Posted on 02/06/2020 8:40:00 AM PST by SeekAndFind
Just about every major movie release these days is scrutinized about whether or not it will feature an obvious LGBT character. Ever since the live-action remake of Beauty and the Beast, and a bit before, Disney has been sprinkling LGBT characters generously across its film properties.
Even the most recent installment of Star Wars, (now owned by Disney) features the franchises first, albeit strangely placed and obviously forced, same-sex kiss. And, Marvel Studios (also owned by, you guessed it, Disney) has joined the cause, including a gay character in its upcoming movie, The Eternals. The studio also recently announced a new film currently in production that will feature its first ever transgender superhero, marking what will likely become an endless parade of token Ts following in the wake of the Ls and Gs.
Token is the right word for what we are seeing. What most stands out about all these characters is just how tacked-on they feel. Few are essential to the stories being told. In some cases, they even detract or, at least, distract from them. Disney and other studios arent making movies about LGBT identity or lifestyle, theyre capitulating to character quotasvirtue signaling to the loud and influential LGBT lobby in order to keep protests down and ticket sales up.
The whole thing is reminiscent of Dave Barrys satirical history of the U.S., Dave Barry Slept Here, in which he ends several chapters with the obligatory closer that around this time women and minority groups were accomplishing a great many achievements, too.
In no way am I suggesting that we shouldnt expect more overt LGBT stories in the future. We certainly can. But in the meantime, the reality is that even a woke entertainment titan like Disney is not so much pushing a cultural agenda as they are bowing to it. Nor am I suggesting that their obvious capitulation to these imposed character quotas is ineffective sexual propaganda. As Brett Kunkle and I said in our book A Practical Guide to Culture, ideas are often most powerful not where they are the loudest, but where they are made to just appear normal.
Since the TV show Will and Grace, the most commonly advanced message has been that gay people are just like everyone else and just want to live and love in peace. Cultural acceptance of same-sex relationships grew steadily until Obergefell was enshrined into law. From there the demands only grew, from cultural power to legal power. Though many in the G and L camp were satisfied with living and loving in peace, the movement itself was far more ambitious, first demanding affirmation, then conformity and even participation from charities, public employees, bakers, florists, schools, and t-shirt makers.
Now, transgender characters are being introduced into big-budget films as characters who just want to live in peace. If this sounds familiar, it should. The T, which has almost nothing in common with the larger acronym and even contradicts the other letters in several places, has assumed enough soft cultural power to demand representation nearly everywhere. The question is: Will it also make the transition to legal power?
The strange tale of J. K. Rowling leaves some doubts. In early December, the multi-billionaire author of Harry Potter tweeted her support for a researcher in the U.K. who was fired from her job for saying that male and female are biological realities.
When a judge at an employment tribunal upheld the firing, calling the researchers views transphobic, and unworthy of a democratic society, Rowling tweeted that while she supports loving whichever consenting adult you choose, firing Maya Forstater for insisting that women are real was a bridge too far for her. Despite the intense backlash and calls for boycotts, Rowling still hasnt retracted the tweet.
As Rod Dreher points out, this raises an interesting question: If all the soft power in that movement cant move Rowling, cant other entertainers say no, too? Maybe the claims of the transgender movement are just too radical. Maybe the T fails culturally where the L and the G largely succeeded?
Well find out soon enough. Until then, token transgender characters at the movies are an ironic reminder that this is a movement still trying to gain acceptance. Which means theres still time for dissenting voiceseven very influential onesto say no.
Originally posted at breakpoint.org
Tried to watch Lego Masters with the family tonight. It was more like a freak show.
Sickos.
Well, at least she said partner instead of wife. The appropriation of the terms of traditional marriage, of words that describe a complementary union, grates upon me.
I was on a temp job where this dyke mentioned her "wife" non-stop. I was trying to figure out how to complain about that when the agency moved me to a better place. As a heterosexual I suspect I would have been forced to tolerate it.
But a week or so before, a Canadian woman on Jeopardy said she was on her honeymoon with her wife.
Saw that. Trabek clenched his jaw while smiling and taking a step back. I will miss him.
I stopped watching Person of Interest when Jim Caviezel uttered the words, We have to save her wife! I know a lot of FReepers ignored it and enjoyed the show after that, but I didnt really regret my decision.
Asians and Latinos are WAYYY underpresented in film and TV relative to their share of the population.
Same happened to me watching “The Flash”. City Hall was under attack and the police chief told him the mayor’s husband was still in there. The mayor, being male. I’m like “Are they not aware about half of this show’s viewers are kids?”
Later I caught a clip of a DC T.V. producer PROUD of bringing his LGBT agenda to all ages on prime time and how they’re striving to do the same with their other shows. Perhaps Zantac and Pepto Bismal should line up as sponsors because I needed them after that.
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