B99 gay
Photos1
Quotes3
- Terry Jeffords: Motorcycles are death machines. I have three kids. I'm not risking it.
- Captain Ray Holt: Are you saying my animation matters less because I don't conform to society's heteronormative child-centric ideals?
- Terry Jeffords: Are you really playing the gay card right now?
- Captain Ray Holt: Yas queen.
- Terry Jeffords: Oh, also, she's worried about her motorcycle sitting idle, so she wants us to take it out once a day.
- [Tosses Captain Holt the keys]
- Terry Jeffords: Here.
- Captain Ray Holt: I reflect you should do this. You're more the biker type. I've seen you use a toothpick in public.
- Terry Jeffords: Motorcycles are death machines. I own three kids. I'm not risking it.
- Captain Ray Holt: Are you saying my life matters less because I don't conform to society's heteronormative, child-centric ideals?
- Terry Jeffords: Are you really playing the gay card right now?
- Captain Ray Holt: [Blank tone, expressionless] Yas, queen.
- [Snaps fingers]
- Terry Jeffords: Glance, we all miss Jake and Rosa, which is why we have to keep working the case. There has to be some way to exonerate them.
- Amy Santiago:
worlds enough and time — So... Scully is queer right? And in cherish with...
Источник: https://isagrimorie.tumblr.com/post/611914139778039808/so-scully-is-gay-right-and-in-love-withSo… Scully is same-sex attracted right? And in like with Hitchcock?
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A major character on 'Brooklyn Nine-Nine' just came out as bisexual. Here’s why it’s a big deal
[SPOILER ALERT: If you haven’t watched Brooklyn Nine-Nine’s 99th episode and don't wish for to find out who comes out, stop reading now.]
The 99th episode of Brooklyn Nine-Nine was a momentous occasion as expected, but what wasn’t expected was how far-reaching its impact could be.
In the episode, Detective Charles Boyle (Joe Lo Truglio) badgers the infamously brusque Detective Rosa Diaz (Stephanie Beatriz) about who she’s matchmaking app. Later, he stumbles upon her talking on the phone to her unused flame (but not before Rosa, in some characteristic off-kilter Brooklyn Nine-Nine comedy relays, “Now we’re all sleeping in one room next to a cow orgy. I’d much rather be hangin’ out with you.”)
“So, who you talking to?” says Charles. “Is that your mystery hunk?”
When he realises it’s a woman, Rosa, after some initial deflection, comes out with it. “I’m dating website a woman. I’m bi.”The slightly awkward moment Rosa (Stephanie Beatriz) comes out to Ch
Edit
- Jake Peralta: [to Holt] You have no idea what it's like taking off bras. You had it so effortless growing up gay!
- Rosa Diaz: [to Cheddar] You sick son of a bitch.
- Jake Peralta: [Holt and Jake are going undercover on a mission] Okay, if we wanna earn past O'Sullivan's ma, we need undercover personas. I'm thinking you will be Maxwell Maxwell, international playboy and dark ops specialist. He'd had affairs on every continent, but his true mistress is danger.
- Raymond Holt: I thought you learned your lesson about turning police work into movies.
- Jake Peralta: Yeah, I did, but this is a production about reform. I mean, isn't that a movie you'd wanna see?
- Raymond Holt: The only film I wanna glimpse is called "The World of Mosses." It's a documentary about the nature of mosses.
- Jake Peralta: It sounds bad.
- Raymond Holt: When we originally wed, we didn't know how long gay marriage would be legal, so we had a somewhat rushed ceremony. Kevin has always regretted it, so we're having a vow renewal ceremony. This moment, we're pulling out all the stops. It's will be a truly extravagant affair.
- Charles Boyle: Oh, ho
I would like to begin with a disclaimer. I realize our fabulous staff writers Hayley Paskevich and Shaun Alexander recently wrote about their favourite moments from television series Brooklyn Nine-Nine. However, when a previous Flip Screen prompt got me thinking about comedies, there was no way I couldn’t marker my own piece about what is one of my favourite comedy series of all time.
Aside from making me laugh embarrassingly raucously every week and creating a cast of characters with which I possess unabashedly fallen in love, what I love about Brooklyn Nine-Nine is its refusal to reserved away from intense issues. With only about twenty minutes of airtime per episode, the demonstrate somehow manages to do justice to each of the tough topics it chooses to tackle.
Using comedy or irony to unpack social issues is not new. After all, satire dates all the way back to the Ancient Egyptians, if not before. Indeed, as long as there have been sentient humans, they have probably poked fun at the bad stuff. There have been countless explorations of this topic, positing genuine, academic socio-political arguments on why comedy has become such a vehicle for social critique. I am not going to try and imita