GLAAD's report on Widow who Fell For Her Son’s Friend’s Stuff She Met On A Matching App (2025)LGBTQ representation in television, released Thursday, initially looked like a cause for celebration.
The organization, which has been examining this data for more than 20 years, came out with some surprising data tailor-made for a happy headline: there were more LGBTQ characters on television than ever before. And while that achievement was notable, the report said, that milestone obscured some other critical representational issues, particularly when it came to queer women and women of color.
SEE ALSO: No one is talking about LGBTQ issues this election. That's a problem."Where We Are on TV" found that 4.8 percent (43 characters) of characters in the 2016/2017 broadcast scripted primetime TV programming are LGBTQ, compared to 95.4% of characters who are heterosexual (854 characters). Broadcast networks are scheduled to feature 28 recurring LGBTQ characters, the highest its ever been. This year, cable features 142 regular and recurring LGBTQ characters, the same as it was the year before.
But 4.8% percent still feels like a paltry number, especially when a recent study found that 7% of people aged 18-35 identified as LGBTQ.
The numbers also only tell part of the story. As Sarah Kate Ellis, GLAAD's president and CEO cautioned in the piece, it's not just the number of LGBTQ characters represented that matter, it's how they're portrayed:
"For all the advancement made, many LGBTQ characters still fall into outdated stereotypes or harmful tropes," Ellis wrote in the report.
There's a long tradition, for example, of television and film killing off their queer characters. A widely shared report produced by Autostraddlein March 2016 found that only 30 lesbian or bisexual TV characters of the 383 who have appeared on American television since 1976 were given happy endings, while 95 have died.
"Most of these deaths served no other purpose than to further the narrative of a more central (and often straight, cisgender) character,” Ellis wrote in the GLAAD report. “When there are so few lesbian and bisexual women on television, the decision to kill these characters in droves sends a toxic message about the worth of queer female stories.”
Via GiphyThough the percentage of black series regular characters is at a record high, black women only make up 38% of those characters. Latino representation lags at just 8%, while Asian-Americans make makes up just 6% of all characters.
72% of LGBTQ characters on cable television are white.
You can read the full report here.
Doc Hammer on 'Venture Bros.' finale's missing Sirena sceneRecapping Dante: Canto 10, or Why We Are Doing This by Alexander AcimanLife Sentence by Sadie SteinTragic, Indeed by Sadie SteinThoreau and the iPad by Dannie Zarate'They Cloned Tyrone' ending explainedHow to host a Passover seder on ZoomMichael Cera's Allan is 'Barbie's sly secret weaponCartoon Network and Warner Bros. Animation production staff are trying to unionizeGchatting with George Saunders by Katherine BernardDoc Hammer on 'Venture Bros.' finale's missing Sirena sceneLil Nas X, still Very Online, stays unbothered by conservative outrageNBA partners with Clear to screen fans for COVIDWordle today: Here's the answer and hints for July 22A Corner of Paradise by Nicole RudickApollinaire on Trial, and Other News by Sadie SteinTroy to Ithaca by Sadie SteinDarcy vs. Knightley, and Other News by Sadie SteinTwitter implements DM limit for unverified usersCartoon Network and Warner Bros. Animation production staff are trying to unionize Hulk talk better in 'Thor: Ragnarok' (and refuse turn back into Banner) 4 big lies you can't undo at the office—so don't ever tell them This shot of Terry Crews in 'Crackdown 3' looks amazing I deleted the Facebook app and I haven't looked back Ben Affleck responds to rumors that he's leaving Batman at Comic Gwendoline Christie explains why Brienne is still following Catelyn Stark's orders Helpful new app connects breastfeeding moms with specialists 24/7 'Black Panther' Comic 10 'Game of Thrones' reality show spinoffs GM will allow developers to test their apps in real cars Sigh: Yes, Marvel's 'Iron Fist' is coming back for a season 2 I played a 'Netflix and Chill' simulator with the guy I Netflix and chill with Pissed Netflix subscribers accuse Verizon of throttling video 'Westworld' Season 2 trailer drops at Comic Euron Greyjoy's '1,000 ships' is a massive 'Game of Thrones' plot hole This trans student's school tried to censor his artwork. Now it's going viral. Why Bitcoin is surging again, in plain English China wants to create a $150 billion AI industry Shark Week: a brief history Jake Paul announces he is leaving Disney Channel amidst controversy
2.8841s , 10123.9453125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Widow who Fell For Her Son’s Friend’s Stuff She Met On A Matching App (2025)】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network