Television
As a Lovers’ Kiss Turns a World Around
By GINIA BELLAFANTE
If
you are between the ages of 13 and 87, the last time you met anyone who
described herself as a loyal viewer of daytime soap operas you were
probably still hoarding quarters for pay phones and maintaining a
casual position on sunscreen. Soaps have been shedding audiences for
years now. The young, especially, have found their absurdities
elsewhere; there is almost nothing put forth by the writers of “All My
Children” that could, in a stupidity contest, outrank a single moment
of “The Hills.”
“All My Children” might as well be “Mad
Money,” as it happens. On Friday, in an effort to fatten its ratings,
the ABC serial featured a guest appearance by Warren Buffett, who
visited Susan Lucci’s Erica Kane in prison and advised her to take up
bridge. Erica has been serving a sentence on a charge of insider
trading.
A cameo by Mr. Buffett, the 77-year-old chairman of
Berkshire Hathaway, is probably not the obvious path to a younger
audience and advertisers for products that have nothing to do with
incontinence. Over the past seven months all but one daytime soap has
lost viewers between 18 and 34. That one is the historically stodgy CBS
drama “As the World Turns,” which has been chronicling the ecstasies
and miseries of life in the fictitious town of Oakdale, Ill., for 52
years.
Since its introduction of a gay-theme story line last
summer “As the World Turns” has actually gained viewers, specifically
younger viewers, some of whom turned to the show, unpredictably enough,
after following the romance of the college-age characters Luke (Van
Hansis) and Noah (Jake Silbermann) via YouTube clips posted by fans —
new media reviving fossil media.
Nearly every moment of Luke and
Noah’s interaction has been featured on YouTube, most notably their
initial kiss, the first gay kiss in daytime soaps, captured in a video
that has received more than a million hits. The relationship garnered
further attention as the subject of protest by the conservative
American Family Association, which is opposed to the “promotion of the
gay lifestyle,” and by fans who have written Procter & Gamble
(which owns “As the World Turns”) demanding that Luke and Noah kiss
more, kiss all the time, kiss the way the show’s heterosexual couples
do. Last month, after a 211-day period that fans described as a
drought, Luke and Noah (“Nuke” in the entertainment press) kissed for
the third, momentous time.
In almost every way, however, Luke
and Noah have been treated as preposterously as any couple on daytime
television, with all the requisite obstacles keeping them from
happiness. First Luke pined in vain, thinking Noah was straight. Noah
thought he was too and began to date Maddie, a girl he met at work, who
also watched a lot of old movies and was probably the only other person
in Oakdale to know that Preston Sturges isn’t the name of a dry-goods
store. Noah kept trying and trying to convince himself that he was
straight, asking Maddie to stay in town in a stealth maneuver to keep
his true libido in check. She had plans to go off to Wesleyan
University — because it’s been “a dream of mine since I knew what
college was” — but Noah begged her to enroll at Oakdale U., no matter
what its U.S. News & World Report ranking.
On the show gay
life doesn’t flourish without intense animosity directed at it. The
relationship of Luke and Noah has played out against what appears to be
rampant homophobia in Oakdale. Luke and Noah were once attacked by some
drunken fraternity jerks. But those random assailants weren’t half as
bad as Noah’s father, Winston Mayer (Daniel Hugh Kelly), a colonel who
served in Iraq during the gulf war and tried to have Luke killed when
he discovered his son was gay. It is amazing that the armed forces
haven’t leveled their own protest against “As the World Turns” for
prejudice against the military.
Colonel Mayer refused to pay for
Noah’s education unless he served in the Iraq war. The colonel also, it
turned out, killed Noah’s mother. Now he is manipulating a pretty young
Iraqi refugee — the character Ameera Ali Aziz is, to the best of my
knowledge, the first woman to appear in a chador on an American soap
opera, amid all the Botox and cleavage — presumably as part of a
malicious plan further to obstruct his son’s love life.
Class
used to be the axis on which so much of the turmoil on soap operas
turned. Years ago Luke’s parents provided the drama on the grounds that
his mother was an heiress and his father a stable boy. “As the World
Turns” hasn’t done anything revolutionary with its gay kiss — gay
characters on ABC’s “Brothers & Sisters,” on Sunday nights, display
their affection for each other constantly — it has merely discovered
the currency of the culture wars.
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