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FRONTLINE explores how an all-American town was forced to confront
its most basic feelings about homosexuality and sheds new light on
the confusing, often contradictory, experience of gay people
themselves in a place far from the main battlefields of the culture
wars.
On May 5, 2005, the residents of
Spokane, Washington, awoke to one of the strangest headlines in the
town's history: "West Tied to Sex Abuse in '70s, Using Office to
Lure Young Men." The popular, socially conservative Republican
mayor of Spokane, Jim West, had been outed by the town's newspaper
the Spokesman-Review. The paper told the sordid story of a
man with two lives: in public, he had once sponsored legislation
forbidding gays from teaching in public schools, while in private,
the paper alleged, he was trawling for young men online, using the
trappings of his office to lure them into sexual relationships. But
as bizarre as the revelations were, so too were the newspaper's
methods. For months, a middle-aged "forensic computer specialist"
had posed as an18-year-old boy online, engaging the mayor in a
relationship that became more and more intimate, ultimately
exploding on the front page of the newspaper. In a media climate
where sexual scandals dominate the headlines, FRONTLINE producers
Rachel Dretzin and Barak Goodman investigate the complex
relationship between politics, sexuality, fear and judgment in one
all-American town.