Thinking of getting back into The Orville reminded me of one of my favorite scenes in fiction.
seen from United States
seen from Yemen
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Thailand
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Yemen
seen from Germany
seen from Moldova

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from TĂŒrkiye

seen from Canada
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from Canada
Thinking of getting back into The Orville reminded me of one of my favorite scenes in fiction.
*Skipping stones across an artificial lake in the simulator*
Kelly: This is nice.
Bortus, who does not understand this Earth activity: Take that you fucking lake.
Bortus from The Orville has truly the most insane queer family in media imaginable...
Like you got the Gay Aliens from Heterophobic Gay Alien Planet where Women Bad and non-gay aliens are put in jail:
Bortus, a panicked bisexual
Bortus's husband Klyden, a heterophobic transphobic-coded but actually somehow cis-phobic misogynistic intersex-coded transgender gay alien,
And their intersex-coded trans but actually also cis daughter Topa
Like when people talk about "weird queer representation" I do in fact picture this fucked up little family
Incredible. I want to draw them at a pride parade post-Klyden redemption arc but I don't even think I'd know what flags to use
I joined the fleet because I never really had a family. And I wanted to belong to something larger than myself. Captain, the Orville has been so much more than I ever could've wished for. It was warm. It was welcoming. I was needed. You were my family. - Alara Kitan, The Orville, 2x3 "Home"
THE ORVILLE 2.03 - Home
I keep getting recommended clips of this sci-fi show (it kinda looks like Star Trek) and apparently thereâs an episode that talks about IGM within a species that is typically all male, with variations being âcorrectedâ after birth. From little Iâve seen, it seems to be handled fine enough? I havenât seen the full show so I dunno
My issue isnât with that, its that people in the comments often donât seem to realize that its trying to tackle a real world issue (someone even tried to use doctors not telling a character about signs of IGM when they noticed it as a way to I guess say the plotline made no sene) and trying to point it out always gets a âchill its not that deepâ response when it clearly is??
A lot of shows have plotlines that mirror real world issues. The entire discussion of whether or not to mutilate their child, and the realization that one of the parents went through IGM, and the whole âyou had that decision made for youâ narrative is very much a reflection of reality. Sure, bringing up Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer is sort of funny (at least until you consider that Rudolph is yet another story that reflects reality with the ostracization of children with noticeable physical differences, even if it is a bit dated with the whole âbut you can excel BECAUSE of your differenceâ narrative) but that doesnât mean the story doesnât have any merit or parallels to the real world
Again, havenât seen the show. I might watch it if it is actually good
The show you are talking about is The Orville, and the Moclan is the alien species that perform genital mutilation on their female population as a commentary on real life âcorrective surgeriesâ forced on babies such as FGM and, yes, IGM.
Like i said in another ask, its been a very long time since I watched the show so i may not be 100% on the whole plot but one of the main characters Bortus and his husband Klyden (who is the parent that was also a victim of these surgeries and who was the most supportive of the surgery) had a baby together on The Orville during their expedition, but the baby is born a female and Klyden takes Bortus to court for not âfixingâ their child. The entire episodes plot circles around the humans, who outlawed IGM and FGM centuries prior to this trial, trying to convince the Moclan Supreme Court that itâs inhumane and to let Bortus keep his daughter a female. I canât tell you how the episode ended, but it was absolutely a reflection of real life, and if you watched the rest of the series (and the sci-fi that inspired it like Star Trek) pretty much every episode had a commentary on real life social and political issues, so for people to say its ânot that deepâ have clearly not seen the show.
I love gay solider characters
And this guy too, for some reason
doing fandom shit yayy