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- One of the most popular
videos on my channel
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is one where I talk about
the lack of representation
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in children's TV and
film for LGBT characters
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which is why I was so pleasantly surprised
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when watching Netflix's
show Anne with an E
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because it's a show based
on a children's book
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that is rated suitable for kids
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which has multiple queer characters
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whose lives don't end in misery.
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And it's set in historical period.
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I just can't believe that this exists.
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There is still something
genuinely revolutionary
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about having LGBT
characters in kids' media.
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I still get messages on that video
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from people saying that it's inappropriate
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to talk about gay people to children
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as if children can't be gay themselves
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or have gay parents or
gay friends or gay uncles.
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As if gay marriage isn't
legal and, you know,
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a thing that exists
that they can understand
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and know about.
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But it's also pretty revolutionary
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to have queer representation
in historical fiction
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in a way that isn't just
derived from misery.
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Sometimes I think people have the idea
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that gay people only sort of popped up
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during the AIDS crisis.
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Like they didn't exist then, you know,
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the AIDS crisis happened and suddenly
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they're there to have story
lines about being ill or sick
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or dead or grieving for
straight and cis audiences
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to watch and like to win Oscars.
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(magical bell tinkling)
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I think that the only
representation of queer characters
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in children's media that's
also kind of set historically
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that I've ever seen before
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was the episode of Dr. Who,
The Unicorn and the Wasp.
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- Oh yes, I was taking
(gentle music)
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a constitution in the
fields behind the house.
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(magical music)
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Just taking a stroll, that's all.
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(gentle music)
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- [Man] Alone?
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- [Roger] Oh yes, all
alone, totally alone,
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absolutely alone,
completely, all of the time,
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I wandered lonely as the proverbial cloud.
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There was no one else with me, not at all.
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♪ The sweetest thing ♪
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- Not ever.
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- But like that ends in
a burial gay's trope,
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one of them dies.
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So this is literally
something that I feel like
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is a first of its kind.
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That's the first time
that I've seen something
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like this on screen.
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So let's get into these
specific characters.
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We have an elderly lesbian character.
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Incidentally, she is my life goal
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in terms of throwing like
amazing queer parties.
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Like hella amounts of food
and also taking baby gays
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under your wing and
generally being lovely.
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My dream.
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Although I will acknowledge the fact
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that part of her story
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before she comes onto
the show does involve
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a burial gay's trope, the idea
that her partner has died.
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This was actually on
reading kind of quotes
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and stuff from the writers
and creators of the show.
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This character is in the books herself
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and there's not really
an explanation as to why
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she's kind of appeared and
come to stay with her family.
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And so they were like
well what if the reason
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why she's come is because
of the death of a partner?
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And what if her partner was a woman?
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It happens before the
show begins off screen.
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It's not the kind of like
trauma that you're made
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to live in real time.
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And it was just like
this perfect opportunity
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to increase the representation on a show
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from this original source material
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without it really contradicting
the source material at all.
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There is also a young gay boy as well
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which is lovely.
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So we have these characters
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that are spanning different age ranges.
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You have different identities.
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We get the idea of a woman who has been
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in this very long-term relationship
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who's at a very different
stage of her life
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as well as the story of
somebody who's coming to terms
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with their sexuality.
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I think with representation when you have
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multiple characters with the same identity
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allows you to tell
multiple different stories.
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You don't feel like they're
stuck into one trope.
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This boy is artistic,
he's kind, but he also has
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this strength to him and
he's trying to pursue
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his own destiny.
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And between them there's
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this beautiful
intergenerational friendship.
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There is this episode in the show
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which takes place almost
entirely at this woman's house
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and she's throwing this very gay party
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for a load of queer people
basically from her life
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that she's gathered together.
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(crowd clapping)
(gentle music)
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- And it essentially revealed
that the partner who died
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is the one who used to throw the party
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and she wants to start
this tradition up again
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and feel some kind of like remembrance
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and love from it.
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And there's this scene
where the boy tells her
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that he feels like he's like
her, that he's gay, too.
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And she has this reaction
that I don't think
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I've really ever seen before
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in terms of like a coming out scene.
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Where a lot of the times when
coming out scenes happen,
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you're coming out to a straight person
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and so it's very like I'm your
mum and I love you anyway.
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Which is all great and brilliant
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but it was just so interesting
to see that be a scene
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where you come out to
someone who's also gay.
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(gentle music)
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(Jo sighs)
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- And I bawled like a baby.
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I just wept because that was
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just such a beautiful,
intergenerational friendship moment
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that I don't feel like we see
in LGBT representation at all.
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Not only will this not stop
you from having a good life,
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actively the friendship
that she's developed,
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the relationships she's
had because she's gay
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have filled her life with such joy
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even as she's kind of
in mourning and grief
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was just stunning.
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And we also have a third gay character
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who is a closeted gay man who is very,
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has a lot of internalised homophobia
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that he takes out on
another gay character.
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And that is a trope
that often frustrates me
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but again when you have lots
of different representations,
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I understand the idea of
actually this is something
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that is realistic within
the time period as well.
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You know, you're gonna have
multiple different characters.
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You have multiple different story lines
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and react to their
identity in different ways.
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You can acknowledge the
truth of the reality
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that he's living without making
it be the gay experience.
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Also I think this is a
positive representation.
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It's not limited to how
it might be positive
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for LGBT people who are watching, right?
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And not even positive in the way
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of well, straight people
can see that gay people
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are great, too.
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But in having this queer party
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in which the idea of, you
know, heteronormativity,
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of cisnormativity is broken apart,
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it allows those straight
and cis characters
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to understand the limitations
that society is presenting
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to them and forcing them into.
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You know, why should women
have to be wives first
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and people second?
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Why should men and women
have to dress a certain way?
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Why should love between two women be seen
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as anything but beautiful?
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It's a way of talking
about the queer experiences
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bound by something other than by pain.
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That if you talk to
children about queerness,
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that far from being
something that damages them,
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it allows them to
understand their own reality
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in a different way even if
they're not gay themselves.
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- By having multiple
characters also interact
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with these queer characters,
it allows the show
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to demonstrate the different
reactions to coming out
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in different ways.
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You have the character
of Anne, for example,
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who is very much like oh
yeah, taking it in my stride,
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nothing fazes me.
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Which I think is especially
poignant because her character
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is so in tuned with nature.
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It is such a huge part of her character
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about how fascinated she
is with the natural world
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and it just feels like
such a subtle statement
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to have the character who is so obsessed
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with the beauty of
nature to see the beauty
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and the naturalness of queer relationships
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and love in that way.
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But it also allowed other characters
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to have their own struggles with it
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that were shown to be more about them.
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It's difficult for me to accept this,
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not because it's inherently bad,
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but because I feel like I've been deceived
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because I know you really well
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and you hadn't told me about it
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all because you're making me
question my own assumptions
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about what I should be dressing like
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or how I should feel.
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It wasn't seen as a this is
something that is inherently bad
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and people have to, they
automatically will think
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it's bad and they have to
work towards acceptance.
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That complexity was displayed
which was fantastic to see.
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Basically I suppose what I'm saying is
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for like a gritty
reboot, it sure does have
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a lot of happy friendships
and lovely endings
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and queer representation.
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Just saying.
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It's been a little while since I've done
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one of these videos that
focuses specifically
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on one piece of media.
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If you liked it, please
let me know in the comments
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if there's any other
things like kind of shows
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or films or things you
want me to talk about,
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let me know.
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If you want to help support
me make these videos,
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I'm gonna leave a link to my Patreon
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in the description along
with all of my social media
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so you can find me all over the internet.
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And until I see you next time, bye.