Is blaine bi or gay
In an email he just shot over to us, Ryan explained: “ Blaine is NOT bi. He is gay, and will always be gay. I think it’s very important to young kids that they know this character is one of. Blaine is openly gay and is now married to Kurt Hummel as of the episode A Wedding. Despite revealing his infidelity in The Break-Up, Kurt eventually decides to forgive him.
Having Blaine be introduced as an explicitly gay character who served as a mentor for Kurt and his sexuality, and then end up making him date a girl? That would be extremely counterproductive and would have further pushed the narrative that gay people just need the right girl to become straight. In the aftermath, Blaine wonders whether he might be bisexual, and goes on a date with Rachel.
When she kisses him again while they are both sober, he concludes that he is indeed gay, which relieves Kurt. [11]. Glee creator Ryan Murphy addressed rumors that Darren Criss' gay character Blaine Anderson would come out bisexual in an upcoming episode. Criss' arrival on the Fox musical-comedy has been. It has an extraordinarily vast fanbase, its music has officially topped the charts on a grander scale than Elvis Presley, and the songs they perform are all dangerously catchy.
In addition, Glee purports to be a haven for the showcasing of diversity—and certainly there have been a startling number of appearance by gay characters, which is very much a celebration in its own right. Representation may be on the rise for LGBT characters, after all, but it has not been an especially speedy ascent. Nevertheless, for a show that promotes itself upon the concept of diversity, there are quite a number of thoroughly problematic and decidedly mishandled aspects of the show—one of which, as will be discussed here, is the problem of bisexual representation.
And certainly there is a point to be made in the fact that this is refreshing—that she seems to mind very little that her focus is much more the actual person than the gender package. But the fact of the matter is that this is a very, very Brittany quality; she is exactly the sort of person who would see no genuine, tangible difference between these attractions.
She lives her life on a different plane of existence altogether, at least in the way that she thinks about things. Whatever her IQ, she certainly approaches life from a remarkably divergent viewpoint from much of the rest of the world.
Bisexuality in this context, then, seems far less universal. For all of the viewers who may be ignorant of bisexuality, Kurt has simply echoed stereotypes that the episode never saw fit to deny. This is a problem. We have scenes here of Santana struggling with her sexuality, of Santana struggling to come to terms with having feelings about her best friend. Now, this is a problem with Glee in general—the skipping around, the general continuity errors, the long periods of time without insight or character development.
I would like to preface this next part by saying that, yes, I am well aware that a lot of people who eventually come out as gay first consider and wonder about the notion of bisexuality. Some people come out as bisexual first. What I am suggesting, however, is that the writing on Glee seems to potentially undermine bisexuality as a legitimate sexuality.
There is plenty, clearly, devoted to coming out to other people, and to being trapped in the closet, but we were never privy to the moments that existed between her declaration that she was attracted to girls and guys and then revelation that she is, indeed, a lesbian. I think that could have been a very important story—her own journey of discovery, the moments of realization.
blaine anderson first appearance
I think it would have been an especially important storyline for Glee because, especially to the more mainstream, casual viewer who may not be privy to notions of bisexuality or what it means, it feels a bit like her being a lesbian is thus proposed as an inevitability. She admitted attraction to both genders. Then, episodes later, we are given access to her thoughts again for the first time, and she is gay.
This is what I mean by inevitability; I think the connection between these two events is dangerous without any visible pathway between them, because in a way it seems to necessarily link attraction with both genders to the discovery of attraction to solely one gender. Although it should be noted that the practice does of course occur in the inverse, too. Therefore, on a show that claims to promote diversity, there could have been the opportunity to extend an honest portrayal of bisexuality rather than seeking to, to some degree, erase it.
There are so many stereotypes about bisexuality and what it means to be bisexual and even the existence of bisexuality that could have been dismissed. There could have been the eradication of the belief that bisexuality is about confusion. And we have Santana, who, when struggling with her own confusion and feelings for Brittany, claimed she was attracted to guys and girls—and then, in her more certain voice over, that she was a lesbian, with no line connecting these two points.
Second of all, it could have done quite a lot in offering a counter to the comments Kurt made. As it is, Brittany is a character whose focus has mostly been her humor, and it is unlikely she could ever be a platform for the internal, in depth coming out that makes Santana, in some ways, very relatable to many people. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.
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