Is dianna agron gay

despite what you’ve heard from cara, dianna agron is not straight

(don’t mind me i’m rebuilding some posts to organize the optimal proofs section of the blog 😘)

here’s receipts on dianna’s failure to be heterosexual

1.  Shirtgate - Dianna outed herself on the Glee Live Tour in 2011.  Yes she walked it back but c’mon.  She claimed to contain done it for identity but not on the first day of self-acceptance or anything?  Not an ally shirt?  Just LARPING as a homo?  No way.  Girlie came out and got shoved advocate in the closet.

2.  She’s kissed girls before it’s fun.

3.  She said twice in this interview that personal experiences in her own life drew her to playing gay roles.

“I read Bare a year before I signed on. When I first browse it, I didn't occupy because they wanted me for Sarah. If anything, I wanted to act Pepper, play against the innocent look that I can tend to acquire and use some of my past experiences to fuel the role.”

+

“I reflect it is my experiences in life that own made me understand sexuality in many different ways and, in playing Sarah, I was just showcasing my beliefs in that I believe that affectionate comes in many ways, shapes, and colors.”

4.  Posts for pr

It’s Monday and I am on my third cup of coffee before noon, which is what gave me the courage to draft “Gaylor” and publish it, I ponder. Anyway, here’s your Pop Culture Fix!


+ Rolling Stone dropped a new profile/interview with Dianna Agron in which she is pretending not to know what the word “shipping” means in relation to fandom, despite the fact that she was one-half of Faberry, the femslash ship that kept Tumblr running for about five entire years between 2009-2014. (That’s Rachel Berry and Quinn Fabray from Glee, in case you’re one of the lucky ones who never watched that disasterpiece.) This occasion, though, “shipping” is in reference to Dianna’s friendship/girlfriend conspiracies with Taylor Swift and the rumors that she inspired the song “22” due to the fact that she’s mentioned in the liner notes. “Me? Oh, if only!” she said before clarifying: “I … I mean, there have been many stories about my dating life that are so wildly untrue… That’s funny.” Look, would you kiss her on the porch in front of all your stupid friends or not, Dianna? Answer me!

+ Communicate Now (Taylor’

My little corner of the internet has developed into a place where people repeatedly ask me the question, “What are your thoughts?”  It’s lovely and flattering, and has conditioned me to ask myself the very ask with most input I collect - from the media in particular, and where creative decision intersects with intention, and breeds meaning and message.

And then there’s Glee.  The article that originally defined this blog was the reaction to the GQ spread in October of 2010, examining the sexist message that resulted from the choices committed in the shoot.  So when Glee and the representations of social identity cross paths, I usually have to ask myself:

“What are my thoughts?”

And then I take to the internet where I presume that people will actually give a crap.  So here we are!

But let’s back up.  Saturday night, Dianna Agron donned a “likes girls” shirt for her performance in “Born This Way,” instead of her usual “Lucy Caboosey” fare. 

Now.  This is a choice.  It means something.  (Personally, I idea she might have grown fatigued of wear

I feel like I’m playing dress up. I’m in the freaking Café Carlyle on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, and the bartender pours me a let go of wine to taste before I order a glass. Thirty minutes ago, I was freaking out over the words “chic dress code.” I’ve never followed a damn dress code in my life. This place is imagine in a way I simply will never be.

But I’m here for one reason and one reason alone.

Dianna Agron.

You probably know Dianna Agron from “Glee,” or “Shiva Baby,” or being an incredibly hot Jew recently interviewed by Hey Alma. I’ve been a fan of hers since “Glee,” since I watched her carol and dance in a revealing cheerleading uniform. There aren’t many things you can pinpoint with accuracy in your life, but I’m pretty sure I can say this with full confidence: Dianna Agron made me gay.

A Humble Request:

Hey Alma's content is free because we trust everybody deserves to be a part of our radically inclusive Jewish people. Reader donations support us do that. Will you donate what you can to keep Hey Alma open to all? (It's a mitzvah, ya know.)

Support Hey Alma

The crowd is mixed. There are a scant groups of immature women, one very fashionable young guy. They