Is kyoshi gay
Nobody fucking MOVE! Something new and male lover has hit the Avatar universe. No I’m not (and never) talking about James Cameron’s CGI blue people, but the series Avatar: The Last Airbender. A Nickelodeon authentic show, the 61 episode series follows a world in turmoil and nations divided. A live-action series just released and changed one of the show’s minor origin stories to include a same-sex couple at its center.
The Cave of Two Lovers
One huge moment that made me really happy in the new show was the re-telling of how the municipality of Omashu was founded. It combines a lot of plotlines from the authentic series, but adds an exciting fresh element. In the OG show, The Cave of Two Lovers follows Oma and Shu who fell in passion but were from fighting villages. They met secretly in caves, using their earthbending to carve elaborate tunnels to reach each other. But once Oma didn’t come because she'd died in the war, so Shu was heartbroken. Shu used his authority to stop the war and merged both villages, head to Omashu. It’s very Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare meets Sci-fi. They were said to be the very first earth benders, a major aspect o
The Legend of Korra may have surprised and excited fans by revealing the relationship between Avatar Korra and Asami, but it turns out Korra isn’t the first LGBTQ Avatar.
The Legend of Korra: Turf Wars – Part One, the new graphic novel published by Dark Horse Comics, reveals that Avatar Kyoshi of the Earth Kingdom was bisexual.
The revelation comes when Kya, Avatar Aang’s daughter, approaches Korra and Asami about their partnership. In addition to revealing that she too is lgbtq+, Aya tells the couple about the attitudes of each of the four nations towards LGBTQ relationships.
Of the four nations, the Ground Kingdom is the most traditional and resistant to the idea of non-straight relationships. In the panel below, Aya tells Korra and Asami “Even Avatar Kyoshi – who by all accounts loved men and women – was unable to influence any kind of real progress. After all, the Land Kingdom has been the slowest to accept change and the most militaristically repressive.”
The Legend of Korra: Turf Wars is written by Michael Dante DiMartino, the co-creator of The Legend of Korra, meaning there is no doubt that these modern revelations are indeed canon.
Kyos
What’s the problem with “wokeness”
I’m not talking about the Spectre. I’m talking about Alan Scott’s sexuality being retconned. The linear character that was uncomfortable with his son being gay.Onomatopoeia said:
Who's to say it was a retcon? From what I hear the more homophobic someone is, the more likely it is that they're overcompensating for their insecurities about their own sexuality.Click to expand...
Narcissus said:
No, you made a blanket statement that was false, which is why you changed your argument and are backpedaling to use specific examples that fit your narrative. The post you were responding to stated that there were characters who couldn't be identified as LGBT, regardless of intention, due to vintage laws like the Hays Code, which was correct.
There is no "could have." The evidence showed that you were blatantly wrong.
Are you under the delusion that there isn't media that preaches from a conservative framework?
And who determines "how it's handled?" What you may not like, may be fantastic for someone else. And if others who use the pos "woke" had things handled the way