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Oh,
No! Summer Reruns!
Whats
a Queer as Folk fan to do?! Dont
worry, honey, have we got a website for you
by
Larry Collins Jr.
The
sitcom days of campy gay sidekicks and Jack Tripper
of Threes Company pretending to be
gay so that he can have two female roommates have
gone the way of the Macerena. Clichéd gay
television is quickly becoming a distant memory.
Leading this new age of fresh and groundbreaking
gay-themed television is Queer as Folk,
its brutal realism and family of characters making
it Sex and the City for the gay community.
Houston
abounds with Sunday night QAF-watching
parties. When OutSmart asked the community
what you thought about QAF, people told
us, "Its my childhood," "Theres
finally a show that tells the truth," "Gets
better every week," and "Who put my
life on tape?"
Bringing
this show to its ever-growing group of enthusiastic
fans and becoming a household name is not a simple
task. Most especially, as QAF heads
into summer reruns, how will it keep the buzz
going?
The
answer, hope QAF producers, is the Internet.
With the Queer as Folk website, fans still
have a place to go for their weekly fix of Justin,
Michael, and Brian as they await the start of
the next batch of shows. In what has become Showtimes
most visited Internet location, new viewers are
finding their way down the online equivalent of
Liberty Avenue every day.
Online
writers have created diaries and faux e-mail from
the characters. They even offer such mundane salacious
details as the contents of characters refrigerators.
Michael must have milk for his Captain Crunch
every morning and the ever-glamorous Emmett would
die without his purple and clear nail polish chilling
in the refrigerator.
The
man masterminding the QAF website is Showtime
executive Gene Falk.
He
says that the site is simply a way to let fans
feel as if they are living on Liberty Avenue with
their favorite characters. The website comes into
play "when an hour a week just isnt
enough."
He
toils for countless hours to ensure that regular
viewers of the series will have a place where
they can follow the show and its characters in
an atmosphere that makes them feel as if they
were a part of the action.
Falk
is no stranger to gay issues, having served as
chair of the board of directors of the Gay and
Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD). A
gay man himself, he has found a way to use his
profession to foster understanding of aspects
of his personal life. Falk explains that the series
is important to the gay population because it
is realistic and issue-oriented. He and likeminded
producers were ready to take gay issues to the
forefront and out of the broadcasting closet.
"Where
I love and admire Will and Grace, they
are not going to talk about police entrapment,"
he says.
Aimed
at QAF faithful viewers, the website does
not so much promote or explain the show, as provide
a continuation of the series for the audience.
Creativity is the key to keeping viewers returning
to the site. Surfers are able to travel down a
virtual Liberty Avenue and stop in at landmarks
from the show to chat or buy music. It offers
producer and actor commentary on episodes in the
same manner that is common on DVDs.
In
the spirit of daytime soap operas, fans are able
to write "fan-fiction" stories in which
they can take a characters life in any direction
that imagination leads. They create their own
couples and love stories. Fans who arent
happy with a Justin/Brian pairing are able to
rock the boat a bit and send Justin straight
into the arms of Lindsay if they felt the
urge.
The
most popular feature of the site are the chat
sessions with the actors, with upwards 5,000 fans
participating at times. Everything is fair game.
One participant asked series regular Hal Sparks
(Michael) about a rumor involving the actor and
his dog. He wrote, "Someone told me that
you kissed your dog to practice for the show.
. . . Who kisses better, Chris Potter [David]
or Spot?"
You
may want to start wedding shopping now, because
Sparks answered that he and the pooch are an official
item.
The
message boards of the site also see a great deal
of traffic. Falk says that this is where the fans
are able to truly discuss the show and all of
its components with other members of the dedicated
audience. Many a young man has posted messages
about finding someone he can relate to in the
teen character of Justin. Or the dysfunctional
household of Lindsay, Melanie, and Baby Gus gives
rise to discussions about the ever-pressing issue
of having children.
Message
boards are also a fertile ground for criticism,
for example, from older viewers that feel a bit
disenfranchised from the young characters of the
show.
In
answer to this, Falk says the show is dedicated
to a younger demographic. Although there are characters
that all parts of the gay community can relate
to, the majority of the storylines and drama surrounds
a group of core characters that are of a certain
age.
"In
the same way that Friends is about a certain
age bracket . . . so are we."
The
site also takes a responsible stance by offering
gay resources and links. "We are a television
network and are not equipped to provide a lot
of information, but we can send [viewers] to places
that can help," Falk says.
Many
of the issues that characters face on the show
are presented on the website with further information
for viewers, with articles on drug addiction and
coming out resources, as well as links to organizations
such as PFLAG and the Gay Law Net.
Due
to the nature of the program, it is important
that age restrictions are in place and practiced.
Based on language and strong sexual content, the
actual television show is intended for an audience
that is over the age of 18. For the website, Falk
and site developers tried to reign in the explicit
content; web surfers should not expect to experience
the complete frank and graphic material that makes
the show such a landmark production.
"Showtime
has the advantage of being invited into peoples
homes . . . online it is open to anyone,"
he adds.
Although
characters of the show seem to only use the Internet
for cruising and watching live strip shows, producers
hope that fans can find a virtual home on the
Queer as Folk website. Pull up a seat at
the Liberty Diner and feast your eyes on what
makes your favorite characters tick or trick.
If
you have any comments about this article, please
email them to letters@outsmartmagazine.com.
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