Are emos gay
A common characteristic of an Emo boy. The fashion of an emo has some similarities to a gay but many emo boys are in evidence bisexual or gay. Peoples opinions of Emo boys kissing saying they act this just because of publicity is ridiculous as many gay teenagers twist to the emo stereotype because of the emo community being free of prejudices. As a homosexual teenager you have a lot of soul searching and a troubled moment and may become saddened this is also how they are most suited into an emo culture.
Emo1: Why does that emo boy look happy?
Emo2: Probably because he is holding handswith that other emo boy!
Emo1: oh I watch, he is an emo gay, why does that make him happy though
Emo2: might be becuase he has found himself.
by calp90 May 29, 2006
A homophobic term used to accentuate the fact that emo kids, while being trendy and annoying, are wonderful because they don't conform to gender roles, resulting in homophobes using their narrow-minded logic to advance to the conclusion that emo kids are homosexual. Hello there run-on sentence.
Emo hater: YOU'RE SO Lgbtq+. YOU'RE WORSE THAN Homosexual. YOU'RE EMO GAY!
Emo kid: ...Okay.
by Deborah! August 22, 2007
As I have argued, emo was not just about song and fashion: it also had a distinctive ‘structure of feeling’ – a set of emotions and orientations that amounted to a kind of mindset or worldview. These are vague terms, I admit, but they identify something that is arguably characteristic of all youth subcultures. It’s easy to decrease subcultures to a single aspect of this kind – the aggression of the skinheads, the euphoria of the hippies – and to trace this to particular psychological or socio-political causes. However, this doesn’t do justice to the clustering of such emotions, their diversity and their occasional contradictions. Punks, for example, were by turns violent and depressed; they could be unmoved, but they could also be politically engaged; they sought attention, but then they couldn’t concern less. And when we look at the detail, none of this structure of feeling can be straightforwardly attributed to working-class resistance, or alienation from consumer society, or even plain former teenage rebellion.
These feeling mind-sets are often seen to hold chemical origins: the mods are frequently ‘explained’ by their preference for amphetamines, the hippies by mariju
why do people call emos gay or lesbian cuz im emo but i have a boyfriend and yes
Gender and Relationships
Im 18 and my boyfriend is 16 should I be concerned?
by baby_sissy201114 years ago
Im 18 and my boyfriend/girlfriend is 16 should I be concerned?
Health
why do i shake even when im not stress out
by kkmari_1711 years ago
why do i shake even when im not stress outi when to the doctor because i shake nand drop n they told me that is because of stress but i experiment not to and it doesnt work so idk why this happen all the time even when i dnt feel emphasize out and i dont know what to execute to prevent this its pretty hard and im...
Religion and Philosophy
Why do most people call Jesus God, when He is the Son of God?
by Apostle Jack15 years ago
Why act most people call Jesus God,when He is the Son of God?For God so love the society that He sent His only begotten SON.They are one in spirit,but separate in Celestial bodies.
Romantic Intimacy
How many of you ladies out there just require to get layed!!!
by the pink umbrella14 years ago
Im so tired of feeling like a whore just because i want to get layed!!!!!!!!!!! Help me out here ladies, attached and single...who else is
Emo Boys Kissing: Curating Queerness and Internet History at the Museum of Youth Culture
Floppy hair, skinny jeans, and XD emoticons. Emo was one of the defining – and one of the most contested – subcultures of the 2000s, creating a new language of melancholic self-expression for a freshly-online generation navigating a senseless world they could increasingly fragment between an isolated IRL and the customisable connectivity of the URL.
The Museum of Youth Culture’s “I’m Not Okay (an Emo Retrospective)”, running at London’s Barbican Centre until 15 January 2024, is the first museum exploration of the 2000s’ “lost emo subculture”, deep-diving its first generation from 2004 to 2009. Emo – caught with one frayed Converse-wearing foot in cyberspace and another in the mosh pit – was a youth movement about angst, confession, and emotion (hence the name, emo) which, through its transgressive edge, attracted a cult gender non-conforming demographic across its lifespan. Reflecting on emo’s nu-existentialist impact, GAY45 talked with Jamie Brett, one of the curator’s behind “I’m Not Okay” and a self-described LGBTQIA+ ex-emo, about what attracted so many gay kids to the subcul