The anti-LGBT freakouts at the Media Research Center keep on piling up.
Annie Piper complained that the Thanksgiving episode of “This Is Us” “was a heartwarming Thanksgiving episode – that is, until one head-turning scene.” That would be when, according to Piper, a 10-year-old character apparently came out as gay, though all that actually happened was that an adult said to the girl that she’s growing up and could talk to her about her “first boyfriend,” to which the girl responds, “or girlfriend.”
Nevertheless, Piper went into freakout mode: “It isn’t enough for TV shows to push the LGBTQ agenda on adults, now they’re pushing it on kids who really shouldn’t be trusting their inhibitions and feelings at such a young age.”
Gabriel Hays got all huffy over Angela Ponce, the transgender contestant from Spain at the Miss Universe Pageant: “Regardless of how anyone feels about Ponce’s gender-bending campaign, betting on her is probably a smart move, considering the showbiz industry is doubling down on an LGBTQ agenda by the hour. Ponce herself has claimed that such a whirlwind victory would be of utmost importance “to promote gender diversity and equality.”
When Ponce failed to place, Karen Townsend was around to complain not only that she “was awarded her very own segment during the show” but that it wasn’t fully in English, as apparently all meaningful TV is supposed to be: “Plus size supermodel Ashley Graham narrated a segment about Ponce’s time in the spotlight and subtitles were used as Ponce only spoke in Spanish. It’s all about diversity and acceptance, y’all.”
Townsend then lectured: “Contrary to what Miss Spain claims, a person’s body at birth does indeed determine the sex of a child. It’s all pretty basic science. You might even say that this science is settled. There are only two sexes of human beings. An operation that mutilates body parts doesn’t change that.”
But the MRC still wasn’t done whining about Ponce: Brad Wilmouth intentionally misgenders her in complaining that one show “took the time to celebrate the first time that a transgender contestant has gotten to participate in the Miss Universe pagent even though he ended up losing.”
Wilmouth later complained that “On NBC Nightly News on Christmas night, the show devoted a full report to the story of a lesbian couple in Illinois whose gay pride flag was stolen from outside their home.” That’s pretty much all there is to that, though Wilmouth does go on to whine that this story was covered while “ignoring the story of a Muslim who is also black committing a hate crime.”
The mysterious Jay Maxson was outraged that a writer criticized Chick-fil-a’s sponsorship of the Peach Bowl because it supports, in Maxson’s words, “organizations devoted to God’s design for sexual intimacy through the context of marriage.” Maxson then huffed that the writer thinks “Chick-fil-A’s sponsorship of the Peach Bowl and events like the Pittsburgh Marathon represent a sports world that puts money over the well-being of a demographic whose suicide rate and rate of self-harm should be alarming to everyone. As if Chick-fil-A is responsible for the individual decisions made by people who choose not to follow biblical values.”