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Recently
there have been more bisexual women cropping up on
network TV, but their bisexuality continues to be primarily
fodder for jokes, or only referenced but not actually explored.
In 2003, the CBS sitcom Two
and a Half Men debuted with ex-wife Judith (Marin
Hinkle) presented as possibly bisexual, but that storyline
was never developed, and Judith has continued to primarily
date men.
The
same year, NBC's attempt at an American version of the hit
British show Coupling
included Jane (Lindsay Price), who called herself bisexual
but really wasn't, and ABC's daytime drama All
My Children introduced Lena, a bisexual woman who
fell in love with the show's resident lesbian, Bianca--whose
best friend Maggie (Elizabeth Hendrickson) has also exhibited
bisexual tendencies, although Maggie has yet to actually get
romantically involved with women.
In
2004, the lesbian on FOX's Wonderfalls
fell for a bisexual woman, but the series was canceled before
the relationship could be explored. Later that year, FOX's
North Shore
introduced a three-episode storyline arc in which one of the
show's regular male characters dated a bisexual woman and
her girlfriend at the same time.
Although
Alex is not a series regular on The O.C.,
she has appeared in most of its episodes this season, and
given the show's immense popularity and millions of viewers,
this makes her one of the most visible bisexual TV characters
in recent history. Fortunately, she is also one of the most
realistic bisexual characters we've seen on primetime network
TV: interesting, intelligent, kind, and a little wise beyond
her years. Like all of the other characters on the show, she
has her flaws--she stands out as downwardly mobile in an upwardly
mobile community, for example--but she's still likeable and
sympathetic.
Most
importantly, beyond the initial surprise factor, her bisexuality
and her (past) relationships with women are for the most part
treated fairly matter-of-factly by the writers. So far, at
least, the writers have avoided saddling her with the usual
promiscuous and non-monogamous stereotypes that afflict most
bisexual women on TV (the recent bisexual storyline on North
Shore is a recent example).
O.C.
creator Josh Schwartz insists
that the upcoming relationship between Alex and Marissa is
not a ratings stunt, and that Marissa develops real feelings
for Alex. But given Marissa's predominantly heterosexual past,
the huge fan support for the Marissa and Ryan (Benjamin McKenzie)
pairing, and the controversy The O.C. would court
by making one of its principal characters bisexual, it's likely
that her "real feelings" for Alex will only last
a few episodes.
Regardless
of how the relationship between Alex and Marissa plays out,
however, integrating a non-stereotypical, openly bisexual
character like Alex into one of the most popular shows on
television is a significant development, and a long-overdue
step in the right direction for network TV.