Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-25926288-20160418005754/@comment-24746469-20160418210327

SnowKingTE wrote: D.Prince wrote: NickM98 wrote: Farerb wrote: Nakis91 wrote: I haven't watch the episode yet but:

- Making Ruby and Dorothy the LGBT couple is smart because they now suddenly have three LGBT characters.

- Reviews on the internet are praising the couple

- Maybe Disney didn't let them make Mulan gay. No, they don't have three LGBT characters because Mulan's sexuality is still ambiguous, and it's not about quantity, it's about quality. They may actually have three LGBT characters: Ruby and Dorothy are confirmed as lesbians, but Mulan could actually be bisexual or, more likely, is still questioning her sexuality. Keeping Mulan's sexuality ambiguous allows OUAT to swing either way, have her be with Shan Yu, give her a female partner, or just keep her solo.

Either way, I loved this episode and the fact that both Ruby and Dorothy found their happy endings. I love it when OUAT leads you to believe one thing (everyone thought that Ruby and Mulan would end up together) but blow you away with something unexpected.

This episode was purely about love and how it comes in many different shapes and forms. Placing Ruby and Dorothy's relationship in another world removes the confines and social expectations that our world has and allows the writers to focus on the fact that love has no boundaries.

If Ruby was a lesbian then why did they portrayed her as hererosexual and gave her Peter in season 1. They obviously retconed her character to please a bunch of fans. It's the truth. Bisexuality exists, just so you know. They probably should have mentioned that in the episode so people don't get confused with Ruby's previous relationships.

I know bisexual people exist, no need to be sarcastic, but from a writers point of view it was poorly executed. If a character is going to develop to be something, as a writer you should give clues, the thing is they didn't do so with Ruby until people started complaining about equality. People need to understand that writers don't need to please anyones desires. So when you do this kind of things to characters that weren't meant to be like that from the beginning it just looks like your improvising. Anyone who knows about writing notices this kinda of stuff, it had happened in the show before, still I don't expect that people that are partialized with certains views in life see this from a objective perspective.

Yesterdays episode was a filler, to please some people. The overall plot was not neccesary and it didn't add anything important to the current plot in the Underworld. Like I said before, this episode was like the merida centrics in season 5A, adding little to no progress in the current storyline and that's what bugs me the most.