Susan's Place Logo

News:

Our 24 volunteers are more than helpers—they're the heart of this place. Each one effectively supports over 800 community members every single day, bringing lived understanding and a deep sense of care to their role.

Main Menu

What the Pregnant Man didn't deliver

Started by Shana A, July 02, 2009, 09:31:37 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Shana A

What the Pregnant Man didn't deliver

Thomas Beatie brought us a media circus and late-night punch lines. But there's something missing, say some transgender advocates -- more respect.

By Thomas Rogers

http://www.salon.com/mwt/feature/2008/07/03/pregnant_man/index.html

July 3, 2008 | By the time Thomas Beatie, "the Pregnant Man," strode across Oprah Winfrey's stage on April 3, his story had already become a worldwide phenomenon. Beatie -- a transgendered man who was born a woman and became pregnant through artificial insemination -- had captured headlines, and worldwide attention, in the preceding weeks. On the show, Oprah clutched Beatie's belly like a touchy aunt and asked him nosy questions about his family, his sex life and the appearance of his clitoris. ("It looks like a penis," he answered, uncomfortably.)

The episode -- which garnered a 45 percent audience increase compared to the same time slot in the previous week -- was actually one of the more nuanced moments in a bizarre uproar over a bizarre pregnancy that became fodder for news anchors and late-night comedians. The night before, David Letterman had aired a top 10 list of "messages left on the pregnant man's answering machine." No. 1 was, "Michael Jackson here -- just wanted to reach out to another androgynous freak show."
"Be yourself; everyone else is already taken." Oscar Wilde


  •