Reddit saying Benedict has no queer bone in him since he has always seen checking out woman??? But Benedict has literally checked out that painter friend of his and caressed that male servant after he spilled that wine at the dinner in front of his whole family. Was it intentional, written in the script or just Luke doing his thing in the background?? No one talks about itttt why????
Hey nonny, I never saw that Benedict caressed the servant after he spilled the wine so I went back and check, and omg! You are right!
It was probably to show that Benedict is high as a kite in this scene, but nevertheless Luke makes some really interesting acting choices for Benedict and I am dying to know if he would be on board with queer Benedict
To those members of the bridgerton fanbase, particularly those whom are queer. I pose a question. Would any of you be intrested in a queer book (or book series) inspiered by bridgerton, about a non binary Lord, falling for a transmasc prince. If so please follow, and name a flower that can be used as a name with the meaning behind the plant.
Bridgerton plot-twist. Cressida is such a bitch because she's a lesbian with comphet and a controlling mother and she and Eloise are gonna kiss. In this essay I will...
as a queer person #FellowTravelers already means a lot, but THIS episode8-finale ep-ending scene? this scene means absolutely the world, it's everything, for all of us.🌈
can't watch it without sobbing.
(please do check the WHOLE post, and watch How to Survive a Plague 2012, it's a MUST watch (+everything you spot in this post)
+important reading about AIDS/HIV: https://www.goodreads.com/review/list/139102124?shelf=about-aids-hiv
The millennial trait nobody talks about is watching episodes upon episodes of a show in a shared space that family or a friend refuses to start until they start paying attention accidentally and get hooked thus forcing everybody to start from the beginning.
There's something that infuriates me so much about people mocking characters that fall into the "not like other girls" trap, because the reasons girls take on that stance is because they exist in a society that tries to put womanhood and femininity in a restrictive box that tells them who and how they should be.
They're generally mocked and derided for not wishing to conform to stereotypical femininity, but when they lash out in entirely predictable but ultimately unhelpful ways (by being dismissive and rude about other women and femininity in general) instead of understanding that it's a product of growing up in a society that's restricting them and punishing them for not conforming (either by choice or inability) so many people who claim to be feminists choose to mock them or make them out to be the cause of the problem rather than a symptom. Whether its being mocked in real life, or watching people deride the fictional characters they relate to, this behaviour just alienates those girls even further into thinking that the issue is other women, and confirms their belief that women who are typically feminine will only ever be derisive toward them and that they're somehow fundamentally different from other women.
If you know someone who thinks along those "I'm not like other girls" lines instead of mocking them try directing them towards resources that can help them understand where that harmful rhetoric comes from, and when you're critiquing characters that fit that mold try to consider why they behave that way, and what girls who see themselves in those characters take from your commentary.
the mood for this scene.... is insane... literally THE most beautiful scene in a thai period lakorn i have ever witnessed. fearing for my life that i feel you linger in the air is deehuphouse's magnum opus because i don't see any of their future works living up to what ifylita brought to thai bl history
I loved Brimsley and Reynolds romance in Queen Charlotte. I was devastated by the end and I refuse to let their story be over.
That being said, their relationship mirrors Charlotte and George's in many ways, so the two main romances of the show (one straight, one gay) both felt tragic, which is very beautiful. So if I'm feeling generous I could try and justify Brimsley and Reynolds sad ending because of this.
BUT if their romance is the only queer romance in the Bridgeton universe I will stop being generous. If the only queer romance we get is their tragic one I will riot. You can only tell tragic queer love stories if you also tell happy queer love stories, ESPECIALLY when you are telling many, many happy straight love stories.
What I'm saying is we are now owed a happy queer love story in the Bridgeton universe and I will not accept otherwise.
like. . .are any other Polin fans out there that do not give a singular flying fuck about Debling? we should form a club lol because from the very bottom of my heart and with my whole chest: I could not care less about him. Not sorry, I'm tuning into S3 for Pen and Colin and Pen and Colin alone