Contents:
- RACIAL STEREOTYPG OF GAY MEN: CAN A MORY SEXUAL ORIENTATN ERASE RACE?☆,☆☆
- 15 STEREOTYP THAT LIM OUR PERCEPTNS OF GAY MEN
- GAY STEREOTYP: ARE THEY TE?
- MEDIA REPRENTATN, PERCEPTN AND STIGMATISATN OF RACE, SEXUALY AND HIV AMONG YOUNG BLACK GAY AND BISEXUAL MEN
- “THAT GUY IS GAY AND BLACK. THAT’S A RED FLAG.” HOW HIV STIGMA AND RACISM AFFECT PERCEPTN OF RISK AMONG YOUNG BLACK MEN WHO HAVE SEX WH MEN
RACIAL STEREOTYPG OF GAY MEN: CAN A MORY SEXUAL ORIENTATN ERASE RACE?☆,☆☆
Tradnally, most LGBTQ characters on televisn were Whe, and the few Black gay characters were distorted stereotyp — feme, stuck tradnally female jobs, the source of humor about genr and genr rol or sequtered otherwise Whe televisual worlds.
15 STEREOTYP THAT LIM OUR PERCEPTNS OF GAY MEN
When lbian and gay characters were clud (there was virtually no discsn of bisexualy or trans people), they were stereotyped ritur: Gay men were “feme” and often had “women’s” reers such as hairdrser and terr signer, and lbians were “butch” bee they, prumably, wanted to be “men.
” One goal of the portrayals was to make lbian and gay inty visible to viewers, siar ways that race n often be read onto the the 1970s, the growg sophistitn of televisn ratgs systems dramatilly changed TV programmg. In the episo “Phil’s Assertn School, ” Travis monstrated that (Black) gay men weren’t all effemate and, wh his job as an attorney (who ultimately end up helpg a seri star get out of a legal bd), that gay men uld have reers outsi the nf of “feme”, as nservative wds swept through the untry the 1980s and as AIDS (ially lled GRID: gay related immune ficiency) began to cimate gay muni, this progrs erod. While he never said Dn was gay, the clu were ample for viewers who unrstood stereotyp of gay men — Dn was a hairdrser, equently discsed his “roommate” Carlos and had a tramark portrayal of Black gay men on televisn started to change the 1990s for three reasons.
The began wh “In Livg Color’s” “Men On …” sketch featurg Antoe Merriweather and Blae Edwards as two cultural crics who viewers were supposed to assume were gay based on their disda for all thgs female and the lisps wh which they spoke. Black-st ss, cludg “Moha” (1997) and “Good News” (1997), featured Black gay characters, wh “Moha” pictg the first Black gay teenager and the episo “Labels” beg the first by a Black gay wrer, Demetri Bady.
GAY STEREOTYP: ARE THEY TE?
“The Wire” featured Omar, a character who not only fied old stereotyp, but also was the first Black gay character whose sexualy was sendary to his inty — which foced more on the fear and rpect he mand om Baltimoreans. The characters reprented an attempt by wrers and producers to offer more nuanced reprentatns of Black LGBTQ the years sce the breakthroughs, numero seri, cludg “Are We There Yet?, ” “Dear Whe People” and “Brooklyn Ne-Ne, ” have had Black gay characters, monstratg perhaps that the old lkage between Whens and LGBTQ sexualy on TV is chang matter.
MEDIA REPRENTATN, PERCEPTN AND STIGMATISATN OF RACE, SEXUALY AND HIV AMONG YOUNG BLACK GAY AND BISEXUAL MEN
IntroductnWh 100 lisends of seeg someone's face for the first time, we make up our mds about what their genr is, what their race is, whether they are old or young, and even about whether they are homosexual or heterosexual (Todorov, Olivola, Dotsch, & Men-Siedlecki, 2015).
Non-gay) members of all racial and ethnic far, we have argued that when prototyp of gay men are bed wh prototyp of particular racial groups, the prumptns of heterosexualy herent the racial prototyp are challenged ways that rce racial prototypily. Soclogil analys nfirm that gay men are often picted the media as enomilly fortable Whe men (Barrett & Pollack, 2005; Bébé, 2001; Shugart, 2003; Valocchi, 1999), spe the much greater diversy that actually characteriz gay muni (e.
“THAT GUY IS GAY AND BLACK. THAT’S A RED FLAG.” HOW HIV STIGMA AND RACISM AFFECT PERCEPTN OF RISK AMONG YOUNG BLACK MEN WHO HAVE SEX WH MEN
Members of the public, reced 2014-2015, were randomly assigned to survey ndns that varied systematilly by race (Black, Whe, or unspecified) and sexual orientatn (gay, heterosexual, or unspecified) of a signated social group. The amount of rponse overlap for the top 15 stereotyp was lower between the Black Men and Black Gay Men Condns (44% of rpons associated wh an overlappg stereotype) as pared to the Black Men and Black Heterosexual Men Condns (77% of rpons associated wh an overlappg stereotype).