dozens of truly heartfelt and believable moments scattered across the arc of that series.
Part of the problem was by the shooting of the last season, the cast basically hated each other in "real life". There's a reason Rosie O'Donell's scenes were shot only with "the Mom" in the show.
the stupidity of saying any show is required, it's interesting to review my very first post in this thread, where I predicted the synthetic drama that was to ensue:
Please don't take my "required watching" comment literally:
SO as for proposing "required watching," when that question is asked the line on where the material actually stands is blurred.
Asking if it is and asserting it should be are one in the same.
fetaby said:And if not, if you intended for us to discuss how these shows may or may not impact gay youth, why even associate a directive at all. It's pushy.
No it's really not.
"Should young gay men be required to watch QAF and SFU?"
