Is clarke from the 100 gay
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This week we’re looking at one of my favourite television shows right now (and of all time!): The CW’s The 100. The 100 prides itself as a show that is inclusive to characters regardless of their sexuality: this is something we’ll feel on in further depth in a couple weeks when we discuss an overview of what The 100’s position on sexuality is. However, for today’s post, I need to focus on one LGBT personality in particular. Clarke Griffin, the protagonist of the demonstrate, is a teenage girl with the world on her shoulders, inspiring hundreds and thousands of girls around the world. She’s also bisexual.
WARNING: Today’s announce contains spoilers from ALL THREE SEASONS of the 100, including the newest episode and the upcoming season. Decipher at your retain risk!
Crash Course: The 100 is a science fiction television show that follows a group of teenage criminals living on a vacuum station in the distant future. They are sent from the Ark Cosmos Station down to Earth to spot if it is survivable after a nuclear apocalypse poisoned the ground with radiation. While they can survive on Earth, it turns out that not everyone was killed in the apocalypse: and the Sky People are not alon
WARNING: Scenes of explicit violence, drug use, suicide, sex, and/or violence occur regularly. Not intended for children or sensitive viewers.
Overview
The reason for the trigger warning is that in the third season, episode 10, there’s self-harm, serious threats of physical violence, and rape.
100 attractive teenagers are sent into outerspace after a nuclear apocalypse made Earth uninhabitable 97 years ago. They’re all sentenced to die with the space station is running out of atmosphere, so they’re dropped back down on Earth to see if it is still livable.
Not only is it survivable, but they discover people still living there!
The show eventually became swallowed by its own mythology in the worst ways. Main character, Clarke Griffin, is a bisexual 17-year-old girl. She had a partnership with a Grounder (someone who’d been born on the ground), a Commander named Lexa. After a season of build-up and a culmination of their association with a sex scene, Lexa was promptly killed immediately afterward.
It was the worst ‘Bury Your Queers’ moment since Tara was killed in Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and start
In an effort to create a space for lgbtq+ people like myself, every Tuesday I’ll be posting opinion pieces, listicals, reviews, and more focused on the LGBT community (and occasionally about the Latinx/WOC community since I am Latinx.) Welcome to Queerly Not Straight! Enjoy and leave a comment below if you have a suggestion for what I should cover next.
It’s reach to my attention on Queerly Not Straight that some people, a subsection of fans of The 100 in particular, act not understand the pos bisexual or that Clarke Griffin is one. So, since the tides own turned in this ridiculous direction and we are here now, let’s shatter things down for those that are unsure, unclear, or uncertain about what a bisexual is.
Clarke Griffin is a bisexual. She is sexually/emotionally/physically attracted to both men and women. And that’s more than ok. It’s fantastic, liberating, and the kind of character that you yearn to see on TV. It doesn’t matter if Clarke ends up with a man or a woman, her sexuality remains that of a multi-attracted and no amount of arguing or back and forth can change that.
Nevertheless, we are here because this explanation isn’t enough for those in The 100 fandom. Just
The 100: [SPOILER] Is Queer in the Books - So Why Not on the Show?
Set 97 years after nuclear war destroyed civilization and all of humanity relocated to a space station, The 100 follows a group of juvenile delinquents sent to Earth so as to repopulate the planet. Among those sent to Earth is Octavia. However, The CW show makes a major change in adapting Octavia from the Kass Morgan novels on which the series is based. While Octavia is queer in the books, she's seemingly heterosexual on the show.
Just why the TV series made this modify isn't clear. However, it may be related to Clarke and Lexa's affair , which some critiqued. Clarke's queerness didn't appear to the surface until Lexa was introduced in The 100 Season 2. When a romantic connection blossomed between the pair, The 100 was celebrated for portraying a loving and well-rounded association between two women. However, in Season 3, The 100 killed off Lexa, which caused some to blame The CW performance of falling victim to the "bury your gays" trope. This is a controversial trend in television in which a gay ethics is introduced and then ultimately killed off.
RELATED: The 100 Celebrates 'A Sort of Homecoming'