Anti-trans attack ads flood airwaves in final weeks of campaign

Over the closing weeks of the 2024 campaign, Donald Trump and right-wing groups are spending stunning sums of money attacking Kamala Harris and other down-ballot Democratic candidates for supporting transgender rights.

Since August, Trump and his allies have spent more than $65 million to flood the airwaves with ads claiming Harris and Democrats have taken transgender rights to extremes.¹

“It’s a staggering sum to spend on a topic that most voters say isn’t a top priority for them this election,” CNN’s Steve Contorno and David Wright reported last week. “But Trump’s campaign is betting any voters still choosing between the two candidates can be swayed to take sides in a cultural fight that has torn apart state houses and school boards in recent years – one that has put tremendous focus on an incredibly small, marginalized group that already faces discrimination-based violence.”²

If you’re looking for classroom tools to help explore the larger context at work here—especially the back-and-forth swings between increasing LGBTQ visibility and the accelerating backlash against LGBTQ rights—don’t miss filmmaker and media scholar Katherine Sender’s powerful new documentary Beyond the Straight and Narrow.

Featuring scores of media clips and incisive analysis from leading scholars, journalists, actors, and activists, Beyond the Straight and Narrow untangles the cultural, economic, and technological forces that have helped open up space for queer and transgender TV representations. At the same time, it considers the real-world implications of this new media landscape, setting it against the backdrop of an accelerating right-wing backlash against LGBTQ visibility in our electoral politics, schools, athletics, and public spaces.

Along the way, Beyond the Straight and Narrow shines invaluable light on the political economy of mass media, the systemic and social forces that shape media representations, and long-fought battles over who gets to exist in our national imagination.

Beyond the Straight and Narrow is now available to purchase in a variety of formats.

 

LICENSING OPTIONS

(1) “Trump and Republicans Bet Big on Anti-Trans Ads Across the Country,” by Shane Goldmacher, New York Times, Oct. 8, 2024.
(2) “Pro-Trump forces flood airwaves with ads attacking Harris over past transgender stances,” by Steve Contorno and David Wright, CNN.com, Oct. 18, 2024.

 

PRAISE FOR BEYOND THE STRAIGHT AND NARROW

 

“The previous Straight and Narrow films established a gold standard for educational docs, and true to its title, Beyond the Straight and Narrow is even better. A wonderful addition to your classroom and/or viewing queue, it ranges across a huge number of LGBTQ+ representations with commanding brilliance, incisive commentary, and a refreshingly welcome focus on intersectional depictions.”

— Jonathan Gray | Hamel Family Distinguished Chair in Communication Arts, University of Wisconsin – Madison

Beyond the Straight and Narrow does an excellent job of exploring how LGBTQ representation in [a] complex and ever-changing world has often shifted for the better, and how it is at once empowering and yet still so fragile across multiple media domains.”

— Yasmin Nair | Writer, Activist, Academic, and co-founder of the radical queer editorial collective Against Equality

“Beautifully explains how mainstream media functions, and for whom. If you want to genuinely, accurately understand queer images today watch [this film].”

— Michael Bronski | Professor of the Practice in Activism and Media Studies of Women, Gender and Sexuality at Harvard University and author of A Queer History of the United States

“Richly entertaining as well as informative, Beyond the Straight and Narrow weaves together a complicated account of progress and remaining limitations.”

— Amanda Lotz | Professor at Queensland University and author of The Television Will Be Revolutionized

“Nuanced … Makes clear that we cannot assume that mainstream representation of LGBTQ people simply improves over time or that we can take any gains seen for granted.”

— Adrienne Shaw | Associate Professor of Media Studies and Production at Temple University

“Offers an outstanding compendium of television and streaming shows featuring queer, bisexual, gay, lesbian, trans and nonbinary characters and content, accessibly framed by experts in queer media studies….Will be of great use to secondary school educators as well as those in media studies and LGBTQ+ studies at more advanced levels.”

— Finn Enke | Professor of Gender and Women’s Studies, History, LGBTQ+ Studies at University of Wisconsin, Madison

“Taking us on a journey through fictional dramas, reality shows, children’s cartoons, web series, and telenovelas, Beyond the Straight and Narrow proceeds with hope and caution to offer an absorbing take on the complex historical development [of LGBTQ representation].”

— Lukas Szulc |  Senior Lecturer in Digital Media and Culture at the University of Manchester

“Television, historically so suppressive of and hostile towards LGBTQ representations, is now swimming with them. Compelling and entertaining, Beyond the Straight and Narrow offers a clear-eyed, smart, and nuanced account of how we got here and why it matters.”

— Joshua Gamson | Professor of Sociology at University of San Francisco and author of Freaks Talk Back: Tabloid Talk Shows and Sexual Nonconformity