prompts nabbed from
queer_fest
Jan. 4th, 2013 03:42 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Any American military fandom, any character, 1993: Hope that the ban on gay servicemen might be rescinded and disappointment when it's only to introduce DADT.
Any character, any fandom, a younger queer person tries to convince an older one to come out, while the older one tries to convince the younger to stay in.
Any fandom, any character, He's always wanted a child and it's not like he was planning on doing anything with this uterus anyway. (change pronouns/anatomy as needed)
Any cop fandom, any character, Being LGBT does not automatically make one an expert on all related topics, but the rest of the team/squad seems to think it should.
Any Fandom : any character with high media visibility, struggling with the decision to come out publicly and whether or not increased queer visibility is worth politicising one's personal life.
Any Fandom : any character, Being gay isn't easy even when you're beautiful, but it sure helps. Tell me the story of a GLBT person who doesn't fit conventional standards of beauty - but is totally awesome anyway.
Any Fandom, any character, it's easier to believe that someone in the older generation will be the intolerant and the younger friend tolerant, but it doesn't always work out that way.
Any Fandom : Any characters, "Did they ask you how you knew, too?" Characters talking about their different coming out experiences with each other.
Any Fandom : any characters, It's true that their marriage isn't a passionate one; one or both of them prefers the attentions of their own sex. That doesn't mean they're unhappily married.
Any Fandom with Alternate Universes, any characters, Character X learns that an alternate version of them is/was in a same-sex relationship and begins to question their sexuality.
Any fandom with world/dimension/universe/planet-hopping, any character, How does a queer character who splits their time between two or more very different societies with different ideas about gender and sexuality construct their identity differently in each one? Or is it that different, really?
Any fandom, any bisexual character, there was a lot to be nervous about when it came to coming out but being accused of jumping on the bisexuality fad/chic/bandwagon wasn't one of the things zie expected.
Any fandom, any character, a bisexual character explains mathematically why being bi doesn’t double one’s chances of a date.
Any fandom, any character, a bisexual character is tired of people assuming that being out of the closet or identifying as queer isn't important to them.
Any fandom, any character, a character returns from the dead with different ideas about their orientation or gender identity. Did they 'come back wrong' or are they just finally discovering who they really are?
Any Military Fandom, any character, He is surprised when his unit takes his sexuality really well, but their wives don't want his partner hanging around them.
Any Science Fiction or Supernatural Fandom: any characters, A human and a non-human discuss their differing views on sexuality and/or gender.
Babylon 5, Stephen Franklin/Marcus Cole, Stephen's dad hears about his undercover mission to Mars (where he pretended to be married to Marcus), and assumes they are actually involved. Stephen isn't sure whether to try to clear up the misunderstanding or let it slide, because he'd kind of like it to be true, but as far as he knows Marcus is straight. (Up to the author whether he turns out to be wrong.)
DC Comics, Bruce Wayne, He hates talking about his asexuality because he can see "childhood trauma" pass through their minds even if they don't say it out loud.
DC Comics, Anissa Pierce and Grace Choi, It's hard to find other lesbian superheroes when you don't want to move to Gotham.
DC Comics, any, a trans Amazon worries about losing his sisters
DC Comics, Diana Prince, Wonder Woman is amused at the firestorm in Man’s World that occurs when she speaks frankly of Amazon sexuality back home. What’s all the fuss about women loving women?
DC Comics, Diana Prince/Kate Kane, When Batwoman first comes out to the superhero community, Wonder Woman invites her home to Paradise Island/Themyscira after a disastrous week on the job.
Doctor Who, Jack Harkness, One of the strange things about traveling with Rose and the Doctor (early on, anyway) was Rose's outdated conceptions of sexuality.
Due South : Benton Fraser, Fraser’s tired of everyone assuming that he ignores the advances of women because he’s repressed/naive/not interested in sex/’a Canadian freak’. Is it really that hard to believe that he’s just gay?
Due South, Benton Fraser, Ms. Fraser wasn’t the first time that Fraser dressed as a woman, but he’s not sure if he’s ready to tell Ray that (either Ray, and the specifics of Fraser’s gender identity and sexuality are up to the author).
Due South, Benton Fraser/Ray Kowalski, From the way that Fraser talked about Canada, Ray would have expected it to be some kind of homophobia-free paradise where no one would care about his and Fraser’s relationship. Turns out that’s not always the case.
Due South, Fraser/RayK, the two have kept their relationship secret from both the RCMP and Chicago PD until one day Canada changed it's marriage laws and they both eventually decide to go for it despite the potential consequences of outing themselves so.... dramatically.
Due South, Ray Kowalski, When Ray told Fraser he'd try anything twice, he wanted to know how Fraser would react.
Hawaii Five-0 (2010 series), Danny Williams, just because he was married to a woman doesn't mean he's straight. Tell the story of Danny's decision to come out.
Hawaii Five-0, Any Character, just because it's legal to marry one's same sex partner/lover doesn't mean one would automatically want to.
Hawaii Five-0, Danny and Kono, Danny and Kono are both bisexual. When they go out, they point out people they find attractive. It's a silly game, but Kono just appreciates that she can let her guard down with him.
Hawaii Five-0, Danny Williams, newly single and moved across the country, he finds the local LGBT culture is completely different from back home.
Hawaii Five-0, Danny, One of Danny's sisters accidentally outs him to the team.
Hawaii Five-0, Danny, Steve, It's not that he was afraid that Steve was going to be a dick about it, but...okay, maybe he was a little bit afraid. In Danny's defense, coming out to co-workers has never gone well for him.
Hawaii Five-0: Danny Williams. He doesn't understand how people can just find others attractive - there has to be a personal connection first, for him, anyway. But trying to explain that to Steve, Chin, and Kono, who try to set him up all the time, proves more than a little difficult. (demisexual!Danny, possibly ending with Danny/anyone on the team or OT4)
Hawaii Five-0, Steve/Danny and Grace, the logistics of setting Steve up as a legal guardian is very frustrating, seeing as Steve is basically a stranger in the eyes of the law.
Marvel Comics (Avengers), Thor, Yes, Thor likes having sex with men and women. He's not really sure why people keep bringing up Loki's incident with the horse when he tells them, though.
Marvel comics, (Captain America), Steve Rogers and the Avengers, Fury doesn't want any trouble with public relations so he holds a sensitivity training seminar for the Avengers. Many were expecting Steve to not take some parts well, they were surprised.
Marvel Comics (Captain America), Steve Rogers, "What idiot told you to take the costume that's the embodiment of this country's core values and march it through a gay pride parade?" "A kid from Brooklyn who could have used the support."
Marvel Comics (Captain America), Steve Rogers, As a soldier in the US Army, Steve Rogers has to keep his sexual orientation secret. But as Captain America, he's supposed to oppose everything the Nazis stand for, and the Nazis are putting homosexuals into concentration camps. How can a soldier in the 1940s reconcile his duty and his principles?
Marvel Comics, Abigail Brand/Hank McCoy, She's the product of a cross species relationship, he's a mutant who looks like a big cat, and they're both bi. It's not always easy to cope when people try to put them in categories.
Marvel Comics, All Winners/Invaders or any hero from 1950s, Fred Davis warns them that the FBI is looking at them over allegations of their sexuality. How do they react?
Marvel Comics, Billy Kaplan and Magneto, Exploring Magneto's relationship to gay people during the Holocaust and afterward and how it relates to his relationship with his grandson.
Marvel Comics, Brian Braddock/Steve Rogers, "Do you think if we made out on the White House lawn, the politicians in your country would be more or less obnoxious? Also, I know my wife won't care, but do you suppose your girlfriend will?" (in which Captain America and Captain Britain are both bi and possibly poly.)
Marvel Comics, Bucky Barnes, having missed the gay rights movement altogether, Bucky adjusts to being LGBT in a post-Stonewall America.
Marvel Comics (Invaders) Any character, at the end of the war the allies liberated the concentration camps and reimprisoned the homosexuals. How do any of the Invaders feel about that, knowing that it's just chance that stopped that being their fate?
Marvel Comics (Invaders) Brian Falsworth, 1930s Berlin Nightlife
Marvel Comics (Invaders) Brian/Roger, honestly anything about the two of them and what they went through together.
Marvel Comics (Invaders) Roger thinking back on how things have changed and how they have not.
Marvel Comics (Invaders) Union Jack/Destroyer, The British LGBT movement
Marvel Comics (Invaders), Jim Hammond (Human Torch I)tries to come to terms with his asexuality in a world that seems primarily motivated by sex, and tries to decide if he thinks it's a flaw in his design, or simply who he is.
Marvel Comics, Jean-Paul/Kyle They want kids, but Jean-Paul has reservations after very publicly losing his daughter. He never felt as though he got to fully process his grief because his coming out had been the media's focus at the time.
Marvel Comics, Natasha Stark, As good as it would be for keeping up the whole secret identity thing, when the press starts to call Natasha's armored persona "Iron Man" (because it's not easy to make that armor look "feminine") Natasha is quick to correct them.
Marvel Comics, Northstar + another character, Northstar is openly gay, but he knows another mutant/other mutants who are closeted. He talks with one of these character (your choice, any gender) in a non-shippy way, about his choice to be out.
Marvel Comics, Rictor, They may joke now, but when the chips fall, he knows his team has his back.
Marvel Comics, Sam Wilson, So apparently there's something of a club for queer superheroes.
Marvel Comics, Sam Wilson/Steve Rogers, An issue of the Avengers tells us that Sam's parents were very open and tolerant towards most things. Likewise, Steve is pretty accepting of differences. Despite their other differences and conflicts, that makes the actual getting together go pretty smoothly. So for Sam and Steve, it is both amusing and irritating when people automatically assume otherwise.
Marvel Comics, Sam Wilson/Steve Rogers, Neither race nor gender matter to Steve, and Sam's pretty sure the fact that he used to Samantha won't matter, either. It doesn't mean the conversation is any easier.
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers, Drag balls and cross dressing before, during and after the war
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers, the younger generation's attempts to lecture him on the proper way of being queer is both sweet and intrusive.
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers, he's not suffering from internal homophobia or biophobia or anything else. He just doesn't get why he has to come out to anyone who isn't his partner.
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers, how Steve spent four hours in a queer bookshop, and why he blew most of his last pay cheque on post-modernist queer theory.
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers, Steve gets an art-related job at a queer-related magazine/comic/company of the artist's choice. Reactions amongst Avengers happen and are varied, but it's still the second most rewarding job he's ever had. (Steve's queer identity is up to the author.)
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers, Steve makes an "It Get's Better" video.
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers, Steve's first Gay Pride.
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers/Clint Barton, Clint is sure that stodgy old freshly thawed from the 40s Steve Rogers can't understand the concept of loving a man and takes great delight in teasing Steve and putting him in what Clint thinks would be uncomfortable situations through overt sexual innuendos. When Steve returns the teasing with flirtations of his own Clint is forced to try to reconcile what he has always viewed as his straight sexuality with the incessant need to know more about Steve Rogers' sex life.
Marvel Comics, Toro Raymond, It's easy to look back on the past and think that being queer in the middle of War was terrible, and in a lot of ways it was. But the open acceptance of Toro's loving men and women almost makes (current queer teen character of your choice) jealous.
Marvel Comics, Toro Raymond, Toro has been living with Andy for a very long time, when Andy begins to transition to Anne. They're both determined to still make the relationship work though.
Marvel Comics, Toro Raymond, When people find out that he and Bucky were together during the war, even his closest allies assume Toro's wife was a "beard." They're wrong, but that doesn't make him straight or confused, either. (Toro is Bi.)
Marvel Comics, Toro, when he heard what Jeff Macey (the patriot) had to say, it was the first time he realised that it was O.K. to like other men, that your friends could still support you.
Marvel Comics, Toro(/Anne Raymond), getting involved with the gay rights movements in the early sixties, because being married doesn't make you straight.
Marvel Comics, X-men (Comicverse)Jean-Paul Beaubier, any character Jean-Paul has referred to himself in canon as a ‘freak among the freaks’ but he also has a strong personality and refuses to back down about what he believes in. His attitude inspires another character to come out, how does he feel about this?
NCIS, Abby, McGee wasn't the first guy she dated, but he was the first one who didn't assume that being bi and kinky meant she'd be okay with an open relationship
NCIS, Sarah McGee, Sarah and Tim have always been close, and they have a lot in common. Liking role-playing games, mystery novels - and being bi. But Sarah doesn't like that she feels she has to hide that side of her around Tim's friends - and she certainly doesn't like that Tim hides.
Percy Jackson and the Olympians, any character, Pondering whether it's allowed to ask the gods for a sex change/undertaking a quest to earn one.
Percy Jackson and the Olympians, any characters, Camp Half-Blood's queer support network.
St Trinian's (2007), any characters, Going from the ultra-permissive world of St. Trinian's to the expectations of wider society is never easy, but the girls have each other's backs no matter what.
St Trinians, any characters, it's a cliche that girls boarding schools are a hotbed of lesbianism, but that doesn't mean it's not true
St Trinians, any characters, Posh Totties are expected to sleep with men
St Trinians, any characters, she's methodical about choosing a clique, but didn't expect her questions to cause such drama: "How queer-friendly is your clique? Do you have openly queer members at the moment?"
St Trinians, any characters, the greatest asexual love affair the world has ever known
St Trinians, any characters, what the school needs is a queer rolemodel who likes chaos and a side order of crime. Is that too much to ask?
St. Trinian's, any character, he loves his school, but the next person to call him a Trinian's Girl is going to get tossed out the window.
Star Trek (any series), any characters, Andorians have four sexes. How does this affect what it means for them to be LGBT?
Star Trek TOS or XI, Kirk, no one cared when he slept with the female aliens.
Star Trek: Voyager, The Doctor, The Doc is very enthusiastic about his newfound [LGBTQIA+] identity. There are slideshows. Many slideshows.
Stargate: SG-1, Jacob Carter and Selmak. Selmak has always had female hosts and been attracted to males, even before the days of the Tok'ra. She's not sure what to do with Jacob Carter and his heterosexuality. (Or vice versa - Jacob doesn't know what to do with Selmak and her attraction to men.)
Stargate: SG-1, Jacob Carter and Selmak. They've worked out their issues and have a steady relationship with another Tok'ra joined pair, the human of which is a man. How can Jacob not tell Sam about such an important part of his life, now that he's reconnected to his daughter?
Stargate: SG-1, Mini!Jack, Things are different in high school this time around. He can date the quarterback or the head cheerleader if he wants.
Any character, any fandom, a younger queer person tries to convince an older one to come out, while the older one tries to convince the younger to stay in.
Any fandom, any character, He's always wanted a child and it's not like he was planning on doing anything with this uterus anyway. (change pronouns/anatomy as needed)
Any cop fandom, any character, Being LGBT does not automatically make one an expert on all related topics, but the rest of the team/squad seems to think it should.
Any Fandom : any character with high media visibility, struggling with the decision to come out publicly and whether or not increased queer visibility is worth politicising one's personal life.
Any Fandom : any character, Being gay isn't easy even when you're beautiful, but it sure helps. Tell me the story of a GLBT person who doesn't fit conventional standards of beauty - but is totally awesome anyway.
Any Fandom, any character, it's easier to believe that someone in the older generation will be the intolerant and the younger friend tolerant, but it doesn't always work out that way.
Any Fandom : Any characters, "Did they ask you how you knew, too?" Characters talking about their different coming out experiences with each other.
Any Fandom : any characters, It's true that their marriage isn't a passionate one; one or both of them prefers the attentions of their own sex. That doesn't mean they're unhappily married.
Any Fandom with Alternate Universes, any characters, Character X learns that an alternate version of them is/was in a same-sex relationship and begins to question their sexuality.
Any fandom with world/dimension/universe/planet-hopping, any character, How does a queer character who splits their time between two or more very different societies with different ideas about gender and sexuality construct their identity differently in each one? Or is it that different, really?
Any fandom, any bisexual character, there was a lot to be nervous about when it came to coming out but being accused of jumping on the bisexuality fad/chic/bandwagon wasn't one of the things zie expected.
Any fandom, any character, a bisexual character explains mathematically why being bi doesn’t double one’s chances of a date.
Any fandom, any character, a bisexual character is tired of people assuming that being out of the closet or identifying as queer isn't important to them.
Any fandom, any character, a character returns from the dead with different ideas about their orientation or gender identity. Did they 'come back wrong' or are they just finally discovering who they really are?
Any Military Fandom, any character, He is surprised when his unit takes his sexuality really well, but their wives don't want his partner hanging around them.
Any Science Fiction or Supernatural Fandom: any characters, A human and a non-human discuss their differing views on sexuality and/or gender.
Babylon 5, Stephen Franklin/Marcus Cole, Stephen's dad hears about his undercover mission to Mars (where he pretended to be married to Marcus), and assumes they are actually involved. Stephen isn't sure whether to try to clear up the misunderstanding or let it slide, because he'd kind of like it to be true, but as far as he knows Marcus is straight. (Up to the author whether he turns out to be wrong.)
DC Comics, Bruce Wayne, He hates talking about his asexuality because he can see "childhood trauma" pass through their minds even if they don't say it out loud.
DC Comics, Anissa Pierce and Grace Choi, It's hard to find other lesbian superheroes when you don't want to move to Gotham.
DC Comics, any, a trans Amazon worries about losing his sisters
DC Comics, Diana Prince, Wonder Woman is amused at the firestorm in Man’s World that occurs when she speaks frankly of Amazon sexuality back home. What’s all the fuss about women loving women?
DC Comics, Diana Prince/Kate Kane, When Batwoman first comes out to the superhero community, Wonder Woman invites her home to Paradise Island/Themyscira after a disastrous week on the job.
Doctor Who, Jack Harkness, One of the strange things about traveling with Rose and the Doctor (early on, anyway) was Rose's outdated conceptions of sexuality.
Due South : Benton Fraser, Fraser’s tired of everyone assuming that he ignores the advances of women because he’s repressed/naive/not interested in sex/’a Canadian freak’. Is it really that hard to believe that he’s just gay?
Due South, Benton Fraser, Ms. Fraser wasn’t the first time that Fraser dressed as a woman, but he’s not sure if he’s ready to tell Ray that (either Ray, and the specifics of Fraser’s gender identity and sexuality are up to the author).
Due South, Benton Fraser/Ray Kowalski, From the way that Fraser talked about Canada, Ray would have expected it to be some kind of homophobia-free paradise where no one would care about his and Fraser’s relationship. Turns out that’s not always the case.
Due South, Fraser/RayK, the two have kept their relationship secret from both the RCMP and Chicago PD until one day Canada changed it's marriage laws and they both eventually decide to go for it despite the potential consequences of outing themselves so.... dramatically.
Due South, Ray Kowalski, When Ray told Fraser he'd try anything twice, he wanted to know how Fraser would react.
Hawaii Five-0 (2010 series), Danny Williams, just because he was married to a woman doesn't mean he's straight. Tell the story of Danny's decision to come out.
Hawaii Five-0, Any Character, just because it's legal to marry one's same sex partner/lover doesn't mean one would automatically want to.
Hawaii Five-0, Danny and Kono, Danny and Kono are both bisexual. When they go out, they point out people they find attractive. It's a silly game, but Kono just appreciates that she can let her guard down with him.
Hawaii Five-0, Danny Williams, newly single and moved across the country, he finds the local LGBT culture is completely different from back home.
Hawaii Five-0, Danny, One of Danny's sisters accidentally outs him to the team.
Hawaii Five-0, Danny, Steve, It's not that he was afraid that Steve was going to be a dick about it, but...okay, maybe he was a little bit afraid. In Danny's defense, coming out to co-workers has never gone well for him.
Hawaii Five-0: Danny Williams. He doesn't understand how people can just find others attractive - there has to be a personal connection first, for him, anyway. But trying to explain that to Steve, Chin, and Kono, who try to set him up all the time, proves more than a little difficult. (demisexual!Danny, possibly ending with Danny/anyone on the team or OT4)
Hawaii Five-0, Steve/Danny and Grace, the logistics of setting Steve up as a legal guardian is very frustrating, seeing as Steve is basically a stranger in the eyes of the law.
Marvel Comics (Avengers), Thor, Yes, Thor likes having sex with men and women. He's not really sure why people keep bringing up Loki's incident with the horse when he tells them, though.
Marvel comics, (Captain America), Steve Rogers and the Avengers, Fury doesn't want any trouble with public relations so he holds a sensitivity training seminar for the Avengers. Many were expecting Steve to not take some parts well, they were surprised.
Marvel Comics (Captain America), Steve Rogers, "What idiot told you to take the costume that's the embodiment of this country's core values and march it through a gay pride parade?" "A kid from Brooklyn who could have used the support."
Marvel Comics (Captain America), Steve Rogers, As a soldier in the US Army, Steve Rogers has to keep his sexual orientation secret. But as Captain America, he's supposed to oppose everything the Nazis stand for, and the Nazis are putting homosexuals into concentration camps. How can a soldier in the 1940s reconcile his duty and his principles?
Marvel Comics, Abigail Brand/Hank McCoy, She's the product of a cross species relationship, he's a mutant who looks like a big cat, and they're both bi. It's not always easy to cope when people try to put them in categories.
Marvel Comics, All Winners/Invaders or any hero from 1950s, Fred Davis warns them that the FBI is looking at them over allegations of their sexuality. How do they react?
Marvel Comics, Billy Kaplan and Magneto, Exploring Magneto's relationship to gay people during the Holocaust and afterward and how it relates to his relationship with his grandson.
Marvel Comics, Brian Braddock/Steve Rogers, "Do you think if we made out on the White House lawn, the politicians in your country would be more or less obnoxious? Also, I know my wife won't care, but do you suppose your girlfriend will?" (in which Captain America and Captain Britain are both bi and possibly poly.)
Marvel Comics, Bucky Barnes, having missed the gay rights movement altogether, Bucky adjusts to being LGBT in a post-Stonewall America.
Marvel Comics (Invaders) Any character, at the end of the war the allies liberated the concentration camps and reimprisoned the homosexuals. How do any of the Invaders feel about that, knowing that it's just chance that stopped that being their fate?
Marvel Comics (Invaders) Brian Falsworth, 1930s Berlin Nightlife
Marvel Comics (Invaders) Brian/Roger, honestly anything about the two of them and what they went through together.
Marvel Comics (Invaders) Roger thinking back on how things have changed and how they have not.
Marvel Comics (Invaders) Union Jack/Destroyer, The British LGBT movement
Marvel Comics (Invaders), Jim Hammond (Human Torch I)tries to come to terms with his asexuality in a world that seems primarily motivated by sex, and tries to decide if he thinks it's a flaw in his design, or simply who he is.
Marvel Comics, Jean-Paul/Kyle They want kids, but Jean-Paul has reservations after very publicly losing his daughter. He never felt as though he got to fully process his grief because his coming out had been the media's focus at the time.
Marvel Comics, Natasha Stark, As good as it would be for keeping up the whole secret identity thing, when the press starts to call Natasha's armored persona "Iron Man" (because it's not easy to make that armor look "feminine") Natasha is quick to correct them.
Marvel Comics, Northstar + another character, Northstar is openly gay, but he knows another mutant/other mutants who are closeted. He talks with one of these character (your choice, any gender) in a non-shippy way, about his choice to be out.
Marvel Comics, Rictor, They may joke now, but when the chips fall, he knows his team has his back.
Marvel Comics, Sam Wilson, So apparently there's something of a club for queer superheroes.
Marvel Comics, Sam Wilson/Steve Rogers, An issue of the Avengers tells us that Sam's parents were very open and tolerant towards most things. Likewise, Steve is pretty accepting of differences. Despite their other differences and conflicts, that makes the actual getting together go pretty smoothly. So for Sam and Steve, it is both amusing and irritating when people automatically assume otherwise.
Marvel Comics, Sam Wilson/Steve Rogers, Neither race nor gender matter to Steve, and Sam's pretty sure the fact that he used to Samantha won't matter, either. It doesn't mean the conversation is any easier.
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers, Drag balls and cross dressing before, during and after the war
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers, the younger generation's attempts to lecture him on the proper way of being queer is both sweet and intrusive.
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers, he's not suffering from internal homophobia or biophobia or anything else. He just doesn't get why he has to come out to anyone who isn't his partner.
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers, how Steve spent four hours in a queer bookshop, and why he blew most of his last pay cheque on post-modernist queer theory.
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers, Steve gets an art-related job at a queer-related magazine/comic/company of the artist's choice. Reactions amongst Avengers happen and are varied, but it's still the second most rewarding job he's ever had. (Steve's queer identity is up to the author.)
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers, Steve makes an "It Get's Better" video.
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers, Steve's first Gay Pride.
Marvel Comics, Steve Rogers/Clint Barton, Clint is sure that stodgy old freshly thawed from the 40s Steve Rogers can't understand the concept of loving a man and takes great delight in teasing Steve and putting him in what Clint thinks would be uncomfortable situations through overt sexual innuendos. When Steve returns the teasing with flirtations of his own Clint is forced to try to reconcile what he has always viewed as his straight sexuality with the incessant need to know more about Steve Rogers' sex life.
Marvel Comics, Toro Raymond, It's easy to look back on the past and think that being queer in the middle of War was terrible, and in a lot of ways it was. But the open acceptance of Toro's loving men and women almost makes (current queer teen character of your choice) jealous.
Marvel Comics, Toro Raymond, Toro has been living with Andy for a very long time, when Andy begins to transition to Anne. They're both determined to still make the relationship work though.
Marvel Comics, Toro Raymond, When people find out that he and Bucky were together during the war, even his closest allies assume Toro's wife was a "beard." They're wrong, but that doesn't make him straight or confused, either. (Toro is Bi.)
Marvel Comics, Toro, when he heard what Jeff Macey (the patriot) had to say, it was the first time he realised that it was O.K. to like other men, that your friends could still support you.
Marvel Comics, Toro(/Anne Raymond), getting involved with the gay rights movements in the early sixties, because being married doesn't make you straight.
Marvel Comics, X-men (Comicverse)Jean-Paul Beaubier, any character Jean-Paul has referred to himself in canon as a ‘freak among the freaks’ but he also has a strong personality and refuses to back down about what he believes in. His attitude inspires another character to come out, how does he feel about this?
NCIS, Abby, McGee wasn't the first guy she dated, but he was the first one who didn't assume that being bi and kinky meant she'd be okay with an open relationship
NCIS, Sarah McGee, Sarah and Tim have always been close, and they have a lot in common. Liking role-playing games, mystery novels - and being bi. But Sarah doesn't like that she feels she has to hide that side of her around Tim's friends - and she certainly doesn't like that Tim hides.
Percy Jackson and the Olympians, any character, Pondering whether it's allowed to ask the gods for a sex change/undertaking a quest to earn one.
Percy Jackson and the Olympians, any characters, Camp Half-Blood's queer support network.
St Trinian's (2007), any characters, Going from the ultra-permissive world of St. Trinian's to the expectations of wider society is never easy, but the girls have each other's backs no matter what.
St Trinians, any characters, it's a cliche that girls boarding schools are a hotbed of lesbianism, but that doesn't mean it's not true
St Trinians, any characters, Posh Totties are expected to sleep with men
St Trinians, any characters, she's methodical about choosing a clique, but didn't expect her questions to cause such drama: "How queer-friendly is your clique? Do you have openly queer members at the moment?"
St Trinians, any characters, the greatest asexual love affair the world has ever known
St Trinians, any characters, what the school needs is a queer rolemodel who likes chaos and a side order of crime. Is that too much to ask?
St. Trinian's, any character, he loves his school, but the next person to call him a Trinian's Girl is going to get tossed out the window.
Star Trek (any series), any characters, Andorians have four sexes. How does this affect what it means for them to be LGBT?
Star Trek TOS or XI, Kirk, no one cared when he slept with the female aliens.
Star Trek: Voyager, The Doctor, The Doc is very enthusiastic about his newfound [LGBTQIA+] identity. There are slideshows. Many slideshows.
Stargate: SG-1, Jacob Carter and Selmak. Selmak has always had female hosts and been attracted to males, even before the days of the Tok'ra. She's not sure what to do with Jacob Carter and his heterosexuality. (Or vice versa - Jacob doesn't know what to do with Selmak and her attraction to men.)
Stargate: SG-1, Jacob Carter and Selmak. They've worked out their issues and have a steady relationship with another Tok'ra joined pair, the human of which is a man. How can Jacob not tell Sam about such an important part of his life, now that he's reconnected to his daughter?
Stargate: SG-1, Mini!Jack, Things are different in high school this time around. He can date the quarterback or the head cheerleader if he wants.