Beefcake, gay subtexts, and queer representation in mass media from the 1950s to the present
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Dec 9, 2013
Ted Wass: Bare-Chested Comedy
Dec 8, 2013
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
My partner is making me watch the entire series of Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997-2003) on DVD, in order, for the second time. And I already saw many episodes when it originally aired, so the third time. That's a record broken only by Seinfeld and maybe Gilligan's Island when I was a kid.
The premise: Buffy (Sarah Michelle Gellar), an ordinary teenager at Sunnydale High, discovers that she is The Slayer, one girl out of all the world given the super powers necessary to kill vampires and other demonic beings. She and her allies make wisecracks and discuss trivial home-and-school issues as they fight the monster of the week.
Every season has a story arc with an Apocalyptic threat by the "the worst enemy we have ever encountered" (by the later seasons, the hyperbole becomes tedious). Also lots of romantic entanglements.
Her team, facetiously called the Scooby Gang, includes (not all at the same time):
1.-3. "Regular guy" Xander (Nicholas Brendon, top photo), who dates snobbish Cordelia, and then Anya, a 1000-year old vengeance demon
4.-6. Computer whiz/witch Willow, who dates the sardonic werewolf Oz (Seth Green), and then the mousy Wiccan Tara.
7.-8. Watchers (professional Slayer mentors) Giles and Wesley
9-11. Buffy's boyfriends, reformed vampires Angel and Spike and military vampire-hunter Riley (Marc Blucas, below)
12, Her sister Dawn.
Beefcake: Quite a lot. The boyfriend characters don't seem to own shirts, Oz is always naked when he finishes "wolfing out," and Xander displays a respectable physique.
Male bonding: Not much. The primarily relationships are always male-female or female-female. The male Scoobies treat each other as cordial coworkers.
Gay characters: Two minor gay male:
1. Larry, a football star, originally accused of being a werewolf in Season 2. Xander discovers his "real" secret, and freaks out. He reappears several times, out and proud, during Season 3.
2. Andrew, the only survivor of a trio of nerd-villains in the last season, becomes the gang's gay-vague hostage-mascot. No one ever says that he's gay, but it seems obvious that that's how Tom Lenk is playing the character.
He appears in the spinoff Angel with a blatant crush on reformed vampire Spike (James Marsters, left). But later, he appears surrounded by beautiful women and comments: "People change." Creator Joss Whedon explains that Andrew wasn't supposed to say the line -- it was to go to a female character, who was supposed to be surrounded by beautiful people.
Three major lesbian:
1.-3. Willow (Allison Hannigan, left) spent three seasons hot for guys, notably her werewolf-boyfriend Oz. Then at the beginning of Season 4, she meets Tara, something clicks, and she's a lesbian. But she hasn't discovered her true sexual identity; she states repeatedly that she has "turned" lesbian. They're a couple through Season 6, when Tara is killed (I know, the gay person always dies).
In Season 7, Willow gets a new girlfriend, streetwise Slayer-in-training Kennedy.
The premise: Buffy (Sarah Michelle Gellar), an ordinary teenager at Sunnydale High, discovers that she is The Slayer, one girl out of all the world given the super powers necessary to kill vampires and other demonic beings. She and her allies make wisecracks and discuss trivial home-and-school issues as they fight the monster of the week.
Every season has a story arc with an Apocalyptic threat by the "the worst enemy we have ever encountered" (by the later seasons, the hyperbole becomes tedious). Also lots of romantic entanglements.
Her team, facetiously called the Scooby Gang, includes (not all at the same time):
1.-3. "Regular guy" Xander (Nicholas Brendon, top photo), who dates snobbish Cordelia, and then Anya, a 1000-year old vengeance demon
4.-6. Computer whiz/witch Willow, who dates the sardonic werewolf Oz (Seth Green), and then the mousy Wiccan Tara.
7.-8. Watchers (professional Slayer mentors) Giles and Wesley
9-11. Buffy's boyfriends, reformed vampires Angel and Spike and military vampire-hunter Riley (Marc Blucas, below)
12, Her sister Dawn.
Beefcake: Quite a lot. The boyfriend characters don't seem to own shirts, Oz is always naked when he finishes "wolfing out," and Xander displays a respectable physique.
Male bonding: Not much. The primarily relationships are always male-female or female-female. The male Scoobies treat each other as cordial coworkers.
Gay characters: Two minor gay male:
1. Larry, a football star, originally accused of being a werewolf in Season 2. Xander discovers his "real" secret, and freaks out. He reappears several times, out and proud, during Season 3.
2. Andrew, the only survivor of a trio of nerd-villains in the last season, becomes the gang's gay-vague hostage-mascot. No one ever says that he's gay, but it seems obvious that that's how Tom Lenk is playing the character.
He appears in the spinoff Angel with a blatant crush on reformed vampire Spike (James Marsters, left). But later, he appears surrounded by beautiful women and comments: "People change." Creator Joss Whedon explains that Andrew wasn't supposed to say the line -- it was to go to a female character, who was supposed to be surrounded by beautiful people.
1.-3. Willow (Allison Hannigan, left) spent three seasons hot for guys, notably her werewolf-boyfriend Oz. Then at the beginning of Season 4, she meets Tara, something clicks, and she's a lesbian. But she hasn't discovered her true sexual identity; she states repeatedly that she has "turned" lesbian. They're a couple through Season 6, when Tara is killed (I know, the gay person always dies).
In Season 7, Willow gets a new girlfriend, streetwise Slayer-in-training Kennedy.