As
I’ve mentioned before, I’m a longtime General
Hospital fan and a soap opera advocate.
But recently I’ve been disappointed in a few storylines running on the
show. I have long praised the way in
which this show, and other daytime serials, have been narrative leaders –
tackling social issues progressively with tact and care (as you will see in the
discussion that follows). So I have been
surprised by GH’s recent depiction of
homosexual males on the program. While
visibility in itself is sometimes something to be applauded – since homosexual
characters are still underrepresented on television – the recent characterizations
have left much to be desired.
In
December of 2012, GH introduced Felix
DuBois (Marc Samuel), a homosexual male nursing student into its large cast of
characters. Although I enjoy the
character for what he is – comic relief to balance out some bleak storylines –
he is, problematically, just the embodiment of stereotypes concerning. He serves mostly as a sidekick for a more
prominent character (Sabrina Santiago) and most of his screen time has been
devoted to silly antics (e.g. conducting female makeovers). Although with the introduction of his kid
sister, there is some indication that he is about to get some storylines with a
bit more “meat” to them, this hasn’t been the case so far. Further, the show devoted much-too-much time
to him longing after a straight male character (a body guard turned accidental
male dancer, who quickly earned the nickname “Magic Milo” – a pop culture
allusion to the recent film, Magic Mike). That the show would promote the mistaken
assumption that gay men are secretly lusting after straight men is
troubling. It was even more troubling
when the premise surfaced again with another new gay character!
In
2013, Brad Cooper (Parry Shen) became a minor character on the show. He is a shady lab tech whose unethical behavior
extends beyond the work scene. Another
gay character, he first is portrayed as chasing after Felix and almost stalking
him (following him into the locker room to spy on him as he showers). As if this wasn’t bad enough (and I find it
to be pretty bad), just last month this character turned his sights toward a
young, straight male character, Michael Corinthos (who will be discussed in
greater detail below). Brad even
attempts to blackmail Michael into sleeping with him. As if this storyline wouldn’t scream “ick” already,
it is even worse being that Michael is a victim of male sexual abuse (a storyline
from three years ago).
So
as these plots flit across my television I have found myself shaking my head in
anger thinking about how surprising this is for GH and soaps in general. It made
me need to go back and re-read a conference paper I delivered a few years back on
the social value of soaps and the ways in which they have delicately dealt with
important social issues. In order to remind
myself of this rich tradition (and to hopefully encourage the genre to return to
it immediately), I am including my previous thoughts on soap’s social utility here.
Soap Opera &
Social Awareness
During
the last three decades of the 20th century, a staple in the lineups
of network television was the After School Special, a genre that often aired on
the heels of the daytime soap operas that filled earlier timeslots. The term “after school special,” was coined
by ABC and correlates with its series of 154 made-for-television movies which
ran from 1972 to 1996 over 25 seasons.
However, the term itself more loosely relates to the general genre of
television programming during that time period which dealt with controversial
or socially relevant issues intended to be viewed by school age children, or
more specifically, adolescents. So
while ABC was the inventor of this form – and was the most successful with it,
racking up 54 daytime Emmy awards – the other networks followed suit: CBS with its Schoolbreak Special (or Afternoon Playhouse) which ran over 17
seasons from 1980-1996 and NBC’s Special
Treat which ran 11 seasons from 1975-1986.
Although
these programs are most well known for their coverage of social issues, this
focus only evolved (or enhanced) gradually over time. A review of all 154 of ABC’s episodes shows
that during the first decade of the programming, the majority of the episodes
did not actually have this focus. While
a few were devoted to being accepting of persons with disabilities,
understanding different family structures (such as teens living with foster
families or coming to terms with the fact that they were adopted), many of the
episodes simply aired storylines featuring teenagers (embarking on fundraising
quests, making friendship pacts, working on political campaigns). Some did focus specifically on coming of age
type conflict stories (a teen overcoming the embarrassment of having a stutter,
a male basketball player who wants to join ballet but worries about what
friends and family will think, etc.) but others were quite different (for
example there was a slew of literary adaptation and historical programming
episodes). It was not until the
1979-1980 season that the first episode aired in ABC’s series that would fit
the normal formula for the after school special. This episode, “The Late Great Me! Story of a Teenage Alcoholic,” was about a15-year-old who girl starts to drink liquor to impress a boy, and soon starts to develop a serious
alcohol problem. After this episode
throughout the next two decades, plots such as this became more prevalent and
the series began to focus more on storylines that fell more under the classification
of “edutainment” with their made-for-TV films focusing on social issues that
would relevant to teenage viewers. Such
storylines included: unexpected
pregnancy, drug experimentation, racial discrimination, depression, sexually
transmitted diseases, child abuse, peer pressure, sexual assault, learning
disabilities, bullying, suicide, drunk-driving, domestic abuse, etc.
By the time these after school
specials went off the air in the mid-1990s, its daytime cohort, the soap opera,
was already turning an eye toward its key audience: adolescents.
In efforts to increase its audience pool, soaps began “youthening” their
storylines hoping to gain after school teenage viewers. As the genre already had a proven track
record of tackling social issues, it is not surprising that eventually these
issues were more often addressed with these teen viewers in mind. In this way, perhaps inadvertently, the soap
opera filled the void left by the departed after school special, acting as an
occasional form of edutainment. I have
been interested in on how recent storylines have tackled social issues by
centering a teenage character at the front of the narrative.
A
few years ago I argued that in a televisual era that no longer broadcasts
“after school specials,” soaps have evolved to partially fill this role and
that this role is one more reason that voices should be raised to save this
genre-in-crisis. But a few recent soap
storylines have made me question this claim to some extent.
As the Teen
Turns: The Soap Opera’s Desire for a Younger Audience
The
soap opera’s initial turn toward younger viewing audiences and more socially
relevant issues were not fueled by altruism (the desire to better serve the
public) or even innovation (the desire to take the genre in new and exciting
directions). Like most televisual
transitions, the shifts were primarily motivated by financial reasons: ratings were plummeting.
According
to Robert C. Allen, By the mid-1970s the majority of soap’s audience members
“began to pass out of the demographic target range of 18-49 years. To make matters worse for soap opera
producers, the baby boom of the immediate postwar years had ended, and women
had begun working outside the home in numbers unprecedented in peacetime… Soap opera producers responded by introducing
younger characters, interjecting plot lines with social controversy, and making
more female characters career orientated.”
A
key example of how this combination worked is ABC’s General Hospital. By 1977
the show’s ratings indicated that the soap opera was destined for
cancellation. Gloria Monty was hired in
1978 in a last ditch attempt to save the show.
She fired some of the older actors [and] focused the narrative on two
younger ones (the first super couple the genre saw: Luke Spencer and Laura Baldwin). This paid off as by 1980 GH had become the highest-rated daytime program. Underlying Monty’s strategy – and that of
other producers who followed her lead – was the need to reorient soap operas
toward younger viewers, not only to add viewers but to establish soap opera
viewing as a regular activity among women just entering their ‘prime’ as
consumers. By 1982 soap opera producers
across networks had succeeded in attracting more than 3 million college
students as soap opera viewers, 70 percent of them women.
Edutainment: The Soap Opera on Social Issues
Of
course, the genre’s turn toward social issues actually predates its attempts to
“youthen” up its audience by at least a decade.
It was during the late 1960s that soap operas first entered into the era
of social issue coverage. This was the
time period that first saw minority actors entering the genre and storylines
that aligned with the social climate flourished. Topics covered included: feminism, abortion rights, the Vietnam War,
drug use, child abuse, and others. As
Dorthy Anger notes, “this new openness on serials extended, for the first time,
to sex” as well (33). Although the
groundbreaking storylines are too many to list in full, some noteworthy ones
include: the first illegal abortion on Another World in 1965, the first legal
abortion on television on All My Children
in 1973, Agnes Nixon’s AMC 1970
storyline concerning the protest against the Vietnam War, OLTL, AW, AMC, and GH’s
1990s storylines dealing with HIV & AIDS.
Although
this is too brief a space to fully credit the genre’s impact on social
awareness issues, it should be briefly noted that this is not simply an
American phenomena. As the genre spread
globally many countries began using their soap operas and telenovelas for
social education. Hedi Noel Nariman covers this well in her book length
study, Soap Operas for Social Change:
Toward a Methodology for Entertainment-Education Television.
A Network
Analysis: An Overview of “Teen Social Issue” Plots on ABC’s Soaps
I
have been most interested in how the soap’s coverage of social issues shifted
throughout the decades increasingly utilizing its younger cast members in such
storylines. In the chart below I have
attempted to house the majority of the youth-centered social issue storylines
that occurred from 1970 to present on the three major soap operas of one
network – ABC. Across each of the
programs: General Hospital, One Life to
Live, and All My Children, the
progression is clear: as time progresses
the number of teen-centered social issue storylines increases as well. Most notable is the explosion of such plots
around the mid-1990s: the exact time
when the after school specials went off the air.
General Hospital
|
|
|
Character
|
Social Issue
|
Year/Range
|
Laura
Webber-Baldwin
|
Rape
|
1979
|
AJ
Quartermaine
|
Alcoholism
/ Drunk Driving
|
1995
|
Stone
Cates/Robin Scorpio
|
AIDS/HIV
|
1995
|
Karen
Wexler
|
Child
Molestation/ Drug Addiction
|
1996
|
Elizabeth
Harding
|
Rape
|
1998
|
Leslie
Lu Spencer
|
Teen
Pregnancy/Abortion
|
2006
|
Kristina
Corinthos
|
Dating/Domestic
Abuse
|
2010
|
Michael
Corinthos
|
Male/Prison
Rape
|
2010-2011
|
One Life to Live
|
|
|
Character
|
Social Issue
|
Year/Range
|
Cathy
Craig
|
Drug
Addiction
|
1970
|
Billy
Douglas
|
Homophobia/Coming
Out
|
1992
|
Marty
Saybrooke
|
Gang
Rape
|
1993
|
Jessica
Buchanan
|
Teen
Pregnancy
|
1999
|
Starr
Manning
|
Teen
Pregnancy
|
2006
|
Oliver
Fish
|
Coming
Out
|
2009
|
All My Children
|
|
|
Character
|
Social Issue
|
Year/Range
|
Erica
Kane
|
Abortion
|
1973
|
Donna
Beck
|
Teen
Prostitution
|
1978
|
Bianca
Montgomery
|
Anorexia
|
1998
|
Bianca
Montgomery
|
Coming
Out
|
2000
|
Bianca
Montgomery
|
Rape
|
2003
|
Zoe
(Fredrick Luper)
|
Transgender
Identity
|
2006
|
Table 1. Teen Social Issue Storylines on ABC
(1970-2011)
In
studying this list, it is clear that certain predictable storylines receive more
coverage as other, for example:
unexpected pregnancy. However, it
is also clear that a great many of the ground breaking narratives centered
around younger characters are covering more uncharted territory. For example, General Hospital’s coverage of child molestation and male rape; One Life to Live’s storylines related to
homophobia and gang rape; and All My
Children’s narratives concerning eating disorders and transgender
identity.
Ratings,
Reactions, & Realism: A Discussion
of Two Recent General Hospital
Storylines
At
the start of the century, General
Hospital launched two teen-centered social issue storylines, although quite
different in content, both focus around the two children of the soap’s key
mobster, Sonny Corinthos. These two
characters, Michael and Kristina, both experienced the infamous SORAS (soap
opera rapid age syndrome) process – aging into teenagers, likely so that they
could contribute to teen-centered social issue storylines such as this.
Kristina Davis-Corinthos: Domestic/Dating Abuse
The
first storyline pertains to 17-old year old Kristina Davis-Corinthos. Running for the majority of the 2010 season
this storyline dealt with the abuse this over-achieving teen experienced at the
hands of her high school boyfriend, Kieffer Bauer, a seemingly all-American,
Ivy League-bound, perfect (on paper that is) guy. The plot dealt with his escalating acts of
violence, his jealous, controlling rage, and his constant justifications that
his abusive outbreaks were all due to his love
for her or were due to her own actions which caused his anger.
This
narrative arc was well covered by mainstream publications, earning two
different interviews in The Soap Opera
Digest, one featuring Lexi Ainsworth and Christian Alexander (the actors
who playing Kristina & Kiefer), and another featuring Ainsworth and Nancy
Lee Grahm (who plays Alexis Davis, Kristina’s mother). All three characters praised General Hospital’s inclusion of the
storyline, as can be seen in the interview segments below:
Lexi Ainsworth (Kristina) commented:
"I was very excited when I
heard about this story for a lot of reasons. Nothing like that has ever
happened to me personally, so not only was it was a great challenge to play
something like that, but I'm really glad I could do the PSA [Public Service
Announcement] to inform people and let people know that this does happen, every
day. That's an important message to people my age. Hopefully this will let
girls in trouble know that they have friends and family who can support them
and help them through it and let them know that any relationship like that is
not a healthy relationship and they need to get out."
Christian Alexander (Kiefer)
discussed how he reacted to the storyline in the very beginning: "I
found out the day I was shooting that scene that the storyline was going to be
centered around domestic violence and abuse. I'm thrilled that we're doing
something in the teen storyline that can help people be more aware of it. I
spoke with the writers, who mentioned that the Chris Brown/Rihanna situation
brought this to light, got people talking about it and there was an opportunity
here to shine some light on the issue."
Nancy Lee Grahn (Alexis) spoke about
how this storyline effected her off-screen as a mother of a teenage daughter: “What I've done,
naturally, is research teen violence, because now it interests me, and also
because I have a just-turned-12-year-old. We had a conversation. She saw me on
the Internet, researching it, and said, "What are you doing?" She
knows the general sense of what goes on [at GH]. I said this is an interesting
topic of conversation, with what these kids are exposed to with the media and
violence on television and all of that stuff. What young women are accepting
from boys and young men right now is unthinkable to me! I'm talking about this
with other parents and I'm saying, "What happened?" Where did the
disconnect happen between my generation and this generation? What happened is
that girls are feeling that they need to be so highly sexualized. And that
violence is cool. It's not just talking about safe sex with your kids now; you
need to talk about respect, violence, verbal abuse.”
Other
reviews – not geared directly toward publicity – have also praised the
storyline. Michele Whitney of
Suite101.com discussed the timeliness of the storyline and the very real problem
it addresses for this current generation of girls. For example, consider these statistics:
- 20% of teens in a serious relationship reported
being hit, slapped, or pushed by their partner
- About 30% of girls reported being concerned
about physical abuse at the hands of their partner
- 25% of teens in a serious relationship reported
that their partner prevented them from spending time with family, and felt
pressure to spend time only with their partner
- 23% of girls felt sexually pressured while in a
relationship and went further than they wanted to because of it
These facts indicate
that General Hospital’s edutainment
plot is serving a real purpose: exposing
a problem that is nor currently getting enough attention.
Of course that is not
to say that the reactions to the storyline were unanimous across the
board. Many female fans posted personal
stories of having experienced similar abuse at the hands of a teenage boyfriend
and while many of them were pleased that GH was addressing this issue, quite a
few noted that the storyline too quickly moved its focus from the victim,
Kristina, to her mobster father and his personal reaction and need for revenge.
Michael Corinthos:
Male/Prison Rape
Unlike
the storyline centering around Kristina, this second General Hospital
storyline, perhaps due to its even more controversial nature, did not warrant
the same amount of publicity. Although
it sent message boards ablaze and sparked quite a few online reviews of the
plot, it did not get the amount of coverage in mainstream publications, like
Soap Opera Digest, that the teen dating abuse plot did.
This
storyline deals with Kristina’s brother,18-year old Michael Corinthos, a
heterosexual virgin who is raped while in prison for murdering his stepmother
in self-defense. As with all soap opera
storylines it is a bit more complicated than that one line summary indicates as
the violent crime committed against this character (one that was not shown
directly on screen and was only hinted at for months) was not actually
committed for the “usual” reasons a rape might be committed (for example, a
display of power). This crime was inflicted
on Michael simply because his fellow inmate, Carter, was hired by someone
(Franco – James Franco’s year long off-and-on cameo role on the show) to hurt
Michael as a way to punish Michael’s surrogate uncle, mobster Jason Morgan. (Got all that?)
Although
regular viewers of General Hospital
are well accustomed to mob violence, dark plots, and a rather regular delivery
of storylines that enter into the “social issue” arena, this narrative was met
with some resistance. A recent review of
the storyline on the website Queerty,
titled “Does General Hospital’s Teen Prison Rape Storyline Go Too Far?,” notes
that (as of the date of publication) 949 Facebook posters noted that they felt
rather ambivalent about the storyline, not quite knowing whether GH pushed the envelope for real purposes
or not. The reviewer asks at the start
of the review: is General Hospital’s
treatment of such a taboo topic actually progressive, or is it just going
scandalous for sweeps week? However, by
the close of the review, the author writes in the show’s favor: “General
Hospital isn’t just being sensational – they’re acknowledging a very real
problem. Seventy percent of
LGBT-identified inmates report having been sexual assaulted during their
incarceration…. And HIV rates among male US inmates are five times higher than
the general population.” And, although
these facts are not well known, most people who do think about prison rape,
mistakenly assume that all prison rapists and their victims are gay and this
storyline corrects this misconception.
Similarly
praising this storyline, Sarah Bibel of Fancast
writes: this storyline “has the
potential to be a heartbreaking, informative, groundbreaking social issue
storyline exploring the impact of sexual assault on a male victim. GH can
touch on everything on why it is more difficult for male victims to come
forward than for female victims, how sending teenagers to adult prisons sets
them up to be victimized, to challenging the notion that prison rape is a
fitting punishment for criminals.” Bibel
also applauded the show’s airing of a public service announcement featuring
Chad Duell (Michael) that aired right after the episode that finally revealed
that the attack Michael experienced in prison was actually a sexual
assault. As Bibel notes, this may very
well be the first PSA addressing the issue of male sexual assault aired on daytime
television.
A
soap opera fan posting on the message boards of Soapcentral.com wrote this post
that seems particularly relevant to this panel:
It seems the era of the daytime drama is
in its senior years, approaching the end of its existence. I think if this is
the case, I don’t want the last stories told to be lazily written, forgettable
dribble that we can’t even pretend to like. If the era of soaps is coming to an
end, I want a story that will always remind me why soaps were so great, why
they lasted 25, 35, 45 years. Because they reach into the heart and place
something there we remember decades later, that soaps gave us memories that
last forever. (With) this gut wrenching
story of Michael’s rape, these writers, Bob Guza and his team, and these
talented actors, Maurice Benard, Steve Burton, Laura Wright and this incredible
young actor Chad Duell could be giving us the last great soap story ever to be
written. If the world of soaps is dying, I want to see it go out in a way that
makes me never ever in the future forget why soaps were so great.
Conclusion
Despite
having been disappointed by recent soap storylines/trends, as a soap scholar I
have been very concerned by the genre’s anticipated departure. While there are countless reasons as to why
the death of the soap opera would be tragic (from a television/genre
standpoint), this discussion has meant to add one more reason onto that long list: the end of the soap opera would also mean the
end of the only type programming that has arisen to fill the needs of the
already deceased after school special.
Of
course, this is not to say that no other programming exists that raises social
issues with an eye toward teen demographics.
(Fox’s Glee, for example, is
being praised for doing such in primetime).
However, the majority of the programming that does this (often on
networks devoted to teen viewers, such as the CW – formerly WB – network), is
limited by its programming schedule. As
primetime series only broadcast an average of 20 episodes a season, the amount
of narrative time devoted to the development of social issue storylines is
quite limited. When such storylines are
delivered, the speed at which they are often tackled often leaves much to be
desired. And, for all that soaps are
criticized for their lack of realism, such issues are often dealt with more
tactfully, and realistically, on daytime programming, perhaps because time is
not a concern and because – melodramatic as soaps are – they can avoid overly
dramatic portrayals of topics they long to cover seriously.
While
more could be said about the research on how effective such edutainment
storylines are (be they aimed at teens or otherwise) their presence alone is
something to be celebrated and their absence – along with the genre that most
faithfully delivers them – would be something to be mourned.