Curator's Note
In 1995, General Hospital broke ground with its HIV/AIDS storyline centered on 16-year-old Robin Scorpio and her first love, Stone Cates. Robin and Stone had unprotected sex before Stone discovered he had contracted AIDS from a previous relationship. Robin learned she was HIV positive shortly before Stone's death, a death still considered one of the saddest in daytime. Robin and Stone's storyline received great praise for contributing to HIV/AIDS education and became one of the genre's most memorable examples of incorporating social issues into storytelling.
Although the primary goal of a soap opera is to tell stories, using social issues gives soaps the opportunity to educate viewers as well, and the soap's unique structure allows these stories to play out in real time. The genre can trace its use of social issues back to Agnes Nixon, creator of the recently departed One Life to Life and All My Children. Over the decades, soaps have featured storylines revolving around rape, abortion, cancer, addiction and so many more issues relevant to the everyday lives of women and men. But in the 1995, HIV/AIDS wasn't relevant to millions of soap viewers until little Robin Scorpio was diagnosed as HIV positive.
Robin's unique position on the General Hospital canvas made her diagnosis all the more shocking. Not only was she the daughter of a popular supercouple, but viewers had also seen Robin and her portrayer, Kimberly McCullough, age naturally from a child into a teen, a rarity in soaps. As a non-drug using heterosexual white female, Robin fell into a minority demographic of people infected with HIV at the time. However, by making an established character HIV positive, General Hospital brought HIV/AIDS directly into viewers' homes at a time when misinformation and prejudice was rampant.
Not every socially relevant storyline on soaps is handled as well as Robin and Stone's was. Soaps do run the risk of misrepresenting issues. Characters with cancer are suddenly pushed to the backburner, or addictions develop and are overcome within a week. These missed opportunities to properly educate viewers can be harmful, but is it more harmful that these opportunities are disappearing as more and more soaps are cancelled? Could the education and awareness that resulted from Robin and Stone's HIV/AIDS storyline have been possible outside of a daytime soap opera? Can the talk shows replacing soaps have the same educational and emotional impact on daytime viewers?
Comments
Teens and Soaps
The story of Robin and Stone occurred at a time when GH was very popular with teens and college students, who had been attracted to the soap by the return of Luke and Laura in 1993, so the educational impact of the storyline was particularly important in reaching that demographic. Today that demographic doesn't watch as much TV. Alexis's menopause storyline is thus a smart move. Robin's HIV status was addressed when she and Patrick became sexually active and when she became pregnant with Emma, which were important extensions of that educational function. Unfortunately, the storyline is being reactivated to prepare for Kimberly McCollough's departure from the soap, so will probably not end well.
watching Robin and Stone
I was really excited when I saw this clip. I was a teenager when I watched this storyline unfold, and I remember feeling absolutely devastated by it. Robin and Stone danced to a song once, and I still think of them when I hear it--so the story stayed with me for years thereafter.
Thinking back, trying to recollect how I felt other than despairing (was her life over? would she ever have sex again? would anyone else ever love her?), I now think of the storyline a bit differently. Is it unique that this storyline was in some ways so disconnected from the soap's usual unstoppable drive toward coupling?
Of the other social issues you mention above, I'm intrigued by how this issue, in particular, resonated widely beyond Robin and Stone. Every single person in her life was impacted by her diagnosis--it forced difficult conversations with so many people (as noted by your clip here) and the diagnosis continued to demand those types of conversations throughout her life. GH also embraced a fight against AIDS on a level that seemed incredible at the time--didn't they portray a ball every year to raise money for HIV study and treament?
It seems rather ironic to me that Stone passed the disease to Robin through lovemaking--the soap's climactic moment for every couple. Yet the meaning of her HIV status ended up developing much deeper resonance apart from this central sexual act.
What Only Soaps Can Do...
Truly, this clip--and storyline--highlights what soap opera (as opposed to telenovela) style storytelling can do that no other genre can: make a pressing social issue relevant to its viewers by having something happen to someone you've known for years...Only on a soap opera, where viewers have watched Robin grow up (and played by the same actress), can someone who may not know anyone with HIV "in real life" go through this with a character they've known for years...While I'm happy about all the ways soaps have helped inspire new paths for storytelling elsewhere, this is one aspect of storytelling that no other genre has really (as of yet) been able to replace.
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