Corvino: Why it matters that Adam Lambert came out
So, Adam Lambert comes out in the latest issue of Rolling Stone, and you’re thinking, “What’s next? Rolling Stone announces ‘Water is wet’”?
I get where you’re coming from. But there are deeper lessons to be gleaned.First, notice how Lambert comes out—in a music magazine, with his sexuality occupying a relatively minor portion of the article. And he does so with the candid yet indirect phrasing “I don’t think it should be a surprise for anyone to hear that I’m gay.” The gayness is almost taken for granted—embedded in a sentence about public reaction, rather than placed front and center.
That approach reflects a larger trend in how society—and in particular, younger generations—view gayness: as a simple matter-of-fact, not something to be belabored. The contrast with Clay Aiken’s “Yes, I’m Gay” People Magazine cover is subtle but important.
And yet, second, there’s an ambivalence in the article that captures the national tone on the issue. Lambert says, “It shouldn’t matter. Except it does. It’s really confusing.”
He’s right on all three counts.
“It shouldn’t matter.” American Idol is a singing competition, and Lambert wanted to—and should—be judged on his vocal performance. His decision to wait until after Idol to answer the gay question, he claims, stemmed from his desire that his sexuality not overshadow his singing. (It may also have stemmed from a desire for votes, and I couldn’t blame him for that. It’s not as if he lied about being gay or took great pains to hide it.)
“Except it does [matter].” As Lambert himself put it in the interview, “There’s the old industry idea that you should just make sexuality a non-issue, just say your private life’s your private life, and not talk about it. But that’s bullshit, because private lives don’t exist anymore for celebrities: they just don’t.”
The music industry doesn’t just sell songs; it sells images. For better or worse, personal backstory is part of that (especially on Idol).
What’s more, gay celebrities give hope to closeted gay kids, who need to know that they’re not alone and who sometimes don’t have gay role models in their everyday lives. That’s not to say that Adam Lambert is any more representative of gay life than any other gay person. It’s just to say that his representation, such as it is, will reach more people.
“It’s really confusing.” Yes indeed. We live in a nation where, for some people, much of the time, gayness is a non-issue, and for others, virtually constantly, it’s huge. American Idol is one of those “common denominator” phenomena (say that three times fast!) where these different groups interact with each other. Often they can do so while avoiding the issue of sexuality. But not always.
And the tension here is not just between groups; it’s also internal. When Lambert says, “I’m proud of my sexuality. I embrace it. It’s just another part of me,” he unwittingly raises a question—one that opponents often hurl at us: “Why be ‘proud’ of something that’s ‘just another part’ of you?” Why take pride in a trait that you didn’t choose and is supposed to be no big deal?
Answer: because it is a big deal. It does matter. Maybe in an ideal world it wouldn’t, but we are still far from that world.
Ironically, it’s a big deal precisely because our opponents insist on making it a big deal. Thanks to them, Adam Lambert (like every gay person) has to negotiate the issue of revealing his sexuality in a way that straight people never do. I think he’s handled it admirably.
Lambert told Rolling Stone that “I’m trying to be a singer, not a civil rights leader.” Fair enough. But it’s also fair to note that civil-rights change doesn’t only come from civil-rights leaders. It also comes from countless small acts of revelation by ordinary and not-so-ordinary people, including Adam Lambert.
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John Corvino, Ph.D. is an author, speaker, and philosophy professor at Wayne State University in Detroit. His column “The Gay Moralist” appears weekly on 365gay.com. Read more about him at www.johncorvino.com.
John will be a volunteer faculty member this summer for Campus Pride’s Leadership Camp for GLBT students. For more about Campus Pride’s work, or to make a donation on John’s behalf to support this year’s program, visit http://www.campuspride.org/.





Sorry, Mr. Corvino, I just don’t share your view that yet another American Idol loser has made his/her claim to fame by making some outrageously predictable statement about themselves, and that this claim somehow helps the rest of us queers. It doesn’t. In fact, the more representatives like Lambert that we have, the less likely it is that society on the whole will see our group as anything more than (to quote another commentator) a whole lot of mascara and hair-dye queens. Adam Lambert is a walking stereotype, he does not represent me, my type of gayness, and I do not want his type of representation. Good for you if you *do* want it, but don’t make it out like what’s good for the goose is ALWAYS good for the gander. Or like there’s something more connecting us all other than our sexuality. My mantra: the only thing all gay people have in common is being gay. It might do some of you some good to consider that idea.
Oh boy, what news, another mascara and hair dye queen “comes out”; as if he could ever have been mistaken for being “in” in the first place. Well, at least he wasn’t wearing a dress to proclaim “himself” to be a proud gay “man”.
Goodness. I couldn’t be happier on two significant fronts: I applaud Mr. John Corvino for his most thoughtful article and my heartfelt appreciation to Mr. Adam Lambert for his superior handling of the gay issue while a contestant on American Idol. . . he was constantly gracious and kind to his audience and the judges, as well. His most adult handling of the issue in Rolling Stone was superior and extremely honorable. Congratulations to both men.
John, you’ve composed one of the best commentaries. level headed, sane and balanced, on this subject I’ve seen in a long time. Very well thought out and written. Thanks.
I’m disappointed by Adam’s resistance to getting involved with activism. However, celebs like Ellen and Lance Bass more or less communicated the same type of resistance about activism yet they eventually came around and started to speak up and get involved.
Like it out not, if you’re a celeb, you can’t try to sell yourself and your sex appeal on one hand and on the other not expect people to want to know about your personal life.
We should expect LGBT people in the public spotlight to do all they can to promote the ideas of equality and acceptance. For Adam to go out of his way to express his disinterest in activism sends a lousy message to his young followers.
Hopefully he’ll wise up soon enough and realize that ALL LGBT people share the responsibility of trying to better things for our community.
There is nothing more offensive to me about the LGBT community and its incessant need to belong is the major league fashion faux pas of wearing black socks with shorts. All of you look like gay dweebs.