Mermaid
Heartbroken.
- Joined
- Nov 8, 2002
- Posts
- 2,110
Looking at beautiful women is never a bad thing.
I could still be called a bi flip flopper, fence sitter, or any other label on any side of the fence. I'd rather be called by my name by those who know me and my handle by those who don't.
I identified with Jenny sometimes and found her to be the most complexly writen characters on the show.
I know a wide variety of people, and I would say the show does not represent the spectrum of lesbians where I live. But I don't live in California.
I'm currious from the readers/posters of this thread if any of you live in California, as it seems to be a quite different place from where I come from.
I would think a lesbian would have to be making money to live in California, and I would also think with the plasticness of the cliche of LA, that they might be thinner than those in the dyke bars I've been to around here.
And if one of the underlying purposes of the show is to show that lesbians should not all be lumped together under one big stereotype, it does that job, but misses the representation of the butchdykecarpetmuncherwithextrapadding all together.
I don't think it's a bad idea to have it around, as any positive exposure is a good thing. But in order to be watched, the writing, and character development have to get better. By Far!
I could still be called a bi flip flopper, fence sitter, or any other label on any side of the fence. I'd rather be called by my name by those who know me and my handle by those who don't.
I identified with Jenny sometimes and found her to be the most complexly writen characters on the show.
I know a wide variety of people, and I would say the show does not represent the spectrum of lesbians where I live. But I don't live in California.
I'm currious from the readers/posters of this thread if any of you live in California, as it seems to be a quite different place from where I come from.
I would think a lesbian would have to be making money to live in California, and I would also think with the plasticness of the cliche of LA, that they might be thinner than those in the dyke bars I've been to around here.
And if one of the underlying purposes of the show is to show that lesbians should not all be lumped together under one big stereotype, it does that job, but misses the representation of the butchdykecarpetmuncherwithextrapadding all together.
I don't think it's a bad idea to have it around, as any positive exposure is a good thing. But in order to be watched, the writing, and character development have to get better. By Far!