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Best of the Worst: The GLAAD anti-gay defamation list for 2008


The Prop 8 cult of lies and Sally Kern are just some of the barrel scrapers this year.

GLAAD has released their list of the worst anti-gay and anti-transgender voices of 2008, and it's a veritable smorgasbord orgasbord of idiotic statements and blatant lies and misinformation.

Join us after the break to see the offenders, and take our poll on who you think deserves the award for the absolute bottom of the barrel this year (or give us your own write-in candidate!)

Bill O'Reilly (Host, The O'Reilly Factor, FOX News Channel)

Bill O'Reilly, who frequently appears on GLAAD's monthly "Best and Worst of National News," led a one-sided and inaccurate discussion of marriage equality on May 15 with Fox News Channel's Megyn Kelly, who compared marriage for same-sex couples with polygamy and incest. Earlier this year, O'Reilly said Americans don't want to see "homosexual behavior legitimized" in reference to Whoopi Goldberg briefly kissing Katy Perry on The View on July 31, and he criticized Heinz for a TV commercial that included a kiss between two men on June 20. Most recently on December 10, he referred to the staff of the Los Angeles Times as "pinheads" for endorsing the Day Without a Gay protest against Proposition 8.

California's Yes on Proposition 8 Campaign

The Yes on Proposition 8 campaign filled the airwaves with deliberately misleading commercials about Proposition 8, which eliminated the right to marry for loving and committed same-sex couples in California. The ads relied on scare tactics and spread inflammatory lies, including that the defeat of Proposition 8 would mean changes in schools and churches. These ads used misinformation to shape public opinion and helped sway voters to pass the discriminatory ban, in spite of various legal experts and mainstream media outlets uniformly denouncing the dishonest approach.

Greg Gutfeld (Host, Red Eye, FOX News Channel)

FOX News Channel's late-night show Red Eye continued to feature sophomoric jabs at LGBT people. On May 20, host Greg Gutfeld and his guests grossly misrepresented serious medical concerns faced by transgender youth and laughed as one of his guests referred to transition as "turning a hole into a pole." Then Gutfeld criticized Ellen DeGeneres for announcing her upcoming wedding, saying Ellen should "shut the hell up about it." In his September 17 blog, Gutfeld ranted about diplomats saying, "These bloated bureaucrats would learn more in two days ducking for cover in Liberia, than two weeks trying to pick up transvestite hookers in Times Square."

James Dobson (Founder, Focus on the Family)

A national media platform gave airtime to an anti-gay activist when James Dobson, founder of anti-gay organization Focus on the Family, appeared on an episode of CNN Headline News and made false claims about Proposition 8, including that if the proposition failed, there would be a "spate of lawsuit against churches" and "all textbooks would have to be republished" and "everything in schools will change." The Museum of Broadcast Communications chose to honor Dobson by inducting Focus on the Family into the Radio Hall of Fame, despite his history of anti-gay rhetoric and lies. GLAAD produced a viral video to raise awareness of Dobson's attacks on the LGBT community and released a Call to Action against the Museum for honoring Dobson's lies and distortions aimed to hurt and marginalize LGBT people.

Jim Quinn (Host, The War Room With Quinn & Rose, Clear Channel)

During the November 6 broadcast of the nationally syndicated radio program The War Room with Quinn & Rose, co-host Jim Quinn made highly offensive and ignorant statements including "Gay marriage doesn't produce anything that the state has an interest in. Gay sex produces AIDS, which the state doesn't have – or should have an interest in. They should charge homosexuals more for their health insurance than they charge the rest of us." Despite numerous complaints from GLAAD's Call to Action, Clear Channel refused to issue an apology and has not disciplined Quinn for his disgusting and unacceptable remarks.

John Gibson (Host, The John Gibson Show, FOX News Radio)

Fox News Radio Host John Gibson was responsible for making several tasteless, juvenile anti-gay jokes on his program. GLAAD first issued a Call to Action after he mocked the passing of actor Heath Ledger by making anti-gay jokes about his role in Brokeback Mountain on Fox News Radio's The John Gibson Show. As a result of the response by GLAAD's members, Gibson apologized for these remarks, but continued using anti-gay jokes on May 2. During a clip of MSNBC's Rachel Maddow, who is openly gay, Gibson cut to an audio clip of someone saying, "Oh, lesbians! Yummy!"

Laura Ingraham (Host, The Laura Ingraham Show)

Transgender people were repeatedly used as punching bags by Fox News Channel and guest Laura Ingraham, even as violence and harassment against transgender people continued with disturbing frequency throughout 2008. While guest hosting Fox News Channel's The O'Reilly Factor on February 8, Ingraham interrupted a guest by saying that a transgender conference was "killing the culture." Earlier this year on The O'Reilly Factor, she questioned how parents of a transgender youth "aren't embarrassed" by their child, and most recently, on December 11, she alluded that being gay is a "bad choice" when discussing a Newsweek feature on marriage for same-sex couples.

New York Post

The New York Post continued its long history of sensationalistic treatment of LGBT people and issues with two highly problematic headlines. On January 25, the tabloid printed the headline "Evil Lesbian Mom Left Toddler to Die Slow Death: DA," despite the fact that such a gratuitous description would not have been used were the subject straight. Additionally, on February 7, the Post dehumanized the transgender community by publishing the egregious headline "Axis of She-Vil" and sub-headline, "Death to Gays But Free Ops For Irani Trannies."

Pastor Rick Warren

Rick Warren has a history of using the media as a platform to spread divisive anti-gay rhetoric. Warren spread inaccuracies about Proposition 8, saying that it would "prevent him from getting up on the pulpit and speaking out against same-sex marriage" on Dateline. He also participated in a video interview with The Wall Street Journal on December 18 where he said that marriage for gay and lesbian couples was the equivalent of "having a brother and sister be together," "an older guy marrying a child" and "one guy having multiple wives." After President-elect Obama chose Warren to lead the invocation at the Presidential inauguration, GLAAD distributed instances of Warren's anti-gay defamation on glaadBLOG as a resource for journalists and bloggers.

Representative Sally Kern (R-OK)

Oklahoma Representative Sally Kern made headlines in March after telling a group of supporters that "the homosexual agenda is destroying our nation" in a gathering of Republicans outside the Capitol. She went on to say that the gay community is "the death knell in this country" and "the biggest threat that our nation has, even more so than terrorism." GLAAD provided media training and media outreach support to local Oklahoma groups to ensure that LGBT advocates were included in local media coverage and balanced the harmful effects of such hateful remarks from an elected official.

Sean Delonas (Cartoonist, New York Post)

The New York Post and cartoonist Sean Delonas, who has been the subject of three GLAAD Calls to Action, continued juvenile treatments of LGBT issues in an editorial cartoon that ran after openly gay actor George Takei announced his upcoming marriage to his partner in California. Delonas drew crew members from Star Trek, which Takei appeared on as Sulu, looking on in disbelief as Takei exchanged nuptials with a man. One character was drawn saying "Totally Illogical, Captain." GLAAD placed a Call to Action to demand that the New York Post stop printing such immature items on their editorial pages.

Which of these choices gets your vote? Or do you have own that wasn't mentioned? Take our poll and let us know!

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  • Liz's picture

    sally kern...

    hmmm...as much as the yes on 8 thing sucked......i gotta say to this day, sally kern was also pretty bad. i mean, homosexuality worse than terrorism? that's really damn intense. i laugh about it for it being so out there, but at the same time, i think it is sad that she thinks so...well, strongly about it to say such a thing.

    Charles's picture

    Sean Delonas

    I agree with most of the picks made by GLAAD about who has been worse in portraying the GLBT community but I do have a huge issue in them singling out Sean Delonas.

    I came across the cartoon in question while reading the New York Post that morning. I didn't quite know what to make of it. I looked up Mr. Delonas's name and saw that GLAAD had issued some statements regarding him and his cartoons. Upon finding Mr. Delonas's personal website, I sent him an e-mail asking what his views were regarding gay people in America today, since it seemed like no one from GLAAD bothered to even try and contact him.

    Within 2 hours I received this response from Mr. Delonas:

    Thank you for your email.  In response to this alleged homophobia: this is written by people who don't know me.  I personally could care less whether someone is gay or not.  As far as George Takei's (Mr. Sulu) marriage, I'm a big fan of him and Star Trek. I wish him and his husband nothing but the best.
    Best,

    Sean

    The emphasis in bold was mine. I'm not saying that we should hail Sean Delonas as a tireless crusader for our community but after just one e-mail, it became very obvious that he does not bear our community any ill will.

    the herald's picture

    I'm sorry I think a public cartoon trumps a private email

    Sean made his feelings about our community quite clear in the editorial cartoon.  The fact that he supposedly wrote you email that completely contradicts that is meaningless.  It's impossible to simultaneously find homosexuality to be "illogical" (and by implication unnatural) and also wish a gay man and his husband "nothing but the best".    He either has a serious medical condition that gives him dual personalities, or he didn't mean what we wrote in the email.  I suspect its the latter. 

    Also, forgive me, but I'm thinking you might be a friend or family member of Sean's.  Am I right?  When you say "I sent him an e-mail asking what his views were regarding gay people in America today, since it seemed like no one from GLAAD bothered to even try and contact him" that seems odd to me since his views were made quite clear in the cartoon.  Also "I didn't quite know what to make of it" implies that Sean's calling homosexuality "illogical" was somehow a vague or difficult to understand statement.  It's not.  He's a bigot.  GLAAD was right to put him on the list.
    Charles's picture

    In response

    First, I am not a relative or friend of Mr. Delonas. When I pointed out that GLAAD didn't bother to contact Mr. Delonas, it goes into a huge problem I have with GLAAD. GLAAD doesn't seem to contact the people they talk about. I agree that many of the people cited by GLAAD are bigots and in some cases just plain morons, but if you ask me, an organization that seeks to reduce the defamation of gay and lesbian people should try to contact these people and ask them why they have said the things they said. Only then can one get to the root of what causes such hatred and ignorance and then one can start to fix it.

    Now, my relaxed point of view regarding this probably has more to do with who I am as a person and my humor. I may be gay and a liberal but I am also love to listen to Don Imus and read the New York Post. So, I guess the level of what I'm willing to tolerate for a laugh is a bit different than yours.

    I hope it does not appear that I'm condescending to your point of view, because believe me that is not what I'm trying to do. I respect your take on the matter but I stand firm in what I believe and what I know to be true.

    Mr. Happy Java Man's picture

    I still personally think

    I still personally think that the Westboro Baptist Church is the ugliest anti-GLBT voice out there.

    I Am The Burrito Queen - Me

    Average (2 votes):
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    Cat's picture

    Ingraham

    "Earlier this year on The O'Reilly Factor, she questioned how parents of a transgender youth "aren't embarrassed" by their child, and most recently, on December 11, she alluded that being gay is a "bad choice" when discussing a Newsweek feature on marriage for same-sex couples."

    She has a gay brother. What a bitch.

    Lyle Masaki's picture

    Also...

    according to David Brock she was part of a conservative publication in college that went to a gay students' club and then published their names and outed them. She sounds like a lovely person.

    BTW, from what little I've seen, I get the feeling Kitty Walker was inspired by Ingraham.

    Scudder's picture

    Sally

    Wow there was certainly no shortage of choices here which is kind of depressing.  That is also the first time I've seen those particular quotes from Rick Warren.  They are quite eye-opening.

    I'm most disturbed by the erosion of the wall of separation of church and state.  After 8 years of assault it is decimated.  So for me it was between the "Yes on 8" people and Sally Kern.  I could have gone with either, but ultimately picked Kern because it is just appalling that she was elected at all, not to mention that she got so much support for her ridiculous comments.  Anyone who thinks they were called by a deity to run our country scare the crap out of me!  And didn't she, ahh, try to bring a gun into work, too???


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