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#incorrect atypical
theshortangrylesbian · 9 months
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Casey, throwing her head into Izzie's lap: Tell me I'm pretty! 
Izzie, lovingly stroking her hair: You're pretty fucking annoying, that's what you are.
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incorrect-supercorp · 8 months
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Alex: Say one thing you like about me.
Lena: Easy, your sister.
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incorrectquotesmcu · 8 months
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Clint: Say one thing you like about me.
Y/N: Easy, your wife.
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Jinx: Say one thing you like about me.
Caitlyn: Easy, your sister.
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spn-lesbian · 10 months
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Sam: say one thing you like about me
Cas: easy, your brother
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thebrightsessions · 10 months
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Hi !
I just finished the brights sessions and in one of the episode D. Bright said that the atypical represented 4% of the world's population, and that let me wondering, considering that almost every atypical that we encounter in the serie is queer, what percent of the queer community is atypical ?
Apart from that, i love your show and all of the amazing character! I hope you have a great day !
Oooh GREAT question! Lemme do some quick math here...
Okay, according to my universe bible (which is pretty accurate, if not fully comprehensive, I'm sure there's stuff I forgot to write down), there are 29 known and named atypicals across the 7 seasons of the podcasts, excluding the Bright Sides (Season 5, the bonus episodes) and the three books (though there is some overlap) but including Frank Sawyer and Sadie Greenwood, who are, like...atypical-adjacent.
Of those 30 atypicals (presuming I counted correctly (does this post have enough parentheticals yet?)), 14 are definitely canonically queer in one way or another. So, by that logic, nearly half of the atypical population is queer! I have a feeling that number would go up if I were to go through and pull out all the folks from the books and the bonus episodes (which perhaps I will do someday but I don't know the orientation of all the bonus ep characters (bc they were created by other people) and pulling out characters from the books is always a mess because, uh, I do not outline lol) but I also don't know that I can say our little atypical population is fully representative of the global population's queerness? Like flocks to like, so perhaps this a somewhat self-selecting bunch, or maybe there really is just a very high correlation between being atypical and being queer. Dealer's (fanfic writer and headcanon-er's) choice!
Counts under the cut:
Known Atypicals:
characters who are canonically queer are bolded - these are characters who either have queer relationships or talk specifically about their identity. some folks on this list are straight (Frank, Sadie, Marley, Jackson, Blackwell, (though tbf, Sadie is the only person in the whole series who ever says they're straight I'm pretty sure, so who knows)), but there are plenty who we never say one way or another, so anything is possible!
Sam Barnes Caleb Michaels Chloe Turner Frank Sawyer Robert "Damien" Gorham Mark Bryant Rose Atkinson Franklin "Frankie" Meeks Sadie Greenwood Ben Bernard Oliver Ritz Margaret "Mags" Densmore Jackson Crawford Jason "Marley" Beck Seamus Blackwell Michal Sharon Helen Sidney Alice Michaels Alice Rufie Jordan Tobias Sitzer Alexis Neal Cat Cam Vanessa Turner Ira Alex "Blaze" Chen Maguerite Sarai
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tupayapsina · 10 months
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Yang: Say one thing you like about me
Weiss: Easy, your sister
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Han: say one thing you like me
Lando: easy, your wife
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Conversation
Jisung: I asked a girl out.
Changbin: Oh, I’m sorry.
Jisung: Why?
Changbin: Well, I assumed she said no.
Jisung: No, she said yes.
Changbin: Oh, well, I’m sorry for her.
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trickarrows-bishop · 1 year
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INCORRECT QUOTES MASTERLIST
ALL QUOTES - all incorrect quotes
ARCANE QUOTES
ATYPICAL QUOTES
DO REVENGE QUOTES
FIRST KILL QUOTES
HSMTMTS QUOTES
HOUSE MD QUOTES
KILLING EVE QUOTES
MARVEL QUOTES
PAPER GIRLS QUOTES
SIX THE MUSICAL QUOTES
STRANGER THINGS QUOTES
WARRIOR NUN QUOTES
WEDNESDAY QUOTES
WILLOW (2022) QUOTES
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theshortangrylesbian · 9 months
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Casey, at Izzie: You're my girlfriend. 
Izzie: Yeah I am! 
Casey, at Sam: You're my child. 
Sam: Yes boss. 
Casey, at Doug: You're my bitch. 
Doug: Yeah I am- wait, what? 
Casey, at Sharice: My bestie. 
Sharice: Naturally. 
Casey, at Zahid: HA, GAY! 
Zahid: Fuck you.
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ewinofthelake · 2 years
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Mrs No One: My father died when I was nine. Murdered by the Lannisters.
Mr No One: Who was that kindly man who gave you away at our wedding?
Mrs No One: Paid actor.
Mr No One: I said, I said I saw your dad on "Braavosi Islands"!
ASoIaF Rare Pairs Week 2022 day 3, secret identity – Jaqen H'ghar/Arya Stark: Mr & Mrs No One
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incorrectquotesmcu · 10 months
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Yelena: Say one thing you like about me.
Y/N: Easy, your sister.
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Mary: Say one thing you like about me.
Elisabeth: Easy, your brother.
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kiarcheo · 2 years
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Anne: I asked Anna out!
Catherine: Oh, I’m sorry.
Anne: Why?
Catherine: I’m assuming she said no.
Anne: No, she said yes.
Catherine: Oh...I’m sorry for her.
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opencommunion · 1 year
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Understanding the theory’s ascent from fringe forums to scientific journals to the halls of Congress helps clarify some of the moral panic and pernicious logic employed to restrict the autonomy and rights of trans people today. It also serves as a vivid example of how questionable science can be weaponized to achieve political goals.
A number of studies on trans youth have taken on “misinformational afterlives,” says TJ Billard, an assistant professor of communications at Northwestern University and executive director of the Center for Applied Transgender Studies. Among them are four papers published between 2008 and 2013 that have together been used to claim that most children “grow out” of gender dysphoria and opt not to transition. All have been shown to have numerous shortcomings. In some, nearly 40% of young people surveyed did not meet the criteria for the official gender dysphoria diagnosis in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders edition used at the time. In two, researchers classified some subjects as having detransitioned—or reversed their transition—purely on the basis of whether a parent or third party said it happened. A 2018 study found that three of the papers labeled those who had stopped responding to researchers as detransitioners; and in one, a subject who identified as nonbinary was classified as detransitioning.
“There’s a wealth of bad science that is out there, and this science doesn’t stay in journals,” Billard says. Parents unfamiliar with trans issues, who don’t understand gender-affirming health care and don’t have the expertise to read the studies themselves, often fall under its sway.
... When Littman took up the question, she decided to survey parents, who she felt would be easier to reach than trans youths themselves. In her Methods section, she writes that “to maximize the chances of finding cases meeting eligibility criteria”—meaning youths who suddenly became gender dysphoric, according to their parents—she turned to three websites: 4thwavenow.com, a “community of people who question the medicalization of gender-­atypical youth”; transgendertrend.com, which says it’s concerned about “the unprecedented number of teenage girls suddenly self-identifying as ‘trans’”; and youthtranscriticalprofessionals.org, a now-private website that was “concerned about the current trend to quickly diagnose and affirm young people as transgender.”
The results were in line with what one might expect given those sources: 76.5% of parents surveyed “believed their child was incorrect in their belief of being transgender.” More than 85% said their child had increased their internet use and/or had trans friends before identifying as trans. The youths themselves had no say in the study, and there’s no telling if they had simply kept their parents in the dark for months or years before coming out. (Littman acknowledges that “parent-child conflict may also explain some of the findings.”) 
Arjee Restar, now an assistant professor of epidemiology at the University of Washington, didn’t mince words in her 2020 methodological critique of the paper. Restar noted that Littman chose to describe the “social and peer contagion” hypothesis in the consent document she shared with parents, opening the door for biases in who chose to respond to the survey and how they did so. She also highlighted that Littman asked parents to offer “diagnoses” of their child’s gender dysphoria, which they were unqualified to do without professional training.  It’s even possible that Littman’s data could contain multiple responses from the same parent .... But politics is blind to nuances in methodology. And the paper was quickly seized by those who were already pushing back against increasing acceptance of trans people. ... Many people who are citing Littman’s work probably haven’t even read the study or seen the correction, Billard says: “People are citing a Reddit post in which somebody invoked the idea of Littman and her research.” Littman agrees with this characterization. “It boggles my mind how people are comfortable holding forth on topics that they haven’t actually read papers [about],” she says. 
... Lawmakers in more than 25 states have introduced anti-trans bills during 2022 legislative sessions. Politicians writing such legislation have plenty of questionable studies, partisan doctors, and associations that lobby against transgender rights to draw on. Littman’s ROGD study is often a go-to. The Coalition for the Advancement & Application of Psychological Science wrote in 2021 that many of the “over 100 bills under consideration in legislative bodies across the country that seek to limit the rights of transgender adolescents” are “predicated on the unsupported claims advanced by ROGD.”
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