Source: Elle Magazine
Monday 15 June 2020 13:28:56
SpongeBob Squarepants is a member of the LGBTQ+ community, Nickelodeon confirmed in a tweet on Saturday. "Celebrating #Pride with the LGBTQ+ community and their allies this month and every month," the network wrote on Twitter Saturday. They also included Schwoz Schwartz from Henry Danger, and Korra from Avatar: The Legend of Korra in the tweet.
The network did not specify exactly how SpongeBob identifies, but Twitter users saw this tweet and took off with their reactions. "SpongeBob Gay" was soon trending.
Although some people on Twitter cried "queerbaiting" after this announcement from Nickelodeon, it is true that in 2005 the show's creator Stephen Hillenburg said that SpongeBob and his best friend, Patrick Starfish, are not gay. He said he thinks of them as asexual.
"It doesn't have anything to do with what we're trying to do," Hillenburg told Reuters, via People. "We never intended them to be gay. I consider them to be almost asexual. We're just trying to be funny, and this has got nothing to do with the show."
So, though Twitter loves to run with "Spongebob gay," it seems that Nickelodeon could be celebrating SpongeBob for his asexuality—the "A" in "LGBTQIA."
The discourse on queerbaiting and networks using queerness for their own financial gain is an important one and should continue. But there have been voices on these characters other than Nickelodeon and its shows' creators.
SpongeBob Squarepants is a member of the LGBTQ+ community, Nickelodeon confirmed in a tweet on Saturday. "Celebrating #Pride with the LGBTQ+ community and their allies this month and every month," the network wrote on Twitter Saturday. They also included Schwoz Schwartz from Henry Danger, and Korra from Avatar: The Legend of Korra in the tweet.
The network did not specify exactly how SpongeBob identifies, but Twitter users saw this tweet and took off with their reactions. "SpongeBob Gay" was soon trending.
Although some people on Twitter cried "queerbaiting" after this announcement from Nickelodeon, it is true that in 2005 the show's creator Stephen Hillenburg said that SpongeBob and his best friend, Patrick Starfish, are not gay. He said he thinks of them as asexual.
"It doesn't have anything to do with what we're trying to do," Hillenburg told Reuters, via People. "We never intended them to be gay. I consider them to be almost asexual. We're just trying to be funny, and this has got nothing to do with the show."
So, though Twitter loves to run with "Spongebob gay," it seems that Nickelodeon could be celebrating SpongeBob for his asexuality—the "A" in "LGBTQIA."
The discourse on queerbaiting and networks using queerness for their own financial gain is an important one and should continue. But there have been voices on these characters other than Nickelodeon and its shows' creators.
As GLAAD wrote in 2017, The Legend of Korra, gave its main heroines a happy ending in its 2014 finale. Michael Dante DiMartino and Brian Konietzko, the show's creators, each released statements confirming Korra and Asami are bisexual.
"You can celebrate it, embrace it, accept it, get over it, or whatever you feel the need to do, but there is no denying it," Konietzko wrote. "That is the official story. We received some wonderful press in the wake of the series finale at the end of last week, and just about every piece I read got it right: Korra and Asami fell in love. Were they friends? Yes, and they still are, but they also grew to have romantic feelings for each other."
Henry D. Cohen, who plays Schwoz in Henry Danger discussed his gender identity and transition with Time in 2019. He did not discuss the gender sexuality of his character but shared his own experience.
"I was misgendered at birth," he said. "I identify as male, and I am proud that I have had a transgender experience—a transgender journey."