That's what it said on the front page of my actual newspaper this morning.
It is. I haven't read the article yet myself. The topic might be mentioned.Isn't North Carolina where GOP lawmakers started the whole "Bathroom Bill" controversy?
Soooo... You posted an article here, yet never read it?It is. I haven't read the article yet myself. The topic might be mentioned.
What does that have to do with the linked article?Isn't North Carolina where GOP lawmakers started the whole "Bathroom Bill" controversy?
as I gay man I totally agree. this article was not worthy of the front page of the Charlotte Observer.Meh, Elvis Duran has been in radio for years, has been at Z100 in New York since '96, has held the morning slot there and his show has been nationally syndicated for a dozen years. He came out as gay in 2010.
While I applaud people like Elvis Duran and Anderson Cooper for blazing a path and setting an example for younger people who may be afraid that they'll never be successful because they're "different" than many others, at the same time I don't think the majority of listeners care if the jock or host they're listening to is gay or straight, black or white, or even male or female in many cases. If they're doing good radio, they'll get listeners and ratings. Now, if they insist on making their sexual orientation or race or gender a big part of their show, and print articles claiming to have "The Gayest Radio Show in zxy City", that may risk turning off some listeners and they need to keep that in mind.
Point being: North Carolina in particular, seems to be frequently fascinated by the LGBT community, and are quick to publicly point out and eventually criticize individuals who are. Do you think in California, any radio or TV personality would be publicly recognized as gay?What does that have to do with the linked article?
I'm completely missing the connection here, if there is one.North Carolina in particular, seems to be frequently fascinated by the LGBT community, and are quick to publicly point out and eventually criticize individuals who are. Do you think in California, any radio or TV personality would be publicly recognized as gay?
Where I work in D.C., there are several folks working in front of the camera who are gay. Nobody publicly points that out, nor is it made a concern.
For whatever reason, (which if you read between the lines, is pretty obvious) North Carolina politics are obsessed with the LGBT community, seemingly looking for ways to demonize or at least pick a fight with what amounts to a small group. The Bathroom Bill was a good example.I'm completely missing the connection here, if there is one.
This guy came out and is promoting himself as gay, something he's very sure about and comfortable with. He got someone to write about it. His coming out has apparently not negatively affected his morning show ratings as he had feared it might.
I guess you never heard of Howard Stern? "Parading their (hetero)sexual preference in front of the whole world" (or at least the whole city) was one of the defining features of "shock jocks" in that era.The difference is back in the 70's, 80's and 90's nobody felt the need to parade their sexual preference in front of the whole world.