Who is gay in bluey
Popular kids show Bluey celebrated for introducing same-sex couple in season finale
The Australian kid’s TV show Bluey has become one of the most critically acclaimed shows of its genre since its debut in 2018.
Upon Bluey’s eventual arrival worldwide on Disney+ a year later in 2019, the show became incredibly popular among both children and adults.
The popular present details the life of Bluey, a seven-year-old cobalt healer, and her minute sister Bingo, a five-year-old red healer, alongside a supporting cast featuring their friends and family.
The majority of the demonstrate features the two sisters getting into hijinks, playing pretend, and learning existence lessons throughout each episode’s seven-minute runtime.
Now, three seasons and over 150 episodes into its existence, Bluey has not only garnered praise for being a tremendous kid's TV demonstrate but also for its inclusivity in the concluding episode of season 3.
In the most recent episode of the series, the show made reference to its first same-sex couple, with a friend of Bluey's - a chihuahua named Pretzel - noting that he has two moms in an anecdote about his pet guinea p
Namely, the particular extended episode “The Sign”, while focusing on Bluey moving house, also has Pretzel, one of the supporting characters from the series, mention that he has two mothers, which confirms that his parents are a lesbian couple, i.e., an LGBTQ+ couple. For a...
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The 28 minute Bluey exceptional “The Sign” has finally dropped, and it’s occupied of heartwarming (and devastating!) moments. With all the heartstring-tugging, though, there’s one moment that’s easy to miss: the show’s first mention of a homosexual couple.
Warning: spoilers for the Bluey special “The Sign” ahead!
In “The Sign,” Bluey and her family deal with the heartbreak of putting their house up for sale and moving to another city. The drama starts at the end of “Ghostbasket,” when we see a For Sale sign in front of the house. In “The Sign,” we understand that Bandit has gotten a higher paying career in another city.
While a couple comes to peek at the house, Bluey’s family drives off to school and work. Once at school, Bluey asks her teacher, Calypso, why stories have happy endings. “I guess because existence will give us enough sad ones,” Calypso responds.
The kids take that as a cue to divide all the sad endings they’ve experienced in their lives. Winton, the mischievous bulldog, shares that his dad is divorced