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You are here: Home > Forum > A Place of Safety > General Talk > Speaking of the Blitz Acam....
icon4.gif Speaking of the Blitz Acam....  [message #60985] Thu, 11 February 2010 12:35 Go to next message
Brody Levesque is currently offline  Brody Levesque

Really getting into it
Location: US/Canada
Registered: September 2009
Messages: 733



Interestingly enough your mention of that bit of ancient history for those of us less fortunate as to not have been around then, coincidentally mirrored an article that appeared at the Advocate.com yesterday.
You'll find that ironically, given some of the recent dubious and outright nutty statements of the Anti-Gay Christiban coalition, this 42 year old broadcast seems almost contemporary eh?

I thought I'd jot some notes and share this video with all of you "youngsters" here at Tim's.... [ I need to point out that the video runs for 45 minutes as it was produced as a news broadcast piece. ]

In 1967, CBS News produced The Homosexuals, an hour long look at the issue of homosexuality in America, reported by correspondent Mike Wallace. It aired on March 7th of that year, and according to reports, CBS News presented two versions for broadcast – the first was rejected because the network feared it would be regarded as an endorsement of homosexuality. No commercials aired, only public service announcements – sponsors did not want to seem to sanction homosexuality.

The tone of the report is obviously set by the time: homosexuality is an illness, the report predated the delisting of gay as mental disorder by the American Psychiatric Association, and homosexuals are ghettoized, seen as outsiders, living lonely, sad lives without much hope for happy, healthy relationships – a sentiment underlined by the psychiatrist Charles Socarides, although, with much irony, his son Richard, openly gay, would go on to become the adviser to President Clinton on gay rights.

The piece, predating Stonewall, was recently found by Mike White, and is more than an odd cultural curiosity – although it certainly is that. It is an important reminder of what has changed, in that little actually has. Attitudes towards gays still sound the same notes today, and worse. What resonated for me is the appearance of Jack Nichols, who employs an alias – Warren Adkins. Articulate, intelligent, and thoughtful, Nichols, forty years ago, anticipates the arguments of homophobes today, bravely telling Wallace that his sexual orientation is innate, like the color of his hair or skin, and that he could not conceive renouncing it. He is the hero of the piece, a pioneer.

The day after The Homosexuals aired, he was fired from his job at a Washington hotel.

[Updated on: Thu, 11 February 2010 12:41]

Re: Speaking of the Blitz Acam....  [message #60990 is a reply to message #60985] Thu, 11 February 2010 21:29 Go to previous messageGo to next message
acam is currently offline  acam

On fire!
Location: UK
Registered: July 2007
Messages: 1849



As you, no doubt know, Brody, 1967 was the year that the law of England was amended so that a homosexual act between two consenting adults over 21 in private behind locked doors was no longer a criminal offence. That year I became 33. We had two daughters. I was completely closeted at work but my university friends and my wife knew.

1940 was 27 years earlier. In December 1940 I was six. The deep snow and my mother's walk to Hartington was in Jan or Feb 1940. By my sixth birthday I lived in Evesham, south-west of the midlands (Hartington is well north).

I wonder what became of Jack Nichols. He was very brave to show his face on television. I think he was foolhardy if the attitudes shown in the program were typical. But he might well still be alive. Is there any chance of finding out? How did you find out that Warren Adkins was really Jack Nichols?

I'm grateful for the chance to see the programme. I watched it all the way through. The attitudes of Socarides seem to me to be quite similar to those of my father. Recent programmes on BBC radio about the way homosexuality was dealt with all those years ago frequently contain quotations from internal memos signed by my father wondering whether the British Public was ready for exposure to the truth about this subject.

Gore Vidal was quite good too, wasn't he? My father knew him and disapproved of his permissive attitude to unconventional sexual liaisons - but then he would.

I suspect he knew about me too, but he never said anything to me (and I said nothing to him).

Love,
Anthony
Re: Speaking of the Blitz Acam....  [message #60991 is a reply to message #60990] Thu, 11 February 2010 22:02 Go to previous message
timmy

Has no life at all
Location: UK, in Devon
Registered: February 2003
Messages: 13796



Did you listen to Mr Dale's Diary where Sally's husband left her to go and live with another gentleman?

That was groundbreaking.



Author of Queer Me! Halfway Between Flying and Crying - the true story of life for a gay boy in the Swinging Sixties in a British all male Public School
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