News, Reviews & Commentary on Gay and Bisexual Men in Entertainment and the Media

Sean Hannity

AfterElton Briefs: Sean Penn hits a sour note on the "Milk" shoot, it's curtains for "Curtains", and more!

Cheyenne Jackson (R) and designer/Ugly Betty star Kenneth Cole

In a continued effort to bring you all that is important in the world of gay entertainment and ensure that you are being spoon-fed images of gorgeous, commoditized manflesh, we present the newly-minted AfterElton Briefs. Following the usual assortment of carefully-selected news items, interested readers can find a refreshing pic of a hot man in underwear after the jump. Yes, we're serious.

  • In his attempts to get a crowd of extras riled up on the Milk shoot, Sean Penn referred to Sean Hannity as Rupert Murdoch's "butt boy". Er ... probably not the best choice of words, Sean.
  • Broadway's Cheyenne Jackson will host the Live Out Loud Young Trailblazers Gala, a benefit for the organization, which aims to provide mentorship and support to LGBT youth. Seriously, Cheyenne, you can stop trying so hard to make me fall in love with you. It's getting a little embarrassing.
  • Up north, Canadian Television (CTV) allegedly yanked an "ex-gay" ministry ad after receiving complaints that it was discriminatory. (Warning: links to a religious site, if you're not into that kind of thing.) If so, good for them.
  • The BAFTA television award nominees have been announced, with three gay men (Stephen Fry, Simon Amstell, and Alan Carr) up for the Best Entertainment Performer prize. Additionally, out actor Sir Antony Sher is up for Best Actor for his role in Primo.
  • Curtains, the show for which David Hyde Pierce won a Tony (and thanked his partner when receiving it), will close on June 29th after 537 total performances.

And today's Briefs are brought to you by...

Is Gawker trolling for page views by "outing" newscasters?

Gawker.com has been in the news quite a bit of late. The Sunday New York Times recently ran an article asking "Has Gawker Jumped the Snark" which examined the sites recent turmoil including the departure of a number of senior bloggers as well as a decline in the quality in the site's coverage of the media. Said the article about whether the site has lost its mojo:

Is it so? There are certainly signs that Gawker, delivering a daily dose of gossip and commentary about the news business and selected celebrities since 2002, is in the midst of a particularly intense period of turmoil, which has led to a slide in its once-hypnotic influence on the news media world.

Then came news that Gawker editor Nick Denton announced a new pay scale where bloggers would be paid based on the number of views at a rate of $7.50 for every 1,000 views that postsgenerate. Felix Salmon, who writes the Market Movers blog over at Portfolio.com, then asked what affect that might have on the quality of posts:

At least two things remain to be seen: whether the new pay scheme will increase the amount of salaciousness at the expense of the sites' broader credibility, and whether the new pay scheme will adequately reward the kind of old-fashioned shoe-leather journalism that Denton wants to encourage at Gawker.

We don't yet know the answer to question number two, but judging by this post — Can We Just Call Them Gay — about which newscasters might be gay, the answer to number one might just be yes.

The post purports to criticize New York Magazine for supposedly hinting around that Fox anchor Shepherd Smith might be gay in their weekly Q&A feature. How did they hint exactly? By asking what was the last Broadway show he attended and what art is hanging above his couch. (Blogger Maggie Shnayerson fails to note these are the same questions that NYM asks each celebrity they interview for the column every week, and that they weren't tailored for Smith in the least.)

Gawker then points out that there was also "heavy subtext" when the magazine profiled Anderson Cooper by noting "Cooper couldn’t have looked more put-together in his impeccably modernblack suit, crisp pink shirt, and perfectly knotted purple-and-bluetie."

Apparently noting that Cooper's shirt was pink and his suit impeccable are coded euphemisms for gay. Well, Gawker is going to have none of that! They're going to grab the journalistic bull by the horns and simply rate five newscasters - Fox's Smith, Sean Hannity, and Bill Hemmer, CNN's Anderson Cooper, and ABC's Sam Champion - on the Kinsey scale because they're tired of all that pussyfooting around!

So they analyze some video of each newscaster, repeat rumors and make "subtle" innuendos about each, and then assign them a number from the Kinsey scale which, incidentally, they got backwards at first and had to fix when a reader pointed it out to them.

So is Gawker really upset at NYM for not having the same convictions as they do, or are they using these men's sexuality as a cheap stunt to drive page views? I can't read their minds, of course, but if you take a gander at the page views on their site today you'll see that the post about Smith and the others has over 5,000 views, making it one of the top posts. In fact, it's done so well for Maggie that she just trotted out another post about Smith, this time accusing The New York Observer of doing the same thing.

Gay-baiting: It's fun and it pays! But you know what else pays? Doing actual research and old-fashioned interviews, rather than taking cheap shots and hoping that your targets drop some easy hits. Our own James Hillis worked his tail off on his Gay Newsmen: A Clearer Picture article, and earned a GLAAD Media Award nomination from his thoughtful work. But I guess that's not what post-snark-jump Gawker is all about. 


User login

Put AfterElton.com headlines on your site/blog:

After Elton home page on logo online