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The Cartoon Closet
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The reaction to the Rev.
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Jerry Falwell's outing of Tinky Winky, the purple Teletubby, was widespread
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scorn and hilarity. Comedians and column writers mercilessly ridiculed Falwell
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for his paranoia in seeing gays under the crib.
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Three comments in
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defense of Falwell: First, he didn't write the article in question, which
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appeared unsigned in National Liberty Journal , a magazine he publishes.
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When asked about the charge, Falwell said he had never seen Teletubbies
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and didn't know whether Tinky Winky was homosexual or not. The notion of
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Falwell attacking a cartoon character is too appealing to liberal prejudices to
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be easily abandoned.
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Second, if you've ever watched Teletubbies , you
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might well suspect some kind of subliminal messaging. The four tubbies have
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aerials coming out of their spacesuit hoods, which receive programming that's
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broadcast on TV screens in their tummies. As they prance out of their bunker
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and around the strange, apocalyptic landscape where they live, periscope
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speakers pop out of the ground and feed them orders. It's both cute and
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creepy.
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Third, the folks at
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Liberty College apparently got their idea about Tinky Winky not from watching
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the program but from reading such publications as the Washington Post
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and People . On Jan. 1, the Post included "TINKY WINKY, THE GAY
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TELETUBBY" in its annual list of what's "in" for the New Year. No one got
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excited. The press, including the Post , then mocked Falwell as a
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reactionary hick obsessed with the sexuality of puppets. Seems like a bit of a
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trap.
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Is Tinky Winky gay? He is not the first cartoon character
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to be outed. More often than not it is homosexuals who claim a character as one
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of their own--which also puts the Falwell fuss in perspective. At the level of
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the creators' stated intentions, the Teletubbies have no sexual
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orientation. The program tries to recreate the world of toddlers, which does
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not involve any level of sexual understanding. But TV programs are group
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products, and it's not impossible that references--Tinky Winky's handbag, his
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purple triangle antenna, and the tutu he sometimes wears--are bits of code
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included for the benefit of adults. If Tinky Winky has a bit more spring in his
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step than Dipsy, the other male tubby, it may be because the actor who
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originally inhabited his costume added that dimension. Gays in Britain love
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Tinky Winky, and some protested outside the BBC when the actor who played him
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was fired.
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Sexual signals can be
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received without being consciously sent. The first cartoon characters to be
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accused of aberrant sexual practices were Batman and Robin. In a 1954 book
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titled Seduction of the Innocent , a psychologist named Fred Wertham
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attacked the sadistic violence and sexual deviance portrayed in comic books.
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Batman and Robin, he noted, were two men living together who liked to wear
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capes and tights. Back home at stately Wayne Manor, they lounged about in
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dressing gowns. Wertham was a student of Freud who discovered a message that
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Bob Kane, Batman's creator, probably never consciously intended. But that
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doesn't mean it wasn't there.
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Wertham's book led to the adoption of a code of standards
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by the comic book industry, which included, among other things, an admonition
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that "sex perversion or any inference to same is strictly forbidden." After
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this history, the Batman TV series, which was made in the mid-to-late
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1960s, couldn't plead the same innocence. Post-Wertham, the producers were well
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aware of the gay take on Batman and Robin. Rather than resist it, they gave a
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camp tenor to the whole series. In the 1960s, even most adult viewers
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interpreted the program as broad parody. But once the idea of a gay subtext has
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been planted, Louie the Lilac (as played by Milton Berle) isn't just a villain
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who likes to wear purple.
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In a curious way, gays,
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their friends, and their enemies have all collaborated in destroying the sexual
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innocence of cartoon characters by making an issue out of it. When trying to
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elude Elmer Fudd or Yosemite Sam, Bugs Bunny is liable to dress up as a woman,
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vamp around, or imitate Katharine Hepburn. Is this meant to indicate that he
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likes other boy bunnies? Many of these antics were borrowed from vaudeville
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comedy, where a man dressing up as a woman didn't necessarily imply
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homosexuality (although the same questions arise in retrospect). The Warner
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Bros. studio, where these cartoons were created in the 1940s and '50s, was an
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aggressively heterosexual milieu. Chuck Jones and other illustrators were
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mocking stereotyped homosexual behavior, not winking at homosexuals in a
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friendly way. But while a man dressing up as a woman may not have "meant"
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anything in the 1940s, it does mean something in the late 1990s. What has
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sexualized these cartoon characters is the change in the culture, which in the
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last few decades has become not just aware of homosexuality but increasingly
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open about and tolerant of it.
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Ernie and Bert are another good example of this process.
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When Sesame Street was created in the early 1970s, no one meant for them
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to be taken as lovers. But consider two men living together, sleeping in the
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same room, and taking great interest in each other's baths. Predictably, the
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"urban legend" that Ernie and Bert were gay began to spread. In 1994, a
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Southern preacher named Joseph Chambers tried to get them banned under an old
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North Carolina anti-sodomy law. (He said they had "blatantly effeminate
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characteristics.") The Children's Television Workshop eventually had to deny
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the rumors, which have included an impending same-sex union. But the gay read
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on Ernie and Bert isn't wrong because the creators don't endorse it. The same
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goes for the Peanuts characters Peppermint Patty and her tomboy friend
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Marcie, who always refers to her as "Sir." When Charles M. Schulz created the
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strip, he never imagined that Patty and Marcie would be claimed as
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protolesbians.
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In recent years,
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children's entertainment has contained an increasing number of apparently
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intentional or even obviously intentional gay references. In The Lion
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King, Simba leaves home and is more or less adopted by Timon and Pumbaa, a
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male meerkat and a male warthog who live together as a couple in the jungle. In
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the 1994 Disney film, the actor Nathan Lane supplied the voice of Timon in much
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the same style as his flamboyantly gay character in The Birdcage . When I
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saw the Broadway version of the musical, the audience roared at Timon's even
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more exaggerated gay mannerisms.
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Or consider Pee-wee's Playhouse . Pee-wee Herman
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minces about and becomes obviously infatuated with other male characters who
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conform to gay archetypes. While parents may pick up this gay semaphore, kids
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aren't likely to. To them, Timon, Pumbaa, and Pee-wee are just goofy
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characters.
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Elsewhere, the implicit
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has become explicit. On The Simpsons , Smithers, the bow tie wearing
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toady who trails around after Mr. Burns, has become increasingly gay. According
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to Larry Doyle, who writes for the show, Smithers was originally just a
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sycophant in love with the boss. But lately he has taken to cruising college
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campuses in his Miata, looking for "recruits." In last week's episode, Apu, the
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Indian convenience store owner, goes down to the docks to donate porno
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magazines to sailors. The sea captain calls out to thank him: "Thank you for
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the Jugs magazines. They'll keep my men from resorting to homosexuality
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... for about 10 minutes!" The sailors all laugh, and one calls out, "Look
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who's talking!"
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It isn't absurd for anyone, including Falwell, to notice
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these hints, inferences, and references. But it is ridiculous to object to
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them. There's no scientific or psychological basis for believing that children
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are affected in their sexual development or eventual sexual orientation by
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exposure to homosexuality--on television or in real life. If the creators of
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cartoons are intentionally or unintentionally giving children the idea that gay
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people are part of the big, happy human family, that's a good thing, not a bad
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one. (If it weren't for gay people, there would be no Lion King --or much
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else on the all-American cultural front.) The conservative paranoia about
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recruiting, which leads them to think that gay school teachers and Boy Scout
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leaders present a hazard to the young is pure prejudice.
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Anyway, for the religious right, this battle is
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pointless because the war is already lost. Gay themes are everywhere.
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Pee-wee's Playhouse runs every day on the Fox Family Channel, the cable
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network Pat Robertson recently sold to Rupert Murdoch. It's just a couple of
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hours ahead of The 700 Club .
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