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Parents Beware: ‘Paw Patrol’ Spin-Off ‘Rubble & Crew’ Adds LGBTQ Character

The promotional commercials have been running for a new Paw Patrol movie coming out Sept. 29 that many families are considering taking their young ones to. We have been toying with taking our 4-year-old for her first cinema experience. The lovable faithful dogs who protect the city from the zany kitten catastrophe crew acquire even piqued my interest at times.

But now, before even entering the theater, the lights are dimming on that idea with news of the Paw Patrol spin-off show Rubble and Crew being the latest children’s animated series to add what they dub a “non-binary” ethics into the program. 

Rubble and Crew follows the beloved bulldog Rubble as he and his family serve to build a modern town called Builder Cove. It debuted earlier this summer, but already, in an attempt to materialize “inclusive,” the show has featured what they called a “non-binary person.” 

And of course, this news wasn’t shared through a squeeze release about the conclusion to kowtow to the gender ideologues. It was only when the character’s creator, a gay-rights activist named Lindsay Amer, took to social media to bra

‘Paw Patrol’ Welcomes Its First Non-Binary Character

The popular children’s TV show Paw Patrol launched its first spin-off series, Rubble &Crew, earlier this year. Now, as the show continues its first season, a neutrois character has been introduced, though you have to really want to watch the person as non-binary.

In a recent episode, a character named River was welcomed into the Rubble &Crew gang, which is largely made up of animals.

The new addition to the show is a skateboarder with a passion for photography who moves to the town, which just happens to be next door to where Paw Patrol is based. In their first episode, River helps the team photograph an upcoming shooting star, even going so far as to build an observatory.

So, how is River non-binary?

Visually, it’s difficult to reveal that they identify as such, which is similar to real people. The episode doesn’t contain any actual mentions of River’s identity or pronouns, but it became clear that River is non-binary once the episode’s writer posted about it on social media.

The character of River was crafted by genderqueer author and activist Lindz Amer. Th

Paw Patrol character becomes target of grim anti-LGBTQ+ outrage

The Paw Patrol cosmos is taking another gigantic step for inclusivity by introducing its first ever non-binary character.

In the novel spin-off, Rubble & Crew, launched on Channel 5 and Nickelodeon in the UK earlier this month and follows 5-year-old bulldog Rubble and his family as they build a new town called Builder Cove.

In the latest episode, which comes before Kim Kardashian’s Paw Patrol debut, skateboarder River was introduced which writer and gay-rights activist Lindz Amer, who was hired as a consultant for the display, has revealed is non-binary.

‘They brought me on to consult on the first nonbinary character—meet River!!—for the PAW Patrol universe and write their episode, converse about a bucket list item,’ Amer shared on Instagram.

‘I wanted to document a nonbinary character that was aspirational and incredibly cool, someone for the pups (and kids at home) to look up to.

‘They found an wonderful non-binary actor to voice River and I’m so so happy about how it turned out.’

Amer added there’s actually a nod to River’s non-binary status if you look closely at their shoes and spot the pride f

Rubble & Crew, a spin-off of Nickelodeon’s smash-hit preschool series Paw Patrol, has dropped an episode featuring the franchise’s first nonbinary nature (and first confirmed Homosexual character overall), written by Lindz Amer of Queer Kid Stuff!

Rubble, the builder pups, and River on Nickelodeon/Paramount's "Rubble & Crew"

In the episode Rubble & Crew episode “The Crew Builds an Observatory,” which premiered August 21, bulldog Rubble and his construction crew of builder pups meet human skateboarder River (voiced by nonbinary star Cihang Ma), who’s fresh in town. River (who reads as Asian) loves taking photos and wants to photograph a shooting star that’s whizzing by that night. River asks for Rubble’s help in building an observatory. The crew encounters obstacles along the way, but (spoiler!) perseveres and completes the job just in period for River to clutch the shot.

The episode’s penner, Lindz Amer, is the creator of Queer Kid Stuff, which launched in 2016 as an Homosexual and social justice webseries, and now offers a variety of LGBTQ-inclusive resources, storytimes, and more for kids and thei

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