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How The Real World
Ended “Don’t Ask
Don’t Tell”
Brookings Foreign Policy Paper Number 6, August 2008
In 1992, Bill Clinton, then a candidate for president, proposed the
idea of allowing gay, lesbian, and bisexual Americans to serve openly
in the U.S. military. Within a year, the new commander in chief ’s
idea had instead mutated into the policy known as “Don’t
Ask, Don’t Tell.”
That same year, MTV famously launched the story of “seven strangers,
picked to live in a loft, and have their lives taped, to find out
what happens when people stop being polite...and start getting real.”
In contrast to Clinton’s policy, MTV’s new show thrived.
So what does the The Real World, now in its 20th season of
production, have to do with the Pentagon’s current ban on anyone
who “demonstrate(s) a propensity or intent to engage in homosexual
acts” from serving in the U.S. military? History will likely
look at the show, or to be more specific the genre of reality television
it helped launch, as one of the key factors that ultimately ended
“Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”
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Full Article (PDF)
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