Marc Malkin Senior Film Awards, Events & Lifestyle Editor“Queer Eye” may have brought LGBTQ issues into the living rooms of millions, but that doesn’t mean the fight for equality can be won by Hollywood alone.“Part of the duality of queer existence is that sometimes you can experience joy, you can experience exciting things in the midst of really difficult things going on,” “Queer Eye” host Jonathan Van Ness told me at an Emmy FYC event for Netflix’s reality makeover show. “But I think duality also applies to visibility and representation and then the lived experience of people.
I think that a lot of times we like we lock those things together and we think, ‘Oh, representation is getting better visibility is getting better.
If visibility and representation is increased, that must mean things are getting better.’” The hard facts prove things differently. “It’s possible that visibility and representation can be increasing and maybe getting better in some ways, like in the entertainment industry.
But also, at the same time, hate crimes are raising every single year,” Van Ness said. “We have more anti-trans laws passed this year than all of last year and last year was the highest of all time.”It’s why the “Queer Eye” teams knows their series is maybe more needed than ever. “My theory is I think we have to start talking about politics and religion and everything at the dinner table with our families,” Van Ness said. “It’s controversial, but it’s the only way it’s going to happen.
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