Why did dc series go gay so sad
Where are the gay/bi men in DC comics?
Yes, I mean Conner.
And I don't think it's likely to happen, but I don't consider it's impossible. There's been a relatively big fan found for him and Tim Drake for a long moment.Click to expand...
How are you so certain?
I'm not asking if you'll fancy it, but I'm curious why you think this instance is impossible? It can't be history because a lot of characters who were explicitly heterosexual have become double attraction or homosexual since.Click to expand...
Conner is so far the member of the Super-Family who always loved the attraction of lovely women etc.
Especially if you read the early stories with him in Hawaii etc.
I personally am also a Gigantic fan of Cassie+Conner relationship, which is my favorite partnership in DC.
Conner has already a girlfriend, who in future Versions (ToT) is also his wife, maybe mother of his children etc.
So I personally would really DONT Prefer it and it also makes no sense given he has already a stable relationship with Cassie...
I would rather use Jon for this..
Are there right and wrong ways of depicting gay characters?
me9o210-19841
It’s a question I kick around in my head from time to time. I think a lot of the problems people possess with fictional characters in the media being male lover isn’t so much of the specific characteristic, but what happens outside of the medium. I consider many dissenters just see past these kinds of details in real people, and the celebrations that are done in commemoration of these announcements feels not only unnecessary, but condescending. Some may also say it’s counterintuitive to the goal of eliminating prejudice towards the non-heterosexual, as it only reinforces the idea that we should judge a person based on their sexual orientation; that there’s a huge difference between Tracer being explicitly gay versus leaving her sexuality undefined.
It kinda reminds me of other related stories I heard associated with same-sex attracted game characters. I recollect during the development of Sony’s first entry of the Sly Cooper series, all of the characters were envisioned with specific characteristics that were compiled into a profile for each character. These profiles were then given to the voice actors along with a picture o
Sponsored
When Sandman was written there WERE NO stereotypes in Media of Trans women. Want to know why? Because there was no representation at all in media so there was nothing to stereotype. Until Wanda there were no Trans characters in any DC Comic that anyone could name.
Also how can she be a stereotype if your complaint is she doesn’t conform to a popular trope?
Every reason you’ve given for not being happy at the representation has proven wrong.
You claim that all the LGBT+ characters are abusive or cheat on each other. This was proven false but you keep repeating it anyway.
In fact there’s only one abusive LGBT+ character in all of Sandman. And that’s Judy. And she dies in the very issue she’s introduced.
You claim Wanda represents a negative stereotype but you’re the only one stereotyping by calling her a “Man in a dress” because she doesn’t fit a sexist idea of beauty.
You won’t acknowledge the GLAAD award, and you twist Desire out of context, ignoring that they are literally the living embodiment of desires, interpretation good and bad ones. But how dare they do bad things while being a complex character! Desire, admittedly, is an as
Dumbledore's Gay: Does Anyone Care?
Oct. 23, 2007 — -- Harry Potter fans' favorite magical, wand-wielding headmaster is gay, says the series' author, and as it turns out, many bookworms don't love him any less because of it.
Parents around the country told ABCNEWS.com that when their children heard the news that professor Albus Dumbledore — who was also Potter's mentor — was gay, most of them shrugged it off.
Robin Moyher, who writes for the Chicago Mom's Blog, said that her son was not at all upset about the wizard's sexuality.
"So what? It's a proof of life," Moyher's 9-year-old son said upon hearing the news.
Dumbledore was outed by Potter creator J.K. Rowling at an Oct. 19 question and retort session at New York City's Carnegie Hall, where a young fan inquired as to whether the headmaster had ever been in love.
"Dumbledore is queer , actually," replied Rowling, who went on to clarify that he had once loved Gellert Grindelwand, a fellow wizard, but was then let down when he went to the "dark side."
Grindelwand's downfall, Rowling said, was Dumbledore's "great tragedy."
Comic book sales have been falling steadily for decades and have suffered considerably since 2007. In 2011, DC Comics managed to turn that around and make a 1% increase in sales by re-launching all 52 of their properties, but odds are this isn’t enough to stem the moment. So they call something else. Step into the oldest and dumbest trick in the book: discovering a shocking secret.
Making Superman (or Batman or some else) gay is nothing more than an attempt to upset conservatives and fans, and to get them to give the series a publicity raise. In effect, it’s the same lousy cynical strategy reboots try when they do something repulsive to the characters people love just to get the audience angry and buzzing about the series. The desire is this will cause