some of my favorite lesbian, bi and trans woc from tv.

seen from United States
seen from Sweden
seen from South Korea
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from Sweden
seen from Australia
seen from Sweden

seen from Australia

seen from Australia
seen from Germany
seen from Australia

seen from Australia
seen from Australia

seen from United States

seen from Netherlands

seen from Sweden
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Sweden
some of my favorite lesbian, bi and trans woc from tv.
WELCOME TO DAILYBICHARACTERS
dailybicharacters, is a new blog dedicated to bisexual (+ non specified multiple gender attracted) characters.
As of now, no new members will be accepted, but as the blog grows, I will need more members. When that happens I will make sure to post an official announcement about it.
In order to be an affiliate, click here!
If you want to see a certain bisexual character featured more, send an ask to make it happen.
Note: if a featured character has a canon sexuality that isn’t bisexual, submit the character with the confirmation and they will no longer be on this blog. This is a safe space for bisexuals, and other LGBT people alike.
If you have an edit you want to be reblogged, tag it as #dailybicharacters
Any questions? send me a quick message on my main blog.
Prashansa Gurung on Purple Skies
anyways shoutout to lesbians who are looking for love/a girlfriend and might not feel adequate. i think a lot of the times we pressure ourselves more than the outside world because a part of us thinks that we’re faking it unless we date a girl and that isn’t true you are 100% lesbians regardless of if you’ve dated anyone. and also that we don’t have to make every relationships work out, sometimes if we do find a girlfriend it all falls apart and thats okay. lesbians don’t have to have perfect relationships, sometimes things don’t work out, sometimes you just lose interest and all of that is fine. but like we really don’t always have to have a girlfriend and be in a committed relationship thats going great. but we can be single, we can find girls unattractive, we don’t have to like every wlw girl that likes us, and esp. for lesbians of color: we don’t have to like white lesbians. lesbians of color have been hurt a lot too by white girls and white people and they don’t want to date/hook up/have any type of relationship with white people and like thats also okay too. and i really do hope any lesbians out there looking for love find the right person and live happily ever after but also i really want us as a community and individuals to stop pressuring ourselves so much.
note: trans lesbians are very much a part of this!!
At Delhi’s First LGBTQ Café, There’s Space For All, But Not Hate
A slight breeze picks up as the virgin mojito arrives. The sun just disappeared beneath the horizon, leaving in its afterglow the silhouette of Delhi’s most identifiable landmark — the Qutub Minar. The drink is as refreshing as the sight — a sort of privileged view of the monument and one of the many reasons why an evening at Chez Jerome-Q Café is an experience rather rare in this chaotic, oft-maddening city.
The most compelling reason, of course, is that it is the first LGBTQI space of its kind in Delhi, and is open to all open-minded folk out there, regardless of sexual orientation or other labels the society generously applies to people.
“I want it to be like India Coffee House, where people come, converse, laugh, let their hair down — knowing this is a safe place for all,” says Sambhav Dehlavi, the polyglot maître d’.
The terrace café, located near the Crescent at the Qutb Mall, Lado Sarai, was started in October 2016 with the expertise of Chef Jerome to boot. Chef Jerome, after whom the café is named, has 35 years of experience in renowned kitchens of France as well as other countries, and ran Rara Avis for three years in Delhi.
Sambhav, who learnt the art of French cuisine under Parisian Chef Alexis, met Chef Jerome through his ex-fiancé Roberto. Impressed with Sambhav’s journey, Jerome asked him to help run the cafe on the roof of his three-storey spa. “I told Jerome that I wanted to make this café space accessible for the LGBT folk in Delhi, which lacks permanent safe spaces for us. Gay men in general have access to the night life here, but this is not so for other community members. That is when the idea of Chez Jerome-Q Café came about,” Sambhav says.
Beautiful advertisement normalizing Trans Motherhood in India (in Hindi with English subtitles). Read the real story here.
‘Rainbow in a Brown World’ is an entertaining, an educative and an animated film that depicts a day-in-the-life of a queer Indian woman as she goes about her daily routine and encounters various people who question her regarding her sexuality. The protagonist ‘Aarti’ is a young, queer woman who finds herself at the receiving end of an absurd, often hilarious albeit well intentioned questions about being LGBT. However, she answers these wittily and is often amused by them.
(This video is in English with certain Hindi sentences translated)