nethilia:mother-entropy:amuseoffyre:indieninja92:monstrousgourmandizingcats:abbaskiarostami:zarohk:a
nethilia:mother-entropy:amuseoffyre:indieninja92:monstrousgourmandizingcats:abbaskiarostami:zarohk:antonwalbrook:and what about it.When you could be watching She-Ra or something actively and openly LGBTQ+ friendly.oh shut the fuck up#can’t believe people in 1956 were watching johnny guitar instead of she-ra#smhim fucking dying what the hell kind of noxious fart gas do u have to have instead of brains to fucking comment something like that im just i dont even know where to begin, between the foolishness of forgetting that queer people predate the she-ra reboot and the blatant disinterest in hearing the experiences of queer people in different contexts and the fact that maybe just maybe we dont exclusively want to watch Certified Gay media and that queer reading is a way of actively engaging in the art u consume and validating urself and etc etc… im dying, what a mook It must be so strange for kids now to wrap their head around how little representation there was back in the day. And what we did get was generally bad - if you were any kind of queer character, you were either murdered or a murderer who deserved to die. No in between. It really did a number on generations of queer people, seeing ourselves presented that way.If you want to talk animated queer characters, up into the Disney Renaissance and beyond, the only queer-coded characters you ever saw were the villains. Hell, in the Beauty and the Beast reboot, they gave us “a confirmed gay character” who was apparently LeFou, Gaston’s side-kick. I say apparently, because have you watched the film? I can only think of one mainstream film I saw from the 80s that had any positive queer representation while studying film at uniand it was tangled up in a savage critique of racism, culturalism and Thatcher’s Britain.Things are better now, yes, but let’s not forget where they started. Let’s not forget how far we’ve come and how far we still need to go.ellen is garbage, but when she came out on her TV show (april 30th, 1997. i was fifteen.) it was national news. for months.a year and a half later, matthew shepard was beaten, tortured and left to die, because he was gay. his death was also national news - but more importantly, his murder is what led to gay bashing being legally declared a hate crime. i was sixteen years old and had been with my then-girlfriend for almost a year. assaulting, raping, and killing us for being queer wouldn’t have been prosecuted as a hate crime. i could go on for so, so long but this is already pushing me close to tears.“you could be watching she-ra” my god. you know, i did watch she-ra when i was a kid.i didn’t see myself in any of them. me, 10 years old in 1991: can’t wait for Steven Universe to show up so I can stop trying to find scraps in these inferior TVs shows -- source link