Caprica and the ‘Queerness’ of Sam Adama

March 1, 2010

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In the new SyFy show Caprica we are introduced to a queer character, Sam Adama. Here is the good and the bad of his queer representation.

Check out other great blogs and commentary:

  • “Ron Moore wants to include more gay characters in his shows.  That is fine.  Now, if he could just stop making them of a certain type.  So far, we have: Cylon Saboteurs and mentally insane Admirals, mutineers, cold-blooded Mafia-esque hitmen (here in Caprica, one of the Adama clan), and cold-blooded fanatical terrorists (Soldiers of the One in Caprica).” from “10 Brief Notes about Caprica“  (I took out the character names for Battlestar Galactica in case of Spoilers)
  • 300: This is Revisionism is a remix about the movie 300. A section of it comments on the trope of homosexuality as manipulative evil.




Caprica and the Queerness of Sam Adama Transcript

Caprica is a new show in the SyFy Network that is actually set 58 years before the events of the reimagined Battlestar Galactica.  As I watched the second episode I noticed something said that was so subtle I almost missed it.

Clip: Caprica – Season 1 episode 2: “Rebirth”
Sam Adama “I used to hangout here with your dad.  All the Tauron kids came here.  I’d be hopelessly trying to flirt with some guy mean while your dad would get a date with his sister. [laugh]“

Did you catch that? Because that man just said he was gay and it wasn’t a big production, it wasn’t a big coming out story, it wasn’t said in big flashing lights, it was so normalized that I didn’t even notice it at first, I actually had to go back and listen to it again because I was like, “Ohhh.”  It just was in passing, how it should be.

That man’s name is Sam Adama and he’s part of the main cast on Caprica.  It’s also really nice to see that he’s not stereotypically gay like we often see in queer representations on TV.  Gay men are often flamboyant and obsessed with fashion.  You might recognize these men.

[[Images of Stanford from Sex and the City, the cast of Queer Eye for the Straight Guy, Will and Jack from Will and Grace.]]

But there is one teeny little problem.  Sam Adama is a murderer, he’s actually a hired hit man that’s apart of a gang.  He also isn’t your average killer in that, you know, he doesn’t dress in black and kill someone with a silencer quietly and then sneak back out of the house like we’ve come to see on television and movies.  NO, he uh, chooses to use two very large, very phallic knives, to slash open his victims in a grotesque and gruesome way.

Hollywood has a long history of making queer characters monsters and sociopaths and murderers who have no moral compass.  This trope is used in order to reinforce a fear of homosexuality.

So do you see the problem here?  On one hand you have this awesome representation of a queer character whose totally normalized in being queer, it’s not even an issue, it’s totally accepted in society and he’s not stereotypical in that way.  On the other hand, he’s kind of crazy and he’s a murderer.

Just when I want to celebrate a genuine accomplishment of Hollywood they have to  go make the queer man disturbingly evil.

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7 Responses to “Caprica and the ‘Queerness’ of Sam Adama”

  1. What also bothers me about this recurring trope is that it as well as other displays of ‘liberal’ attitudes (i.e.: women’s empowerment, complex race relations, happy social-ist endings, etc.) is used as an excuse to paint Hollywood/entertainment as ‘progressive’. As in…Oh look–they put in a character who isn’t straight, damn hippies!

    But of course this is easily deconstructed in so many ways, perhaps the first being that Sam Adama, as you’ve shown him in your vlog, still performs within overtly masculine categories. Is this a ploy to make queerness a more acceptable character trait? Are there other queer male characters on the show who display different forms of gendered activity?

    As you know, I’m generally with you–I don’t like being too critical of shows that have good writing, complex characters, confront social issues, etc. However, I don’t think simply putting complex characters into a script can excuse heteronormativity or gender normativity.

    Out of curiosity, do you think that displaying female/queer/non-white/disabled/poor/etc. characters as morally objectionable is better, worse, or the same as ignoring these structures completely (i.e.: Buffy and race)?

    [Reply]

    Anita Reply:

    That’s a really good question and I think in the case of Sam Adama, the villianizing of a queer character is not bad in and of itself, it only becomes problematic when there is no counter balance. For example if we had queer characters littered all over our television screens in many different roles: heroic, paternal/maternal, sadistic etc. it wouldn’t matter because it wouldn’t be perpetuating a particular stereotype, marginalized characters would be characters like any other.

    In terms of Buffy and Race though, I think that it was just egregious racism most of the time and although marginalized groups have worked damn hard to be represented in the media it’s still highly problematic. Instead of saying is it better or worse to have bad representation then none at all, I’d rather just demand that we improve the quality of the characters and roles for oppressed groups. Tropes and archetypes are recycled through our tv shows and movies because that’s what advertisers think the audience wants. For the billions of dollars they put into psychoanalyzing us they might want to realize that we are getting pretty bored of the same old white heroes and the same old evil marginalized folks.

    Obviously the writers of Caprica have thought about the representations of queer people within the series, and they probably think they are being progressive, but unless Sam Adama’s character breaks out of the Evil Queer trope, they are just perpetuating decades of heteronormative representation.

    Did I go off on a tangent? Oops.

    [Reply]

  2. My husband & I are waiting for you to do a recap/commentary on how his character has evolved… and hear what you think of the pros/cons.

    [Reply]

  3. Hi,
    I’ve been enjoying listening to your Youtube entries and found this one interesting from the idea of ‘balance’.
    To preface, I haven’t seen Caprica.
    What I found interesting about this discussion is the idea that there is a portrayal of a gay character who’s sexual orientation is incidental in the context of the show, yet seen as negative because that character is capable of(horrific) violence.
    The ‘violent gay male’ stereotype isn’t one I’m familiar with. Most gay portrayals I’ve experienced in the media tending toward over the top and physically inept.
    So I’m a bit surprised to see an expectation of ‘balance’. Isn’t it the desired outcome that we can portray people of any sexual orientation or ethnicity as an individual beyond those definitions?
    I guess the question really should be, is the character’s homosexuality portrayed as a contributor to his negative behaviour?(and depending on the context that could still be regarded as a valid aspect of exploring the character if the violence stems from internal/societal conflict and repression etc. it would be completely depend on how it was handled) Are there other gay characters who are also portrayed negatively?
    Asking for a ‘balance’ within the context of a single show seems to work against creating a sophisticated audience to whom the orientation or background of a character might contribute, but doesn’t define the character.

    [Reply]

    Anita Reply:

    Yes, I agree it is the desired outcome to represent various race and sexuality backgrounds as full whole people but until there are an abundance of those characters in mainstream media the few representations we do get tend to lean towards stereotypical and/or villainized. It wouldn’t at all be a problem if Sam Adama was a hitman on television and just happened to also be queer if we had many, many other queer characters on tv who were also pilots, mothers, scientists, cops, artists etc.

    [Reply]

  4. Hi Anita, thanks for replying.
    I reckon I have a slightly naive approach to these issues because I tend toward ignoring race, gender or sexual orientation when engaging with people in reality or fiction.
    I actually find it frustrating when positive stereotypes are blatantly used for the purpose of ‘balance’.
    That’d be a feminist mother and 4 years of Art School making an impact…
    I think there are several grades of ‘inclusion’ happening in the media. There’s pure non inclusive, there’s tokenism, there’s ‘socially aware issue of the week’, and there’s the slot I imagine Caprica would use based on their (BSG)track record, which is inclusion and awareness but let’s mess with this character as a person(if Caprica’s anything like BSG, they simply don’t do ‘unflawed’).
    If we want equality then the expectation needs to be that the character is true to the dramatic context of the show, rather than to fulfill an external tally book of balance.
    Could you give me some examples of villainised fictional homosexuals? It’s a stereotype I’ve missed somehow.

    [Reply]

  5. LOL, or I could just read the links provided in your story.

    Oops.

    Thanks again for replying Anita.

    [Reply]

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