Martin D. Goodkin

Profile

Username:
greatmartin
Name:
Martin D. Goodkin
Location:
Fort Lauderdale, FL
Birthday:
02/29
Status:
Single
Job / Career:
Other

Stats

Post Reads:
610,498
Posts:
6133
Photos:
2
Last Online:
> 30 days ago
View All »

My Friends

5 days ago
> 30 days ago
> 30 days ago
> 30 days ago
> 30 days ago
> 30 days ago
> 30 days ago
> 30 days ago

Subscribe

Gay, Poor Old Man

Entertainment > Humor > Even Doritos Aren't Safe! Lol
 

Even Doritos Aren't Safe! Lol

Corvino: Are those gay Doritos ads funny?



, columnist, 365gay.com

I first discovered the gay-themed Doritos ads when
a friend sent me a link to one titled “Told You So” with the question:
“Is it okay for me to laugh at this?” (See it on YouTube.)


Quick answer, for those who have been wondering the same thing: Yes, it’s okay to laugh.
A longer answer, for those who nevertheless feel a bit uncomfortable while doing so, constitutes the remainder of the column.
The “Told You So” ad opens with a man “Tom” trimming his hedges when
he notices a bowl of Doritos in the distance, causing him to stop
working and to start licking his lips. His wife/girlfriend “Barbara”
suddenly appears, giving him a quizzical, faintly disgusted look. Then
the camera pans out, revealing that the Doritos are being consumed by a
stereotypically gay male couple as they lounge poolside in skimpy cutoff
shorts. Jolted from his Doritos daydream, Tom realizes that Barbara
mistakenly thinks he’s drooling over the guys, not the snack.

The guys apparently think the same thing: the commercial ends with one telling the other, in an effeminate voice, “Told you so!”
The ad bothered me a bit when I first saw it, though not entirely for the reasons one would think:
First, Tom is using the wrong garden tool for the sort of trimming
he’s doing, and in any case he should be more careful when handling
sharp pruners.

Second, how could the video editor not notice that Gay Guy #2 has his
legs crossed in the close-up shots but spread in the distance shot?
Careless.

Third, Doritos are nasty, and there’s no way you can eat them
regularly and still maintain abs like those guys in the commercial.

Fourth, and on a serious note: the ad’s portrayal of gays as mincing
queens makes me a bit uneasy when the intended audience is Super Bowl
viewers.

(Note: the ad was a submission for Doritos’ “Crash the Superbowl”
contest. It was not chosen as a finalist, and according to Frito-Lay it
has no chance of airing at the Super Bowl.)

Comedy often emerges from “mistaken identity” scenarios, and there’s
nothing wrong per se with deriving humor from someone’s confusing a gay
couple with a bag of Doritos as the object of another’s lust.

Moreover, it’s a 30-second ad, and short of putting the neighbor guys
in bed together there’s probably no quicker way to establish their
gayness than by using stereotypes. Indeed, the ad comically exaggerates
the stereotypes, from the guys’ cutoff shorts to their limp-wristed
mannerisms to the umbrellas in their cocktails. Even their Doritos bowl
is bright pink.

So what’s the problem?
The problem is that those stereotypes are still used to taunt gay
kids, and it’s not difficult to imagine a closeted gay teen seeing that
commercial during the Super Bowl with his homophobic Dad, who rather
than laughing at the mix-up, laughs at the stereotypical gays:
“Haha—silly faggots.” The kid gets the message that gayness itself is
worthy of ridicule.

Is that the ad-makers’ fault? No. And I’m not—I repeat, NOT—saying
that the ad itself is homophobic, or that it should be censored.

It’s just that humor is contextual, and the context for an ad like
this can vary wildly—which explains the mixed reaction to “Told You So.”

A portrayal of gays that’s funny on LOGO TV can be cringe-worthy at a
Southern Baptist Convention. A stand-up routine that’s hilarious in Los
Angeles can fall flat in Dayton. A joke that inspires gentle
self-deprecation in some can unwittingly fuel self-loathing in others.

The trouble here is that, with a (potential) Super Bowl ad, the
audience is pretty much everyone. That’s especially true in our internet
age, when such ads can go “viral” on YouTube (as this one seems to be
doing, along with another gay-themed ad “The Sauna”).

As I said, “Told You So” won’t be aired during the Super Bowl.
Personally, I wouldn’t object if it were. The guys are cute, the premise
is funny, and the creators shouldn’t be faulted for the reactions of
homophobes—many of whom dislike us no matter how we’re portrayed.

So yes, it’s okay to laugh, and it’s okay to wince a little too. Just
remember that the best way to combat stereotypes is not to censor the
stereotypical. It’s to strengthen the representation of LGBT people in
all our diverse forms.

John Corvino, Ph.D. is a writer, speaker, and philosophy professor
at Wayne State University in Detroit. His column “The Gay Moralist”
appears Fridays at 365gay.com. Read more about him at
www.johncorvino.com, where his winter/spring speaking schedule is now
posted.


 



posted on Jan 29, 2011 1:46 PM ()

Comments:

will do this.Thanks.
comment by fredo on Jan 30, 2011 1:12 PM ()
I agree with the writer's concerns. Homophobia is still very prevalent in our society and these sorts of ads may lead to the usual anti-gay "sentiment" that still prevails and could cause a few gay teens to feel they are being mocked. Not a good idea, especially to be shown at the superbowl.
comment by aussiegirl on Jan 30, 2011 8:13 AM ()
That was good.Very interesting to read this.
comment by fredo on Jan 30, 2011 5:37 AM ()
You should go to Youtube---type in gay doritos!
reply by greatmartin on Jan 30, 2011 9:45 AM ()

Comment on this article   


6,133 articles found   [ Previous Article ]  [ Next Article ]  [ First ]  [ Last ]