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Pdoggg

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The presence of Boys Love series, a unique drama genre that depicts homoerotic relationships between male characters, has increased significantly in recent years. Narratives revolving around two boys in a romantic relationship were pretty much secondary subplots before the 2014 series Love Sick, which was a significant turning point for the subgenre. It was probably the first time in Thai entertainment history that two boys with homosexual inclinations were featured in the lead.

Thai Boys Love is a local appropriation of yaoi, the Japan-originating form of homoerotic fiction that revolves around the romantic narratives between a masculine boy (called “uke”) and a more feminine boy (called “seme”). Traditionally, yaoi is created, consumed and favored by women. This Japanese subculture arrived in Thailand a decade ago in the form of novels. The community of Boys Love readers flourished long before the culture came to the small screen.

“It started off underground, before surfacing around 2011 to 2012. The genre picked up and blossomed in around 2014-2015,” says Dr. Utain Boonorana, a medical doctor who’s also an LGBTQ fiction author known by his pseudonyms, Patrick Rangsimant and Mor Tood (“Homo Doctor” in Thai).  :homoswitch:

https://www.timeout.com/bangkok/lgbtq/thai-boys-love-culture

 

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On 9/6/2021 at 9:25 AM, Pdoggg said:

The presence of Boys Love series, a unique drama genre that depicts homoerotic relationships between male characters, has increased significantly in recent years. Narratives revolving around two boys in a romantic relationship were pretty much secondary subplots before the 2014 series Love Sick, which was a significant turning point for the subgenre. It was probably the first time in Thai entertainment history that two boys with homosexual inclinations were featured in the lead.

Thai Boys Love is a local appropriation of yaoi, the Japan-originating form of homoerotic fiction that revolves around the romantic narratives between a masculine boy (called “uke”) and a more feminine boy (called “seme”). Traditionally, yaoi is created, consumed and favored by women. This Japanese subculture arrived in Thailand a decade ago in the form of novels. The community of Boys Love readers flourished long before the culture came to the small screen.

“It started off underground, before surfacing around 2011 to 2012. The genre picked up and blossomed in around 2014-2015,” says Dr. Utain Boonorana, a medical doctor who’s also an LGBTQ fiction author known by his pseudonyms, Patrick Rangsimant and Mor Tood (“Homo Doctor” in Thai).  :homoswitch:

https://www.timeout.com/bangkok/lgbtq/thai-boys-love-culture

 

Pdoggg,

 

I am super impressed how deeply you understand Asian cultures and the various cutting edge memes that are happening underground.

I had no idea the biggest consumer of Yaoi was women. I have spanked it to some of those comics before in the past. I guess it's similar to how so many men consume lesbian porn.

 

I mean..... it's not real lesbian porn it's more like American male fantasy lesbian/bi sexual.woman porn.

 

girlie boys are the new femboys.

 

 

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5 hours ago, The-Sith said:

I am super impressed how deeply you understand Asian cultures and the various cutting edge memes that are happening underground.

 

Hi The-Sith, thanks for the kind words but I don't understand squat.   The above is an article that I cut and pasted as I thought some of our members might be interested.   :geek:

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