It’s the
first hot day of 2008 in Los Angeles -- upward of 90
degrees, and it’s only April -- and I’m
hiking in dusty Runyon Canyon in the Hollywood hills
with Thomas Roberts, the former CNN anchor turned Insider
correspondent. Halfway up a moderately rugged climb, both
wheezing a bit, we spot a secluded ridge off the main
path, safely removed from the dogs and owners and
shirtless runners enjoying the late-afternoon sunshine. We
stand still for a moment and take in the commanding view
from downtown in the east to the Pacific in the west.
The vast metropolis, bustling with kinetic dreams up
close, lies before us in a state of startling clarity.
The only thing moving is an airplane in the distance.
The peaceful
tableau is a good match for the calm, confident demeanor of
Roberts, a major talent who’s weathered some career
turbulence of late. It started in 2006, when his
appearance on a panel of gay broadcast journalists was
picked up by a blog. The “news” quickly turned
into a coming-out of the first order -- even though
Roberts was already out at CNN. Never mind: He was now
an official gay celebrity, and along with the
affection came the opposite -- the rumors, innuendos, and
downright trash talk hurled at anyone in the public
eye these days. When Roberts left CNN a year ago this
May, people speculated that the cable news behemoth
parted ways with him because of his sexuality. Then, when he
started on the air at The Insider a few months
later, in September 2007, a blogger posted pictures
that were purportedly from Roberts’s Manhunt
profile -- a nasty hit that was splashed across the top
of the New York Post gossip column Page Six.
A tall, muscular,
classic hunk of a man, Roberts is the all-American
matinee-idol version of a broadcaster, as opposed to, say,
Anderson Cooper’s effete, almost European vibe.
But Roberts isn’t talking to me today to name
names or speculate about other people’s careers and
choices. He’s here simply to talk about his own
experience being gay in broadcasting -- which, for the
most part, has been positive, despite what you may
think.
“It’s funny that people think I got fired from
CNN,” he says, addressing the prevailing rumor
about him. “I left CNN on my accord: I resigned from
my contract because of personal reasons.” During his
six years at the channel, he says, “I never
dealt with anything but respect and kindness.
There’s a great misconception.”
Indeed, Roberts
says, being gay has never held him back. “I’ve
worked my ass off, I’ve been fortunate, and
luck doesn’t hurt either,” he says. “If
people don’t like that I’m gay or that I talk
about being gay, I’m sorry. Because
that’s not my problem.”
The glaring
absence of openly gay television anchors at the networks, on
cable, and in local markets across the country is most
obvious in the case of the CNN and 60 Minutes
silver fox, who delivers the facts on everything
except his sexuality. But when you turn your attention
away from him and scan the ranks of America’s
newsreaders, you notice Cooper has lots of company.
According to
longtime industry talent agent Mendes J. Napoli, there are
only two openly gay main news anchors currently working in
the top 20 U.S. television markets: Randy Price at
Boston’s WHDH and Craig Stevens at
Miami’s WSVN. On cable news there’s one: Jason
Bellini of CBS News on Logo. And on the networks?
None.
In the
correspondent and reporter corps, the numbers are higher --
NBC News’s John Yang and ABC News’s
Jeffrey Kofman and Miguel Marquez are a few of the big
names, though there are countless others at all levels of
TV. (And -- let’s get this out of the way --
there’s CNN’s Richard Quest, recently
busted on charges of loitering in Central Park after hours
with meth in his pocket.)
Yet when it comes
to being the face of a news division, the glass ceiling
is barely smudged. “You can be a morning anchor, a
weekend anchor, an afternoon anchor, a reporter --
they love gay reporters now because they’re so
animated, they’re not stiff,” says Napoli, who
represents Stevens. “But a primary male anchor
who’s gay? It’s an issue.”
The reason, he
says, is simple: The decision makers are middle-aged white
men. “Ninety-nine percent of main anchor decisions
end up on the desk of an older white male manager, who
is not going to view gay men the same way other people
might.” Plus, Napoli says, “There’s a
fear that the audience will reject them.”
“It’s uncharted territory,” says
“Jake,” an anchor in a major media
market who, in exchange for anonymity, spoke to me candidly
about his experience being gay but not out.
“Maybe I should have the attitude of ‘I
am gay -- take it or leave it.’ But in the back of
your mind, there’s always that thing: the
culture of the industry.” The business is rife
with gay talent, from executives on down --
“tons,” according to Jake. But
television is also a fundamentally conservative, risk-averse
world. “It’s OK if they know within the
company,” Jake says, “but you wouldn’t
do a cover story with The Advocate without
warning your media-relations person.”
Indeed, when I
first inquired about an interview with Roberts before he
started at The Insider, a spokesperson for the
show instantly said no. When I followed up two months later,
it was no dice again. Roberts says he doesn’t
recall being contacted either time.
This January,
though, he got involved directly, when I learned through a
mutual contact that he was interested in talking. Yet when
he ran the idea up the flagpole, he too was denied.
Roberts won’t cite the reasons on the record,
but he was clearly disappointed by the decision. When I
asked him how he felt about it, there was a long pause while
he considered his response. “I won’t
attach a negative to it,” he finally says
diplomatically, “but I will say that I was flattered
by the offer and thought that it would be great to be
included.” It wasn’t until this
February, when his contract was unexpectedly optioned --
meaning he was cut from the show -- that he was free
to talk.
Roberts
doesn’t want to knock anyone. He’s not that
kind of guy. “Quote me: I am flawed! I make
mistakes! I do things that are stupid! Hopefully this
interview won’t be one of them!” But he also
knows he’s making a difference, as hackneyed as
that sounds. “I heard this phrase the other
night: You can always tell the pioneers by the number of
arrows in their back,” he says, chuckling.
“It’s not that I want to be a pioneer --
I’m certainly a reluctant role model -- but
it’s like, Come out already. There’s
just no reason not to.”
“I can
state unequivocally that we would be a thousand percent
supportive of any employee who wanted to come out
publicly,” says ABC News senior vice president
Jeffrey Schneider, who is gay. And yet, none of the
highest-profile gays on the air at ABC News (think Good
Morning America, which is reportedly called
“GayMA” by its rivals at Today) wanted
to come out for this story, since they declined to be
interviewed. Nevertheless, Schneider says, being
openly gay isn’t a career breaker: “Are
people good broadcasters? Are they aggressive and great
journalists? How do they do their job? Those are the
things that people talk about in terms of the on-air
talent.”
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