elemeno82002
irishcoffee
elemeno82002

Yaoi is basically Japanese for male/male sexual relationship. Many, MANY female anime fans don’t really care about female representation in anime, they’d rather have pretty boys making lovey-dovey eyes at each other. Some, such as Gravitation or Yuri on Ice or Hetalia, rely on female fans shipping the men together as

Yeah, I get the frustration if fans take it too far by demanding shipping, but I personally never understood just why people get so angry about people just musing “Sam and Bucky would make a cute couple” and leaving it at that. I ship. I don’t take it too seriously, and I understand and can differentiate reality from

One of my takeaways is that people sometimes expect too much out of how people talk, or communicate. YES - it’s phrased poorly. That’s how thoughts work sometimes. He wasn’t writing an essay. The words are jumbled, and I think he was searching for how to get across his feelings while still formulating that.

Characters are fictional. They can be whatever the writer wants them to be. For decades, Bucky was dead. Now he’s alive. Does that count as “forcing” a dead character into being alive?

We’re in agreement here dude.

Falcon had some very queer bait-y moments though in the first two episodes. Them rolling on the ground together, the couples therapy moment, etc. It was supposed to be humorous, but the show itself set them up as a couple for gags. 

Agreed, I loved that Donna didn’t fancy the Doctor without being comedically repulsed by him either.

His wording was just off and probably would have saved him a whole lot of trouble had he said the same thing in a better way... but at the same time - let fans be fans and read into the story what they want (personally I’m all for them hooking up as that would bring equally-shipped Steve Rogers back on the market). A

Show runners feed it too. New Doctor Who is a good example where for the first several series the companions always wanted to fuck/fell in love with the Doctor but everyone who has ever watched Doctor Who knew he’d never end up in a relationship.

I’ve read/heard Mackie say similarily bro-y blinkered sentiments, and in the main I agree with you, but I also think actors operate in a fairly rarefied space and many directly identify with the roles they play. For the same reason actors who play villains often say they don’t think of them as evil, they’re situating

I think people just ship.  Shippers gonna ship.  It’s the same with hetero friendships too, really.  Everyone’s always all will they or won’t they.  

I’m not him (that you know of), but in re: your question:

In the one movie,  canonically in comics and Killing Joke she is Gordons daughter and generally falls around early college age.  So its still gross.  

Isn’t there also a joke in Thor: Ragnarok about Goldblum’s character using his luxury spaceship to throw orgies?

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That’s why I liked the Batman Tell Tale series. It was the most interesting Batman take yet. He’s basically Archer if he could do his damn job right. LOL!

He’s still trying to solve the mystery of the g-spot.

You’re assuming anyone at Warner Bros. cares about the comic book portion of their empire.

There’s also the joke from the first Guardians movie that implied Star Lord had jizzed everywhere in his ship.

Plus his hookup in the beginning of the movie that A) he forgot was still on the ship and B) forgot her name.

I liked it better on a rewatch. Once I got past the stuff I didn’t like—Dark Elves, amorphous evil infinity stone-not-a-stone powers—I could focus on what I did: all things Loki, and Darcy

This special was intermittently clever and sometimes funny (internet song, video game stream), but really irritated me with its smugness. I know the narcissism was largely unavoidable (and also the point), but even 90 minutes of Burnham’s self-impressed post-post-ironic preening is too much.