http://meatball42.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] meatball42.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] queer_fest 2013-03-16 07:03 am (UTC)

Dead Poets Society, any of the Society members, He thought he could hide the fact that he was homosexual while he was at school, but that was before he met his crush.
Dead Poets Society, Todd Anderson, He disappointed his parents by not being an exact copy of his brother. Being homosexual is just another disappointment. Right?
Doctor Who, Ace, Ze might go by Dorothy now, because it sounds a lot more professional, but Ace can’t help but resent the fact that everyone assumes ze’s a woman.
Doctor Who, Algy (The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances), What was it like for him being a gay man in the 1940s, especially after the war when everyone was getting married? How did his meeting Jack Harkness change this for good or bad?
Doctor Who, Amy Pond, After flirting with herself, Amy realizes she likes flirting with women and still loves her husband, and what Amy wants, Amy gets. Luckily, Rory loves her for her.
Doctor Who, Amy Pond, meeting her future self wasn't the first time she'd fancied a woman.
Doctor Who, any companion from a contemporary or future era or alien companion, A lesbian, gay, or bisexual companion who has never hidden their orientation gets stranded (temporarily or permanently) in a society that persecutes homosexuality.
Doctor Who, Any companion: Family and/or friends warily accepted that he/she disappeared for months at a time with some ‘Doctor’, but is bringing a same-sex S.O. from another time/planet to meet them too much?
Doctor Who, any Time Lord, prejudice against Time Lords who chose to regenerate into a different sex than their original.
Doctor Who, Barbara Wright, traveling in the TARDIS was a wonderfully free experience that let her embrace her sexuality for the first time. Back home in the sixties she deals with prejudice and keeping secrets once again
Doctor Who, Brigadier Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart, people shagging others of the same gender is one of the least weird things he deals with on a regular basis. But when it's the Brig coming to terms with his interest in another man (the Doctor, Yates, Harry Sullivan, whomever), it's not quite so easy.
Doctor Who, Canton Everett Delaware III, the decision to leave the FBI
Doctor Who, Canton Everett Delaware III, what kind of life can an interracial gay couple have together, anyway?
Doctor Who, Doctor and Rose: a romantic asexual and a sexual try to negotiate a relationship that works for them both.
Doctor Who, Doctor, Sex pollen isn't a particularly pleasant experience for anyone, but for an asexual, it's especially unpleasant.
Doctor Who, Doctor, The Doctor is asexual but not aromantic and it's really awkward how people think affection and sex are the same thing.
Doctor Who, Doctor/any companion, He’s in love with this one, really in love with them, but how can he tell them that that doesn’t mean he can sleep with them? (Sexuality issues, lack thereof, or ‘humans don’t do it for me,’ author’s choice.
Doctor Who, Doctor/Martha, When the Doctor's new regeneration is female, Martha reckons she's in with another chance.
Doctor Who, Donna Noble, the metacrisis affected 10.5's DNA and her mind, and now she finds that like the Doctor, she's attracted to both sexes,
Doctor Who, Donna Noble, She'd thought Lance was The One - the one who'd make her straight. Then he turned out to want to sacrifice her to the Spider Queen. Traveling through time and space with the Doctor, Donna finally gives herself permission to stop living in denial.
Doctor Who, Donna Noble, Donna as MtF. The only guy on Earth she'd found who didn't mind she'd opted out of the op, and Lance tried to sacrifice her to the Spider Queen. Well, with the Doctor, she doesn't have to stick to Earth - and maybe her body wouldn't be considered 'freaky' out there in the black.
Doctor Who, duplicate Tenth Doctor, how does being part Donna influence the Doctor's perception/experience of hir gender?
Doctor Who, Eighth Doctor, During the earth arc (EDA novels), the arrest and, later, suicide of the Doctor's old friend Alan Turing makes the Doctor confront his own sexuality.
Doctor Who, Eleven, new body, still a male body, damn
Doctor Who, Eleven/Amy/Rory, Rory's pov on being attracted to the Doctor. At first he told himself it was just to please Amy but that didn't explain any of the times without her.
Doctor Who, Fitz Kreiner, He always knew that he liked both men and women. But until he met the Doctor, he never felt free to express the other part of his sexuality.
Doctor Who, Fitz Kreiner, When suddenly all the rules are taken away--when you can marry your same-sex best friend if you want to--it's both wonderful and terrifying.
Doctor Who, hand!Ten, the Doctor realises she's a brand new person in more ways than she was expecting.
Doctor Who, Jack & The Ponds. Captain Jack meets up with Team Tardis (11), and the companions hit it off really well (three-way romantic relationship).
Doctor Who, Jack Harkness and Eleven, The Doctor and Jack meet up again. In this new body, the Doctor finds himself much less reluctant to fulfill some of Jack's fantasies about him. Jack must reconcile yet another change in personality of the man he loves, while the Doctor adjusts to a desire to experiment sexually.
Doctor Who, Martha, She’s afraid that the reason the Doctor can’t see her as a prospective date is that she wasn’t always a woman.
Doctor Who, Martha, Tom tells her he’s bisexual before she can figure out how to say the same thing.
Doctor Who, Melody Pond, One of the best things about being Amy and Rory’s best friend was that Mels could come out to them without worrying that they’d be disappointed in their queer daughter.
Doctor Who, Mickey/Martha/Tom, Mickey came to understand his bisexuality thanks to Jake, Martha learned she could love more than one person at a time thanks to Jack, and Tom loves Martha enough to share. But when he starts having feelings for his wife's boyfriend as well, it's his turn to question who he thought he was and needs a little help of his own.
Doctor Who, Martha Jones/Mickey Smith/Tom Milligan, Tom's always been okay with his open marriage, it works for them. And he's always considered himself straight. So when he finds himself proposing marriage to his wife's new boyfriend, there needs to be some relabeling going on...
Doctor Who, Martha Jones/Rose Tyler, Rose thought she would hate The Doctor's next companion for taking The Doctor from her. She certainly didn't expect to fall for her instead.
Doctor Who, Mickey Smith, Whilst in Pete's World after the Doctor leaves, Mickey finds himself attracted to Jake and questioning his sexuality as they grow closer and closer. How does he bring himself to come out to Rose and her family and what happens when he's given the opportunity to return to his birth reality? (Can go AU if you want)
Doctor Who, Mickey Smith, Mickey has never thought about sexuality beyond that he likes girls; it wasn't important. Then he found out that Ricky was gay. Now he has to reexamine his sexuality.
Doctor Who, Mickey/Jake, Mickey's always been gay and Rose has always been his smokescreen, in a different universe he doesn't have to hide anymore and Mickey doesn't know what to think about that.
Doctor Who, Mickey/Martha/Tom, Mickey came to understand his bisexuality thanks to Jake, Martha learned she could love more than one person at a time thanks to Jack, and Tom loves Martha enough to share. But when he starts having feelings for his wife's boyfriend as well, it's his turn to question who he thought he was and needs a little help of his own.
Doctor Who, Peri, just because she wasn't born female and she worked hard for her body, that doesn't mean she's not offended when guys talk to her breasts and not to her.
Doctor Who, River Song -so she likes to flirt, and kissing’s fun, that doesn’t make her any less asexual and people need to quit implying otherwise.
Doctor Who, River Song, Binary gender is such a very human concept, and River Song has always been human plu
Doctor Who, River Song, How do you come out to your parents when a) they actually never really raised you and are in fact much younger than you b) you're married to their (male) best friend and c) your relative chronologies are all screwed up?
Doctor Who, River Song, River is pansexual, the Doctor is asexual, they're still madly in love across time and space. River/women, plastic boyfriends, etc. greatly appreciated. :)
Doctor Who, Rory, He'd told Amy he was bi when they were teenagers. She'd not found it strange, but his family had reacted badly. Their new life with the doctor helps him change his oppression of his bisexual leanings.
Doctor Who, Rose, Jack points out every attractive male, female, alien or other they come across and Rose starts to wonder why she’s not just agreeing about the men.
Doctor Who: Rose/Doctor!Donna - Rose discovers that the Doctor!Donna is a lot more "Donna" than "Doctor" "down there." And, to her surprise, discovers it doesn't matter.
Doctor Who, Rose/Nine/Jack, Rose doesn’t know how to respond to learning that the Doctor’s asexual, but luckily Jack’s not phased in the least.
Doctor Who, Rose/Nine/Jack, To Time Lords, homosexuality is just another reason why lower life forms are just that. When Jack (and Rose) confront him about it, how can the Doctor let go of one of the few connections he still has to his past- his people’s beliefs?
Doctor Who, Sam Jones, Sam had been recreated so many times by the Faction Paradox that it was sometimes tricky to hold onto any sense of her sexuality or gender.
Doctor Who, Sarah Jane Smith, She's always lived by her own rules so she's not going to apologise for being bi, but sometimes she forgets that Earth in the 20th/21st century isn't quite as open about such things as other places she's been.
Doctor Who, Sarah Jane Smith, Sarah was an activist back in the early seventies and not just for women's rights. Either explore her experiences back then as a lesbian or bi woman.
Doctor Who, Second Doctor, Coping with all the changes of regeneration is difficult enough, but the Doctor never expected that his sexuality would change as well.
Doctor Who, Tardis/Jack, Tardis POV
Doctor Who, Tegan Jovanka/Nyssa, Tegan finds the TARDIS is finally the right, safe place to come out - though she didn't expect her first serious girlfriend to be an alien.
Doctor Who, Ten and/or Captain Jack, both have been witness to a lot of history, what is their perspective on the LGBT history they have been around for (Stonewall? The trial of Oscar Wilde? Pink triangles?)
Doctor Who, Ten II/Rose, The human Doctor is okay with the fact that he's intersex -- some of his physiology comes from Donna, after all, and he's always felt that his gender identity has been fluid, even if he hasn't talked about it much. Rose, however, is used to a more binary system of gender identity -- can they work things out?
Doctor Who, Ten.2/Rose, Due to being created part Donna Ten.2 has a different gender identity than the original Ten. Rose is a bit confused that her new boyfriend wants to live openly as MtF.
Doctor Who, the Corsair (mentioned in "The Doctor's Wife"), The Doctor mentions that the Corsair regenerated as both male and female, and was evidently comfortable in both sorts of body. Run with that - was it ever deliberate? Was it unusual/frowned upon in Gallifreyan society to embrace such a fluid gender identity?
Doctor Who, the Doctor (any incarnation), any relevant companions, He loves them, but they're still another species, no matter the outward similarities, and they don't do anything for him, which he doesn't always know how to explain.
Doctor Who, the Doctor, Sometimes it's hard to be asexual and biromantic.
Doctor Who, The Doctor, The Doctor regenerates as a woman, and it's not weird at all.
Doctor Who: Doctor/Jack. Jack's omnisexual and in love with the Doctor, and suddenly doesn't know how to cope with being in love with a happy asexual.

Doctor Who, The Doctor, The Doctor has regenerated into someone ginger--a moderately attractive thirtysomething woman. Ze finds to hir displeasure that even though ze's intelligence and behavior haven't changed one iota, the way people respond to hir certainly has.
Doctor Who, the Doctor, Sometimes it's hard to be asexual and biromantic.
Doctor Who, the Doctor and any companions, the Doctor prefers triads, but he's learnt the hard way that sometimes his human companions have trouble breaking away from a more binary system of relationships.
Doctor Who, Third Doctor, The Doctor has no concept of hiding his sexuality, but now he's stuck on earth in the 1970s and expected to conform to UNIT regulations against homosexual conduct.
Doctor Who, Tom Milligan/Martha Jones/Mickey Smith, their marriage is legally binding on at least fifty planets- just not the one they happen to live on.
Doctor Who, Turlough, Turlough finds it hard to adjust to an English public school in the early 1980s for more reasons than just being an alien.
Doctor Who, Two/Jamie, Jamie has never been with a man before and the Doctor has never been with a non-Time Lord; their relationship would be frowned upon in both cultures (albeit for different reasons.)
Doctor Who: Two/Jamie. The Doctor knows that in Jamie's struggling with feelings that were punishable by death in his time period. He decides a history lesson is a good way to educate him. (Pick or make up a gay positive historical moment for them to visit.)
Doctor Who, Victoria Waterfield, there was hardly even a concept of women loving other women in 1866. Now that Victoria's living in the more liberated 1960s, she has a lot of things to figure out.
Doctor Who, Yates, the stress of being a closeted gay man in a military environment leads Yates to betray UNIT.
Doctor Who, Zoe Heriot, Jamie McCrimmon, Explaining that she's a bisexual to Jamie is more complicated than Zoe would have anticipated; the words Zoe grew up using to describe sexual orientation simply don't exist in the world of 1745...and the 18th century view is that sexuality is something that you do, not someone you are.
Doctor Who, Brigadier/Benton, Doris, the Brigadier's 'wife," is just a codename for Benton, his real, secret lover."
Doctor Who, Tegan Jovanka, In school, she thought it was just a faze. After Nyssa, Tegan decided she was a lesbian. Only, she never fit in with the other lesbians. Now, she's realizing she's FtM and having to deal with that and the fact that she's 5'2' and everyone telling her, 'But you're so pretty...'
Doctor Who, Two/Jamie, Jamie totally understands that he wants a sexual/romantic relationship with the Doctor; it's the Doctor that needs 'convincing' that it's all right.
Doctor Who/Torchwood, Martha Jones, Being with the Doctor - or working with Torchwood - and being out is so very different than being out at UNIT.
Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog, Captain Hammer, There's a reason he's never slept with the same girl twice: now that he's out of the public eye, after the Death Ray incident, Captain Hammer is starting to realize he repressed his sexuality so he could fit the image of a hero
Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog, Penny, Penny returns somehow after the events of DHSB, exploration of her ‘stormy’ past (“After years of stormy sailing, have I finally found the bay?”), including her sexuality (possibly in the context of her growing up in foster care)
Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog, any characters, Sometimes, the line between hero and villain is less important than a common LGBT orientation.

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