Contemporary television and news media frequently cover transgender issues through diverse lenses:
: Episodes featured various formats, including panel discussions, field reporting, and personal travelogues. They offered a direct look into the lives and politics of transgender people in the Bay Area.
: Since approximately 80% of Americans do not personally know a transgender individual, media representation is often their primary source of information. Groups like GLAAD work with national networks and film studios to advocate for fair and accurate storytelling.
Historically, "Tranny Talk" was a significant public access television series "for, by and about transsexuals" that aired on San Francisco's Channel 29 between 1999 and 2007.
Contemporary television and news media frequently cover transgender issues through diverse lenses:
: Episodes featured various formats, including panel discussions, field reporting, and personal travelogues. They offered a direct look into the lives and politics of transgender people in the Bay Area.
: Since approximately 80% of Americans do not personally know a transgender individual, media representation is often their primary source of information. Groups like GLAAD work with national networks and film studios to advocate for fair and accurate storytelling.
Historically, "Tranny Talk" was a significant public access television series "for, by and about transsexuals" that aired on San Francisco's Channel 29 between 1999 and 2007.