A Blog About Everything.

Name: Jessica Ann or Spooky Elric
Age: 22
Location: Toledo, Ohio and Wherever the Conventions take me.

I like words.
I like photos.
I like videos.
I like fandoms.
I like booze.
I like suits on guys.
I like shoes.
I like makeup.
I like art.
I like dreaming
I like Homestuck.
I like cosplay.
I love the internet.
I love Kevin<3

My religion is Whedonism. I am a Whedonite. I worship Joss Whedon and all things Whedonverse.
Things I Like
People I Like

solyeuse:

pawtisticengineer:

jaiface:

ghetto-astronauts:

So I’ve been seeing a lot of things on my dash lately that have been making me really uncomfortable, and I realized that a lot of the people doing these things were people I like, people I respect, people who I think are genuinely good people who probably don’t realize that they’re doing or why it’s problematic. If you read through this and wonder if it’s about you, it probably is: please don’t be offended. Just take a step back and think instead. 

Gay characters on television (in this case, almost exclusively male gay characters) get a lot of attention from Tumblr. This in itself isn’t inherently a bad thing. Gay characters often have plotlines and background that are just as - or even moreso - interesting than those of their straight counterparts. We like seeing something different on our favourite show, we like to feel like the things we’re watching are diverse and inclusive. All of these are good intentions. Unfortunately, what seems to be happening is that this gets taken to a whole other level. For some reason the gay characters have become automatically more interesting than any hetero characters, gay ships are more engrossing than hetero ships (A LOT of which has to do with the internalized sexism that goes on in pretty much every television fandom, but that’s another thing for another day), even if these characters or ships are fleeting or badly written or incredibly problematic, until it gets to this point where you’re shipping any two boys you can get your hands on regardless of actual compatibility, actual well-roundedness, or foundation, or anything other than “Two boys together!”.  It turns into this obsession. I’ve seen it happen, I see it on my dash every day.

This takes me to a whole other thing. Shipping people irl is really a huge issue. I don’t mean real person fiction, I’m a part of that fandom myself. Something most rpfers pride themselves on is their ability to compartmentalize real!Celebrity from fic!Celebrity. What I’m talking about is when you’re out to lunch and you see two boys driving in a car together and you ship them. Or you’re at the campus center and two boys are sitting next to each other and you’re secretly hoping that they’ll start holding hands. What you’re doing is fetishizing. It’s as similarly creepy as “breaking the fourth wall” when it comes to rpf except probably more damaging. When one single person tweets something weird or creepy at a celebrity, chances are it will be overlooked and life will move on, but when you get to the point where you’ll ship strangers you see in real life just because they’re of the same gender and attractive, you’re losing your ability to compartmentalize, and as a result you’re allowing your entire perception of gayness to be skewed into something that was made for you to watch.

If you’re still not convinced, think of it this way: if a straight boy was constantly seeing “lesbians” everywhere, or talking about how those girls would look so good together, or making up headcanon about you and one of your platonic girlfriends, you would think he was creepy as fuck, sexist, and probably a pervert. Because he isn’t seeing you or other girls as people with real agency, he’s seeing you as an object to project onto. He’s invalidating your personhood and your sexuality and making your actual queer friends feel like their sexuality isn’t a real identity.That is what you’re doing to these boys; straight or gay, real or fictional, you are projecting onto them and invalidating them.

This bothers me with television because I often see people fawn over these characters who are brilliantly written and wonderfully flawed, but are only being appreciated as a Gay Guy or One Half of My Otp. On the other side of the coin, I see characters who only existed for a couple of episodes, who had no real backstory or meat to them being treated the same way- a way which isn’t really deserved or well founded.

If the only things you can tell me about your Otp are “But they’re so right for each other! They just work! They love each other so much!” then I’m probably not going to take your ship very seriously. I think shipping is excellent. I’m a terrible multi-shipper, I’ve got at least three Otps for just about whatever fandom I’m into. But there has to be some kind of thought there. You can’t just ship people together because they’re the same gender. It’s a discredit to yourself and your characters and your show.

Gayness does not exist for you. Your worship of it as cuter or more real or more meaningful than other relationships is damaging and problematic. Gayness in television and other media is not important because you get to ship it. It is not important because it’s a fuck you to your homophobic parents. It is not important because it makes you favourite show more “diverse”. Gayness in media is important because it is representation for people who have not gotten that in the past, and who are still not getting a lot of it unless they’re male, white, and attractive (or in the case of queer female characters, white, young, attractive, and willing to get naked). 

What you’re doing does not make you supportive or an ally, it’s problematic and it’s something we really, really need to try and keep in check. I’m so tired of the gay worshiping fetishism on my dash, you guys. Let’s try to fix it.

Those last two paragraphs are really to the point and especially important for everyone to consider.

THIS THIS THIS THIS
PLEASE TAKE FIVE MINUTES OUT OF YOUR DAY AND READ THIS

THIS ISN’T WHAT I AM

AND IT ISN’T FUCKING OKAY

I never thought of it like this. I don’t participate in shipping this way but I never thought of shipping in this context before. Thank you OP for making me see that this is a problem in fandom. I ship people not because of their gender or their type of relationship, I ship when it is appropriate and usually canon. I have on occasion shipped people in real life but only because I know them and I really do believe that based on their personalities they would actually be compatible. I didn’t necessarily need to add that but I just wanted to elaborate on myself for those who don’t know me very well. Shipping in fandom is wonderful, until you start taking it too far. The OP’s essay is proof of taking it too far.

(via helioscentrifuge)

  1. romanticillusions reblogged this from iron-jen
  2. theyliveforever reblogged this from ifwemetupatmidnight and added:
    Bringing this back because it’s important and apparently (according to Tumblr females) friendship between males doesn’t...
  3. sortedstorage reblogged this from lostinthemorning
  4. magnumbobcat reblogged this from bluepeets
  5. dokiforloki reblogged this from strawberryorange
  6. strawberryorange reblogged this from 148km
  7. atriumphedmind reblogged this from onlytalia
  8. onlytalia reblogged this from theroguez
  9. wickedwitchelphaba reblogged this from xxmoonowlxx and added:
    This is why I make it a point to NEVER ship anyone in real life. Not even celebrities. But honestly…I mean, I’ve shipped...
  10. xxmoonowlxx reblogged this from may000 and added:
    “On the other side of the coin, I see characters who only existed for a couple of episodes, who had no real backstory or...
  11. taterdoom reblogged this from go-fightingdreamer and added:
    Good food for thought, but I don’t ship IRL people, period. I tried it and it was just creepy to me, so I stopped. I’ll...
  12. go-fightingdreamer reblogged this from heartwormblues and added:
    I kinda do it >.> but not with my OTP, of course. Anyway, you should read it
  13. may000 reblogged this from heartwormblues and added:
    I think it makes a lot of good points.
  14. vanhelsingfreak reblogged this from mumblingsage
  15. heartwormblues reblogged this from mumblingsage and added:
    I do not agree with a lot of this but I think you should read it and decided for yourself, is really interesting and new...
  16. mumblingsage reblogged this from bubblegumbea
  17. viribillus reblogged this from mfreems
  18. banneresque reblogged this from ifwemetupatmidnight
  19. aheadyspace reblogged this from mfreems and added:
    Very good points....agree with the second poster...with...
  20. ifwemetupatmidnight reblogged this from iron-han and added:
    Found it here we are a classy explanation of the point I was just tryin’ to make.