Okay, I'm going to switch to a subject that is a bit personal, but I find has never been critical.
How in the hell is a gay relationship suppose to work? What is the dynamic? Is it the same as a heterosexual relationship, or something else?
We see a bunch of literature of straight people getting all romantic, but anything with gay romance hasn't become absolutely explicit until recently. In other words, we lack much primary text and history describing how a gay relationship works and how it should not work. Some people say it is the exact same thing as a heterosexual one, and while in theory that may be true, I find it is not because homosexuals receive a social experience that is much different than, say, a heterosexual couple. The way a homosexual couple and a heterosexual one interacts in society was and is different due to obvious perceived deviancy and judgement against queers; and while that gap is much smaller in the present, it still exists: two gay men still have a hard time holding their significant other's hand in public, or just showing really any signs of affection.
Though, and I hate to say this but this is where dudebro and bromances actually do help. It allows for a sort of leeway for men to have affection for one another without being entirely gay-- though we of course joke about how queer it is. Still, in a sense it allows for men to have emotions for each other, and emotions in general were not a thing to be found explicitly in men until recently as well.
So I dunno, I guess the dynamic for lesbian couples, gay couples, and straight couples are all different because of the way society views the gender of each, as well as the biases of the sexuality itself.