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Was the Cartoon He-Man Really About Conservative Gay Men and HIV in the s?
In a recent episode of The Fandom Files, the SYFY-related geek podcast, David Chlopecki, founder of fetish wear company Slick It Up, called the ‘80s-era animated superhero He-Man gay and called the cartoon series “the gayest present that has ever been on TV.” He then argued that Skeletor was actually the show’s hero and emblematic of gay HIV-positive men during the ‘80s.
Is He-Man gay?
In the cartoon, He-Man’s superpowers are described as “fabulous secret powers” and they only happen when he pulls out his sword (wink, wink).
“They are not regular super powers,” Chlopecki said. “These are fabulous secret powers. Heterosexuals, they don’t contain fabulous secret powers.”
He-Man’s royal persona “Prince Adam” also has a very gay blond pageboy haircut and an outfit made entirely of form-fitting spandex.
“He holds aloft his magic sword, and, poof! His clothes are gone. And he’s wearing a harness,” Chlopecki said. “The only time my clothes have been gone and I’m wearing a harness is when I’m having
In , Cannon Films — the great, long-defunct schlock factory responsible for some of the optimal bad movies of the s — released a live-action version of the wildly popular cartoon TV series He-Man and the Masters of the Universe. Starring Swedish adonis Dolph Lundgren (The Expendables, Universal Soldier, Rocky IV) as the virtuous and heroic He-Man and genuinely respected actor Frank Langella (Robot & Frank, Frost/Nixon, Dave) as the villainous and power-mad Skeletor, the film did resemble the cartoon series in the basic details. It was still set on Eternia and still centered around Castle Greyskull, which was still overseen by the Sorceress — and Skeletor and his right-hand lady Evil-Lyn did still covet conquering it. He-Man did still brawl alongside trusted warrior compatriots Man-at-Arms and his daughter Teela, and he did still wield the famed "Sword of Greyskull." Skeletor did still have a skull for a face, and He-Man did still wear virtually nothing other than leather briefs, a small chest plate, and a red cape.
But otherwise, for many He-Man fans, this film wa
Features
by: ProtoclownMasters of the Universe was never my favorite cartoon growing up, but of all the cartoons I enjoyed as a child, it's by far my favorite to go back and watch now, even with its bad animation and excessive use of stock footage. Although I never recognized it as such when I was a child, in retrospect I always remembered the cartoon as being extremely homo-erotic.
Even so, I was ill-prepared for what awaited me when I went back to watch some old episodes in recent years. It wasn't just a little gay, but shockingly, awesomely so, and I hesitation such a children's cartoon would get on the air these days (though I hear that in one of the adj Transformers cartoons the "Mini-cons" convert and fly into the larger Transformers' butts, but that's another story). I just don't view how any adult can verb the show without thinking "Wow, these guys are all totally fucking each other."
Discussing which "Masters" characters may have been gay is like discussing which members of Wham! were flying the rainbow flag—there's just no actual