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Class on The L Word
by Malinda Lo, January 30, 2006
Moira Bette with Angelica The group at dinner

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.

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