Commentary

TV Taking Viewers On A Gender-Expression Journey To Trans-America

It appears poised to become the biggest trend in television in 2015, but I’m not even sure what to call it.

I’m tempted to go with “transgenderism,” but technically, that’s not a word -- at least not a word that appears in the dictionary here on my shelf that I use for reference (it's not a brand-new dictionary, but it was published fairly recently).

GLAAD.org, the Web site for the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, provides a pretty good roadmap through the thicket of this confusing subject. “Be aware of the differences between transgender women, cross-dressers, and drag queens,” GLAAD advises. “Use the term preferred by the individual. Do not use the word ‘transvestite’ at all, unless someone specifically self-identifies that way.”

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So much for clever wordplay where the use of “TV” is concerned in this TV blog post. Oh well -- that’s okay with me, because the last thing I wish to do is defame or otherwise hurt anybody’s feelings in this summary of the ways in which TV is about to shine the spotlight on men who have become, or are becoming, women.

My research has turned up three reality shows in the works -- not counting a possible show centered around Bruce Jenner’s “gender expression journey” that has not yet been officially announced. Speculation about a Jenner reality show has heated up in recent weeks, and even more so since the news broke last weekend that he finally came clean and admitted that he’s “transitioning” to female in an interview with People magazine. He’s on the cover this week.

Some might trace television’s acceptance (or exploitation) of transgender lifestyles back to “RuPaul’s Drag Race” -- the drag-competition show on the gay cable channel known as Logo that first premiered back in 2009. More recently, critics have gushed over the Amazon series called “Transparent,” starring Jeffrey Tambor as a transgender dad.

That show has apparently set the stage for this year’s raft of unscripted transgender shows, only one of which seems to have a premiere date. They are:

“New Girls on the Block” on Discovery Life Channel: Set to premiere April 2, this show focuses on a group of transgender women (men who now “identify” as women) in Kansas City, Mo. Six episodes have been made.

“My Transparent Life” on ABC Family: From producer Ryan Seacrest, this is a docu-series that is drawing comparisons to “Transparent” because it is about an apparently real family in which the dad is becoming a woman. In the process, he is divorcing his wife. The show reportedly focuses on their teenage son, Ben, and his reactions to these upheavals in his family.

“TransAmerica” on VH1: Announced last May, this one is another “docu-series” -- reportedly consisting of eight episodes -- about another group of transgender women. Neither the show’s location nor its air date were announced. The producer was announced, though: Tyra Banks.

Yesterday, “Inside Edition” announced that it had hired a transgender woman as a correspondent -- Zoey Tur. Zoey was formerly Bob Tur, a swashbuckling helicopter pilot who achieved considerable renown in the TV news business in Los Angeles for his derring-do capturing dramatic video from the air (including the O.J. Simpson Bronco chase in 1994).

The announcement said Tur is “America’s first transgender television reporter,” although that claim could not be independently confirmed (at least by me). If she is the first, then it is legitimate to consider her as some sort of pioneer. In that regard, Bruce Jenner is also a pioneer -- the first Olympic decathlon champion to embark on the process known as “gender reassignment," that we know of.

“Avoid the phrase ‘sex change’,” advises GLAAD on its Web site.

Okay, GLAAD, I will try and abide by this one. But I’m not making any promises.

 

1 comment about "TV Taking Viewers On A Gender-Expression Journey To Trans-America".
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  1. Jonathan McEwan from MediaPost, February 4, 2015 at 3:25 p.m.

    They can also trace it to Hilary Swank's Oscar-winning role in 1999's "Boys Don't Cry" and Felicity Huffman's Oscar nominated turn in 2005's Transamerica. RuPaul is really about Drag Queens. There is a difference. Men who perform dressed as women, often caricatures of women, vs. men who completely identify as women, live their lives as women and transform themselves physically into women. It may seem funny to you, but clearly, based on the two films mentioned above, it's actually very painful and complex.

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