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Very much this.mute_proxy wrote:Huh.. I guess I got everything I expected from this topicthe offended and the annoyed
Vice wrote:"Look at all these characters getting some shine in the buildup for the tournament of power, maybe we'll get to see some other characters do some stuff instead of the same old shit."
1. Goku (Universe 7) has eliminated 6 competitor & Vegeta (Universe 7) has eliminated 6 competitors
"Fuck."
Puri puri prisoner is a funny stereotypical gay perverted man, but he's a very good and admirable character. Stereotype jokes are funny, and asians seem to be a lot more laid back on the topic, weather it's about sexuality, race, religion or what not. If you can't take a joke when it's meant to be one, it's really your problem.Akyon wrote: For the record since I saw One Punch Man being brought up as worse; I actually REALLY like Puri Puri Prisoner. Easily one of my favourite heroes in the series.
He's a fun character that I never find myself bored at watching. Over the top but very manly. His 'Angel form' is just a more extreme version of Full Metal Alchemists Alex Armstrong's quirk, and no different from stoic straight guy Gray Fullbuster from Fairy Tail. Nothing wrong with the over the top stripping.
Is he offensive? Definitely at times. There's certainly some questionable scenes with him in. But alongside his negative traits which I'll admit he has, he still has many positives; he's extremely powerful, he is one of the top ten heroes in universe, he makes sure to protect those weaker than him and has a strong drive to get better.
Whilst a sex pest, he only attacks criminals with that sort of thing, and even volunteers to stay in prison when he realises he's a sex pest in order to only attack the worst of the worst and not the law abiding citizens. Personally I think that puts him above Master Roshi of recent; assaulting girls with sexual advances who, as far as he knows, did nothing wrong. He's certainly very charismatic and likable even with all those negative traits and I honestly find him a fascinating character to watch, although I'm sure he's a base breaker of a character.
I wouldn't call him admirable, he's a rapist.mute_proxy wrote:Puri puri prisoner is a funny stereotypical gay perverted man, but he's a very good and admirable character. Stereotype jokes are funny, and asians seem to be a lot more laid back on the topic, weather it's about sexuality, race, religion or what not. If you can't take a joke when it's meant to be one, it's really your problem.Akyon wrote: For the record since I saw One Punch Man being brought up as worse; I actually REALLY like Puri Puri Prisoner. Easily one of my favourite heroes in the series.
He's a fun character that I never find myself bored at watching. Over the top but very manly. His 'Angel form' is just a more extreme version of Full Metal Alchemists Alex Armstrong's quirk, and no different from stoic straight guy Gray Fullbuster from Fairy Tail. Nothing wrong with the over the top stripping.
Is he offensive? Definitely at times. There's certainly some questionable scenes with him in. But alongside his negative traits which I'll admit he has, he still has many positives; he's extremely powerful, he is one of the top ten heroes in universe, he makes sure to protect those weaker than him and has a strong drive to get better.
Whilst a sex pest, he only attacks criminals with that sort of thing, and even volunteers to stay in prison when he realises he's a sex pest in order to only attack the worst of the worst and not the law abiding citizens. Personally I think that puts him above Master Roshi of recent; assaulting girls with sexual advances who, as far as he knows, did nothing wrong. He's certainly very charismatic and likable even with all those negative traits and I honestly find him a fascinating character to watch, although I'm sure he's a base breaker of a character.
He rapes bad guys in jail lolDoctor. wrote: I wouldn't call him admirable, he's a rapist.
Let me be 100% clear that this individual and their viewpoint does not represent Kanzenshuu as a website or greater community as a whole in any way whatsoever.Super_Divine_Genki wrote:I don't stand behind, or agree with the "alternative lifestyle", and the word "homophobic" offends me. I'm simply purist and traditional.
There are so many ignorant comments leading up to and culminating in this statement that I'm at a loss for further words.mute_proxy wrote:He rapes bad guys in jail lolDoctor. wrote: I wouldn't call him admirable, he's a rapist.everyone needs a hobby
In all fairness VegettoEX, the character has been referred to as 'attacking men' in prison but his sex pest nature is played for laughs in the same way Roshi's lust is.VegettoEX wrote:There are so many ignorant comments leading up to and culminating in this statement that I'm at a loss for further words.mute_proxy wrote:He rapes bad guys in jail lolDoctor. wrote: I wouldn't call him admirable, he's a rapist.everyone needs a hobby
Vice wrote:"Look at all these characters getting some shine in the buildup for the tournament of power, maybe we'll get to see some other characters do some stuff instead of the same old shit."
1. Goku (Universe 7) has eliminated 6 competitor & Vegeta (Universe 7) has eliminated 6 competitors
"Fuck."
I read this a lot, but I can't say I agree with it. If making a character gay isn''t going to add anything to the story, what's the point of doing it? It feels like a very corporate tokenism decision to me. I mean the writers' conversation must have gone something like "Hey, Paramount wants us to include a gay character but without offending Trek's main audience, how can we do it without changing the script we already wrote? Oh, I know...!"ekrolo2 wrote:Sulu from Beyond was a pretty good way of doing it, he's there, he's got a husband and kid and the story never takes a sledgehammer and bashes you in the nutsack about how cool and hip and fresh it's being because oh my god!
Please go back and read the comments in this thread from gay people discussing their personal experience with representation in media. Use that as a starting point, and do some additional reading outside of this community.LuckyCat wrote:I read this a lot, but I can't say I agree with it. If making a character gay isn''t going to add anything to the story, what's the point of doing it?
By that view, if making a character straight isn't going to add anything to the story, what's the point of it? Especially in a story like Dragon Ball with the romance down to a minimum, it would change nothing were some of the characters LGBTQIA. Absolutely nothing. It would harm no one.LuckyCat wrote:I read this a lot, but I can't say I agree with it. If making a character gay isn''t going to add anything to the story, what's the point of doing it? It feels like a very corporate tokenism decision to me. I mean the writers' conversation must have gone something like "Hey, Paramount wants us to include a gay character but without offending Trek's main audience, how can we do it without changing the script we already wrote? Oh, I know...!"ekrolo2 wrote:Sulu from Beyond was a pretty good way of doing it, he's there, he's got a husband and kid and the story never takes a sledgehammer and bashes you in the nutsack about how cool and hip and fresh it's being because oh my god!
It also harms nobody if the characters remain straight.Gerky wrote:By that view, if making a character straight isn't going to add anything to the story, what's the point of it? Especially in a story like Dragon Ball with the romance down to a minimum, it would change nothing were some of the characters LGBTQIA. Absolutely nothing. It would harm no one.
Please don't misunderstand, I've read up to page 5 before commenting, and it's just that this particular argument has been coming up often in my experience. My assertion is that a gay character should be put in a story organically. The Sulu example is great, because Sulu's family didn't do anything in the movie. It's pure window dressing. Why not give Sulu's husband a piece of dialog that would've contributed to the upcoming mission? That's all I'm saying. I'm not sure the interests of the LGBT community are served by throwing a member of the community into the background.VegettoEX wrote:Please go back and read the comments in this thread from gay people discussing their personal experience with representation in media. Use that as a starting point, and do some additional reading outside of this community.LuckyCat wrote:I read this a lot, but I can't say I agree with it. If making a character gay isn''t going to add anything to the story, what's the point of doing it?
You know what, you're absolutely right. It doesn't harm anyone if the characters are also all white in media. Things should stay exactly the same they have always been, shouldn't they? Why change anything? Isn't it fun being reductive?Doctor. wrote:It also harms nobody if the characters remain straight.Gerky wrote:By that view, if making a character straight isn't going to add anything to the story, what's the point of it? Especially in a story like Dragon Ball with the romance down to a minimum, it would change nothing were some of the characters LGBTQIA. Absolutely nothing. It would harm no one.
How did it any way affect things negatively for Sulu to be gay?LuckyCat wrote:Please don't misunderstand, I've read up to page 5 before commenting, and it's just that this particular argument has been coming up often in my experience. My assertion is that a gay character should be put in a story organically. The Sulu example is great, because Sulu's family didn't do anything in the movie. It's pure window dressing. Why not give Sulu's husband a piece of dialog that would've contributed to the upcoming mission? That's all I'm saying. I'm not sure the interests of the LGBT community are served by throwing a member of the community into the background.VegettoEX wrote:Please go back and read the comments in this thread from gay people discussing their personal experience with representation in media. Use that as a starting point, and do some additional reading outside of this community.LuckyCat wrote:I read this a lot, but I can't say I agree with it. If making a character gay isn''t going to add anything to the story, what's the point of doing it?
A fair counter point, but considering the fact how much stuff is horrendously bad at integrating its representation because it almost literally beats you over the head with it (Bioware is my go to example for this kind of stuff), I'll take the super subtle route over Mass Effect Andromeda dropping an entire NPCs back-story about how they're trans-gender because you said HI TO THEM!LuckyCat wrote:Please don't misunderstand, I've read up to page 5 before commenting, and it's just that this particular argument has been coming up often in my experience. My assertion is that a gay character should be put in a story organically. The Sulu example is great, because Sulu's family didn't do anything in the movie. It's pure window dressing. Why not give Sulu's husband a piece of dialog that would've contributed to the upcoming mission? That's all I'm saying. I'm not sure the interests of the LGBT community are served by throwing a member of the community into the background.VegettoEX wrote:Please go back and read the comments in this thread from gay people discussing their personal experience with representation in media. Use that as a starting point, and do some additional reading outside of this community.LuckyCat wrote:I read this a lot, but I can't say I agree with it. If making a character gay isn''t going to add anything to the story, what's the point of doing it?
Nothing was harmed, it's just that nothing was gained. For a franchise that's supposed to "go boldly", one would think they'd push the envelope further. They played it safe, and consequentially didn't improve anything.Gerky wrote:How did it any way affect things negatively for Sulu to be gay?
The original actor for Hikaru Sulu, George Takei, was not receptive to the change. In particular with the implication that the character may have been closeted in the original timeline as well, which is something that Takei himself struggled with. It's a fantastic example because the writers for the movie changed the character, who was straight, at an attempt to virtue signal. They didn't actually care about gay people or their opinions because when the original actor, a gay man, raised his concern they went along with it anyway.Gerky wrote:How did it any way affect things negatively for Sulu to be gay?