Unpacking the homophobia in this Reagan official's response to AIDS
Remember when AIDS was funny? When the health crisis disproportionately affecting gay men was met with a stunning lack of compassion? That’s the basic thrust of a new documentary short that premiered Tuesday on Vanity Fair‘s website.
In When AIDS Was Funny, filmmaker Scott Calonico cuts together audio recordings from three White House press briefings between 1982 and 1985 with photos of AIDS patients from the same era. The end result underlines just how ineffective President Ronald Reagan‘s administration was at tackling the crisis (not that they even tried for many years). Here’s a breakdown of just some of the deeply rooted homophobia at play in Press Secretary Larry Speakes’ answers.1. Complete and utter ignorance
More than 850 people had already died from complications of AIDS in the U.S. by the time of this 1982 press briefing, most of them gay men. The fact that HIV and AIDS had also been known as gay-related immune deficiency (GRID) and, less formally, the “gay plague,” no doubt contributed to the Reagan administration’s state of self-willed ignorance.
2. Deflective gay jokes
Despite not knowing what AIDS was—or at least feigning ignorance of the crisis surrounding it—Speakes proceeds to make locker room jokes about it once press pool reporter Lester Kinsolving refers to the disease as the “gay plague.”