ripplesinthesand:

the funniest thing about smallville is the fact that they basically took your typical lighthearted #thepoweroflove superman story and put a succession character in there. like lex is out here trying to escape the Cycles and suffering under the thumb of his abusive father while clark is like man i wish my dad would let me play football :/ like i love smallville clark, he’s one of my favorite guys of all time, but he is incapable of understanding why lex is the way he is, not only because he grew up with a family that loved and cared for him but because he is living inside a completely different genre. he’s out here saving people, making the world a better place through goodness and compassion, while lex is sitting inside his million dollar estate on his fourth glass of bourbon talking about how he doesn’t know how to love people because he was raised in a business instead of a family. and both of these are very good and interesting stories, but they are so fundamentally different that i think the show struggles to reconcile them at times, which is why you have scenes where clark is like “well lex you should’ve just tried harder with your dad because love and family conquers all in the end” while lex is just sitting there looking at him like he’s insane.

queerasfact:

Bright, comic-book style image of Condoman, an Indigenous superhero in a red and yellow body suit, standing on a beach. He's holding a packet of condoms. Text reads: "Condoman says "Don't be shame, be game. Use condom!"ALT
Cartoon of Indigenous superheroes Condoman and Lubelicious against a bright yellow background. Condoman is wearing a red body suit, holding up a condom, and saying "Don't be shame, be game! Wear condoms!" Lubelicious is wearing a green, white and blue off-the-shoulder top and shorts, and adding "With water-based lube!" Text between them reads "Condoman and Lubelicious".ALT

Condoman

In 1987, Indigenous sexual health worker Aunty Gracelyn Smallwood and her team felt that safe sex advertising wasn’t effectively targeting people in Australia’s remote Indigenous communities. In response, they created Condoman – “The Deadly Predator of Sexual Health” – who spoke to Indigenous people in language they could relate to, and removed stigma from conversations about sexual health. 

Condoman became something of a cult figure in Australia, and in 2009 he was relaunched with a suite of comics, animations, and merch, including branded condoms. He was also joined by his “deadly, slippery sister” Lubelicious, who promoted consent, the use of water based lube, and women’s health, for her sisters and sistergirls (an Indigenous term analogous to trans women).

We covered Condoman in our podcast on the AIDS epidemic in Australia.

Keep an eye on this blog throughout the week as we continue highlighting queer Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander history and culture for NAIDOC Week.

thekijs:

ganymedesclock:

I think cis people should also be their gender of choice. Like, if you’re a man, you should get to really enjoy being a man- have fun with it! If you’re a woman, take the parts of womanhood that really deeply make you happy. If being a little androgynous or ambiguous or hidden is the part that really makes you happy, you don’t have to be trans for that. If you wanna lean really hard into being femme or masc- do it! You have one life in your body, do what makes you happy. Ditch the stuff you don’t like.

My sinister queer agenda is I think that everyone should be the gender they like in the way they like it.

I call this Cis+ and I highly recommend people who have never had questions about their gender try it out.

shaenongarrity:

Hallmark Christmas movie but the salt-of-the-earth small-town guy moves to the big city and falls in love with the cynical career woman and they stay in the city and work side by side to make the world a better wait that’s Superman, once again I have just written Superman