I’m feeling a little confused.
I’m confused about the reaction to the news that Ian Thorpe has done a tell-all interview with Michael Parkinson which will air on Sunday night.
I’m confused because people aren’t talking about hearing the former Olympian talk about his meteoric rise to fame, about the years he dominated swimming, his infamous rivalry with Pieter van den Hoogenband, his volunteer work in Australia’s indigenous communities, his recent admission that he has suffered from crippling depression or more details on that post-operation infection which has put an absolute end to any hope of a Thorpedo comeback. All these topics are fascinating, deeply personal and newsworthy.
And yet nobody cares about them.
Because it’s Ian Thorpe. And all anyone apparently wants to ask Ian Thorpe is: Are. You. Gay?
I’m sorry but I don’t get it. I don’t get why it matters to so many people. I don’t get why in 2014 someone’s sexuality is still the most important or newsworthy thing about them.
WHY DO WE CARE? What possible difference does a person’s sexuality actually make?
But today I’m feeling a little alone on this. Because I live in a country where people DO care. They care a lot. It’s the first thing that comes up whenever his name is mentioned. Everyone wants to know if Ian Thorpe is heterosexual or homosexual.
And their reasons for wanting to know this deeply personal piece of information are varied. Here is a sample of some I’ve heard today:
Top Comments
I hate when people like T say "it sends a message that .." This guys is not sending a message, he's just an ordinary guy trying to live his own life. A person's decision to "come out" or not, it their own damn business. Sure, he's a public figure, but he still has the same rights as the rest of us, including the right to privacy.
It's interesting. My 20 year old son came out to me the day after the Thorpe interview. I had just finished telling him that I wish there would come a day when people didn't have to "come out" because there was no need to. Heterosexual people do not have to "come out", so why should homosexual people? The whole thing is just ridiculous to me and is fueled by religion and old fashioned values. My son said that in his generation, people simply could not care less what your sexuality is. He is of the firm opinion that it is pockets of the older generation and certain religious groups that are still making it difficult for gay people to be open. Having said that, he still insisted that I do not tell anyone esle including my husband and I have to respect his wishes. He told me that he would have come out to me earlier, but he really didn't want to put me in a position of having to keep something from my husband.
On my husbands side of the family, his brother is gay and the family pretend that he isn't. Every excuse under the sun is used as a reason for his lack of any relationship at the age of 49. The one I love most is that he is "too tight with his money". They also have two transgender members of the family that you just never hear about, so I understand my son's reluctance to be open.