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Dating : For Colored Boys Who Considered the Swirl When Black Love Wasn’t Enough

h2>Dating : For Colored Boys Who Considered the Swirl When Black Love Wasn’t Enough

Jo’el Santiago

For Colored Boys Who Considered the Swirl When Black Love Wasn’t Enough

BY Jo’el Santiago

Growing up in the 90s, Black representation on TV was diverse enough to make me believe I didn’t have to just be a ball player or drug dealer. I could go to outer space like Whoopi in “Star Trek: The Next Generation”, attend an HBCU like the kids on “A Different World”, solve mysteries like Jamal did on “Ghost Writer”, or sign to Bad Boy Records and be a music superstar — this one was a LEGIT goal of mine. I had options.

Fast-forward to 2019; I’m older, a little wiser and a lot more handsome. I find my adult-self still looking for not necessarily professional touchstones but personal ones. If it was solely a matter of career, I’d be all set. The arena for Black creatives is wide open in just about every category: music, movies, television, literature/writing. The list is long and dazzling, filled with people who entertain us, move us, and inspire us.

But when I start to look for inspiration for Black love, specifically Black male queer love? My mental streaming system begins to buffer, Siri asks if I accidentally summoned her and I’m left stumped, singing “Who Can I Run To?”

While we are seeing more Black queer characters on our TV screens, most often they’re with a white partner. Shows like “The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina”, “Sex Education” and “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” all feature a Black Gay lead with a non-Black love interest. Think about how rare it is to see a Black queer male couple on your screen. Excluding “Empire” (and we can thank Jussie Smollett for saying “fuck no” to his character having a white boyfriend, how far back does your mind have to travel? In 2012 there was Kaldrick and Christopher on “The L.A. Complex”, but if you’re looking for a non-abusive depiction, you have to go even farther back to 2006 and “Noah’s Arc”. Thirteen years. Think about the underlying (or perhaps blatant) message this sends. Black men loving each other is unacceptable, not marketable and unpalatable.Take the popular Netflix series “Dear White People”. The storyline of the only male Black Gay lead, Lionel (portrayed by actor DeRon Horton), was initially handled well. His lovable geekiness quickly won over his college comrades and he was able to come to terms with his sexuality. The interesting thing is, none of this exploration or liberation included a Black love interest. While there was the freshman year crush on his Black (and very straight) roommate, the men young Lionel actually chose to pursue relationships with were all white or white-adjacent. In a show that’s all about in your face messaging, this particular message is crystal clear: It’s perfectly fine to lust after Black bodies, but loving Black people is never ideal.

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