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This paper was presented at the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication in San Antonio, Texas August 2005. If you have questions about this paper, please contact the author directly. If you have questions about the archives, email rakyat [ at ] eparker.org. For an explanation of the subject line, send email to [log in to unmask] with just the four words, "get help info aejmc," in the body (drop the "").
(Feb 2006) Thank you. Elliott Parker ====================================================================
Giving a Human Face to Anti-Gay Violence
by
Professor Rodger Streitmatter
School of Communication American University Washington, D.C. 20016
[log in to unmask]
office phone: 202-885-2057 home phone: 202-675-8446
Submitted for presentation to the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Interest Group Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication National Meeting in San Antonio, Texas, August 2005
Matthew Shepard ~ Giving a Human Face to Anti-Gay Violence It was about 10:30 p.m. on October 6, 1998, when University of Wyoming student Matthew Shepard walked into the Fireside Lounge not far from campus. As the young man who was impeccably dressed in jeans, a sport coat, and patent-leather loafers was sitting at the bar and quietly sipping a cocktail, two local men approached him. The pair of high school dropouts said they, too, were gay and asked their new acquaintance to come home with them, intimating that a sexual threesome would follow. Twenty-one-year-old Shepherd then made the worst decision of his life, as he accepted their invitation. As soon as the two men got their prey inside their pickup truck, they began striking him with the butt of a Smith & Wesson .357-caliber magnum handgun. But that physical brutality was only a warm-up exercise, as the thugs then drove the blond-haired, blue-eyed Shepherd to a remote area, just past the local Wal-Mart, where they tied him spread eagle to a rough-hewn wooden fence, burned his arms with lighted cigarettes, kicked him repeatedly in the groin, and struck his head so hard and so many times that his skull collapsed. After the men bludgeoned Shepard beyond recognition, they left him to die in near-freezing weather. When a passing bicyclist found him eighteen hours later, the only spot on his entire head that was not covered in dried blood was just below his eyes—he had cried while being beaten, so his tears had rolled down his face and washed his cheeks clean. Five days later when Matthew Shepard took his last breath in a local hospital, every major print and broadcast news organization in the country reported his death.[1] "For homosexuals, the key to winning acceptance and respect has been to make themselves familiar, visible and known," the New York Times stated on its editorial page. "Yet in almost 30 years of struggle, the modern gay rights movement has never achieved a recognizable public face. Now, in a victim, it has been given one."[2] The country's most prestigious daily newspaper had begun reporting on the Shepard story while the young man was still struggling to survive his injuries, and that coverage quickly spread to the country's other major dailies and to the television networks. That plethora of stories helped propel mass rallies and marches in more than fifty American cities—including several thousands men and women joining Senator Edward M. Kennedy and openly gay Representative Barney Frank for a candlelight vigil on the steps of the U.S. Capitol.[3] As Dan Rather reported on the CBS Evening News, "Matthew Shepard's death has set off a nationwide wave of demonstrations protesting anti-gay violence."[4] The avalanche of news coverage combined with the eruption of public condemnations resulted in the name "Matthew Shepard" becoming embedded in the national consciousness—both in 1998 and in the years since then. Whenever anti-gay violence is mentioned, people instantly think of the five-feet-two-inch, 105-pound young man. This paper has two major goals. First, it seeks to provide an in-depth examination of the news coverage of Matthew Shepard. In particular, this study attempts to illuminate four major messages that the coverage communicated to the media-consuming public: Despite the progress that had been made by the final years of the twentieth century, a significant number of Americans continued to hate gay people. By contrast, stories that were published or that appeared on television news programs showed that the country's leading journalistic voices expressed unrestrained outrage at how the young man had been brutalized. A third message was that, according to some news outlets, hate-crime laws needed to be expanded to include attacks that were based on a person's sexual orientation. A final statement that the extensive coverage communicated was that the family of a gay person, at least in some instances, can be remarkably loving toward and supportive of that individual. The second goal of this paper is to explain why the news media devoted such an enormous quantity of coverage to this particular incident of anti-gay violence. As reported by several print and broadcast outlets, twenty-one gay men and lesbians had been killed during the year preceding Shepard's heinous murder, and yet the country's leading news organizations committed relatively few column inches of news print or seconds of television air time to those deaths—or to any of the dozens of gay- or lesbian-related murders that have occurred since then. And so, this manuscript seeks to identify the specific factors that caused this single incident to receive a uniquely large amount of attention. Because this paper makes an original contribution to the body of scholarship vis-à-vis the media and gay people, it relies mainly on primary sources. More specifically, the author of this study examined the thirty-eight news and feature articles, editorials, and commentary pieces related to Matthew Shepard that appeared in the New York Times, the prestigious news organ that many of the country's other journalistic enterprises follow in determining what topics to cover and how to cover them, between October 1998 when Shepard was beaten and November 1999 when the second of his killers was convicted. The author also examined all forty-two news segments about the topic that aired on the ABC, CBS, CNN, and NBC television networks during that same time period (through the Television News Archive at Vanderbilt University). This core body of material was supplemented with examinations of several dozen additional items that were published in a wide variety of other newspapers and magazines including the Atlanta Journal and Constitution, Boston Globe, Los Angeles Times, Minneapolis Star Tribune, Washington Post, Newsweek, Time, U.S. News & World Report, Harper's Magazine, The Nation, National Review, The New Republic, and Vanity Fair. Secondary sources that were consulted for this study included the books Up from Invisibility: Lesbians, Gay Men, and the Media in America by Larry Gross and All the Rage: The Story of Gay Visibility in America by Suzanna Danuta Walters.
Hatred of Gay People A discussion of the degree to which the gruesome murder of Matthew Shepard illuminated the hatred that many Americans of the late 1990s felt toward gay people rightly begins by looking at what motivated the vicious attack. The New York Times was among the first news organizations to report on the backgrounds of Russell Henderson, twenty-one, and Aaron McKinney, twenty-two, who were arrested after a pistol covered in Shepard's blood was found in the back of McKinney's pickup. Henderson had dropped out of Laramie High School and worked off and on at various jobs, including as a roofer; he had been convicted twice for drunk driving. McKinney had followed a similar route and also was the father of a four-month-old son born to his girlfriend; he had recently been convicted of robbing a Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise.[5] Although neither man had a steady job, every few weekends they managed to scrape together enough money to buy a hefty supply of methamphetamine—also known as crystal meth or crank. One of their friends said Henderson and McKinney had smoked or snorted about $2,000 worth of the drug the weekend before they crossed paths with Shepard. That friend speculated, in fact, that the men may have still been feeling the effects of their recent binge on the night the attack took place.[6] Henderson and McKinney came into the Fireside Lounge about an hour after the college student had arrived, ordering a $5.50 pitcher of beer that they paid for by pulling quarters and dimes from their pockets. The bartender told the New York Times that the two locals were the ones who first made contact with Shepard, leaving their barstools and moving to where the lone man was sitting, several feet away from them. The three men talked for quite awhile and then left the bar together about 1 a.m..[7] Exactly what happened after they climbed inside the pickup is difficult to know for sure, as the only details came from Henderson and McKinney when they went on trial for first-degree murder. According to their testimony, soon after the three men were alone, Shepard placed his hand on McKinney's leg, presumably as a signal that he was ready to proceed with the sexual activity that he thought would be unfolding. But Shepard's gesture prompted McKinney to say, "Guess what? We're not gay, and you just got jacked. It's Gay Awareness Week!" That last sentence came in response to the fact that gay and lesbian activists had posted fliers around Laramie to promote a series of activities leading up to National Coming Out Day, which was scheduled for the next week.[8] McKinney then began hitting Shepard, according to Henderson's testimony, with his fist and the butt of the handgun, while repeatedly yelling "Queer!" and "Faggot!" Law enforcement officials speculated that hatred was the primary motivation of the two killers, as they took the $20 inside Shepard's wallet but did not steal his watch.[9] News organizations soon reported that hatred of gay people was by no means limited to these two men. An NBC Nightly News segment included a patron of Wild Willie's Cowboy Bar in Laramie saying, "If you come to Wyoming and you're gay, you're lookin' for trouble,"[10] and the New York Times reported that a billboard advertising a nearby history museum had been vandalized so the original statement "Shoot a Day or Two" would read "Shoot a Gay or Two."[11] Based on an entry in the homecoming parade at Colorado State University, according to ABC World News Tonight, college students were no more tolerant of gays than members of older generations; the bicyclist who had found Shepard hanging from the fence had said he initially thought the body was a scarecrow, so members of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity mocked the killing by adding a scarecrow to their float and using spray paint to scrawl the words "I'M GAY" across the figure's face.[12] (Salon magazine was one of the few news outlets that reported the fact that the words "UP MY ASS" were also painted on the scarecrow's backside.)[13] Perhaps the most disturbing evidence of gay hatred was broadcast to media consumers as part of the coverage of the slain student's funeral. All of the major television networks—ABC, CBS, CNN, and NBC—covered the event, which meant that millions of viewers saw protesters standing outside St. Mark's Episcopal Church carrying pickets reading "No Tears for Queers" and "Fags Die, God Laughs."[14] The country's major news magazines reproduced some of the hateful signs as well. A Time cover story titled "The War on Gays" included a photo of an angry man shouting at members of the Shepard family while holding up a sign that said "AIDS Cures FAGS,"[15] and one of the pictures that accompanied Newsweek's coverage of the funeral showed a man smirking as he leaned against a large placard reading "God Hates Fags."[16] Hatred of gay people did not end with harsh words. During the previous year, according to ABC World News Tonight, twenty-one gay men and lesbians had been killed specifically because of their sexual orientation.[17]
Outrage from the News Media Beginning with the earliest stories, it was clear that news organizations had no intention of limiting their coverage of Matthew Shepard's murder to answering who, what, when, and where. Journalistic voices immediately communicated their outrage that a college student had not only been killed but had been savagely tortured as well. One indication of the news media's strong editorial position came through the words they chose to use when describing the victim. The New York Times set the tone by characterizing him as "trusting,"[18] "clean-cut,"[19] "soft-spoken,"[20] "polite,"[21] "sweet,"[22] and "boyish."[23] The Washington Post followed suit, telling its readers that the slain youth had possessed a "cherubic face"[24] and had been "shy,"[25] "sensitive,"[26] and "slight of stature, gentle of demeanor,"[27] while quoting the police officer who found Shepard on the fence as saying he looked "like a child" rather than a man.[28] Newsweek painted a highly sympathetic portrait of the young man as well, calling him "meek,"[29] "well-groomed,"[30] "sweet-tempered and boyishly idealistic,"[31] while beginning one story with the statement: "From his first breath, life was a struggle for Matthew Shepard. He was a preemie at birth—a tiny slip of a kid who would grow up to be barely five feet tall. He was shy and gentle in a place where it wasn't common for a young man to be either: in Wyoming, a state that features a bronco buster on its license plate."[32] The Times, Post, and Newsweek all also took their places on a list of news outlets that compared Shepard to another man who was savagely beaten and then left to die: Jesus Christ. "There is incredible symbolism about being tied to a fence," the Times said in its front-page story reporting the student's death. "Many people are comparing it to a crucifixion."[33] The Post made a similar observation, commenting on "the powerful Christ-like imagery of Shepard being assaulted and strapped to a fence."[34] The news magazine's reference to the image came in the form of a quotation from the young victim's godfather: "The only way I can be released from the bitterness and anger I feel is when I concentrate on the Son of God being crucified the same way almost 2,000 years ago."[35] That trio of publications took the lead in expressing rage about the grisly crime as well. The Times said, on its editorial page, "The details of Matthew Shepard's murder are a public horror."[36] The country's most respected newspaper did not stop there, as one of its liberal columnists accused the Family Research Council of being an accomplice to the murder. Specifically, Frank Rich criticized the right-wing organization for airing television ads portraying homosexuality as a disease that could be cured. "The ads ooze malice," he wrote. "In one of them, homosexuality is linked to drug addiction and certain death by AIDS." Such messages led to physical attacks like the one against Shepard, Rich argued. "If you wage a well-financed media air war in which people with an innate difference in sexual orientation are ceaselessly branded as diseased and sinful and un-American, ground war will follow."[37] Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen made strong accusations as well, blaming conservative politicians for Shepard's murder. "I will figuratively place the young man's body at the doorstep of Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott," Cohen wrote. That reference was to a statement by Lott, a Republican from Mississippi, in June 1998 that homosexuality was a disease comparable to kleptomania. "Lott has likened a sexual preference to a wacky mental disease and also called it a sin," Cohen wrote. "In his rhetoric, he and others have, bit by bit, robbed homosexuals of their humanity." The columnist ended his piece with the statement: "Anti-gay politicians have given voice to some of the ugliest sentiments in American society—legitimizing the sort of hate that left Matthew Shepard tied to a fence and near death, lynched on account of being gay."[38] In Newsweek, the words of outrage came from media critic Jonathan Alter. "Violence against gays is a fact of life and a national disgrace," he wrote. Like Cohen from the Post, Alter blamed Trent Lott and other Republican leaders, saying there was a direct connection between "gay-bashing in Washington and gays actually getting their heads bashed in." Alter then added another element to the argument by comparing violence against gays to the physical abuse that African Americans had suffered a century earlier. "Just as white racists created a climate for lynching blacks," he wrote, "so the constant degrading of homosexuals is exacting a toll in blood."[39] Among the television journalists who expressed outrage at the murder was Tom Brokaw. "It's a crime that goes beyond despicable," the NBC Nightly News anchor said during one broadcast.[40] And during another he shook his head as he asked, with an expression of bewilderment, "What causes someone to turn on another human being with such anger, such hatred?"[41] His network colleague Katie Couric provided an answer to that question when she said, on the Today show, "Conservative Christian political organizations certainly are helping to create an anti-homosexual atmosphere in many parts of the country."[42]
Debate over Hate-Crime Laws Even the most committed advocates of many public policy initiatives spend years trying to move their particular concern into the spotlight of media attention. But then, suddenly, a single event can propel that little-noticed issue onto the national agenda. Matthew Shepard's murder played that role for a proposal to expand hate-crime laws to include sexual orientation. During the 1970s and 1980s, forty states and the District of Columbia had passed laws that increased fines and jail time when prosecutors were able to prove that a crime had been committed specifically because of the victim's race, religion, color, or national origin. Twenty-one of those states and D.C. also had opted to include sexual orientation in their laws. But Shepard's attackers had not been charged with a hate crime because Wyoming was one of the ten states that had not enacted a hate-crime law of any type. "Gay leaders hope that Mr. Shepard's death will galvanize state legislatures to pass hate-crime legislation or broaden existing laws," the New York Times reported in one page-one article. "Wyoming has been a holdout on hate-crime laws, rejecting three bills since 1994." The story also pointed out who objected to the public policy change, as well as why. "Conservatives, particularly Christian conservatives, generally oppose such laws, saying they extend to minorities 'special rights.'"[43] The Times established itself as a strong proponent of expanding the definition of a hate crime to include an attack motivated by a victim's sexuality. "Members of minority groups have often had to pay a terrible price just for being who they are," the editorial began, going on to say that African Americans and Jews were the most frequent targets of violence. "But other groups have been the victims of that murderous impulse too, and homosexuals have always been among them." After describing the attack on Shepard, the Times ended the editorial by stating: "His death makes clear the need for hate-crime laws to protect those who survive and punish those who attack others, just because of who they are."[44] In the months following the incident and as the trials of Russell Henderson and Aaron McKinney approached, the Times continued to campaign—in news stories as well as in editorials—for hate-crime laws that included sexual orientation. Indeed, some articles on the issue sounded like they had come directly from press releases crafted by advocacy groups. "The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force says the laws are valuable because they shape the way society thinks about itself and they draw boundaries of what society will tolerate," one story read. "Advocates argue that society speaking out, clearly and specifically, against crimes directed at members of a minority group can make the members of that group feel less isolated and threatened. And, they say, police officers might become more vigilant about such crimes if the laws require training on the issue, as the laws in eight states do."[45] One of several occasions on which the Times promoted the issue on its editorial page came in the wake of Henderson's decision to plead guilty to murder charges in exchange for avoiding a possible death sentence. The paper applauded the judge who sentenced the killer to two consecutive life terms, but it criticized the Wyoming legislature for failing to enact any type of hate-crime law. "In the days and weeks after Matthew Shepard's murder, it seemed that the nation would be awakened to the virulence of anti-gay beliefs that propelled the murder," the Times stated. "Yet in a very short time, the old prejudice that homosexuals are not discriminated against and do not warrant 'special' protection has resurfaced."[46] Hate-crime laws—whether related to sexual orientation or other factors—were not endorsed, however, by all liberal-leaning news organizations. A Washington Post editorial, for example, dubbed the effort to enact such laws "misguided."[47] A commentary piece on the opposite page illuminated the Post's reasoning. "What Henderson and McKinney allegedly did was a terrible, evil thing. But would it have been less terrible if Shepard had not been gay? If Henderson and McKinney beat Shepard to death because they hated him personally, not as a member of a group, should the law treat them more lightly?"[48] The Boston Globe also opposed hate-crime legislation. "No new law is needed to punish the tormentors of Matthew Shephard," the Globe wrote. "Everything they did—kidnapping, aggravated robbery, murder—is covered by Wyoming's criminal code. It shouldn't matter why the murderers in Laramie did what they did. They should be punished because of their deeds, not because they are bigots."[49] Regardless of the arguments for and against hate-crime laws, Shepard's murder prompted considerable debate on the issue, in Wyoming and several other states. Ultimately, however, neither the media attention nor the discussion led to any additional laws being enacted. As NBC anchorman Tom Brokaw put it in 1999, "It appears the death of Matthew Shepard has done little to change any minds."[50]
Love for a Gay Son Another important message sent by the news media's coverage of the Matthew Shepard murder and its aftermath centered not on the young man who was killed but on his parents. The long-standing stigma that accompanied homosexuality had prompted generations of Americans to shun the gay or lesbian members of the family, but the stories that were written and broadcast if the wake of this high-profile crime provided a dramatically different model. Television viewers met Dennis and Judy Shepard on the day the grieving parents buried their son. Cameras showed the father and mother, tightly gripping each other's hand, standing somberly outside St. Mark's Episcopal Church as snow fell around them, determined to tell the world about their son. "Matt was the type of person who, if this had happened to another person," Dennis Shepard said, "he would have been the first on the scene to offer his help, his hope, and his heart." Before the father finished his brief statement, his wife broke down and cried openly, the cameras capturing the image and broadcasting it nationwide. Across the street, protesters could be seen carrying signs that read "Matt in Hell" and "No Fags in Heaven." The correspondent for ABC World News Tonight finished her report by saying that the Shepards "chose to ignore" the protesters. "Instead, they gave thanks to the thousands of well wishers from around the world who they say have comforted them in their time of sorrow."[51] Katie Couric of NBC gave television viewers a much more intimate look at the couple when she interviewed them on the Dateline news magazine show four months after the funeral. "He wanted to go into diplomacy," Dennis Shepard said of his son, "and work overseas for human rights." Judy Shepard spoke during the program as well, but her voice was so soft that listeners had to strain to hear her words. "He wasn't my son," the mother said. "He was my friend, my confidant, my constant reminder of how good life can be."[52] Dennis and Judy Shepard had been living in Saudi Arabia when their son was attacked, the father working as an engineer for an oil company. They flew to Wyoming to be with Matthew as he lay comatose in the hospital and then to bury him. But when Dennis Shepard returned to his job halfway around the world, Judy Shepard stayed in the United States. She wanted to retreat into the privacy of her role as a stay-at-home wife, but gay rights activists persuaded her that she could be a uniquely effective public spokeswoman against anti-gay violence. When reporters—whether they worked for the Atlanta Journal,[53] Los Angeles Times,[54] or Minneapolis Star Tribune[55]—asked her why an upper-class woman who had wanted nothing to do with the public limelight had agreed to give up her comfortable life with her husband and crisscross the country, traveling by herself, to speak before dozens and dozens of groups in such far-flung towns as Murfreesboro, Tennessee, and Willimantic, Connecticut, Judy Shepard's answer was always the same: "I'm doing this for Matthew."[56] Journalists also repeatedly asked Shepard about when and how she and her husband learned of their son's sexual orientation. They had suspected Matthew was gay long before he came out to them, she said in a Boston Globe story, so she read everything she could find about how parents could make it easier for gay children during the often-traumatic process of acknowledging their sexuality. "I tried to educate myself," she said, so she and her husband could react as supportively as possible. After absorbing what experts and other parents of gay children had to say, Judy Shepard concluded that the ideal response would be to accept the news matter-of-factly. She and her husband even rehearsed that conversation that they knew was coming, she said, so when Matthew—at age eighteen—finally told them, they didn't so much as blink an eye. "We acted like it was no big deal, even though our hearts were pounding a mile a minute," she recalled. "That seemed to us like the ideal reaction, so that was how we reacted. Matthew's well-being always came first."[57] Judy Shepard shared other details about her son's life as well. He had become fluent in three foreign languages—French, German, and Arabic—while attending boarding school in Switzerland, she said, and had worked to raise money for AIDS research. Not all aspects of Matthew's life had been pleasant, however, as his mother also told of how, during a trip to Morocco during his senior year in high school, he had been gang raped by six men. "After that, he had the posture of a victim," she said. "He was the kind of person whom you just look at and know if you hurt him that he's going to take it—that there's nothing he can do about it, verbally or physically. When he walked down the street, he had that victim walk."[58] Even though the stories painted Dennis and Judy Shepard to be highly caring and compassionate people, the public was still unprepared for the act of human generosity the couple performed in November 1999. After Aaron McKinney was found guilty of first-degree murder, the Shepards asked the judge to show leniency to the man who had tortured their son. Because of that request, McKinney was sentenced not to death but to life in prison, with no possibility of parole. Dennis Shepherd delivered the news to a stunned courtroom. "I would like nothing better than to see you die, Mr. McKinney," the father told the killer. "However, this is the time to begin the healing process—to show mercy to someone who refused to show mercy to my son."[59]
"The Crucifixion of Matthew Shepard" When looked at from an analytical perspective, some of the messages sent by the killing combined with the extensive news coverage of that heinous crime were conflicting. On the one hand, the incident indicated that a significant slice of late-1990s American society hated gay people. On the other hand, the myriad statements of outrage published and broadcast by the nation's leading news organizations indicated that many of these powerful institutions were appalled that a young gay man had been treated so monstrously. Efforts to broaden hate-crime laws to include sexual orientation offered mixed messages as well; the prestigious New York Times fervently supported the proposal, but other liberal journalistic voices opposed it. One topic related to Matthew Shepard's murder on which there was no ambiguity was that his parents loved him and supported him—completely and unconditionally. Another topic on which there has come to be general agreement is what may rank as the most intriguing question related to the incident and the extensive news coverage of it: Why did this particular instance of anti-gay violence attract so much attention and thereby propel the issue into the national spotlight to a degree unparalleled by any other event before or since? Vanity Fair magazine attempted to answer this question in March 1999 with a story titled "The Crucifixion of Matthew Shepard." The exhaustive article, which extended for fifteen pages, ultimately concluded that the decisive factor was how the media portrayed the victim. "Parents throughout the country felt that Matthew could have been their son, an idea many had never contemplated before about a gay person," the piece argued. "In part, this may have been a result of the fact that while he was described as gay, the press did not portray Matthew as a sexual adult. He was depicted as having parents, rather than partners, and those parents were loving and affluent." Shepard's physical characteristics added to this media image of Shepard's being an innocent—perhaps even angelic or beatific—boy rather than his being a world-wise man, the Vanity Fair story continued. "Photographs in the press showed him as having a fragile, childlike appearance—a look of pale purity, the translucent beauty favored in religious art."[60] Two books that chronicle the increased visibility of gay men and lesbians, both published in 2001, also sought to explain what set the Wyoming incident apart from other murders. In Up from Invisibility: Lesbians, Gay Men, and the Media in America, author Larry Gross wrote, "Shepard might have been typecast for the role of a sad young man."[61] This statement reinforced a recurring theme in Up from Invisibility: The various forms of media—not only news outlets but also such media genres as motion pictures and entertainment television—consistently portray gay men not in a broad range of roles but as being either victims or villains. According to Gross's analysis, journalistic operations devoted large quantities of news coverage to Shepard because certain details about him, such as his having been slightly built and his having been gang raped in Morocco, meant that those organizations could transform him into the epitome of the stereotypical "victim" that the news media were so comfortable with as one of the two standard classifications for gay men.[62] In All the Rage: The Story of Gay Visibility in America, Suzanna Danuta Walters argued that Shepard's murder "garnered a tidal wave of attention" from newspapers and television news programs because the young college student was "non-threatening" as well as an "All-American kid from the heartland."[63] These characteristics were consistent with the major theme driving All the Rage: There was a substantial increase in the presence of gay people throughout the American culture during the final years of the twentieth century, but the specific individuals who became visible were largely limited to men and women whose characteristics fit within certain parameters of societal acceptability. "In this age of new gay visibility, for example," Walters wrote, "one of the most popular television characters is the narcissistic, shallow, Cher-loving, boy-chasing, fashion-obsessed, show-tune-singing Jack of Will & Grace—a sturdy stereotype if ever there was one."[64] Likewise, newspapers and television networks shifted into overdrive when covering the Shepard murder, Walters argued, because the victim's non-threatening nature (by virtue of his small size and innocent appearance) combined with his All-American attractiveness (by virtue of his blond hair, blue eyes, and upper-middle-class social status) placed him well within the media's accepted bounds of a gay person worthy of attention.[65] Although these three perspectives—the one by Vanity Fair and those of the Gross and Walters books—use somewhat different words and focus on slightly different aspects of who Matthew Shepard was, they generally are in concert with each other. They ultimately agree that the most important factor leading to the remarkably large quantity of news coverage was the physical appearance and the character of the victim—or at least the aspects of the victim that news media outlets chose to emphasize about him. The quotations and citations included in the current study highlight some of the various words and phrases that journalistic organizations chose to use in portraying Shepard, clearly contributing to the impression that he, despite being twenty-one and therefore legally an adult, was really more of a boy than a man. The New York Times called him "trusting," "sweet," "boyish"; the Washington Post spoke of his "cherubic face," his "shy" and "sensitive" nature, his "slight" stature, his looking "like a child"; and Newsweek added that he was "meek" as well as "sweet-tempered and boyishly idealistic." The comparisons to Jesus Christ nailed to a cross reinforced the image of a pure and blameless victim. At the same time, it is important to acknowledge that another dynamic leading to the extensive news coverage involves the gruesome nature of the crime. Two homophobic thugs in a Western state lied to a gay college student in order to lure him out of a bar, took him to a remote area, tied him to a fence, tortured him, and beat him so savagely and so relentlessly that his skull collapsed and his face was no longer recognizable—the kind of details that create a riveting story. That it was Matthew Shepard's physical appearance and character traits that propelled this particular incident into a unique status vis-à-vis news coverage was reinforced by how two other acts of anti-gay violence were portrayed in the press. Five months after Shepard died, an Alabama man was bludgeoned to death with an ax handle and his body was then burned on a stack of rubber tires,[66] and, a few more months after that grisly incident, an Army private stationed in Kentucky was dragged from his bed and killed by fellow soldiers who beat him with a baseball bat.[67] And yet the name of neither man—Billy Jack Gaither nor Barry Winchell—became part of the public consciousness at the time or has remained part of the American memory to the degree that the name Matthew Shepard has. It seems clear that it was certain aspects of how the Wyoming victim was portrayed that distinguished him from the other two men. The college student was seen as a waif-like child who had been taken advantage of because he was puny and unable to defend himself. Gaither and Winchell had clearly been characterized as men, not boys. Gaither was a middle-aged, working-class man with only average looks; Winchell was a muscular, battle-ready soldier who fought back against his attackers, losing to them only because they outnumbered him. Neither Gaither nor Winchell was from the upper-middle class, neither attended a Swiss boarding school or spoke three languages, and neither was innocent to the ways of the world. Matthew Shepard was the only one of the three who had blond hair and blue eyes, who was of diminutive stature, and who was meek in demeanor—the epitome of the weak and effeminate gay man who wore patent-leather shoes and sipped cocktails as he sat alone and vulnerable in a bar, almost as if he were waiting to be attacked and then to be transformed into the archetypal gay victim. [1] See, for example, James Brooke, "Gay Man Dies from Attack," New York Times, 13 October 1998, A1; Tom Kenworthy, "Gay Wyoming Student Succumbs to Injuries," Washington Post, 13 October 1998, A7; CBS Evening News, 12 October 1998 (the newscast was anchored by Dan Rather; the segment was reported by Cynthia Bowers); CNN, 12 October 1998 (the newscast was anchored by Judy Woodruff; the segment was reported by Brian Cabell); NBC Nightly News, 12 October 1998 (the newscast was anchored by Tom Brokaw; the segment was reported by George Lewis in Laramie, Wyoming, and Pete Williams in Washington).
[2] "The Lesson of Matthew Shepard," New York Times, 17 October 1998, A14.
[3] Allan Lengel, "Thousands Mourn Student's Death," Washington Post, 15 October 1998, A7.
[4] CBS Evening News, 24 November 1998 (the newscast was anchored by Dan Rather; the segment was reported by Richard Schlesinger). [5] James Brooke, "Men Held in Beating Lived on the Fringes," New York Times, 16 October 1998, A16.
[6] JoAnn Wypijewski, "A Boy's Life," Harper's Magazine, September 1999, 62.
[7] James Brooke, "Men Held in Beating Lived on the Fringes," New York Times, 16 October 1998, A16.
[8] James Brooke, "Witnesses Trace Brutal Killing of Gay Student," New York Times, 21 November 1998, A9.
[9] James Brooke, "Witnesses Trace Brutal Killing of Gay Student," New York Times, 21 November 1998, A9.
[10] NBC Nightly News, 9 October 1998 (the newscast was anchored by Tom Brokaw; the segment was reported by Roger O'Neil).
[11] James Brooke, "After Beating of Gay Man, Town Looks at Its Attitudes," New York Times, 12 October 1998, A9.
[12] ABC World News Tonight, 14 October 1998 (the newscast was anchored by Peter Jennings; the segment was reported by Lisa Salters in Fort Collins, Colorado).
[13] Lily Burana, "Letter from Laramie," Salon, 16 October 1998 (http://archive.salon.com/news/1998/10/16newsb.html)
[14] ABC World News Tonight, 16 October 1998 (the newscast was anchored by Peter Jennings; the segment was reported by Lisa Salters in Casper, Wyoming, and Rebecca Chase in Atlanta); CBS Evening News, 16 October 1998 (the newscast was anchored by Dan Rather; the segment was reported by Cynthia Bowers); CNN, 16 October 1998 (the segment was reported by Joie Chen); NBC Nightly News, 16 October 1998 (the newscast was anchored by Tom Brokaw; the segment was reported by Roger O'Neill in Casper, Wyoming, and Pete Williams in Washington). [15] Steve Lopez, "The War on Gays: To Be Young and Gay in Wyoming," Time, 26 October 1998, 39. [16] Jonathan Alter, "Trickle-Down Hate," Newsweek, 26 October 1998, 44. [17] ABC World News Tonight, 16 October 1998 (the newscast was anchored by Peter Jennings; the segment was reported by Lisa Salters in Casper, Wyoming, and Rebecca Chase in Atlanta). The death figure was attributed to the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs. [18] "Murdered for Who He Was," New York Times, 13 October 1998, A18. [19] Michael Cooper, "Killing Shakes Complacency of the Gay Rights Movement," New York Times, 21 October 1998, A1. [20] Frank Rich, "Journal: Loving Him to Death," New York Times, 24 October 1998, A17. [21] Frank Rich, "Journal: Loving Him to Death," New York Times, 24 October 1998, A17. [22] Frank Rich, "Journal: Loving Him to Death," New York Times, 24 October 1998, A17. [23] James Brooke, "Wyoming City Braces for Gay Murder Trial," New York Times, 4 April 1999, A14. [24] Justin Gillis and Patrice Gaines, "Pattern of Hate Emerges on a Fence in Laramie," Washington Post, 18 October 1998, A1. [25] Tom Kenworthy, "Hundreds Gather to Remember Slain Man as 'Light to the World,'" Washington Post, 17 October 1998, A3. [26] Allan Lengel, "Thousands Mourn Student's Death," Washington Post, 15 October 1998, A7. [27] Tom Kenworthy, "Gay Man Near Death after Beating, Burning," Washington Post, 10 October 1998, A1. [28] Wil Haygood, "Honor Thy Son," Washington Post, 13 July 2003, D1. [29] Howard Fineman, "Echoes of a Murder in Wyoming," Newsweek, 26 October 1998, 43. [30] Howard Fineman, "Echoes of a Murder in Wyoming," Newsweek, 26 October 1998, 43. [31] Mark Miller, "The Final Days and Nights of a Gay Martyr," Newsweek, 21 December 1998, 30. [32] Howard Fineman, "Echoes of a Murder in Wyoming," Newsweek, 26 October 1998, 42. [33] James Brooke, "Gay Man Dies from Attack," New York Times, 13 October 1998, A1. [34] Tom Kenworthy, "Hundreds Gather to Remember Slain Man as 'Light to the World,'" Washington Post, 17 October 1998, A3. [35] Howard Fineman, "Echoes of a Murder in Wyoming," Newsweek, 26 October 1998, 42. The godfather's name was Steve Ghering. [36] "The Lesson of Matthew Shepard," New York Times, 17 October 1998, A14. [37] Frank Rich, "Journal: The Road to Laramie," New York Times, 14 October 1998, A23.
[38] Richard Cohen, "Legitimizing Hate," Washington Post, 15 October 1998, A23. [39] Jonathan Alter, "Trickle-Down Hate," Newsweek, 26 October 1998, 44. [40] NBC Nightly News, 9 October 1998 (the newscast was anchored by Tom Brokaw; the segment was reported by Roger O'Neil). [41] NBC Nightly News, 12 October 1998 (the newscast was anchored by Tom Brokaw; the segment was reported by George Lewis in Laramie, Wyoming, and Pete Williams in Washington). [42] John Corry, "Murder in Wyoming," American Spectator, December 1998, 72.
[43] James Brooke, "Gay Man Dies from Attack," New York Times, 13 October 1998, A1. [44] "Murdered for Who He Was," New York Times, 13 October 1998, A18. [45] Rick Lyman, "Hate Laws Don't Matter, Except when They Do," New York Times, 18 October 1998, D6.
[46] "A Stiff and Proper Sentence," New York Times, 6 Apri1 1999, A26.
[47] "A Murder in Wyoming," Washington Post, 14 October 1998, A14.
[48] Michael Kelly, "Punishing 'Hate Crimes,'" Washington Post, 14 October 1998, A15.
[49] Jeff Jacoby, "The Lessons of Laramie," Boston Globe, 15 October 1998, A19. [50] NBC Nightly News, 5 February 1999 (the newscast was anchored by Tom Brokaw; the segment was reported by Roger O'Neil in Ft. Collins, Colorado). [51] ABC World News Tonight, 16 October 1998 (the newscast was anchored by Peter Jennings; the segment was reported by Lisa Salters in Casper, Wyoming, and Rebecca Chase in Atlanta).
[52] Dennis and Judy Shepard interview by Katie Couric, Dateline, 5 February 1999.
[53] Kirk Kicklighter, "Mother's Tale of Murdered Son Briings Quiet, Then Tears," Atlanta Journal, 19 January 2001, E1.
[54] Julie Cart, "Matthew Shepard's Mother Aims to Speak with His Voice," Los Angeles Times, 14 September 1999, A5.
[55] Terry Collins, "Matthew Shepard's Mom Fights the Hatred that Killed Her Son," Minneapolis Star Tribune, 29 March 2001.
[56] Julie Cart, "Matthew Shepard's Mother Aims to Speak with His Voice," Los Angeles Times, 14 September 1999, A5.
[57] Adrian Walker, "Mission Found After Son Is Lost," Boston Globe, 25 March 2000, B1.
[58] Melanie Thernstrom, "The Crucifixion of Matthew Shepard," Vanity Fair, March 1999, 267.
[59] Angie Cannon, "In the Name of the Son," U.S. News & World Report, 15 November 1999, 36.
[60] Melanie Thernstrom, "The Crucifixion of Matthew Shepard," Vanity Fair, March 1999, 272.
[61] Larry Gross, Up from Invisibility: Lesbians, Gay Men, and the Media in America (New York: Columbia University Press, 2001), 174.
[62] Larry Gross, Up from Invisibility: Lesbians, Gay Men, and the Media in America (New York: Columbia University Press, 2001), 174.
[63] Suzanna Danuta Walters, All the Rage: The Story of Gay Visibility in America (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001), xvi.
[64] Suzanna Danuta Walters, All the Rage: The Story of Gay Visibility in America (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001), 13.
[65] Suzanna Danuta Walters, All the Rage: The Story of Gay Visibility in America (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001), xvi.
[66] Kevin Sack, "2 Confess to Killing Man, Saying He Made a Sexual Advance," New York Times, 5 March 1999, A10.
[67] Francis X. Clines, "Killer's Trial Shows Gay Soldier's Anguish," New York Times, 9 December 1999, A18.
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