LMAO that's such an embarrasing quote! Since you want me to be so official, yes I am and have been since I can remember.
I have a feeling I posted that back then because I was like 14, so I don't know, I thought one of my friends was going to like go online and track me down.
But anyways. Yeah. I'm completely open with my close friends but I "act"...straight...around my fellow team mates/guy friends when I play soccer and tennis for school.
Disney Duster wrote:(unfortunately Sleeping Beauty keeps trying to take Mermaid's second place spot on my list).
Now onto Flam-Ham...
So I misread you okay? I'm sorry.
Point 3: No, you see Pixar could have avoided any issue by making the robots genderless or at least ambiguous. Parents wouldn't complain as long as they weren't clearly one sex or the other. Pixar felt a need to genderize. BAD PIXAR. Hello Dolly! gets no rap because that was made before this time...and they aren't robots, they're people who were born with genders.
Go Aurora, don't take crap from some fishwife!
It's alright
Well, if any animation company were to take on a gay love story, I'm sure Pixar could. Besides the story is supposed to be how Wall*E is unusual enough to begin with (he's not supposed to have a personality). If they made him any more "different" the Christians would be up in arms (or not). As for Dolly, how do you know the story doesn't involve robots in a parallel universe where it's always 1890 and people sing and dance a lot?
Brendan: thanks for sharing. I would never tell some straight guy upfront that I love him (give me some credit ) but I guess I just haven't received any signals yet. Yes my "gaydar" is broken and I haven't fixed it yet.
Flanger-Hanger wrote:As for Dolly, how do you know the story doesn't involve robots in a parallel universe where it's always 1890 and people sing and dance a lot?
Oh, man. I'd like to go to that universe.
Flanger-Hanger wrote:Brendan: thanks for sharing. I would never tell some straight guy upfront that I love him (give me some credit ) but I guess I just haven't received any signals yet. Yes my "gaydar" is broken and I haven't fixed it yet.
Oh, you'll get the signals and understand them eventually.
*belts* That's how you knoooooooooowwwww he loves you!!!
...oh, what a parallel universe that would be...
"Ta ta ta taaaa! Look at me... I'm a snowman! I'm gonna go stand on someone's lawn if I don't get something to do around here pretty soon!"
Flanger-Hanger wrote:As for Dolly, how do you know the story doesn't involve robots in a parallel universe where it's always 1890 and people sing and dance a lot?
Oh, man. I'd like to go to that universe.
It sounds nice, at first.
Also, we've had many gray days here and I have yet to get any yellow flowers.
MickeyMouseboy wrote:so what will happen to jasmine prince ali?
Prudence wrote:Does Jasmine ever wear any type of eyeglasses, Prince Ali? Just an innocent question. Someone needs to comfort the girl and, quite frankly, make her forget you.
Fortunately for me, Jasmine just came out as a lesbian. So all is well between us.
oh dear! I guess Jafar was barking at the wrong tree
SpringHeelJack wrote:Hellz no! Go for the win, Sleeping Beauty!
...or the second place spot, anyhow.
Psh, whatever! Who would want a lazy narcoleptic at the top of their list?
Lazario wrote:I agree. But then, I'm easy.
Oh good, I'll be sure to keep that in mind. lol
"Hip hop frightens you, doesn't it....Hmmm...Fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate. Hate leads to endlessly posting threads about stupid white people. Hmmmmm....."
Ladies!
Which female Disney character is the most attractive in your eyes? Answer whatever you want, as long as the character in question is animated (and as long as you are a lesbian or bisexual female).
Personally, I'm not sure. Jasmine is visually pleasing, now that I think about it, although I was never too fond of her personality.
Lazario wrote:
(No, I'm not sure I get it either - it's just there)
Ya, what is particularly gay about it? Other than the feminine title and all the crappy pink merchandise which unfortunately has been associated with it. I like it because for me the film has everything I want in a movie (romantic songs and a fire breathing dragon? I'm sold!)
Well, amongst the many reasons I love "Sleeping Beauty" would be because it has an amazingly bad-ass female villain, which may vaguely stem from my gaiety. It's also one of the reasons I like "The Little Mermaid", I think Ursula is a wonderfully campy baddie. Anyone based on Divine is okay in my book.
"Ta ta ta taaaa! Look at me... I'm a snowman! I'm gonna go stand on someone's lawn if I don't get something to do around here pretty soon!"
Lazario wrote:You're questioning the gay following for Disney's Sleeping Beauty?
(No, I'm not sure I get it either - it's just there)
I guess I am! lol... wasn't really aware there was one though.
Anywho, sorry, but I prefer to idolize someone who is willing to take risks and do everything they possibly can do achieve their dreams (Ariel) than someone who doesn't. (A-whore-a)
"Hip hop frightens you, doesn't it....Hmmm...Fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate. Hate leads to endlessly posting threads about stupid white people. Hmmmmm....."
xxhplinkxx wrote:I prefer to idolize someone who is willing to take risks and do everything they possibly can do achieve their dreams (Ariel) than someone who doesn't. (A-whore-a)
They were created in different times. Disney's 1959 heroine was portrayed as living in a time when women weren't as forward as women were in the 70's and 80's. And popular entertainment is always behind the times, so naturally, the women of the 60's movies were also less forward than women in actual society. By the 1980's and 90's, Disney protagonist females became more independent and free-thinking. Unless they were kidnapped by a monster and held prisoner in a castle. Besides, what if you were in her position. You would have had a different upbrining in a different time and place.
And are we talking about the overall movies? Or do you see the heroine as the forefront of both? Because anyone knows Sleeping Beauty is not actually about Aurora. Silly boy.
Lazario wrote:They were created in different times. Disney's 1959 heroine was portrayed as living in a time when women weren't as forward as women were in the 70's and 80's. And popular entertainment is always behind the times, so naturally, the women of the 60's movies were also less forward than women in actual society. By the 1980's and 90's, Disney protagonist females became more independent and free-thinking. Unless they were kidnapped by a monster and held prisoner in a castle. Besides, what if you were in her position. You would have had a different upbrining in a different time and place.
And are we talking about the overall movies? Or do you see the heroine as the forefront of both? Because anyone knows Sleeping Beauty is not actually about Aurora. Silly boy.
I know all that, silly!
I just love to love Ariel and love to hate Aurora!
"Hip hop frightens you, doesn't it....Hmmm...Fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate. Hate leads to endlessly posting threads about stupid white people. Hmmmmm....."
Well Little Merman, I admit I quoted that because you covered up your gaiety, but I also admit this is a Disney place and Disney and Christian/conservative are often thought of together on the surface, and it's perfectly alright that you were worried someone would find out and tell other people who it would be very bad to find out. But maybe you didn't want to outright say something untrue, just not mention your sexuality. Like I did for a while. But thanks for telling me your story and coming out officially!
Yes, xxhplinkxx, Sleeping Beauty's not just about Aurora. If you didn't notice, Aurora was raised by fairies pretending to be humans who didn't know squat about how to raise a girl into a curious, go-after-her-dreams heroine, because they didn't want her going out into the world to find Mlaeficent or spindles! And they were loving parents, so she would feel bad to disobey them, as well as the only people she knew. And also, when she got the chance, she actually did disobey them and get romantically involved with a stranger for a moment, then planned to get them to accept the man when he came to their home! Also, the story has three very active women saving the man and saving Aurora.
All the Disney princess movies are gay, or at least contain what I think is gay. Pretty dresses, jewelry, pink and purple and pastel colors, castles, dancing, singing, fairies, evil queens, heavily-makeupped villainesses, glamour, beauty, falling in love with a man. They even call gay boys princesses and gay men queens. I'm proud to be a princess! Well, I'm over 18, but I'll make it 21 to be a queen.
So, that's why I am the truest of gays, my favorite films being the Disney princess ones.
Sleeping Beauty's particularly gay. Four fairies, one a beautiful purple-and-pink-wearing diva, fights involving the color pink, making a dress, lots and lots of dancing not confined to just a ballroom scene, binding a man, rainbows, even the dragon's purple.
Oh...UM, I'll make it 30. Maybe 35. Okay, 40, because Brian Kinney was acting like a princess past 30. Or maybe because we're all kids on the inside, we're princesses forever!!!!!!
I was just thinking of how, by law, 18 is adult. But I still hate the idea of thinking I'm a man, not a boy, when I don't feel (or act) like one at all.
Well, I turn 21 in a week. After that, I'm lying about my age, and when I'm famous, I plan to pull an Eva Peron and shave a couple years off my birth certificate. So yes, let's keep it 40.
And yes, you're only as old as you feel. I feel six. A very sexually active six.
"Ta ta ta taaaa! Look at me... I'm a snowman! I'm gonna go stand on someone's lawn if I don't get something to do around here pretty soon!"
Well it's time for me to chime in and I would like to say that I am gay. I knew I was gay by the time I got into High School and found myself not being interested in girls and more so into guys. None of my friends know because I'm afraid to tell them because if I do they won't be my friend anymore.
Disney is awesome, and was the biggest part of my childhood.