• @teslasaur@lemmy.world
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    82 days ago

    It’s like you forgot that “queer eye for a straight guy” was one of the most popular shows at the time. Would have been completely unheard of just a decade earlier.

    Much of the 2000’s was bridge building, many people who had never even seen or met a homosexual was first introduced to the culture by shows in the 2000’s. I know I was.

    • @DillyDaily@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      If the Queer Eye fans of today watched an OG episode I think they’d pass out from shock.

      I was living under a rock when the new Queer Eye came out and some of the young residents at work were raving about it. The things I kept overhearing had me thinking “They can’t possibly be talking about catty old Carson”

      The homophobia of the 2000s paired perfectly with all the other toxic body shaming and slut shaming the media was doing at the time.

      Bridge building was exactly right. It was about getting the language of “gay” into the homes of everyday people and in a tone that was happy and humerus, not divisive. Yeswere the butt of the joke, but at least it was just a joke, unlike in the years prior when it was violence.

      We still have the language in the household of everyday people, but in many households the only reason the word “gay” gets brought up is for someone to spit at it and praise Trump. The happy humour is lost, the tone is shifting to vitriol and if we’re not careful the next step will be violence again.

    • @VoterFrog@lemmy.world
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      11 day ago

      My wife and I watch a lot of sitcoms before bed, often from the 00s. One had at least one anti-gay joke per episode. In one of the middle seasons, they had an episode where a character makes a gay friend and has to deal with their discomfort around gay people. Then the next episode, they’re back to gay bashing. Wild times.