Too many forced gay characters in media today.

too many forced gay characters in media today.
Bisexuals only account for 28% LGBTQ characters on shows, close to half of the real numbers (1/3 for gen z) they may actually be proportionate or even slightly underrepresented as a whole while lesbian gay and trans people all appear even further overrepresented than the data would initially suggest. This is something I have to do to write the monthly streaming guide. Sometimes I copy and save my very favorite lines from these complaints to laugh at them and today seemed like a good moment to share them with the group. But, stop trying to shove the mess in my face.
We’re losing characters across scripted broadcast programming, and of all LGBTQ characters counted across broadcast, cable and streaming networks, 36% won’t be returning due to. Have you figured out how you're going to kill them yet? This trope is the presentation of deaths of LGBT characters where these characters are nominally able to be viewed as more expendable than their heterosexual counterparts. In this way, the death is treated as exceptional in its circumstances.
Staff Writer Stella Powers has put together a guide to good and bad LGBTQ+ representation in media. Over the years, LGBTQ+ representation has become increasingly more prominent in television and film. For the most part, this is a great thing, especially when it’s done well. However, that is not always the case. Such a beautiful times. No… Most people couldnt give a truck about it… But when its forced for the sake of wokeness… then thats when it is bad…. Look at tracer… there was hardly any backlash… It felt natural… then there is 76… that was forced on us.
There were 2SLGBTQ+ characters in TV shows this year, according to an April report from the prominent advocacy organization GLAAD, fewer than its last annual report. And of them, 36 per. I want what Billy and Stu from Scream had, but like, without the murder and dying. Season 1 looked like it was naturally setting up a queer love story for him. And then, when Benedict questioned Henry Granville about loving a man in high society, it seemed like he was doing so because he himself wanted to understand how he could find a way to love a man like Granville did.