Queer Tropes

Jun 07, 2010 08:00


The following post was made this weekend over on noscans_daily :

As many of you know, June is the month of LGBTQ Pride and I couldn't think of a better time to call out a few tropes that inundate comics and media when it comes LGBTQ characters/themes.

Tropes that if I never see again for the rest of my existence, I'd be eternally grateful.

While this by no means covers every trope/issue/fail, it definitely hits the major ones.

Take thorough notes, I'm gonna move fast, and this will not be pretty. Class in session and you're about to get schooled by Prof. neo_prodigy himself!!!



1) I'm The Gay Guy

One of the biggest sins commited by writers is that when they write lgbtq characters, they don't bother to make them a three dimensional character like their heterosexual/cis-gendered peers, they box them in and define that character solely by their lgbtq status.

An example: I'm watching a television series on DVD now and while it's doing a lot of excellent things, they failed when it came to the characterization of the gay character. Practically every scene he's been in has played out like this:

Hi I'm the gay guy. I'm gay, did I mention I'm gay. Gay is me. Wanna know who's gay? I'm gay. I'm the gay guy. You look like you didn't know that I'm gay. What's gayer than gay? Me. Gay guy here. Did you know I'm gay? Let me mention that I'm gay. No I really should mention I'm gay. Did someone say gay? I'm gay. It's been 30 seconds since the last announcement but in case it may have slipped your mind, I'm gay. Yeah I know, I'm the gay guy.Did I mention I'm gay? This is usually followed by rainbows, techno music, references to Broadway, and/or gay iconic actresses, you know to show how authentically gay the character is. Sorta similar to how writers will have black characters use the latest urban slang and emulate what they've seen on MTV/BET to show how authentically black they are.

A friend of mine,  a queer woc made an excellent point on her blog:

"When it comes to race, a lot of people (including people of color) assume - if not outright state - that White is a lack of race, an empty ethnicity, the default, normal, invisible. As a result, when it comes to matters of race, Whiteness becomes impartial, objective, unbiased, rational, common sense. I'm sure you can imagine how this plays out in racial discourse. Whiteness is positioned as true and therefore right. Of course, no one thinks that consciously (duh!), but it often comes out in how, in a weird sort of way, White people seem to act like they're only White when the topic of discussion is racism and not every waking moment of their lives. And this confuses the shit out of me because that's like a straight person acting like they're only heterosexual when the issue of gay marriage crops up. Or a man acting like the only time he notices gender is when people bring up sexism. To which the only prudent response is to disengage before the intensity of delusion makes your head explode."

Just as being white/male/cis-gendered is part of the next person's identity and yes having those traits and the privileges that accompany said traits will shape their experiences, the same holds true for minorities. Being an LGBTQ is only part of who we are. It's not the end all be all. We come in all ages, genders, races, socio-economic classes, etc. Some of us are effeminite, some of us are masculine, just like cis-gendered heterosexuals.
We're found in all professions, we're doing our thing. The point is, our sexual orientation is not our end-all be-all defining characteristic.

A textbook example of this was the Pied Piper during Countdown. Almost in every issue, they beat over the reader's head (usually through the Trickster) was that he was gay. And while I'm always happy to see my LGBTQ brethren represented, I also like to see them represented right. It wasn't until the end that they hinted as if they were about to build up the Piper to be a major player in the DC universe but last I heard (I had to stop reading Countdown, the writing just got too atrocious for me), it never came to fruition. Shocker!

And as much as I wanted to enjoy their relationship, this is one of the biggest fails of Thunder and Grace's relationship in Outsiders when I read the series. The writers wouldn't let you forget they were lovers and that was the only thing about them worth noting. While reading all I could think was okay, two cool female characters are in a loving relationship. Awesome. Can we please do more than that? At minimum please reference Willow & Tara as a reference for LGBTQ characters/lesbian relationships done right.

2) "You Must Be The Man In The Relationship"

This is something I've heard too many times in my own life and this is something I've witnessed in portrayals of same-gender relationships.

Same-gender relationships are not the same as heterosexual relationships and you know what, THAT'S AWESOME! But apparently some writers didn't get the memo. When they write gay and lesbian couples, they will often attempt to pigeonhole characters to fit the trope of the dominant alpha and the submissive beta. It's one thing if one character is a dominant alpha and the other is a passive beta (because that's just who they are) and they happen to play to that dynamic.

But when we're talking about two powerful dominant characters who save the planet on the regular, that's not gonna play. Hell, that doesn't even work for many heterosexual pairings in comics. Dinah Lance is one of the most powerful women in comics, I do not expect her to being submissive or passive to Ollie or any other man she's in a relationship with just because she's a woman and they're men. I expect her to still be the dominant ass-kicking alpha woman that she is. The same goes for Hawkgirl and Roy (don't even get me started on the Red Arrow fail). And while I despise the pairing for being nothing more than a cheap publicity stunt, I will say they've done a solid job showing T'Challa and Storm as equals, partners.

The same goes for gay and lesbian pairings. As much as I adore Midnighter and Apollo (and still consider them Full of Win) they've been subjected to this kind of fail from time to time, depending on the writer.Apollo may not be the grim brooding badass that Midnighter is, but he's powerful in his own right and should be on equal footing with his partner.

Wiccan and Hulkling are a perfect example that shows two well-developed gay characters who are on equal footing and it works. Because they're like partners and equal and stuff. Partners being equal. Wow, what a concept.

3) The Mythical Straight Boy Unicorn

Boy do I have plenty to say on this one.

Stop me if you recognize this plot device or some variation thereof. Miserable gay boy who has given up on love falls in love with the mythical straight boy. Gay boy in desperate need of being rescued falls in love with the mythical straight boy. Gay boy is persecuted by life and homophobes, who shall ever save him, the mythical straight boy. The gay boy is miserable and has no confidence in himself. Who teaches him to be cool, self confident and self reliant? The mythical straight boy. The gay boy is looking to recruit and win over that white knight. So who does he convert? The mythical straight boy. The gay boy needs saving? Who shall save him? I know, how about the mythical straight boy.

will.....

you....

please.....

stop?..........

no..........

really........

PLEASE........

STOP!!!

No seriously, I am willing to offer monetary and/or sexual incentives to stop this madness.

This stems back to this bullshit notion that cis-gendered heterosexual men have the sole copyright trademark on masculinity, power and strength. All straight guys are tough and strong and all gay guys are sissies.

Society pushes this misnomer that even if no other woman finds a cis-gendered straight guy desirable, they can always count on us dirty perverted homos to get in their pants simply because they're the mythical unicorn of a cis-gendered heterosexual man because they're "real men.". And of course all gay guys will jump at the chance to be with any real man.

Unfortunately they've got it twisted.

Personally speaking, most straight women are far more tolerant, understanding, fair and far more open-minded than I am. I'm far more critical.

Read: if a straight woman doesn't want their ass, then I sure as hell don't.

Someone being cis-gendered/heterosexual isn't going to make them magically more appealing to me. Oh sure, gay or straight, I can appreciate a pretty package and I might even harmlessly flirt (you know if they're actually hot), but I don't recruit. Have I hooked up with straight guys? Sure. But two things:

1. They were actually attractive
2. They sought me out, not the other way around
3. Fun times were had by all.

A little example. I was chatting with a group of friends and we got on the subject of being on relationships, being gay, and me getting hit on by straight guys.

N-P: For some reason I'm the exception to the rule when it comes to them.

Buddy: Neo, I can tell you right now, you won't be the exception with me. LOL.

N-P: Oh don't worry Buddy. You're totally safe. I'm only into guys who are actually hot.

Everyone burst out laughing and even though he was smiling nervously, Buddy was completely mum after that.

And while we're on the subject. New Rule: Cis-gendered straight men aren't allowed to be homophobic and assume that I'm just dying to get into their pants because I'm gay and then get offended when I'm not interested.

I can't tell you how many times I've dealt with this scenario where macho guys, who are clearly secure about themselves, freak out the second they learn that I drive stick.

As soon as they find out I'm gay, the first thing they announce, "I'm straight. I ain't into that gay shit. I'm only into women!!!!"

"Dude chill alright?" I'll reply.  "I wouldn't dare try to come on to you or make you uncomfortable like that. That's not my style at all. Besides, you're not even my type."

"What the fuck do you mean I'm not your type? Guy or girl, I can get any piece of ass I want. Look at this beer gut. It's damn sexy. My milkshake brings all the boys to the yard!"

The male ego, nothing is more fragile.

And while I'm know Judd Winnick was making a good faith effort with Terry Berg, even he fell into that trapping with his jealousy over Kyle Rayner and Jenn.

I've got two college degrees, I work out and I've studied martial arts for years. Do I look like I need a magical straight boy to save me? Them being straight is not gonna make them magically appealing. Chances are they've got nothing I want, and I'm willing to visit my local bookie because it's probably a safe bet that mine is bigger than theirs. Does Midnighter look like he need a straight guy to save him? And for those of you who think we masculline tough gay guys are some weird anomalies, let me remind you of our brethren of yore, samurais, Romans and Spartans, military soldiers (YES WE BE GAYIN UP YO ARMIES), prison inmates, you know gay warriors and walking badasses at that.

And yet you expect me, a proud, accomplished, gay and masculine alpha male, to co-sign on this ignorant, disgusting and insulting and homophobic exalting of the cis-gendered heterosexual male mythical unicorn bullshit?

Let me make this as abundantly clear as I possibly can: FUCK THAT SHIT!!!!!!

4) We Can Save Ourselves

This often intersects with #3 but it definitely warrants its own discussion. Typically when an LGBTQ character is attacked or persecuted they require some cis-gendered heterosexual savior to swoop in and save them. This is very similar to the Great White Hope trope where a mythical savior of the caucasian persuasion will will come riding in on a white stallion to save us lowly POCs from his own kind. Because he's not like them because he's a Speshul White Person. Not be an ally and stand tall with us as peers (because that's awesome) but rescue us in one single-handed gesture.

Like B.Scott said, I'm not waiting for someone to come save me, I'll do the damn thing my damn self.

We're more than capable of functioning and overcoming adversity. Hell we do it every day in our day-to-day lives. With all of the hatred and violence that we face, do you think most of us would be here if we didn't know how to kick ass and take names?

And speaking of LGBTQs who can kick ass and take names and save themselves: AIDS BURGER FOR THE MOTHER FRAKKIN WIN!!!!

image Click to view



5) White IS NOT The Default For LGBTQ

Unfortunately too often the media often portrays the racial default for LGBTQ as good looking cis-gendered whites, usually males. This of course leads to a lot of problem because it pushes the failed mindset that the only marginalized people who exist, much less matter are those that fall into that category.I appreciate a cute white boy as much as the next person but my God is it asking too much to dispel the notion?

Too often people forget that there are LGBTQs of color. So it's just not enough to have LGBTQ characters in the media they have to be as diverse as we are. We desperately need more Satsus, Renee Montoyas, Lafayette Reynolds, and Xavins who brings the trifecta of win for not only defying the gender binary, debunking the notion that white is the default for LGBTQ but also debunking the failed mindset that white is the default race for humanity in general.

6) My Trans Peeps ARE NOT Your Dirty Little Secret

My trans brothers and sisters are rarely showcased in the media but when they are it's usually boxed into unflattering roles as sex workers or mistresses, or some other kind dirty secret for one of the primary protagonists of a story. And don't even get me started on this bullshit here. I write this as cis-gendered male, I can't even begin to imagine the frustration, anger, and hurt transfolks endure when they witness this.

The transfolks who have been in my life over the years have been entrepreneurs, waiters, teachers, award winning community activists, military veterans, volunteers, actors, directors, computer programmers, media personalities. Accomplishments these men and women have garnered while eduring bigotry and even violence. Funny how THAT never gets showcased in these stories. A little education (and removal of one's head from their rectal cavity) would reveal this.

And speaking of education, I highly recommend these two blogs:

http://transgriot.blogspot.com/
http://questioningtransphobia.wordpress.com/ by our very own lisaquestions.

7) We're Not Looking To Assimilate

A trope I see too often in stories is that gay and lesbian characters' sole raison d'etre is to emulate their heterosexual neighbors: get married, move to the suburbs, get a picket fence, have children, and conform to the "heterosexual ideal" (because we know heterosexuals totally have the trademark on this) and when the issue of homophobia arises in stories, the argument is made that gays and lesbians' rights and humanity should be recognized because it's contingent on the fact that they're willing to conform and be just like the straights.

I don't want to live in the suburbs, I don't want children or a picket fence. Not knocking those who do. If it works for them, awesome and blessed be. It's not for me. And you wanna know what else, my gay lifestyle is awesome. By not having a spouse and a family, I have more disposable income and more time to myself. I can travel abroad at the drop of a mood swing, I can go back to school, I can buy the latest tech. I can have as much indiscriminate sex as I like and I'll never have to worry about unwanted pregnancies. And you know what, I'm STILL entitled to the same rights, privileges and respect, and human dignity.

As Brian Gerald stated, "Your equality and humanity are not contingent upon conforming to some standard. Give me equality and justice because all humans deserve it, and not because I clean-up well. And don’t forget that queers who aren’t monogamous / don’t go to church / reject marriage / oppose the military / avoid taxes deserve justice also. In fact, we can learn something from these non-conformists!"

How about stories featuring gay characters who are completely happy with their lifestyles and aren't longing to be assimilated by the heterosexual Borg? Oh wait, we can't have that. We might start unpacking some privilege and having LGBTQs feel good about themselves. And we just can't have that.

8) We're Not Your Girlfriends

If you've watched a romantic comedy in the last 30 years, you've seen this trope. The gay BFF who ONLY exists to be a shoulder, listening ear for the female protagonist, offer said female protagonist hair/makeup/ fashion tips, or to pull a Queer Eye for the masculine straight guy who needs advice on getting in touch with his heterosexual side. Said gay BFFs are usually cardboard cutouts with no character development. They may have a platonic love interest which we see for like 20 seconds but their love life is usually limited to innuendos. But ultimately their whole existence is to serve the heterosexuals in their life.

I won't mention how many times when women discover that I drive stick they get giddy like I'm some kind of fucking fashion accessory they just bought. They think they've made a new BFF who solely exists for the aforementioned fail. Or when guys need advice on cleaning themselves up and want fashion tips, they automatically turn to me.

"Hey Neo, you're gay, and all you gays know about fashion looking good. Can you give me advice? I'll even let you mentally undress me for five whole minutes because that's what all you gay boys like to do with us real straight men isn't it?"

And folks wonder why I keep a lawyer and a bail bondsman on speed dial.

9) Orientation =/= Evil

While at Outlantacon last month, I spoke with a woman who was immensely frustrated over a sci-fi series she had been watching. The show featured a confident powerful alpha woman who was extraordinary, accomplished and happened to be a lesbian. Surprise, surprise, she was actually evil.

This led to a discussion the age old trope where writers will make a villain bisexual or a lesbian to add a little bit of kink to their villainy. After all, nothing says true deviant who should be slain by our valiant cis-gendered heterosexual (often white male) protagonist like being an LGBTQ.

How many times have we seen this in comics and other media? The evil lesbian is out to kill ALL men because she hates ALL men. Or the gay guy who is a pedophile because destroying children is our only mission in life. Or that bisexual villain who is bisexual because they needed some extra kink. Or because they can't make up their mind about what they want or they're greedy sexually.

In fact, how many times do you actually see bisexual characters in the media in roles other than villains? I can probably only count them on one hand.

Now I already know what some folks are gonna say. "But Neo, some LGBTQs are bad people. Are you trying to imply that they should only be portrayed as good protagonists?"

Not at all.

The problem is that they aren't portrayed as villains who HAPPEN to be LGBTQs but villains who are evil and diabolical in large part (if not all) BECAUSE they are an LGBTQ. That's the difference.

10) We Fuck! DEAL!!!!!

I've lost count the number of times I've endured the following:

"It's okay if you're gay and I totally accept it. I just don't want to hear about your crushes/ kisses/relationships/or details about you having gay sex. Because that icky gay sex is just icky and that aspect of who you are makes me uncomfortable and in all my cis-gendered heterosexual privilege, my comfort trumps your experiences as a human being. But I'm not homophobic at all and I like totally accept you being gay."

And I'm usually eyeing my cell phone.

Not surprising this fail translates over into comics and the media as well. This is why the most action Doug Savant's character, Matt got on Melrose Place was a blip of a cutaway kiss.

The blogosphere about flipped it shit when As The World Turns outed Luke Snyder as a gay male and paired him with Noah Mayer. They flipped their shit a second time when they had their first on screen kiss. And the world wide web about damn near had a cyber meltdown when rumblings of the two characters having a love scene arose. But don't take my word for it. Here are two nuggets:

“I am outraged that ATWT would put a dramatic kiss between two male actor[s]. I have watched ATWT since I have been a young child and am disgusted with the show.  It was one thing to have the characters discussing their sexual orientation but I am outraged that they would put this on the screen.  I will no longer watch ATWT and I'm sure that my mother who has watched for years will feel the same as myself.  I watched Y&R in the late 70's and early 80's and intend to return.  You've lost a long time fan.”

“I really don't care for the close contact of Luke and Noah kissing. My daughter watches also and I would like to see the show without the actual male to male contact.  I am fine with being gay, I just would prefer not to see it on my soap that I have been watching for 30 something years. Please leave it to our imaginations. I will not watch the show if I have to watch sex and kissing among the guys.  That does not make me feel sexy. I really felt uncomfortable.”

As one commenter so accurately stated, these people seriously need to check their moral compasses at the door because they’re obviously broken.

And let's not forget that it was only a year ago that the comic fandom was embroiled in a smilar brouhahaha when Rictor and Shatterstar shared their first onscreen kiss.

This just in. LGBTQs fuck. DEAL!!!!!!!

Yes we have the sex. I fuck. It's one of my favorite recreations. I think sex is a beautiful thing and one of the greatest gifts God ever gave us. I enjoy bedding beautiful men. I love fucking. I love to fuck, constantly:

On the bed
On the floor
On the towel
By the door
In the tub
In the car
Up against
The mini bar.

And just like heterosexuals, I'm still one of God's children and I STILL deserve to loved (and protected under the law) just like everyone else does.

And while I know you straight fanboys enjoy fwapping to the hot lesbian sex, we gay fanboys are entitled to the hawt man-on-man action ON SCREEN. And I always find it odd that in soap operas, comics and other media regularly features, murder, rape, domestic violence, adultery, fornication, no one blinks an eye. Yet same gender loving arises, then everyone wants to play the morality card.

This goes back to Tim Wise's point on the Trouble With Tolerance: So what is tolerance anyway? As I see it, tolerance means I don't burn your church down, or tie you to a fence and leave you to die, or drag you down a dirt road behind my pickup. It means I tolerate your existence and little else. I let you live and breathe for another day. How nice of me.

How nice indeed.

11) Retconning Lesser Characters As Gay Is Not Progressive

Something I've seen too often in comics is that a lesser character (often a villain) will be retconned as gay. However they are kept at a minor role and if readers get turned off, they can always kill them off or retcon them back as straight. Or if they do get a featured role and are propped up as a publicity stunt like say the Rawhide Kid, they play to every denigrating stereotype.

Visibility is not progress.  But we already knew that.

12) Being Gay IS NOT A Tragedy

Just as there's far more to the POC experience than racism, there's far more to the LGBTQ experience than homophobia, coming out, HIV/AIDS. Yes those are important issues worth exploring and I'm not saying we should stop. Yes LGBTQs have our challenges and yes we must contend with institutional oppression but there are perks about being an LGBTQ, many of which I've listed in Point 7. On top of that we have rich culture and history stemming back to Greek/Roman times and eras before that. So a few more well adjusted characters who are totally comfortable with who they are (Jack Harkness, Lafayette Reynolds) will go a long way. K? Thanks.

13) The Greeks/Romans/Spartans Were Like Totally Gay

I'm a huge whore........................for Greek and Roman mythology and too often I've witnessed when someone touches on this genre or period of history, they try their damndest to revise history and straighten out icky gays. Because it fucks with their sensibilities that some of history's mightiest warriors were actually gay.

If they had it their way, they'd have you think that Zeus and Gaynemede were just  platonic drinking buddies. This is why we shouldn't rely on Frank Miller's homophobic shitfest 300 as historical fact.

The Spartans were like totally gay! The Greeks were like totally gay! The Romans were like totally gay!

DEAL!!!!!

Any previous claims to the contrary, FUCK WHAT YOU HEARD!!!!!!

And to Rob Liefeld, in case you're still bitter about Rictor and Shatterstar going brokeback, maybe this (NSFW) will help you accept it...or at the very least assist you with your anatomy, because God knows you need all the help you can get.

14) Quit Retooling LGBTQ Characters

One of the most infuriating things is when a character comes out of the closet, they completely retool their personality to fit the offensive gay caricature.

Let me give you an example. There's a show I'm watching now where a frat boy jock recently came out of the closet. While that in itself would be awesome, unfortunately they've completely revamped his character with no explanation why. Suddenly he's now whiny and plays to every negative denigrating stereotype.

And then he and his boyfriend get into a fight with a pair of homophobes and suddenly he doesn't know how to throw a punch or defend himself. And he has to get saved by a mythical heterosexual. Something else happened, but I didn't see what because by that point my baseball bat had collided with my flat screen.

Now, it would be one thing if say the character had always been sensitive or a gentle soul or what have you. That would've made sense, obviously.

But alas a world of no. This is nothing more than trifling homophobic writers pigeonholing a character in their myopic box about what they think all gay people are like.

When I realized I was gay, the entire content of my character didn't suddenly shift. Being gay didn't affect my personality, my interests, my hobbies, etc. I'm still a writer and an artist, I'm a voracious comic book junkie, I'm still an obsessive compulsive overachieving perfectionist. I'm still a quirky geek. I'm those things because that's who I am, not because my sexuality dictates it.

15) Enough With The Gay Deaths

Sometimes I wonder if writers only include LGBTQ characters if for no other reason than to kill them off. One of the biggest heartbreaks in comics for me (and to this day I'm still raw about it) was the fate that befell Freedom Ring.One of the best characters in years, he easily could've carried his own series. Not only did they kill him off, but tortured and sodomized him in the process, none of which they would've dared done to a heterosexual superhero.The one time they SHOULD bring a superhero back from the dead, suddenly they decide to keep him dead.

Ironically, I've actually defended the storytellers behind two of the highest profile gay demises in fandom: Tara Maclay from Buffy and Ianto Jones from Torchwood.

Don't get it twisted. I completely get why people were livid about Tara and Ianto being killed. We have so few LGBTQ characters and even fewer who are handled correctly. So we are dealt a major blow when one of them is killed off. And we deserve a little romance from our heroes as well.

I loved Tara, I loved Tara and Willow together. They will always be one of my all-time pairings. However season six which was the worst season ever imho was about Willow's descent into darkness. If the objective of season six was to make Willow dark, the only way that was going to happen was to take away the one thing that mattered to her most, and that Tara. It was sad and heartbreaking to lose such an awesome character like Tara, but from a storytelling standpoint, I understand the decision.

As far as Jack Harkness/Ianto Jones went, that relationship wasn't going to last and to be completely honest, I'm shocked it lasted as long as it did. Jack has far too many layers and and Ianto hadn't even began to scratch the surface. This was a relationship rooted in lust (my favorite kind).

Oh sure, they cared for each other but Jack isn't the settling down type and Ianto knew that and he was cool with it. That's why Jack never acted on his feelings for Gwen because he knew she would want the commitment, the flowers, the ring, the kids, the house, all of it and Jack wouldn't/couldn't be that man. He's not that man. What's also interesting about this is that while Jack is omnisexual, Ianto isn't even gay. As he explained to his sister, he didn't have an attraction to men, it was just one man.

This made for very compelling television because it kept their relationship interesting (and yes the man on man action was hot). But you knew they were on borrowed time as most Torchwood agents didn't live past 26. This relationship would have an even shorter lifespan.

But the difference between Harkness/Jones, Willow/Tara and deaths like say Freedom Ring and countless other gay deaths is that the former deaths were story-driven and handled with care and respectability imho.

They weren't brutalized or murdered in some exploitative or over the top manner that occurs too often with LGBTQ deaths.

Which leads us to our next trope......

16) Enough With The Specialized Brutality Reserved for LGBTQs

I could cite the seemingly countless examples but rather than doing that, I'm just going to link Perry Moore's essay Who Cares About The Death Of A Gay Superhero Anyway? A History of Gays In Comic Books. Much in the spirit of Gail Simone’s essay which brings awareness to the industry’s misogyny, Moore’s article chronicles LGBT superheroes who have been met with torture, rape, disembowelment, decapitation, had their
genitalia disfigured or removed, and/or was retconned as heterosexual. While the essay is a few years old and some specifics may be outdated, Mr. Moore's ultimate point still stands and is still a most valid one.

17) LGBTQs Are Not Your Punchline?

Do I even need to explain this one?

18) Escapism, We Need It Too

Just like our cis-gendered heterosexual brothers and sisters, LGBTQs turn to art to uplift us when our lives need lifting. We too need to be whisked away to magical worlds where being a minority is not a scarlet letter but something worth celebrating.

When I watch Doctor Who and Torchwood, I want to be in that world and want to know what it's like to be a gay male who defies labels and plays by his own rules and still manages to be a kickass character. I want to know what the world could be like without racism, sexism, homophobia, that's actually inclusive of everyone. I sometimes need to escape to a world where I can live vicariously through a loving gay couple who are able to be out and affectionate without fear of violence, like say Wiccan and Hulkling.

Just as showcasing the oppressions bring to light the injustices in the world, I think the escapism can often serve as a blue print of what the world could be like for all of us if we made a good faith effort.

19) We Can Take The Lead

If Torchwood, Batwoman, and the Question are any indication, we are more than capable of leading the team and being the primary protagonists

While it is wonderful that LGBTQs are featured in stories as supporting characters, we not only need more stories featuring us done right but stories featuring us as the heroes and heroines of our tales, we're more than capable of being the sidekick or the teammates.

To quote Rob Van Dam, we can be THE WHOLE EFFIN SHOW!!!!!!!!

20) We Are Whatever We Want To Be

In another post I mentioned a friend is working a novel which features two characters. Close as brothers, this story is not only well-written but it kicks ass because the assertive stoic dominant alpha character just happens to be a gay male and the sweet sensitive clumsy one just happened to be the straight guy. Well the feedback she's been receiving from (heterosexual) female readers is that they don't approve of the story because they don't feel the gay character is authentic ie he doesn't adhere to stereotypes and ergo isn't realistic.

I had a similar situation awhile back while collaborating on a comic book. It was a team story and one of them featured a devout spiritual knight who happened to be gay. I got pushback from some folks because it was mansplained and straight-talked to me that it's unrealistic that gays could be religious or spiritual because it goes against the Bible.

Once again, this is why I keep an attorney and a bail bondsman on speed dial.

This type of fail is what led to John Barrowman being passed over for the role of Will in Will & Grace. He was too masculine and not authentically gay. The producers rather wanted a straight man playing a stereotypical and denigrating gay man, rather than a gay man defying convention.

LGBTQs are not the Borg. We come from all walks of life and have myriad of experiences and perspectives. We are more than our demographics. And it's not unreasonable for us to expect the same from LGBTQ characters.

You see people love to put minorities in a box in order to satiate their superiority complexes. They base their self-worth off of what others can't/aren't supposed to be doing.

Speaking for myself here, I'm gonna do me, and I'm gonna be the best me that I can possibly be. And if you got a problem with that, then that's your problem.

Because it sure as hell ain't mine.

With all of this being said, storytellers: your game, do step it up.

Here endeth the lesson.

ETA: Thanks for all the awesome comments. Wow so many very cool people stopping my by my pad.

*chuckles nervously*
*quickly straightens up living room*
*puts on pants*

wicked truths, writing, comics

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