March 14, 2007

But Then What Did He Mean by "The Women Are Strong, the Men Are Good Looking"?

Garrison Keillor has written some stuff in his Salon column that many, including Dan Savage, are calling homphobic, and it's hard to argue. I'm a big Keillor fan from way back, but this is disappointing. Not that his Salon column has ever been all that great- last time it made news, he was insinuating that Norm Coleman had helped plot the assassination of Paul Wellstone.

Posted by Stephen Silver at March 14, 2007 05:45 PM
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Garrison Keillor has responded to the criticisms he's received over his Salon article on the front page of his Prairie Home Companion website: http://prairiehome.publicradio.org/

"Ordinarily I don't like to use this space to talk about my newspaper column but the most recent column aroused such angry reactions that I thought I should reply. The column was done tongue-in-cheek, always a risky thing, and was meant to be funny, another risky thing these days, and two sentences about gay people lit a fire in some readers and sent them racing to their computers to fire off some jagged e-mails. That's okay. But the underlying cause of the trouble is rather simple.

I live in a small world — the world of entertainment, musicians, writers — in which gayness is as common as having brown eyes. Ever since I was in college, gay men and women have been friends, associates, heroes, adversaries, and in that small world, we talk openly and we kid each other and think nothing of it. But in the larger world, gayness is controversial. In almost every state, gay marriage would be voted down if put on a ballot. Gay men and women have been targeted by the right wing as a hot-button issue. And so gay people out in the larger world feel beseiged to some degree. In the small world I live in, they feel accepted and cherished as individuals, but in the larger world they may feel like Types. My column spoke as we would speak in my small world and it was read by people in the larger world and thus the misunderstanding. And for that, I am sorry. Gay people who set out to be parents can be just as good parents as anybody else, and they know that, and so do I."

Pass it on, please.

Posted by: Melanie at March 18, 2007 10:51 AM
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