Tennessee’s print news is dominated by one company, Gannett, which has largely failed to cover the discriminatory new law meant to restrict public drag performances in the state’s LGBTQ community. Over about four months, Gannett-owned papers covered the issue in only 43 articles, out of which only 13 articles quoted a trans person and 11 quoted a drag performer.
On March 2, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee signed multiple bills into law that will harm gay and trans Tennesseans, including Senate Bill 3, which classifies “male or female impersonators” and criminalizes such “adult cabaret” performances on public property, or any location where children could be present. It classifies a first offense as a misdemeanor and the second offense as a felony, with prison sentences of up to six years and fines up to $3,000.
The law effectively bans drag performances in all public spaces and makes no distinction between a drag performer and a trans person. The law has been condemned by the White House, civil rights groups, and drag artists who say these types of initiatives are a thinly veiled and “malicious attempt to remove LGBTQ people from public life.”
A Media Matters review of Tennessee newspaper coverage via the Factiva database found only 43 news articles from Gannett-owned papers covering the drag ban in almost four months -- from its introduction in November 9, 2022 until March 6. Each article mentioned the possibility that drag performances could be outlawed in public spaces in the headline or lead paragraph.
Of those 43 articles, only 30% quoted a trans person, 26% quoted a drag performer, 19% acknowledged that the law puts trans people at risk alongside drag performers, and only 21% mentioned that the law likely violates the First Amendment, a supposedly untouchable tenet of conservative legal doctrine.