PDA

View Full Version : Adam Lambert and double standards...



Ben
12-03-2009, 12:13 AM
Adam Lambert and double standards

December 1, 2009

IF YOU missed the recent American Music Awards, it would be worth it to check out the performance of American Idol runner-up Adam Lambert, which has caused a media frenzy over his sexually explicit performance.

Lambert's "shocking" performance included full mouth-on-mouth action with his male keyboardist, sadomasochist themes and a simulation of oral sex with a male dancer (which was edited out of the West Coast broadcast).

Groups like the Parent's Television Council and the Liberty Council have made formal complaints to Federal Communications Commission (FCC), claiming that "ABC should have to pay a hefty penalty to the FCC for assaulting its viewers with a debased performance by Adam Lambert." Consequently, ABC's Good Morning America cancelled Lambert's scheduled performance for fear of viewer complaints.

While this kind of response is ridiculous, reactionary and clearly homophobic, more shocking is the kind of response Adam Lambert has had from the so-called left, including equal-marriage supporters. Huffington Post blogger and equal-marriage supporter Jennifer Vanasco chastised Lambert in her piece "How Adam Lambert is hurting gay marriage." In her rant, Vanasco essentially blames Adam Lambert's overt sexuality for the right-wing backlash:

"And what is the mainstream most worried about, Adam Lambert? Why are they afraid of our partnerships, our service to our country, our working lives, our families? They are worried because they think "gay life" is exactly what you portrayed on the American Music Awards: focused on the kind of sex that turns people into animals (almost literally, in this case, with crawling dancers leading you on leashes), geared toward enticing children (ABC is a network owned by Disney, for heaven's sake), degrading, rapacious, empty.

This is why mainstream America votes against gays, Adam Lambert. Not because of people who have families and jobs and bills and weddings. Because of people like you, who use sexuality thoughtlessly in order to advance your own agenda, instead of thinking about the very real consequences your actions will have on others' civil rights."

But the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) movement isn't fighting for people to be "respectably gay." Rather, it is fighting to have full equality under the law and in society.

The ways in which people choose to express their sexuality (whether it is how they dress, how they enjoy sex or how they perform on stage) should be their prerogative. And I believe that most people in the LGBT movement, like myself, want to see a world where sexuality can be expressed in all kinds of ways, without ridicule, harassment, shame and discrimination.

If Vanasco's criticism weren't enough, Lambert has been subject to criticism from Out magazine, of all places. Out Editor-in-Chief Aaron Hicklin, in an open letter, criticized Lambert's Details magazine photoshoot (depicting him holding a woman's breast, instead of a male body part) as well as the fact that his interview in Details had "No mention of your [Lambert's] gay fans, which is kind of disappointing, don't you think, given what your success represents."

In a society where homophobia is still rampant and where coming out can cost your career or your life, the fact that a self-proclaimed gay magazine like Out is accusing Adam Lambert of not being "gay enough" is too much to swallow.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

THIS ATTACK on Lambert also tails the misguided idea that all of our pop stars must be the moral leaders of our movements and our children. So when Adam Lambert defensively says, "I'm not trying to lead the fucking way for the civil rights movement that we're in right now," he is being honest. Leaders of social movements aren't chosen because they happen to be in the spotlight--they are born and develop out of real struggle.

Adam Lambert is surely a role model for many gay teens who love his music and are attracted to the fact that he won't conform to societal ideas of what a "gay lifestyle" is. Part of the irony of the fact that Good Morning America cancelled his performance is that it is exactly performances like his which nab the biggest audiences for music awards shows. The music, entertainment and media industries makes billions off of the sexual objectification of teenage girls (think Miley Cyrus, Britney Spears, etc.) and blatant misogyny. To then turn around and call Adam Lambert's fully clothed performance "controversial" is hypocritical at best.

In response to the so-called "controversy" his performance caused, Lambert has called out this double standard, saying, "Women performers have been encouraged to push the envelope sexually for the past 20 years, and all of the sudden a male does it, and we can't show that on TV. To me, that's a form of discrimination." He added:

"I don't feel I owe anyone an apology for anything. I performed, it was late-night TV, I did something that female performers have been doing for years, no different. It's just the fact that I'm me, and it's a little different for people. It's really not that big of a deal. I'm not a babysitter, I'm a performer. I'm sexual person, and maybe people didn't see that on American Idol. But now they do."

Lambert is, after all, a rock star. Overt sexuality comes with the genre. But the fact that he is openly gay, is breaking the norm. This kind of candor and self-confidence is refreshing in a rock star and says something about the times: that people are more confident about standing up for themselves when it comes to the discrimination that LGBT people are subject to on a daily basis.

This has everything to do with the emergence of an LGBT movement that is demanding full equality, without apology.

Jessica Hansen-Weaver, San Francisco

UirCelLanAd
12-03-2009, 12:37 AM
I am sorry but I have to completely disagree. Now I am not homophobe, in fact I am exactly the opposite. I am also no prude. However, the fact is he simulated sadomasochistic oral sex on TV. As for the kiss, I have no problem with two males or two women or two anything kissing but if you watch it he nearly ate the other guys face lol. The fact is the AMA's are supposed to be for everyone and that was inappropriate for the program. Now did he get it worse because it was male/male, probably (although I cannot remember the last time I saw oral sex simulated on a show like that) and that really is unfortunate, but that does excuse his performance or make it wrong for other programs to cancel him. Finally, I could have forgiven all of that if his song and performance were any good but the fact is, other than the controversy, it was boring.

Legend
12-03-2009, 12:48 AM
Wow that performance was crappy, people should be more upset about how awful that whole frelling performace was.

Me, i don't have a problem with two people kissing(gay or straight) if it fits the setting or scene but i dislike people who throw their sexuality on others for shock value(gay or straight).The guy did all those things because he had to "shock" people because his crappy performance wasn't going to cut, all that other stuff was totally unnecessary.All artist do this sort of stuff most likely cover up for the lack of talent, he got what he was aiming for(attention) but it exposed his lack of talent.

ghbryans1
12-03-2009, 01:32 AM
Don't like it when straight performers use overt sexuality to sell their music. Don't like it when gay performers do it. Rent a room.

sugdaddie69
12-03-2009, 01:47 AM
What???? He didn't see what happened to Janet..after Justin Timberlake through her under the bus....Only blond females can get away with that...

gr4phic4rtist08
12-03-2009, 03:20 AM
silly faggot dicks are for chicks

alyssats
12-03-2009, 05:56 AM
any links of the video i cant find it on youtube :(

speedstick112
12-03-2009, 06:15 AM
What a loser

CaptainGeech
12-03-2009, 06:50 AM
Like Janet, it was a lame publicity stunt done by someone desperate for attention. I hope his label follows suit and blacklists him. This is someone who became "famous" through a reality TV show. I'm not really offended by what he did (although it was the wrong place and time) I am offended this person continues to get attention and sell more albums than real musicians and singers.

Ben
12-04-2009, 12:27 AM
any links of the video i cant find it on youtube :(

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eoQwdu1ywlk

raybbaby
12-04-2009, 01:51 AM
Is it still a double standard if I care about stuff I deem important but simply don't give a fuck about this guy or his 15 minutes?

alyssats
12-04-2009, 06:25 PM
any links of the video i cant find it on youtube :(

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eoQwdu1ywlk

thanks Ben for the link he looks very different now i prefer him when he was still in American Idol

littlenookie
12-08-2009, 06:03 PM
Is it just me or did he sound like complete garbage??? Wow this guy was a finalist on American Idol?? That's sad. I wonder if they were using a pitch corrector for him in every round.

The Second Coming- JB
12-09-2009, 06:54 AM
why would anyone want to see two guys making out... that's just disturbing and kinda disgusting.