Gay robin
Batman: Robin coming out as bisexual was 'missing piece' of story15456
1. Read what you love. If you don't like it, don't read it. Great thing about this world -- especially in the nature of comics, tv, movies, books, etc., there's so much damn content present now.
2. Personally, I don't equate this move the same as the Bat Dong. That was clearly for headlines and had absolutely nothing to do with the story. It was just a way to acquire the Black Label some press.
3. Totally approve that new characters can be a focus for diversity. We've seen that with probably the leading example in the past 20 years -- Miles Morales, which someone referenced earlier. However, at the same time, there's a lot of joking about the million Robins that have been around, which is very fair. 50% of Gotham has been Robin at this signal. So, if DC created a new bisexual nature and said, "Here's our new Robin," I assess a lot of folks would come out and say that's it sluggish writing and just done solely to create a bisexual Robin for the sake of diversity and that this Robin is not a real "R
By: Queerly Nerd
“Sum of Our Parts” by Meghan Fitzmartin, Belen Ortega and Alejandro Sanchez is one of the most important Batman-related stories ever written. If you look at it in terms of comic book history, it is the first time a world-renowned male character and huge intellectual property favor Robin has been portrayed as something different than the common heteronormative template. Alan Scott Green Lantern and Iceman can’t even compare. Tim Drake was the sole character to use the Robin title for 20 years. He has action figures, statues, t-shirts, and a 100+ issue comic series. He has appeared in cartoons and DC animated movies; he has every sort of product you would expect from a well-liked superhero. Saying he is important is an understatement. Such a great brand being associated with queerness marks not only a new chapter in representation, but how companies – in this case DC Comics, Warner Bros., AT&T and Discovery – see diversity. Gone are the times when lgbtq+ people were forbidden, coded, only villains, a one-time tragic character or a supporting cast. Now they can be heroes; they can be important heroes and not just a blemish o
Robin Gay, DMD
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A Brief History of Dick
Freely adapted from The Caped Crusade: Batman and the Rise of Nerd Culture by Glen Weldon, out now from Simon and Schuster.
Let’s get one thing absolutely clear: Robin isn’t gay.
Don’t let the verdant Speedo and the pixie boots steer you wrong; Dick Grayson is as straight as uncooked spaghetti. In fact, there own been several Robins over the years, and not one of them has exhibited any trace of same-sex attraction or evinced anything resembling a gender non-conforming self-identity.
Neither, it feels significant to note here at the start, has Batman.
Don’t take my word for it. Ask anyone who’s written a Batman and Robin comic. Or, you know what, you don’t have to: Dollars to donuts they’ve already been asked that question, and have gone on write down asserting the Dynamic Duo’s he-man, red-blooded, heterosexual bona fides. Batman’s co-creators, Bill Finger and Bob Kane, both firmly swatted the question down. So hold writers like Frank Miller, Denny O’Neil, Alan Grant, and Devin Grayson—though Grayson admitted that she could “understand the gay readings.”
So there you have it. After all, if a character isn’t written as gay, then that personality can’t possibly be g
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