David Simon | Barack Obama And The Death Of Normal

But the country is changing. And this may be the last election in which anyone but a fool tries to play — on a national level, at least — the cards of racial exclusion, of immigrant fear, of the patronization of women and hegemony over their bodies, of self-righteous discrimination against homosexuals. Some in the Republican party and among the teabagged fringe will continue to play such losing hands for some time to come; this shit worked well in its day and distracted many from addressing any of our essential national issues. But again, if they play that weak-ass game past this point, they are fools.

via David Simon | Barack Obama And The Death Of Normal.

David Simon is bang on. This is a lovely post. Also, he’s an amazing storyteller. You’ve probably enjoyed a lot of his writing for television and never even known it.

Scott Evans: One of the People You May Know

Of course I know who Scott Evans is. The openly blond actor is the kid brother of Captain America star Chris Evans. He has made a name for himself in his own right with a memorable turn on One Life to Live playing a cop, one of our top five gay career fantasies, according to the Village People. Most recently I spotted him in the audience at the Emmy Awards, and a few weeks ago on the patio of a bar in West Hollywood. So, yes, I certainly know who he is. I just don’t know him. But try telling that to Facebook.

via Derek Hartley: Scott Evans: One of the People You May Know.

Scott Evans as Ofc. Oliver Fish on “One Life to Live,” part of one of daytime’s first longer term gay couples. Sadly, Facebook has never connected him to me!

Love this piece on HuffPo. I was just having this conversation with a co-worker. Everyone Facebook suggests to me either (A) I don’t know or (B) I absolutely, positively never, ever want to be friends with — like the troll who orchestrated my ouster from one of the best jobs I ever had. [Well, karma’s a bitch: he got his! LOL]

Anyhow, it seems to me that at this point in my long Facebook “career,” if I’m going to be friends with someone, I’ve already friended them or vice versa. I have enough friends.

As to Derek Hartley’s article, I have to admit to being more than a little bit jealous here. I legitimately know (not just “Facebook know”) a few folks who travel in the same circles as Mr. Evans, but Facebook has never suggested his dreamy visage to the right of my screen. Upset by that, I must admit! LOL

Sam Champion Engaged: ‘GMA’ Weather Anchor Comes Out, Plans To Marry Rubem Robierb

Sam Champion Engaged: ‘GMA’ Weather Anchor Comes Out, Plans To Marry Rubem Robierb.

Pardon me for being crass, but there’s someone out there that had no idea that Sam Champion was gay? C’mon…..

 

PS – Good for you, Sam.

GLAAD’s ‘Where We Are On TV’ Report Finds LGBT Television Characters At Record High

GLAAD’s ‘Where We Are On TV’ Report Finds LGBT Television Characters At Record High.

A record high — for the record — is 31 out of 701 series regular characters. T’aint enough, McGee….

‘Honey Boo Boo’ Has the Ratings, if Not the Critics

‘Honey Boo Boo’ Has the Ratings, if Not the Critics – NYTimes.com.

Dear Sweet Lord …. what is wrong with America?????????

Why ‘Husbands’ Matters: An Exclusive Look at the Marriage Equality Sitcom’s Second Season | ThinkProgress

Why ‘Husbands’ Matters: An Exclusive Look at the Marriage Equality Sitcom’s Second Season | ThinkProgress.

Excellent article by Alyssa Rosenberg. Read it.

This is an intriguing web series — and a cut above almost every other web-exclusive show. It helps that they are in Hollywood and they’ve got some connections because, let’s face it, how else do you get Jon Cryer and Joss Whedon to appear in your web series?

The first season is a series of approximately 2 minute eps. Longer, but fewer eps for the just being released season 2.

The writing is excellent. And the eye candy is first rate.

Watch it.

Gaycoms in a Progressive Age?: Partners and The New Normal

Gaycoms in a Progressive Age?: Partners and The New Normal Stephen Tropiano / Ithaca College | Flow.

Hmmm… Not sure about this one. Let me back up and tell you my initial reactions to these shows before I had seen them:

1. I don’t think “Glee” is the end-all be-all of TV in the new millennium. I run hot and cold on it because it is, without a doubt, the most uneven series on television. I’ll love an episode, its crisp writing, elegant plotting and deft, nuanced musical numbers. Then I’ll tune in the next week and watch a train wreck, written by monkeys locked in a room full of typewriters trying to bang out Hamlet and a lot of ham-fisted jokes that don’t land and a whole lot of one-dimensional snark and I’ll swear I’ll never watch it again. I held out little hope for Ryan Murphy’s gaycom, “The New Normal.”

2. I loved “Will & Grace,” Max Mutchnick and David Kohan’s groundbreaking sitcom. Other than queening up Will about halfway through the run — which was unnecessary and a little bit dumb — I loved it all.

All that said, I have watched all three episodes that have aired (as of this writing) of “The New Normal” and I am head over heels in love with it. I have watched the pilot of “Partners” and yawned.

Here’s why: “The New Normal” feels fresh and modern. Yes, there are a few over-the-top elements that possibly should be toned down, but the writing, so far, has been eloquent without being preachy. It’s shot in a modern style, lit smartly and is shot on sets that look like a place where people would actually live.

“Partners” feels like “I Love Lucy.” It’s a dinosaur. It’s shot on heavily key-lit sets that look like sitcom sets and the sitcom they seem to be shooting is called “Jack & Will & Occasionally Grace & Some Other Guy.”

And it’s that “Some Other Guy” part that especially annoys me. Kohan and Mutchnick understand that they need to ground Michael Urie, so they have paired him with ex-Man of Steel Brandon Routh as his boyfriend. That makes sense. And Routh is a great actor — “Superman” aside (also good) but he was terrific on “Chuck” — but they have left him without a character. There is NOTHING in the text that suggests that he’s even supposed to be real. There’s a lot to be annoyed by here, but that and the infernal hand-clapping between scenes was enough for me to give it two thumbs way, way down.

In “Partners'” defense, pilots generally suck, so I’ll give it another whirl and we’ll see what happens. However, in spite of the media’s hype of the fabled Kohan-Mutchnick partnership, realize that the ONLY certifiable hit they’ve ever had is “Will & Grace.”

(Then again, that IS one more than me!)

Wally Cleaver: Sculptor. Who Knew?

Tony Dow, forever known as Wally Cleaver, is now an abstract artist | Arts | Detroit Free Press | freep.com.

Recently I ran across an episode of a soap opera called “Never Too Young” on YouTube that starred Tony Dow. It was, I believe, his first regular cast role after “Leave It To Beaver.” It was about a bunch of surfers who hung out at a surf shop or some such. Pretty terrible, but the soundtrack was kinda zippy!

David Cross Says New ‘Arrested Development’ Season Has Been Extended From 10 To 13 Episodes | The Playlist

David Cross Says New ‘Arrested Development’ Season Has Been Extended From 10 To 13 Episodes | The Playlist.

Remember, there’s always money in the banana stand…..

God, I love this show!

Cross is right — the future of television is not on the networks — it’s on the interwebs.

Things That Make Me Insane

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/domenick-scudera/straight-acting-straight-_b_1757260.html

Good article by Domenick Scudera on HuffPo about Bret Easton Ellis saying Matt Bomer is not right for a lead in a proposed film adaptation of Fifty Shades of Grey because he is “openly gay.”

Number 1 — Bret Easton Ellis? Really? Who cares. Write something in the last two decades that anyone cares about. Shut up. Stop being a douchebag.

Number 2 — Fifty Shades of Grey? Really? Start caring about a book that’s not pablum for oversexed and frustrated housewives.

Number 3 — Matt Bomer is a helluva good actor. Shut up, Bret Easton Ellis.

Scudera:

Heterosexual actors do not seem to have this problem. They are easily accepted as gay in film. Tom Hanks, William Hurt, Sean Penn, Charlize Theron, Philip Seymour Hoffman, and Christopher Plummer, all heterosexual actors, as far as I know, won Oscars for playing homosexual characters. Where was the outrage when these films were cast? Was anyone shouting, “Tom Hanks playing gay? Never! No way! Unbelievable!!!”? No. Instead, Hanks was handed an Academy Award, and audiences marveled at how brave he was for tackling an incredibly challenging role.

Number 4 — Though I have no inside knowledge of this, sources say he’s a really nice guy, too. Shut up, Bret Easton Ellis.

Number 5 — He’s also dreamy hot.