Exactly. There was no narrative value of turning the two characters bisexual. The ending diverted too much attention away from Korraâs arc.
Agreed. When I saw the ending, I felt like it was done for cheap shock value. If they wanted to be inclusive to the LGBT community they could have went for a secondary character and portray this struggle in a more relatable way to the viewers. It would still be jarring for me to see it in a childrenâs show but at least plenty of others wouldnât be so hung up on this imo unlike the out of the blue revelation finale ending.
Couldnât have said it better myself. I really like this one post I read awhile back when I was actually starting to suspect that direction or at least undertones.
The post was from a bisexual girl who said that if they did actually take that route, not only would it not make sense at this point, but it just makes girls feel like the only kind of people tomboy like girls can be with is another girl, because theyâre just too much like one of the guys.
Korra was by no means a shapely overly glamorized sex symbol. If anything Asami was and she was modest. The fact that people thought they had chemistry simply because of behavioral characteristics is
ironically incredibly closed minded.
I canât decide if I can go back and watch the Last Airbender or not without this series ruining it for me. I donât want it to, and Iâm hoping I can just separate the two, but itâs really hard knowing that some of the writers pushed that so hard.
Not to mention every season except for season 3 was pretty sloppily written. The whole love triangle in season 1 felt incredibly forced, season twoâs breakup between Mako and Korra also seemed really forced for plots sake, just a lot of different threads didnât make any sense. I remember people thinking that Amon had somehow lived when he clearly bit the dust.
Season 3 was perfect. It was concise, smart, incredibly clever, and didnât deal with any relationships besides Bolin and Opal. Which worked because Bolin has the emotional depth of a sponge⌠Or maybe the opposite?
The writers that made the statement even went on to say that they felt Katara and Aangâs relationship at the end of The Last Airbender was forced⌠What? You mean a relationship that started from book one was forced? How else could you have POSSIBLY ended it that wouldnât have made fans confused? Aang had CLEARLY shown interest in Katara from the moment he left the iceberg. The fact that a relationship between the two felt forced from the two most obvious characters that could be together really makes me question how well the writers that made the statement felt they knew their own characters.
They went on to say that after awhile your characters begin to write themselves. That you end up just writing what you know theyâll do⌠Clearly they were biased when saying this because the fact that they knew people would be confused about it is just ludicrous. These characters didnât just write themselves. If people are in unison about Katara and Aang making sense, then making a character bi just for the sake of âsupporting all our friends and family and cousins of the LGBT communityâ is about as effective as saying âwe hate homophobes or people that donât agree with usâ.
They shot themselves in the foot with this one. Now NO ONE is going to remember the show for what it was. Theyâre only going to talk about that one moment in a show that ran for 2 years. And what a shame.