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Before
you jump to the conclusion that Rescue Me is a
tower of enlightenment, however, let me assure you, it's not: this
is the same episode in which the (male) firefighters in Tommy's
unit have a contest to see whose erect penis is the longest.
But
it's exactly this odd juxtaposition of the best and worst of male
behavior that makes Rescue Me so interesting. The worst
includes Tommy's efforts to sabotage his wife's new relationship;
an older firefighter's embarrassment with his gay son; and the continual
treatment of women as sex objects by most of the firefighters. The
best includes a firefighter who, for a time, was secretly writing
poetry about 9/11 ("I wish it had been porn," laments
his wife upon discovering his secret); a cocky young African American
firefighter who inherits a five-year-old daughter he never knew
he had and finds he just can't walk away from her; and Tommy's support
of Colleen's lesbian relationship.
Like
most of the show's storylines, this is not
the kind of "lesbian" storyline you see on television
very often. When Colleen gives her father the impassioned speech
about her girlfriend, it's not about her right to have
a girlfriend as much as it is about her right to not have her relationship
with her girlfriend held to a different standard than heterosexual
relationships. The assumption underlying her indignance—that
of course her relationship deserves equal treatment—and
the casual way she imparts the news about her lesbian relationship
are rarely seen on TV.
This
storyline is unusual for another reason: with the exception of
The L Word, TV lesbians are almost always marked firmly as
lesbians, and bisexual characters are virtually nonexistent. While
Colleen may simply be experimenting (with either lesbianism or heterosexuality),
on the surface she appears to be one of the few sexually fluid characters
on television.
The
word "lesbian" is not used by Colleen herself, only by
her parents (although Colleen doesn't rush to refute the label when
Tommy uses it, either). Colleen says only that she has a girlfriend,
whom she "really, really, really likes." Since she had
a boyfriend only a few episodes before (whose name she tattooed
on her ass), it's anyone's guess—including probably Colleen's—exactly
what her sexual orientation is.
But
this is yet another way Rescue Me challenges the status
quo and presents an alternative (and arguably more realistic) representation
of sexuality. Colleen's apparent lack of desire to label herself
and her casual expression of her feelings for her girlfriend reflects
the tendency among many teenagers today to see sexuality as more
fluid, and less black-and-white, than most adults do (even gay ones).
All
of which is likely to make the character of Colleen a challenge
to many of the show's two million adult viewers (the highest total
in the coveted "adults 18-49" demographic for a new basic
cable show), and a breath of fresh air for lesbian and bisexual
viewers who are finding themselves nearly invisible on television
this season. This may also be a small step towards more TV storylines
that include lesbian and bisexual characters who are past the coming-out
process.
The
character of Colleen is only a supporting one with little screen
time each week, so she can't make up for the lack of any new scripted
full-time lesbian characters on TV in the 2004-2005 season. But
it helps.
Rescue
Me airs Wednesdays at 10pm on FX.
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