Few
American television shows have engaged with issues
of class, partly due to the common misperception that the
United States is
a classless society, but also because television tends to
show idealized families and social groups and generally
avoids controversy in order to draw advertisers.
Characters
on a given television show tend to hail from the same class
or economic background. On prime-time soaps like Dynasty,
for example, they are all wealthy or upper-class, or on
a comedy like Everybody Loves Raymond, everyone comes
from an acceptable working-class background.
When
characters of different class backgrounds interact on a
television show, it is often likely to occur on a crime
drama, or as a matter of romantic interest (for example,
the boy from the wrong side of the tracks falls for an upper
middle-class girl on a show like The O.C.).
But
from its beginnings in 2004, The
L Word has been different. Los Angeles, where The
L Word is set, is a sprawling, mixed-class urban area
in which grinding poverty is effectively separated from
extremely wealthy enclaves by freeway systems that divide
the city into different class zones, a dual economic system
split into a wage-based formal economy and a labor-based
informal economy, and racism compounded by a large number
of recent immigrants.
The
characters of The L Word, however, who mostly live
in the upper-middle-class gay bubble of West Hollywood,
rarely if ever encounter these complexities. Instead, the
lesbians on The L Word seem to live in a rose-hued
melting pot of different cultures and classes, implying
that a shared lesbian identity transcends class and race.
From
the show’s beginning, the lead character, Bette Porter (Jennifer
Beals) has been a somewhat atypical African-American lesbian.
The daughter of a man who had connections to both
Bill Clinton and Gloria Steinem (as revealed in the
last episode of Season 2), Bette lives in a beautiful West
Hollywood bungalow (complete with swimming pool and expensive
works of art) and works as a highly paid museum director.
Bette’s
social circle includes women from a variety of
classes, but their different backgrounds rarely make an
impact on their social lives. Among the wealthiest, most
upper-class of Bette’s friends is tennis star Dana Fairbanks
(Erin Daniels), who hails from a rich white Republican family
in Orange County. Bette’s ex-girlfriend, Alice (Leisha Hailey),
seems to effortlessly make a living as a freelance writer
and radio host.
The
former street kid, Shane (Katherine Moennig), has successfully
gone from being a drug-addicted prostitute to an edgy hairstylist
who no longer seems to struggle to pay the rent.
Carmen
(Sarah Shahi), who was only a lowly production assistant
and part-time DJ in Season 2, has become an in-demand Los
Angeles DJ who is now invited to spin at celebrity parties.
And Bette Porter’s sister, Kit (Pam Grier), a former pop
star who fell on hard times and alcoholism, has kicked the
habit and become the successful owner of the Planet, a coffee
shop-cum-lesbian-nightclub that comes complete with its
own top-shelf chef.
But
in Season 3, this idealistic melting-pot of classes has
shown signs of leaking.