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27 April 2024

'Glee' stars criticised for racy GQ photos

The pictorial story features Dianna Agron, Corey Monteith and Lea Michele in school fantasy settinges (GQ.COM)

Published
By Reuters

A racy photo shoot for men's magazine GQ featuring three "Glee" cast members raised eyebrows on Wednesday, provoking terms like "creepy" and "pedophilia" and questions over whether the popular TV musical show is becoming over-exposed.

Short skirts, high heels, scanty panties and provocative poses featuring lollipops dominate the November issue photo shoot featuring Lea Michele (Rachel), Dianna Agron (Quinn) and Corey Monteith (Finn) that plays with the high school setting of the Emmy-award winning television show. All three actors are in their twenties.

The Parents Television Council watchdog group said the photos "border on paedophilia," given the adult male readership of GQ. "This is just the latest example of the overt sexualization of young girls in entertainment," the PTC added.

"Glee", a sometimes dark, subversive comedy featuring a high school choir, has taken US pop culture by storm since its 2009 debut. Superstars like Madonna, Britney Spears and Lady Gaga readily agreed to license their songs to the show.

The programme has produced three best-selling albums, won two Emmys and deals boldly with issues like sex, disability, and gay bullying. It is regularly watched by some 13.4 million US viewers and has a strong youth following.

Broadcaster Fox on Wednesday declined to comment on the PTC statement. But GQ editor in chief Jim Nelson said that the watchdog group "should learn to divide reality from fantasy."

"As often happens in Hollywood, these 'kids' are in their twenties. Cory Monteith's almost 30. I think they're old enough to do what they want," Nelson said

Bob Thompson, professor of popular culture at Syracuse University, brushed off the PTC comments, noting that "Glee" had never been a "kiddie show" despite attracting teens.

"From the very beginning, 'Glee' has dealt with pot, teen pregnancy and gay sexuality. This is a show that has definitely got adult themes. The GQ shoot demonstrates it isn't just a show for teeny boppers," Thompson told Reuters.

But Salon.com writer Mary Elizabeth Williams said GQ's playing up of the sexy teen angle was "just creepy".

Los Angeles Times TV writer Mary McNamara, noting that Monteith remains fully clothed, expressed dismay that young women still feel the need to pose so provocatively. Michele, she wrote "seems to be auditioning for a live action version of Japanese anime porn."

The Washington Post's Celebritology blog said the GQ shoot was "the latest evidence that the 'Glee' hype machine might be starting to spiral out of control".

Thompson said he had long felt that "Glee" is over-rated by the media. But he noted that one of its consistent themes was tolerance and "that's a pretty good message for a kid, even though it gets there with a lot of dicey content."
 

Following increasing condemnation, 24-year-old Agron apologised for the photos on her blog saying, “If you are hurt or these photos make you uncomfortable, it was never our intention. And if your 8-year-old has a copy of our GQ cover in hand, again I am sorry. But I would ask, how on earth did it get there?”

Although GQ is facing criticism, the magazine stands by the photo shoot. “I feel it’s really not that far from what 'Glee' really stands for which is a little bit of controversy..And you know, this is not real life, this is fantasy,” GQ Creative Director Jim Moore was quoted as saying.