Culture Tranny News Megathread - Hot tranny newds

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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...school-attack-caught-camera-says-bullied.html

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A transgender girl accused of assaulting two students at a Texas high school alleges that she was being bullied and was merely fighting back

Shocking video shows a student identified by police as Travez Perry violently punching, kicking and stomping on a girl in the hallway of Tomball High School.

The female student was transported to the hospital along with a male student, whom Perry allegedly kicked in the face and knocked unconscious.

According to the police report, Perry - who goes by 'Millie' - told officers that the victim has been bullying her and had posted a photo of her on social media with a negative comment.

One Tomball High School parent whose daughter knows Perry said that the 18-year-old had been the target of a death threat.

'From what my daughter has said that the girl that was the bully had posted a picture of Millie saying people like this should die,' the mother, who asked not to be identified by name, told DailyMail.com.

When Perry appeared in court on assault charges, her attorney told a judge that the teen has been undergoing a difficult transition from male to female and that: 'There's more to this story than meets the eye.'

Perry is currently out on bond, according to authorities.

The video of the altercation sparked a widespread debate on social media as some claim Perry was justified in standing up to her alleged bullies and others condemn her use of violence.

The mother who spoke with DailyMail.com has been one of Millie's most ardent defenders on Facebook.

'I do not condone violence at all. But situations like this show that people now a days, not just kids, think they can post what they want. Or say what they want without thinking of who they are hurting,' she said.

'Nobody knows what Millie has gone through, and this could have just been a final straw for her. That is all speculation of course because I don't personally know her or her family, but as a parent and someone who is part of the LGBTQ community this girl needs help and support, not grown men online talking about her private parts and shaming and mocking her.'

One Facebook commenter summed up the views of many, writing: 'This was brutal, and severe! I was bullied for years and never attacked anyone!'

Multiple commenters rejected the gender transition defense and classified the attack as a male senselessly beating a female.

One woman wrote on Facebook: 'This person will get off because they're transitioning. This is an animal. She kicked, and stomped, and beat...not okay. Bullying is not acceptable, but kicking someone in the head. Punishment doesn't fit the crime.'


FB https://www.facebook.com/travez.perry http://archive.is/mnEmm

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Something to pay attention to when it comes to tranny news is Ohio House Bill 513. Ohio seems to be a hotbed for trans kid stories from parents losing custody of their kid for saying no to trooning out (more on this here) to being the state where famous 41%er Joshua Alcorn lived. Instead of running away from his bigot parents who wanted him to be a good young man he jumped in front of a semi, joining the 41% and getting conversion therapy outlawed in Ohio.

It's been several years since Joshua Alcorn killed himself and everyone has forgotten about it. Now the state of Ohio is pushing House Bill 513, called the Vulnerable Child Protection Act. I'm attaching it here because it's pretty great, it outlaws HRT and blockers to those under 18, along with Jazz Jennings style surgeries. It also even allows for those with trans regret from underage surgeries/chemical castration to sue the doctors for a period of up to 20 years.

It's been getting some sparse media coverage in Ohio but expect this to blow up as more out of state lobbyist money rolls in.

TOLEDO A new bill introduced to the Ohio House of Representatives seeks to make it a crime to counsel or treat teens looking to transition to another gender. The bill, which is officially called House Bill 513 and referred to as “The Vulnerable Child Protection Act,” is co-sponsored by Bill Dean of District 74 and Rob Hood of District 78.

As proposed, the bill would make it a third-degree felony or misdemeanor to prescribe any drugs meant to stop or delay puberty. It would also be a crime to prescribe any other hormone-related medications or any surgical procedures associated with gender transitioning, including mastectomy, vasectomy, or procedures intended to alter the patient’s sex organs.


The bill would not make it illegal for mental health professionals to provide sexuality or identity counseling, but would make it illegal for them to “purposefully attempt to change, reinforce, or affirm a minor’s perception of the minor’s own sexual attraction or sexual behaviors, or attempt to change, reinforce, or affirm a minor’s gender identity when that identity is inconsistent with the minor’s biological sex.”


Local mental health experts are outraged by the bill.


“Basically, what this legislation says is you are wrong. You are not permitted to have any feelings other than what we tell you you can have, and if so then there's something wrong with you," says Dr. Tim Valko, MD, a Child, and Adolescent Psychiatrist. "The big thing that I'm worried about is that it's going to make them feel bad and that they're not really a person and that they don't belong here."


Under the bill, the statute of limitations on violations would extend to 20 years past the initial violation. If charged with the felony, violators would face up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. The misdemeanor carries up to a one-year prison term. In both cases, they would face the possible suspension or revocation of their medical license.


The bill does outline some exceptions to the legislation, including instances in which the minor genetic disorders or abnormal chromosome structure.


The bill has not yet come up for a vote in the Ohio legislature.
Here's the video from the article of a doctor pushing the "harm reduction" and "your kid will kill himself/try drugs" myths along with "activists" pushing against the bill as well:


A news story from February 13th:
COLUMBUS, Ohio (WKRC) - Lawmakers behind the proposed Vulnerable Child Protection Act, which would prohibit medical procedures to be done on transgender youth ages 18 and younger in Ohio, spoke on Thursday.

Ohio representatives Ron Hood and Bill Dean are behind the proposed bill and believe the decision of gender-altering procedures need to be made when a person is 18 or older. While some parents are for it, others raise concerns regarding what this means for their children.

“I’m the same person I was 10 years ago, I just look different,” Alex Nix, a transgender 21-year-old man, said. “There’s really no second-guessing who you are.”

Alex spent his teen years questioning his identity.


“It sounds so cliché, but, I mean, I was never like any of the other girls,” Alex said. “I was always the weird girl or like the ones that no one wanted to talk to, and I just knew that there was something off. I just didn’t know what it was until later on when I actually learned about this kind of stuff.”

Alex’s mother, Linda Nix, said, “We had to make the best decision with the most knowledge that we had at that time to have a happy, alive child or a child who was miserable in their own body who would literally beat their breast because they wanted the boobs to go away.”

Eleven months later, after meeting with doctors, Linda allowed Alex to start taking testosterone injections. He was 17 years old at the time.

“After a lot of research on my own, then I came to the conclusions that what we did, with allowing Alex to start transitioning medically before he was an adult, and it gave him so much confidence and made him so much happier,” Linda said.

Alex then got a mastectomy at 18 years old.

“There’s so many kids that the agony they live with every day of their brain telling them that they are a male or female and their bodies just are different,” Linda said. “It’s just horrible for them, for these kids to have to live with that.”

But a new proposed bill soon to be introduced in the Ohio statehouse may not give those younger than 18 who’d like to transition a choice.

“We’re very concerned this is being perpetrated among our children in Ohio at a young age, and when they do become of age, it’s too late. It’s irreversible damage being done to their bodies, and the decisions being made by other people that they have to live with for the rest of their lives,” State Rep. Ron Hood said. “We believe that children, that minors, should not have lifelong altering decisions being made upon them like this at this age, being made for them, when there is such a high chance of regret that once they become an adult and maybe see things differently that they can’t go back. It’s the irreversible nature of this.”

State Rep. Bill Dean said, “Children are not self-aware until they get older, and there is confusion, and when you have gender dysphoria, they need mental help, not to be cut up physically and mutilated.”

Should the government tell doctors how to treat their patients? Aaron Baer, president of Citizens for Community Values, said, “Absolutely.” The group, Citizens for Community Values are also in favor of the bill.

“There’s plenty of cases where you see incredibly dangerous procedures happening that the government has come in and banned. We’re not lobotomizing people anymore, we prohibit children from smoking under the age of 21 in the state of Ohio, but you can put a child under 18 on a high-dose [of] processed hormones or puberty blockers is just insane for off-label use,” Baer said. “The government needs to step in here and say ‘we cannot do this.'”

As for Alex, “This isn’t really a decision that I have to think twice about because I am who I am."

“For Alex to have that opportunity was just wonderful,” Linda said. “Had he not had that opportunity, I don’t know if he’d still be alive.”

The bill is out for co-sponsor request right now, meaning other members of the House can sign on to support the bill.

The bill will likely be introduced to the house next week.

News video from this, including the lawmakers themselves introducing it. It's actually less slanted than the other video:


There's one more article about it and it's basically the same shit as the other two and has no news video either so I'm ignoring it mostly but it does have one notable thing:
At least 10 states have introduced bills banning gender-related medical treatment for teens according to organizations that track transgender legislation: Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Missouri, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Tennessee. The New Hampshire bill would classify drug treatments or surgery intended to alter gender as child abuse.

Ten states at least are attempting to push back on trans teens.
 

Attachments

It also even allows for those with trans regret from underage surgeries/chemical castration to sue the doctors for a period of up to 20 years.

That should include parents.

Thanks to his worse than DeeDee Blanchard mother, it is captured forever on video of Jazz's mother outright lying to Jazz about the potential complications of SRS.
Jazz has had significant compilations and mommy has gotten pissed when Jazz talks about then, especially to other kids who think they are trans.
 
Woman Transitioned into Man, Then into ‘Genderless Alien’

Woman twice displeased at identity

View attachment 1156639


A woman who transitioned into a man, then, after realizing they were displeased with their identity, transitioned into a “genderless alien,” leaving humanity behind.
Jareth Nebula, who withheld their birth name, transitioned from female to male at the age of 29, before making the step to transcend humanity altogether, transitioning into a genderless alien at 33.


According to All That’s Interesting, Nebula’s fascinating moniker was inspired by “David Bowie’s character, Jareth the Goblin King, from Jim Henson’s 1986 cult-classic fantasy film Labyrinth.”

Since making the transition, Nebula has had their eyebrows and nipples removed to give themself a less human look, after reportedly feeling uncomfortable as either gender.


The Daily Mail reported that Nebula fashions a number of piercings and face paints to look more alien-esque.

The hair salon receptionist and model revealed that the body modifications were to “feel less human.”


On Nebula’s gender identity, All That’s Interesting wrote:


Nebula spoke about their transition, saying “After coming out as transgender and believing I had finally found myself, I realized I was wrong – I wasn’t male or female, or even human.

“I don’t think or feel like humans. I can’t really explain it to others – I’m simply otherworldly.”


They continued: “I didn’t feel comfortable as either gender or even anything in between. I know I’m stuck in a human form and that’s how I’m perceived by others – but to me, I’m an alien with no gender.”

Nebula is not the first person to publicly self-identify as a genderless alien.


In 2017, a make-up artist by the name Vinny Ohh, 23, spent around $60,000 to become a genderless alien.

Ohh reportedly wanted to have his genitals removed to authenticate the complete alien look.


Despite their wishes, plastic surgeons at the time warned the aspiring extra-terrestrial that the possibilities of performing the surgery were astronomically unlikely.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=Pvn3SP4mA5w
She shoulda fixed her teeth first.
 
The Doctor Gets Troon Companion
The Doctor Who franchise will soon get its first transgender companion played by the trans actress and comedian Rebecca Root.
Root is joining the upcoming series of the Doctor Who audio drama produced by Big Finish, which has been delighting fans for the past two decades with a welcome extension to the Whoniverse.
She stars as the character of Tania alongside Paul McGann, who played the eighth Doctor in the made-for-TV movie. It’s a role she’s thrilled and honoured to play, but she’s already got her sights on an even bigger one.
“I don’t think it’s any secret in the media world that I would love to have a chance to play the Doctor myself,” she admitted to PinkNews.
“Certainly before Jodie Whittaker took over I was hinting very heavily to showrunners that I wanted a stab at that role.
“Never say never though, I’d still like a shot at the TV version, but suffice it to say that being a part of the inner circle of the TARDIS crew is an honour and a treat.”
The significance of her role as the first transgender companion in canonical Who is not lost on her, but it’s something that is deliberately downplayed on the show.

“It’s one of those things where it’s said and then everyone moves on, it’s not mentioned again. It’s kind of refreshing in its normality, really,” Root said.

Paul McGann playing the eighth Doctor in 1996 (YouTube/BBC America)
Cautious not to divulge too much about her character’s storyline, she says that Tania’s gender identity is revealed in the context of a lesbian relationship.
“I think Tania has some anxieties around her gender identity in so far as how that might get in the way of a relationship, but her anxieties are unfounded and the person involved just doesn’t bat an eyelid,” she said.
“She just shrugs and says ‘Yeah, and?’ And it’s a gorgeous little moment.
“It’s kind of indicative of, I hope, how people from other galaxies might respond to different expressions of gender. And without giving too much away, it’s just refreshing to see that it’s not a big deal, you know?”
Root made her name on the BBC Two’s Boy Meets Girl, a sitcom about a developing relationship between a young cis man and an older transgender woman.
The show was widely praised for its positive portrayal of trans characters, and it also allowed Root to “crack open” a spot in the TV industry. “After many years of knocking on the door, I finally found the door opening,” she said.

Rebecca Root and Harry Hepple in ‘Boy Meets Girl’ (BBC)
But when she went into voice acting – an extremely competitive industry within an extremely competitive industry – she found that some doors were still closed to her.
More from PinkNews


Stars you didn’t know are gay or lesbian


Celebs you didn’t know have an LGBT sibling

“I don’t do any voiceovers for commercials for example, and I’ve asked people why they think that and the answer comes back that people don’t know how to place my voice, whether male or female, as if that matters,” she said.
“But for character work, for acting, I think my voice offers interesting layers, and I think that’s why I’ve had more work as a voice actor than as an actor.”
Listeners can hear her voice for themselves when Tania makes her debut in the episode ‘Lost Property’. Exactly what Tania will bring to the TARDIS is still kept tightly under wraps, but Root throws a few hints.
“She’s patient, she’d had to be patient in her line of work,” she said. “I played her I hope with some humour, some sensitivity, and there’s a love story amongst the mayhem of the actual story which is wonderful.
“I don’t want to give too much away, but suffice it to say that leads to Tania embarking on further adventures with the Doctor and the crew of the TARDIS. She gets embroiled in something, and I would probably say she’s been waiting a long time for this moment. And who knows where it will take her.”
Screenshot-2020-02-21-at-17.29.01.jpg
Archive

I miss the first Romana.
 
The Doctor Gets Troon Companion
The Doctor Who franchise will soon get its first transgender companion played by the trans actress and comedian Rebecca Root.
Root is joining the upcoming series of the Doctor Who audio drama produced by Big Finish, which has been delighting fans for the past two decades with a welcome extension to the Whoniverse.
She stars as the character of Tania alongside Paul McGann, who played the eighth Doctor in the made-for-TV movie. It’s a role she’s thrilled and honoured to play, but she’s already got her sights on an even bigger one.
“I don’t think it’s any secret in the media world that I would love to have a chance to play the Doctor myself,” she admitted to PinkNews.
“Certainly before Jodie Whittaker took over I was hinting very heavily to showrunners that I wanted a stab at that role.
“Never say never though, I’d still like a shot at the TV version, but suffice it to say that being a part of the inner circle of the TARDIS crew is an honour and a treat.”
The significance of her role as the first transgender companion in canonical Who is not lost on her, but it’s something that is deliberately downplayed on the show.

“It’s one of those things where it’s said and then everyone moves on, it’s not mentioned again. It’s kind of refreshing in its normality, really,” Root said.

Paul McGann playing the eighth Doctor in 1996 (YouTube/BBC America)
Cautious not to divulge too much about her character’s storyline, she says that Tania’s gender identity is revealed in the context of a lesbian relationship.
“I think Tania has some anxieties around her gender identity in so far as how that might get in the way of a relationship, but her anxieties are unfounded and the person involved just doesn’t bat an eyelid,” she said.
“She just shrugs and says ‘Yeah, and?’ And it’s a gorgeous little moment.
“It’s kind of indicative of, I hope, how people from other galaxies might respond to different expressions of gender. And without giving too much away, it’s just refreshing to see that it’s not a big deal, you know?”
Root made her name on the BBC Two’s Boy Meets Girl, a sitcom about a developing relationship between a young cis man and an older transgender woman.
The show was widely praised for its positive portrayal of trans characters, and it also allowed Root to “crack open” a spot in the TV industry. “After many years of knocking on the door, I finally found the door opening,” she said.

Rebecca Root and Harry Hepple in ‘Boy Meets Girl’ (BBC)
But when she went into voice acting – an extremely competitive industry within an extremely competitive industry – she found that some doors were still closed to her.
More from PinkNews


Stars you didn’t know are gay or lesbian


Celebs you didn’t know have an LGBT sibling

“I don’t do any voiceovers for commercials for example, and I’ve asked people why they think that and the answer comes back that people don’t know how to place my voice, whether male or female, as if that matters,” she said.
“But for character work, for acting, I think my voice offers interesting layers, and I think that’s why I’ve had more work as a voice actor than as an actor.”
Listeners can hear her voice for themselves when Tania makes her debut in the episode ‘Lost Property’. Exactly what Tania will bring to the TARDIS is still kept tightly under wraps, but Root throws a few hints.
“She’s patient, she’d had to be patient in her line of work,” she said. “I played her I hope with some humour, some sensitivity, and there’s a love story amongst the mayhem of the actual story which is wonderful.
“I don’t want to give too much away, but suffice it to say that leads to Tania embarking on further adventures with the Doctor and the crew of the TARDIS. She gets embroiled in something, and I would probably say she’s been waiting a long time for this moment. And who knows where it will take her.”
View attachment 1158279
Archive

I miss the first Romana.

Someone call Oneangrygamer and apologize for mocking them. They were absolutely right when they said fem doctor was a slippery slope.
 
The Doctor Gets Troon Companion
The Doctor Who franchise will soon get its first transgender companion played by the trans actress and comedian Rebecca Root.
Root is joining the upcoming series of the Doctor Who audio drama produced by Big Finish, which has been delighting fans for the past two decades with a welcome extension to the Whoniverse.
She stars as the character of Tania alongside Paul McGann, who played the eighth Doctor in the made-for-TV movie. It’s a role she’s thrilled and honoured to play, but she’s already got her sights on an even bigger one.
“I don’t think it’s any secret in the media world that I would love to have a chance to play the Doctor myself,” she admitted to PinkNews.
“Certainly before Jodie Whittaker took over I was hinting very heavily to showrunners that I wanted a stab at that role.
“Never say never though, I’d still like a shot at the TV version, but suffice it to say that being a part of the inner circle of the TARDIS crew is an honour and a treat.”
The significance of her role as the first transgender companion in canonical Who is not lost on her, but it’s something that is deliberately downplayed on the show.

“It’s one of those things where it’s said and then everyone moves on, it’s not mentioned again. It’s kind of refreshing in its normality, really,” Root said.

Paul McGann playing the eighth Doctor in 1996 (YouTube/BBC America)
Cautious not to divulge too much about her character’s storyline, she says that Tania’s gender identity is revealed in the context of a lesbian relationship.
“I think Tania has some anxieties around her gender identity in so far as how that might get in the way of a relationship, but her anxieties are unfounded and the person involved just doesn’t bat an eyelid,” she said.
“She just shrugs and says ‘Yeah, and?’ And it’s a gorgeous little moment.
“It’s kind of indicative of, I hope, how people from other galaxies might respond to different expressions of gender. And without giving too much away, it’s just refreshing to see that it’s not a big deal, you know?”
Root made her name on the BBC Two’s Boy Meets Girl, a sitcom about a developing relationship between a young cis man and an older transgender woman.
The show was widely praised for its positive portrayal of trans characters, and it also allowed Root to “crack open” a spot in the TV industry. “After many years of knocking on the door, I finally found the door opening,” she said.

Rebecca Root and Harry Hepple in ‘Boy Meets Girl’ (BBC)
But when she went into voice acting – an extremely competitive industry within an extremely competitive industry – she found that some doors were still closed to her.
More from PinkNews


Stars you didn’t know are gay or lesbian


Celebs you didn’t know have an LGBT sibling

“I don’t do any voiceovers for commercials for example, and I’ve asked people why they think that and the answer comes back that people don’t know how to place my voice, whether male or female, as if that matters,” she said.
“But for character work, for acting, I think my voice offers interesting layers, and I think that’s why I’ve had more work as a voice actor than as an actor.”
Listeners can hear her voice for themselves when Tania makes her debut in the episode ‘Lost Property’. Exactly what Tania will bring to the TARDIS is still kept tightly under wraps, but Root throws a few hints.
“She’s patient, she’d had to be patient in her line of work,” she said. “I played her I hope with some humour, some sensitivity, and there’s a love story amongst the mayhem of the actual story which is wonderful.
“I don’t want to give too much away, but suffice it to say that leads to Tania embarking on further adventures with the Doctor and the crew of the TARDIS. She gets embroiled in something, and I would probably say she’s been waiting a long time for this moment. And who knows where it will take her.”
View attachment 1158279
Archive

I miss the first Romana.

Not surprising coming from britbong land
 
There's no indication Alcorn was even conversion therapied by his parents. They took him to a Christian counselor, which everyone assume meant he was forced to huff shit fumes while looking at gay porn, but the worst the counselor did, according to Alcorn himself, was suggest his demands to transition were selfish, which, frankly, they fucking were. Transitioning is expensive, which is a big reason why corporations love trannies.

I was forced to see a Christian counselor when my dad was having marital problems with his conservative Christian fourth wife, and my main takeaway was that the counselor was very boring and too nice, and both those things kept her from seeing through the lines about what was wrong with my dad's relationship and my relationship with his wife.

Meanwhile, transitioning effeminate boys and butch girls is the worst gay conversion therapy that's ever been concocted. Alan Turing was forced to take estrogen to "cure the gay", but even those monsters didn't make him put on a dress.
 
Glencoats Primary School is in one of the shittiest areas of one of the shittiest cities in Britain. There are parents taking heroin instead of feeding their kids. It's not far from Glasgow airport and is in the top 10% most deprived postcodes in Scotland.

The head teacher came out as a lesser, and is busy brainwashing the trainee smackheads in LGBT ideology.

She's locked down her Twitter


1582516054736.png

And renamed and locked their Twitter (which yes, has an LGBT flag on it)


1582516524729.png

The school is devoted to brainwashing 5-11 year olds about LGBT

1582516285084.png
They have a 'Rainbow Squad'
At Glencoats Primary in Renfrewshire, pupil leaders can become part of the Rainbow Squad, helping to implement the school’s LGBT Charter – for instance by ordering LGBT books for the classroom. ‘For example, a book like Olly Pike’s Kenny Lives With Erica and Martina is a great way to introduce diversity into the classroom,’ says Glencoats head teacher Michelle Watson.

After teaching their kids about gay wrestling they have now brought in a drag queen active heroin user called 'Flow Job' https://twitter.com/flowjobqueen to molest the kids, I mean 'read them stories'.
1582517903637.png
1582517025657.png

(check the date, no way is he clean)

1582516932654.png


1582516962129.png

1582517794136.png

1582518205781.png


Here's his Insta, where you can find a picture of him reading to the kids among all the more usual photos of taking dildos up his butt etc.

https://www.instagram.com/flowjobqueen/

Apparently Tranny Smackhead was brought in by SNP MP Mhairi Black, herself a lesser.

Their maths teacher introduces kids to the joys of butt luvvin:


1582517289558.png
Every day is LGBT day https://twitter.com/CaitlinWood_1/status/1221167450739347456

1582517490313.png



1582518074871.png
 
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Good luck to Ohio, no celebrating until that law is passed. That Alcorn kid is already a statistic, stop these mad scientists and Munchhausen-by-proxy mothers from having anymore healthy kids join the poor thing.

The Doctor Gets Troon Companion

You know between the first chick Doctor, something about a pregnant dude, the retcon of the first Doctor being a fat nigress, and THIS, they're either:
1. Drunk off their tenure of being a britbong classic and mulking it for all its worth despite the ratings falling off a cliff.
OR
2. The low ratings really are pissing off the network and DW's days are numbered so they're gonna rake in as many diversity points as they cam before more gender identities are made up.
 
2. The low ratings really are pissing off the network and DW's days are numbered so they're gonna rake in as many diversity points as they cam before more gender identities are made up.

Usually when cancerous wokeshits have destroyed something to the point it's going to be cancelled, they go all out like this to get in their last few belts of shitty, public-alienating degenerate propaganda.
 
The Doctor Gets Troon Companion

Cautious not to divulge too much about her character’s storyline, she says that Tania’s gender identity is revealed in the context of a lesbian relationship.
“I think Tania has some anxieties around her gender identity in so far as how that might get in the way of a relationship, but her anxieties are unfounded and the person involved just doesn’t bat an eyelid,” she said.
“She just shrugs and says ‘Yeah, and?’ And it’s a gorgeous little moment.
Rape apologists.
“I don’t think it’s any secret in the media world that I would love to have a chance to play the Doctor myself,” she [sic] admitted to PinkNews.
So, the character has been old, young, thick, thin, frumpy, kawaii, and took it in stride, but now that he's been a woman, he's going to mutilate a subsequent body?
 
The Doctor Gets Troon Companion
The Doctor Who franchise will soon get its first transgender companion played by the trans actress and comedian Rebecca Root.
Root is joining the upcoming series of the Doctor Who audio drama produced by Big Finish, which has been delighting fans for the past two decades with a welcome extension to the Whoniverse.
She stars as the character of Tania alongside Paul McGann, who played the eighth Doctor in the made-for-TV movie. It’s a role she’s thrilled and honoured to play, but she’s already got her sights on an even bigger one.
“I don’t think it’s any secret in the media world that I would love to have a chance to play the Doctor myself,” she admitted to PinkNews.
“Certainly before Jodie Whittaker took over I was hinting very heavily to showrunners that I wanted a stab at that role.
“Never say never though, I’d still like a shot at the TV version, but suffice it to say that being a part of the inner circle of the TARDIS crew is an honour and a treat.”
The significance of her role as the first transgender companion in canonical Who is not lost on her, but it’s something that is deliberately downplayed on the show.

“It’s one of those things where it’s said and then everyone moves on, it’s not mentioned again. It’s kind of refreshing in its normality, really,” Root said.

Paul McGann playing the eighth Doctor in 1996 (YouTube/BBC America)
Cautious not to divulge too much about her character’s storyline, she says that Tania’s gender identity is revealed in the context of a lesbian relationship.
“I think Tania has some anxieties around her gender identity in so far as how that might get in the way of a relationship, but her anxieties are unfounded and the person involved just doesn’t bat an eyelid,” she said.
“She just shrugs and says ‘Yeah, and?’ And it’s a gorgeous little moment.
“It’s kind of indicative of, I hope, how people from other galaxies might respond to different expressions of gender. And without giving too much away, it’s just refreshing to see that it’s not a big deal, you know?”
Root made her name on the BBC Two’s Boy Meets Girl, a sitcom about a developing relationship between a young cis man and an older transgender woman.
The show was widely praised for its positive portrayal of trans characters, and it also allowed Root to “crack open” a spot in the TV industry. “After many years of knocking on the door, I finally found the door opening,” she said.

Rebecca Root and Harry Hepple in ‘Boy Meets Girl’ (BBC)
But when she went into voice acting – an extremely competitive industry within an extremely competitive industry – she found that some doors were still closed to her.
More from PinkNews


Stars you didn’t know are gay or lesbian


Celebs you didn’t know have an LGBT sibling

“I don’t do any voiceovers for commercials for example, and I’ve asked people why they think that and the answer comes back that people don’t know how to place my voice, whether male or female, as if that matters,” she said.
“But for character work, for acting, I think my voice offers interesting layers, and I think that’s why I’ve had more work as a voice actor than as an actor.”
Listeners can hear her voice for themselves when Tania makes her debut in the episode ‘Lost Property’. Exactly what Tania will bring to the TARDIS is still kept tightly under wraps, but Root throws a few hints.
“She’s patient, she’d had to be patient in her line of work,” she said. “I played her I hope with some humour, some sensitivity, and there’s a love story amongst the mayhem of the actual story which is wonderful.
“I don’t want to give too much away, but suffice it to say that leads to Tania embarking on further adventures with the Doctor and the crew of the TARDIS. She gets embroiled in something, and I would probably say she’s been waiting a long time for this moment. And who knows where it will take her.”
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I miss the first Romana.

...okay but troons have the worse case of kermit the frog voice gay voice and most so-so maybe passable troons get outed due to their voice so hiring this guy to voice act is basically just kinda luzyworthy.

Also, Radio BBC. Who the fuck actually listens to any of their dramas? Nobody I know and I live in Britbongistan.
 
...okay but troons have the worse case of kermit the frog voice gay voice and most so-so maybe passable troons get outed due to their voice so hiring this guy to voice act is basically just kinda luzyworthy.

Also, Radio BBC. Who the fuck actually listens to any of their dramas? Nobody I know and I live in Britbongistan.
It's not a BBC production.
Edit: @Judge Holden might have an opinion about this story
 
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There's no indication Alcorn was even conversion therapied by his parents. They took him to a Christian counselor, which everyone assume meant he was forced to huff shit fumes while looking at gay porn, but the worst the counselor did, according to Alcorn himself, was suggest his demands to transition were selfish, which, frankly, they fucking were. Transitioning is expensive, which is a big reason why corporations love trannies.

I was forced to see a Christian counselor when my dad was having marital problems with his conservative Christian fourth wife, and my main takeaway was that the counselor was very boring and too nice, and both those things kept her from seeing through the lines about what was wrong with my dad's relationship and my relationship with his wife.

Meanwhile, transitioning effeminate boys and butch girls is the worst gay conversion therapy that's ever been concocted. Alan Turing was forced to take estrogen to "cure the gay", but even those monsters didn't make him put on a dress.
iirc the last posts he made were on tumblr and were about how he would never be a pretty woman without puberty blocking and HRT, and when he brought it up to his mom she said that they don't have much money.
 
The Doctor Gets Troon Companion
The Doctor Who franchise will soon get its first transgender companion played by the trans actress and comedian Rebecca Root.
Root is joining the upcoming series of the Doctor Who audio drama produced by Big Finish, which has been delighting fans for the past two decades with a welcome extension to the Whoniverse.
She stars as the character of Tania alongside Paul McGann, who played the eighth Doctor in the made-for-TV movie. It’s a role she’s thrilled and honoured to play, but she’s already got her sights on an even bigger one.
“I don’t think it’s any secret in the media world that I would love to have a chance to play the Doctor myself,” she admitted to PinkNews.
“Certainly before Jodie Whittaker took over I was hinting very heavily to showrunners that I wanted a stab at that role.
“Never say never though, I’d still like a shot at the TV version, but suffice it to say that being a part of the inner circle of the TARDIS crew is an honour and a treat.”
The significance of her role as the first transgender companion in canonical Who is not lost on her, but it’s something that is deliberately downplayed on the show.

“It’s one of those things where it’s said and then everyone moves on, it’s not mentioned again. It’s kind of refreshing in its normality, really,” Root said.

Paul McGann playing the eighth Doctor in 1996 (YouTube/BBC America)
Cautious not to divulge too much about her character’s storyline, she says that Tania’s gender identity is revealed in the context of a lesbian relationship.
“I think Tania has some anxieties around her gender identity in so far as how that might get in the way of a relationship, but her anxieties are unfounded and the person involved just doesn’t bat an eyelid,” she said.
“She just shrugs and says ‘Yeah, and?’ And it’s a gorgeous little moment.
“It’s kind of indicative of, I hope, how people from other galaxies might respond to different expressions of gender. And without giving too much away, it’s just refreshing to see that it’s not a big deal, you know?”
Root made her name on the BBC Two’s Boy Meets Girl, a sitcom about a developing relationship between a young cis man and an older transgender woman.
The show was widely praised for its positive portrayal of trans characters, and it also allowed Root to “crack open” a spot in the TV industry. “After many years of knocking on the door, I finally found the door opening,” she said.

Rebecca Root and Harry Hepple in ‘Boy Meets Girl’ (BBC)
But when she went into voice acting – an extremely competitive industry within an extremely competitive industry – she found that some doors were still closed to her.
More from PinkNews


Stars you didn’t know are gay or lesbian


Celebs you didn’t know have an LGBT sibling

“I don’t do any voiceovers for commercials for example, and I’ve asked people why they think that and the answer comes back that people don’t know how to place my voice, whether male or female, as if that matters,” she said.
“But for character work, for acting, I think my voice offers interesting layers, and I think that’s why I’ve had more work as a voice actor than as an actor.”
Listeners can hear her voice for themselves when Tania makes her debut in the episode ‘Lost Property’. Exactly what Tania will bring to the TARDIS is still kept tightly under wraps, but Root throws a few hints.
“She’s patient, she’d had to be patient in her line of work,” she said. “I played her I hope with some humour, some sensitivity, and there’s a love story amongst the mayhem of the actual story which is wonderful.
“I don’t want to give too much away, but suffice it to say that leads to Tania embarking on further adventures with the Doctor and the crew of the TARDIS. She gets embroiled in something, and I would probably say she’s been waiting a long time for this moment. And who knows where it will take her.”
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Archive

I miss the first Romana.
the radio plays aren't canon
 
Brazilian transgender dancer shatters Carnival parade taboo
By MAURICIO SAVARESEFebruary 23, 2020



SAO PAULO (AP) — When dancer Camila Prins entered Sao Paulo’s Carnival parade grounds, a costume of feathers clinging to her sinuous body, she fulfilled a dream of feminine beauty nearly three decades old.
Prins says she first realized she wanted to be a woman at a Carnival party at age 11, when, like the other boys, she was allowed to dress like a girl as part of the burlesque festivities. Now, in the final minutes of Saturday, she became the first transgender woman to lead the drum section of a top samba school in either of the renowned Carnival parades put in Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro.

Prins, 40, was hand-picked to be “godmother” of the Colorado do Brás samba school’s drum section, an iconic role fought over by dozens of models and TV celebrities. Her duty was to dance infectiously for 65 minutes in front of the drummers, using her legs to drive their rhythm while judges assessed the school’s parade.Prins performs during Carnival in Sao Paulo. (AP Photo/Andre Penner)“Gorgeous women wanted to be here. I’m very excited because this shows we can be anywhere. We can be godmother of the drummers, we can be owners of a samba school,” Prins told The Associated Press before the parade. “Soon they will see many other transgender girls, who will find it easier than I did.”Colorado do Brás, which rose to Sao Paulo’s top samba league only two years ago, made a bold decision in picking Prins for the role, despite Brazil’s Carnival being a party at which few things have never been tried.Transgender people remain something of a taboo among Brazilians, even in Sao Paulo, the country’s most cosmopolitan city and host to the world’s largest gay pride parade. Brazil has more slayings of transvestites and transgender people than any country in the world. In 2019, 124 were killed, 21 of them in Sao Paulo state.As godmother of the drum section, Prins teamed up with a drum queen who has a similar role, and together they worked to dazzle fans in the Sambadrome bleachers with their beauty and sex appeal. Prins said she was counting on her penetrating brown eyes, long blond hair, strong legs, open smile and imposing breasts to help win points from the judges.Colorado do Brás finished the 2019 parade in 11th place, only two spots above the cutoff for being relegated back to a lower league. Directors of the samba school decided to try for something different this year, since the group has fewer resources than richer samba schools. Its floats and costumes were clearly less luxurious than the main challengers for the title.Keila Simpson, president of Brazil’s National Association of Transvestites and Transsexuals, was happy Prins secured her prominent Carnival role, and said their community aims to make cases like hers the new normal.“We have to be proud of Camila and hope her symbolic message allows us to think of reducing violence against trans people. Why can people celebrate her at the Sambadrome while trans people on the street are subject to violence?” Simpson said. “We don’t have data, but there are many violent cases against us during Carnival. Because there’s more of us outside, there’s more attacks.”Sao Paulo is trying to root out persecution of LGBT people during Carnival, and this year set up 20 tents spread among major street parties to handle cases of violence against the community. Psychologists, police officers and social workers are on hand until Wednesday for revelers who are victimized.English teacher Alessandra Salvador, a transgender woman who encouraged revelers to come to the city hall tent at the LGBT street party Minhoqueens, said she was excited by Prins’ selection.“I don’t even watch parades that much, but this year I will when she is on,” Salvador said. “It is good to see one of us being talked up. We don’t get it so often. If we don’t get that in Carnival, we won’t get it anywhere else.”It’s been a long road for Prins to reach the big leagues. She has worked as a professional dancer for 20 years and, though she lives in a small town in Switzerland with her husband, practices her steps at home all year and listens to samba incessantly. As Carnival nears, she splits her dance routine with ab workouts and squats at a gym, then makes her annual return to Brazil.Prins gets her make-up done prior to performing (AP Photo/Andre Penner)Prins’ first time dancing as a samba school’s godmother came in 2018, in the second division of Sao Paulo’s Carnival league. And it wasn’t easy.“Many people turned their backs, because they thought I shouldn’t be there. They thought it was a role for a woman,” Prins said. “Little by little I won them over with a lot of respect and true dancing.”Prins said her friends in Switzerland feared for her because of the increase in violence against transgender people, and because of the rise of far-right political groups in Brazil. She said she was worried about an increase in hateful comments aimed at LGBT people since President Jair Bolsonaro took office Jan. 1, 2019, but she planned to keep her smile and march on.Just before midnight, when Colorado do Brás finally started its parade, a TV Globo reporter approached a tearful Prins in front of her drummers. She was already the most talked about of all 2,200 members of the samba school, even more than eight young topless women dressed as “goddesses of the sea.”“I feel so blessed this is happening. I came here to hold my banner and dance samba to the face of prejudice, for all the LGBT community,” she said. “Trans girls, I am sure your day will come, too. I am just the first, many more of you will follow.”Prins performs during Carnival parade in Sao Paulo. (AP Photo/Andre Penner)
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Looks like any other leathery middle aged Brazilian plastic surgery victim, good job tranny. Trick is to identify into a population where the women already look hard and worn.

Brazil has more slayings of transvestites and transgender people than any country in the world. In 2019, 124 were killed, 21 of them in Sao Paulo state

Why do they keep on with this, who cares? What’s the murder rate overall in Brazil, what’s the rate of troonery, and have they adjusted for sex work. Of course they haven’t. Most of the time, troons get murdered because they were asking for it by being prostitutes or else crossing the wrong other dude. So what’s the overall rate of prostitute murder in Brazil? It’s probably like every other country in the world. Troon sex workers are murdered at a lower rate than female ones, and troons not in sex work get murdered less than any other demographic.
 
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Cruella DeVille Cruella DeVille! If she doesn't scare you no evil thi-

Sorry, what was that again?
 
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