Nebraska Won't Let Kid Read Macklemore Lyrics on TV, Shitstorm Ensues
LatestEvery year, the winners of Nebraska’s state high school speech and drama competition are invited to perform their winning material on public TV. But this year, they’re running things a little differently. One of the winners in the poetry category, you see, made the mistake of choosing “controversial” material that openly questions and ridicules the gender binary. And officials told him Nebraska “wasn’t ready” for that kind of gay-talk on public television, so he’d have to drop it before the taping, or else. Commence shitstorm.
Michael Barth of rural Gordon-Rushville High School chose to perform in competition three pieces that deal with gender identity issues — “Same Love,” “Manly Man” by Brad Hathaway, and “Swingset,” a lovely spoken word piece by Andrea Gibson about an androgynous-looking preschool teacher that reads, in part,
Frat boys, drunken, screaming, leaning out of the windows of their daddys’ SUVs, “Hey! Are you a faggot or a dyke?” And I wonder what would happen if I met up with them in the middle of the night.
Then of course there’s always the somehow not-quite-bright enough fluorescent light of the public restroom, “Sir! Sir, do you realize this is the ladies’ room?” “Yes, ma’am, I do, it’s just that I didn’t feel comfortable sticking this tampon up my penis in the men’s room.”
But the best, the best is always the mother at the market, sticking up her nose while pushing aside her daughter’s wide eyes, whispering “Don’t stare, it’s rude.” And I want to say, “Listen, lady, the only rude thing I see is your paranoid parental hand pushing aside the best education on self that little girl’s ever gonna get, living with your Maybelline lips, stairmaster hips, synthetic kiwi-vanilla smelling beauty; so why don’t you take your pinks and blues, your boy-girl rules and shove them in that car with your fucking issue of Cosmo, because tomorrow, I start my day with twenty-eight minds who know a hell of a lot more than you. And if I show up in a pink frilly dress, those kids won’t love me any more, or less.”
Heavy stuff for a high schooler, for sure, but Barth’s performance omitted the most NSFW language; he performed a “cleaned up version.” No one at any competitions leading up to last week’s state contest raised issues with his content. Further, this material, cleaned up or not, is brave stuff for a small town kid to read out loud and dramatically in public in front of his peers and a panel of judges. Barth did such a good job that he won the Nebraska School Activity Association’s speech competition in the poetry category.
Only a day before Barth was supposed to perform his material for NET’s “Best of Speech” program, someone from the NSAA called his school and told his coach in no uncertain terms that he’d have to change his material. According to a source close to the story, the caller informed Barth’s coach that “Nebraska is not ready for this.” The NSAA has rules, you see, that allow speech of student competitors to be censored if it offends the moral sensibility of the community. And apparently not conforming to gender expectations is immoral.