GLADD Study shows more gay characters on TV
The number of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender characters in primetime continues to rise, according to a new GLAAD study set to be released today. The org found that 3% of scripted series regulars on the broadcast nets are gay and lesbian, up from 2.6% in 2008 and 1.1% in 2007. ABC led the way, with eight characters out of 168 (5%), followed by Fox, with four out of 105 (4%), NBC, with three out of 126 (3%) and the CW, with two characters out of 69 (3%). CBS had none, which the org called "disappointing." GLAAD officials said they were also concerned about a lack of diversity among the LGBT characters -- as just four are people of color. According to the GLAAD study, male characters outnumber women 57% to 43% overall in primetime. White characters rep 77% (466 out of 600), followed by African Americans, at 11% (67) and then Latino representation, which is down to 5% (27). Asian Americans/Pacific Islanders rep 4% (23 characters). GLAAD also found that the number of regular gay and lesbian characters on the mainstream cable nets dropped to 25 vs. 32 last fall.
GLADD Study shows more gay characters on TV