As U.S. Exceeds 2,300 Coronavirus Deaths, Trump Touts His TV Ratings

As U.S. Exceeds 2,300 Coronavirus Deaths, Trump Touts His TV Ratings

Trump pandumbic

Donald Trump on Sunday touted his TV ratings as the U.S. death toll for coronavirus climbed to more than 2,300.

Trump’s tweet was part of another attack on the media meant to distract from the fact that he is failing to respond competently to the COVID-19 crisis, about which he once said, “like a miracle, it will disappear.”

…On Monday, nearly 12.2 million people watched Mr. Trump’s briefing on CNN, Fox News and MSNBC, according to Nielsen — ‘Monday Night Football’ numbers. Millions more are watching on ABC, CBS, NBC and online streaming sites, and the audience is expanding. On Monday, Fox News…

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) March 29, 2020

…The CBS News poll said 13 percent of Republicans trusted the news media for information about the virus.” Michael M. Grynbaum @NYTimes

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) March 29, 2020

Because the “Ratings” of my News Conferences etc. are so high, “Bachelor finale, Monday Night Football type numbers” according to the @nytimes, the Lamestream Media is going CRAZY. “Trump is reaching too many people, we must stop him.” said one lunatic. See you at 5:00 P.M.!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) March 29, 2020

Polls are showing tremendous disapproval of Lamestream Media coverage of the Virus crisis. The Fake News just hasn’t figured that out yet!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) March 29, 2020

The Lamestream Media wants us to fail. That will NEVER happen!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) March 29, 2020

The post As U.S. Exceeds 2,300 Coronavirus Deaths, Trump Touts His TV Ratings appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


As U.S. Exceeds 2,300 Coronavirus Deaths, Trump Touts His TV Ratings

Must-See LGBTQ TV: ‘The Magicians’ series finale and ‘How to Get Away with Murder’ spring premiere

Must-See LGBTQ TV: ‘The Magicians’ series finale and ‘How to Get Away with Murder’ spring premiere

Photo Credit: ABC

Grab the remote, set your DVR or queue up your streaming service of choice! GLAAD is bringing you the LGBTQ highlights on TV this week. Check back every Sunday for up-to-date coverage in LGBTQ-inclusive programming on TV.

The series finale of The Magicians airs on Wednesday night. The fantasy show is ending on its fifth season, wrapping up the stories of young people with extraordinary abilities in the magical world of Fillory, including queer fan-favorite character Eliot. The Magicians: Wednesday, 10pm on Syfy.

The second half of the final season of ABC’s How to Get Away with Murder will premiere Thursday night. With an ensemble full of queer characters, the final six episodes will conclude the series. In Thursday’s episode, Annalise’s disappearance is exposed; Bonnie discloses a secret about Tegan; Gabriel becomes a murder suspect. How to Get Away with Murder: Thursday, 10pm on ABC.

Sunday, March 29: God Friended Me (8pm, CBS); Batwoman (8pm, The CW); Outlander (8pm, Starz); Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist (9pm, NBC); Supergirl (9pm, The CW); The Walking Dead (9pm, AMC); NCIS: New Orleans (9pm, CBS); Good Girls (10pm, NBC); Black Monday (10pm, Showtime)

Monday: 9-1-1 (8pm, Fox); All Rise (9pm, CBS); Roswell, New Mexico (9pm, The CW); Dispatches from Elsewhere (10pm, AMC)

Tuesday: Empire (9pm, Fox); Schitt’s Creek (9pm, Pop TV); One Day at a Time (9:30pm, Pop TV)

Wednesday: Modern Family (9pm, ABC); Motherland: Fort Salem (9pm, Freeform); American Housewife (9:30pm, ABC); S.W.A.T. (10pm, CBS); Twenties (10pm, BET); The Magicians (10pm, Syfy); Boomerang (10:30pm, BET)

Thursday: Station 19 (8pm, ABC); Superstore (8pm, NBC); Brooklyn Nine-Nine (8:30pm, NBC); Grey’s Anatomy (9pm, ABC); Siren (9pm, Freeform); How to Get Away with Murder (10pm, ABC); Tommy (10pm, CBS)

Friday: Charmed (8pm, The CW); RuPaul’s Drag Race (8pm, VH1); Dynasty  (9pm, The CW)

March 29, 2020

www.glaad.org/blog/must-see-lgbtq-tv-magicians-series-finale-and-how-get-away-murder-spring-premiere

What’s the origin of the ‘well-dressed, articulate, educated gay man’ stereotype?

What’s the origin of the ‘well-dressed, articulate, educated gay man’ stereotype?

From Stanford in Sex and the City to George in My Best Friend’s Wedding and even David in Schitt’s Creek, we’re overwhelmed with stereotypical depictions of gay men as witty, well-groomed, and well-spoken (and, unfortunately, disproportionately white). But as one Redditor recently asked, where does that trope even come from?

Other Reddit users readily replied with theories. “Gay men from the upper class or bourgeoisie were more likely to be ‘out’ for centuries,” one wrote.

Related: From fops to jocks: How gay stereotypes are changing faster than you can say Jack McFarland

Another pointed to media depictions from a more censored era of filmmaking: “Gays have often depicted as elite and/or humorous due to the Hayes Code established in Hollywood. Hysterical use of veiled references and inside jokes aimed at an audience a bit more sophisticated.”

A third commenter attributed the stereotype to “societal pressures” that “invalidate the gay identity,” homophobia included. “So some gay men seek validation through achievement in professional careers and personal presentation,” that commenter wrote. “They feel like they need a greater amount of success to get the respect that society gives to straight man automatically.”

Replied another user: “This is a great answer! I’d like to say the same thing in a different way, that internalized homophobia, the fear of being rejected for being gay, and the whole host of circumstances that could drive gay men to be ostracized (which, in some aspects, remains in the gay community) can drive some people to strive for acceptance via secondary achievements as a sort of defense mechanism.”

That user continued: “Being funny, witty, and well-groomed are, to some extents, among the more readily accessible. Absorbing culture through reading, music, theater, movies are also good options, doing double duty as also being ways to deal with loneliness and boredom. Their appeal is also reinforced by being socially acceptable and even encouraged ways to differentiate oneself, and a source of validation by straight society.”

Related: Someone broke down every Disney villain as a gay stereotype and it’s perfect

Meanwhile, another Redditor cited the acclaimed book Gay New York: Gender, Urban Culture, and the Making of the Gay Male World, 1890-1940 by Columbia history professor George Chauncey. “Aristocrats were associated with effeminacy because they were a leisurely class that didn’t do hard labor like those hardy working men,” that Redditor wrote. “It was a show of status to be effeminate. When the middle classes started to form, they used the stereotype to discredit both aristocrats and homosexuality, because the nuclear family was all-important to their ideology. Working-class men usually referred to as ‘fairies’ and ‘pansies’ used the stereotype in the late 19th/early 20th century to give themselves status, and to this day, many queer men (including me) knowingly or not use it to give themselves culture and ‘class’ to make up for the middle-class male privilege they’ve been stripped of.”

For more about this stereotype — and how it robs gay men of the right to be “dull and humorless” — check out The Independent’s coverage of Ashley Brooks’ research into “ambivalent homoprejudice.”

www.queerty.com/whats-origin-well-dressed-articulate-educated-gay-man-stereotype-20200329?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29