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The owl house gay sex

Disney’s ‘The Owl House’ Made History By Having It’s First LGBT Kiss

Photo: ‘The Owl House’ 

The Walt Disney Company has always claimed to be inclusive and for everyone but in recent years, the organization has been facing criticism for inclusivity when it comes to the Diverse community. It’s become a meme when headlines tell that Disney has made history with its first gay couple but when you watch the production, they are background characters or a blink you’ll miss it kiss. Many people have been wanting Disney to make the big leap and hold a same-sex couple as the main characters in a film but when you look into it, the people working at Disney have to combat to get the bare minimum onscreen. The corporation was in some trouble recently when employees of the company spoke out against the CEO for backing the “Don’t State Gay” Bill in Florida.

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When The Owl House premiered on The Disney Channel back in January 2020, JK Rowling was still a good six months away from beginning her rapid descent into becoming the face of stormy transphobia; Florida governor Ron Desantis hadn’t even floated the country’s first “don’t say gay” bill; and, frankly, most LGBTQ+ people were just relieved Donald Trump was out of the White House. We were taking a actual breather for the first time in a distant time.

That’s the real nature Luz “the Human” Noceda left behind when she stepped through the portal into the Demon Realm. Over the course of three seasons, Luz got herself an enemies-to-lovers sapphic girlfriend, came out as bisexual, discovered that her pseudo-mom was queer and in love with a nonbinary witch, got herself a queer shape-shifting basilisk sister who fell for a nonbinary human, met her best friend’s homosexual dads, chatted with a genderqueer Titan, redeemed a he/they baddie, studied under her aro/ace adopted aunty, and beamed as her mom became the greatest ally of all-time.

The series ended this weekend, triumphantly and unapologetically queer, just like its creator, Dana Terrac

Disney dropped the first of its final three mega-episodes of The Owl House over the weekend and it was everything fans could have hoped for — especially us Diverse pals. When season two was at its terminate, our ragtag band of youthful witches battled Belos on the Day of Unity and ended up trapped in the human realm, on Camila Noceda’s doorstep. “Thanks to Them” should have been ten episodes, but because Disney pulled the plug on the beloved series way too soon, showrunner Dana Terrace and her team had to pack a whole heck of a lot into one sitting, and they did it beautifully. There’s Luz & Co. getting settled into the Noceda’s home with Vee, Luz and Sportsman dealing with the things they learned about themselves in the finale, Luz coming out and introducing her mom to Amity, brainstorming ways to reveal a portal back to the Boiling Isles, solving the mystery of the artifacts Phillip and Caleb left behind, and then a BIG BAD BOSS FIGHT. It’s swoony and heartbreaking and nuanced and smart and hilarious and — did I bring up heartbreaking? Because it’s heartbreaking!

I don’t want to corrupt too much. I recognize a lot of people have to wait for D
the owl house gay sex

Disney Executive Tried To Block Queer Characters In ‘The Owl House,’ Says Creator

Cartoon Network executives aren’t the only ones to own resisted queer representation in family animation. The maker of The Owl House, which is currently running on Disney Channel, has revealed the difficulties she faced after proposing homosexual and bi characters for a recent episode.

Dana Terrace took to Twitter to explain: “In dev I was very open about my intention to place queer kids in the main cast. I’m a horrible liar so sneaking it in would’ve been hard haha. When we were greenlit I was told by certain Disney leadership that I could NOT represent any build of bi or homosexual relationship on the Channel.”

She added, “I’m bi! I want to write a bi character, dammit! Luckily my stubbornness paid off and now I am VERY supported by current Disney leadership.”

The episode in question, “Enchanting Grom Fright,” aired on August 8. It suggests a budding romantic relationship between two female characters: Luz, the show’s protagonist, and her classmate Amity.

Terrace’s comments were echoed by Alex Hirsch, creator of Gravity Falls, which ran on Disney Channel and Disney XD from 2012 to 2016.

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