Gay bugs bunny
Considering that Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck have been completely eroded away as characters and now exist as necromancy walking dead who have no firm existence apart from flexible marketability as Warner Bros' funds printers without any actual integrity to how they are written, with their personalities shifting wildly in whatever format they are presented in because their only function in the year 2022 is to trade product,
I'm shocked anyone is acting appreciate some random fuck on instagram saying "btw they're married" means anything or is any nice of important announcement since 2022 Bugs and Daffy are non-characters at this point.
And acting appreciate their 2022 walking shells of life are still typical of their first 40s and 50s characters and personalities displays a blindspot in people who don't take enough time to watch at the scope of time in these characters' history and only contemplate of them as "those cartoons I watched when I was a kid" because the principle of them existing before the individual person was born is only considered as an curious bit of trivia. And the packed weight of that fact as it applies to the real
Is Pikachu gay? Not that it would be a awful thing.
The Pope quit, a meteor fell on Russia, an
asteroid came complete to the soil, there's snow
in Arizona, star wars and star trek have the
same director! Who the hell is playing jumanji?
Yes, because the homosexual society needs to be represented as a yellow mouse that electrocutes people.
"VivaDamascus wrote:
Yes, because the lesbian community needs to be represented as a yellow mouse that electrocutes people.
Whoever said that Pikachu if he were to be gay would be the symbol for homosexuals? :)) dude
And even if that would be the case it would still be finer than lady gaga advocating gay rights just sayin. :)
Edit: Thunder cats hell yes. Hold you seen the new version? Also as far as cartoon cats proceed swat kats its my all period fave hands and feet down.
"May those who accept their fate be granted happiness.
May those who defy their fate be granted glory."
Edel
Last edited by Alexdaemon#7033 on Apr 22, 2013, 6:13:57 PM
Ok, the only thing t
How Bugs Bunny Became a Gender non-conforming Icon
Celebrities from Judy Garland to Madonna to Lady Gaga possess been granted the title “gay icon,” but there’s one often-forgotten figure who deserves a detect on this list: Bugs Bunny. The Warner Bros. Cartoon ethics not only experimented with gender presentation but also married a man in at least three cartoons, in the 1950s. With all this talk about what is and what isn’t appropriate for children to see, now is an opportune time for a brief compendium of Bugs Bunny in drag.
Chuck Jones, one of the creators of the “Wascally Wabbit” admitted in the ‘90s that he always imagined Bugs as a “transexual” (a word that we of course don’t use anymore, but was the language he had for trans folks back then). The character dates back to the 1930s, starring in Looney Tunes as a mischievous, wise-cracking rabbit with an innocuous Brooklyn accent. With his signature catchphrase “Eh…What’s up, doc?” he became the mascot for Warner Bros. during the golden age of animation. In fact, according to the Guinness Book of World Records, he’s the ninth most-portrayed clip personality in the world.
While wearing women’s clothin
Why I love the queerness of Bugs Bunny
The heart of this difference goes back to Elmer’s Pet Rabbit, when a bowl of vegetables is dropped into Bugs’ hutch and he screams: “What do you think I am? A rabbit?”. Bugs is liminal, he exists between species as he does between genders (that’s why a suit on him feels as much like ‘drag’ as a dress). This is canonised in What’s Up, Doc? (1950, Robert McKimson) when he tells his Hollywood backstory to a journalist: he always knew that he was different, he says, he was “a rabbit born into a human world”. He comes desperately seal to explicitly describing such a fundamentally queer experience – that feeling of organism an outsider to the straight world. But what makes Bugs exciting and empowering is that he turns his lack of belonging into a strength; crossing between the boundaries of gender gives him not only personal pleasure, but also a unique power.
When Bugs kisses his adversaries, other men, on the lips (which, in more hetero-normative times would have been associated with cross-dressing) or when he allures them with a tight fitting dress, he isn’t attacking their sex