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warning:
potential Season 3 spoiler at the end of this article
In
the second season episode “Labyrinth,”
Alice, Dana, and Dana’s then-girlfriend, Tonya, are shopping
at a sex-toy store when Alice is once again asked when
she is going to decide whether she’s gay or straight.
Tonya declares, "I don't understand you bisexuals! I mean, really,
make up your minds already.” And Dana adds,
“Make up your minds already.”
Though
Dana’s uncertainty about Alice’s sexuality is in part
explained by her character’s own uncertainties, as well
as her developing sexual relationship with Alice, and
Dana's aggressive attempts to make Alice "choose"
are reflective of how many lesbians see bisexuality, the
fact that Alice’s main opportunities to discuss bisexuality
occur in defensive situations mean that bisexuality is
almost always cast in a negative light.
In
addition, as the series has developed, Alice’s interest
in dating men has declined while her interest in women—particularly
Dana—has taken center stage,
underscoring the first assumption that bisexuality is
simply a transitional phase. Of course, many bisexual
women enter into serious relationships with other women
as Alice has with Dana, and there's nothing unrealistic
about this.
The
problem is that none of the show's bisexual characters
enter into serious relationships with men.
The
"just a phase" belief is also supported
by Jenny’s storylines. Soon after her affair with Marina,
Jenny tells her visiting friend Annette, “I think I'm
bisexual,” but her identity as a bisexual is short-lived.
In the first episode of Season 2, her male lover, Gene,
tells her in exasperation, “I'm sorry to break it to you,
but you are a girl-loving, full-on lesbian!” Jenny doesn't
refute this statement, just admonishes him, "I don't
think that's for you to say."
Though
Jenny and Alice both make subtle references to their bisexuality
in the season 2 finale (“Lacuna”)—Alice
says, “I follow the heart, not the anatomy”—there has
been little action to support their talk.
Instead,
as the series has developed, it appears that both Alice
and Jenny are moving further and further away from bisexuality
and toward an exclusively lesbian sexual orientation.
Again, while this is representative of the experiences
of many bisexual women, having all of the show's bisexual
characters only date women offers a skewed picture of
bisexuality--that it's just another word for "lesbian".
It’s
clear that The L Word’s heart is in its lesbian
storylines, and there’s nothing wrong with that--it’s
even to be applauded, given the dearth of good lesbian
characters on TV. But the show also promised to include
bisexual women, and has so far failed to do more than
pay them cursory attention.
With
the January 8, 2006 debut of the third season
of The L Word only weeks away, is the series
poised to finally deliver on its promise to accurately
and sensitively portray bisexuality?
Probably
not. One of the most obvious ways The L Word could
be more fully representative of bisexual experience would
be to include a male lover for either Alice or Jenny--one
who is not an object of ridicule. But
writing in an opposite-sex relationship for either of
these two characters is not likely to generate a lot of
enthusiasm among the show’s lesbian fans, which suggests
that bisexuals aren’t likely to get much screen time on
The L Word in the future.
This
points to the difficult situation the L Word writers
find themselves in with regard to pleasing viewers: if
they do give Alice or Jenny a serious boyfriend, many
(lesbian) viewers will be unhappy; if they don't, many
bisexual women will continue to feel poorly represented.
It's a no-win situation.
There
is rumor (potential spoiler warning) of Tina leaving Bette
for a man she met at work in the third season, but even
if this turns out be true, it will do little to counter
any of the aforementioned stereotypes about bisexual women,
and will in fact just anger viewers already starved for
media images of lesbians in committed relationships.
Which
means for now, television viewers are better off turning
to America's Next Top Model
or South of Nowhere
to find realistic bisexual characters than The L Word.