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Tuesday, December 8, 2015

5 Heterosexist and 5 Gay-Inclusive Christmas Specials

From: Boomer Beefcake and Bonding
 Have you ever noticed that most Christmas specials are annoyingly heterosexist.  Here are the worst examples:


1. 
Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol 
1962
Why is Magoo/Scrooge so miserable?  He was so obsessed with money that he lost Belle, the girl of his dreams.  So he atones by helping a heterosexual nuclear family, Bob Cratchett, wife, daughter, and three sons. 



2. 
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer 
1964
OK, it's about accepting difference.  The "misfit toys" are all adopted out, Rudolph uses his glowing red nose to save the day, and Hermey the Elf gets to become a dentist. But Rudolph gets a girlfriend, Clarice ("She thinks I'm cute!") and Hermey dances with a female elf at a party. 

In the closing "Holly Jolly Christmas," Burl Ives sings that there's a girl waiting for you (a boy) under the mistletoe: "kiss her once for me."  When a woman sings that song, it becomes "kiss him once for me."


3. 
Frosty the Snowman 
1969
Only a subtle a hetero-romantic subtext about a little girl in love with the snowman, but the sequel, Frosty's Winter Wonderland (1976) is all about the snowman finding a wife.


4. 
Santa Claus is Comin' to Town 
1970
A heterosexual love story between the young-adult Santa Claus (then known as Kris Kringle) and the future Mrs. Claus (a teacher named Jessica).  At least Kris (voiced by former teen idol Mickey Rooney) is a cute redhead.

5. 
The Year without a Santa Claus 
1974
Mrs Claus saves the day.  And heterosexual monogamy.



But not to worry, there are a few inclusive ones.  Here are the best:


1. 
A Charlie Brown Christmas 
1965
A reference to the Little Red-Haired Girl and Lucy's obsession with Schroeder, but otherwise about nurturing and friendship.

2.
How the Grinch Stole Christmas 
1966
The Grinch is a green-furred outsider who dislikes Christmas, so he and his dog Max set out to ruin the holiday for the residents of Whoville by stealing all of their stuff.  When he discovers that the townsfolk are happy together even without stuff, he relents, returns everything, and joins in the celebration. 

No same-sex plot lines, but at least there's no hetero-romance, and few if any heterosexual nuclear families.


3.
Olive the Other Reindeer 
1999
 A dog (Drew Barrymore), a penguin (Joe Pantoleono), and a flea (Peter MacNichol) save Christmas, and no one falls in love with anyone.



4. 
Billy and Mandy Save Christmas 
2005
The cast of The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy discover that Santa Claus has been transformed into a vampire. While looking for a cure, the Grim Reaper develops a homoromantic bond with a flamboyantly feminine, gay-coded vampire named Baron Von Ghoulish (voiced by gay actor Malcolm McDowell).  They even sing about how much they like each other.

5. 
Prep & Landing 
2009Two high-tech Elves buddy-bond while saving Christmas.





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