While anime networks are a dime-a-dozen across the internet, Netflix offers a decent selection of animated films and series from across the pond that could make your eyes pop and your sides hurt while your heart goes pitter-pat. A lot of the very best anime is available on Netflix. Whether you’re into supernatural horror, giant robots, high school romance, slice-of-life drama, fantasy action, or pure comedy, anime is a tour de force of animation while providing a feast for your senses. Below is a rotating list of some of the Best Anime on Netflix. Even if something’s not in your wheelhouse, give it a shot. Variety of the spice of life and anime is a far-reaching medium that often defies expectations.
All the anime films and series listed below are on American Netflix. Enjoy!
Aggretsuko
Workplace comedies give audiences some of the most relatable laughs that mirror their everyday lives.
All the anime films and series listed below are on American Netflix. Enjoy!
Aggretsuko
Workplace comedies give audiences some of the most relatable laughs that mirror their everyday lives.
- 5/29/2023
- by Steve Seigh
- JoBlo.com
In 2013, Adventure Time character designer Natasha Allegri premiered Bee and PuppyCat, an animated series about a goofy gig worker and her adorable alien pet. The show, initially hosted by producer Frederator on its Cartoon Hangover YouTube channel, was an immediate hit. A campaign to fund the complete first season set Kickstarter records by raising more than 872,000, and Bee and PuppyCat became one of the most prominent IPs on the Cartoon Hangover channel.
Nine years later, the second season of Allegri’s animated fantasy has landed at Netflix. The new episodes of Bee and PuppyCat, which carry the collective subtitle Lazy in Space, retell the initial web series storyline before taking it in a new direction. The vibe is still as strange and wondrous as it used to be, even if some devoted fans are bristling at changes that have been made during the show’s extended hiatus.
So, what took so long?...
Nine years later, the second season of Allegri’s animated fantasy has landed at Netflix. The new episodes of Bee and PuppyCat, which carry the collective subtitle Lazy in Space, retell the initial web series storyline before taking it in a new direction. The vibe is still as strange and wondrous as it used to be, even if some devoted fans are bristling at changes that have been made during the show’s extended hiatus.
So, what took so long?...
- 9/12/2022
- by Sam Gutelle
- Tubefilter.com
Animation luminary Fred Seibert’s FredFilms will team up with Chinese content production firm DeZerlin Entertainment for an incubator projected called “Hot Pot! Cartoons,” which hopes to bring emerging Chinese talent and content out to the global market.
In the project, FredFilms’ U.S.-based development and production team and Qingdao-headquartered DeZerlin will supervise up-and-coming Chinese creators to develop animated shorts for global distribution.
“Often what’s happening with Western animation producers is we’re looking to get a toehold into the China market because it’s so large. And that’s fine, but it always makes me go, ‘Ok, well, what’s going on there that we can bring here, rather than vice versa,’” Seibert told Variety.
The serial entrepreneur has been taking an incubator approach to animation for almost 30 years, focusing on cultivating seven-or-so-minute shorts that can then go on to spin off into major series. As president of Hanna-Barbera in the 1990s,...
In the project, FredFilms’ U.S.-based development and production team and Qingdao-headquartered DeZerlin will supervise up-and-coming Chinese creators to develop animated shorts for global distribution.
“Often what’s happening with Western animation producers is we’re looking to get a toehold into the China market because it’s so large. And that’s fine, but it always makes me go, ‘Ok, well, what’s going on there that we can bring here, rather than vice versa,’” Seibert told Variety.
The serial entrepreneur has been taking an incubator approach to animation for almost 30 years, focusing on cultivating seven-or-so-minute shorts that can then go on to spin off into major series. As president of Hanna-Barbera in the 1990s,...
- 6/15/2021
- by Rebecca Davis
- Variety Film + TV
New episodes of Bee And PuppyCat are on the way. Natasha Allegri's series, which follows the fantastical adventures of a women and her cross-species pet, will return with a new series subtitled Lazy In Space, which is set to premiere exclusively on the Vrv Svod service in 2019.
Bee And PuppyCat, produced by Frederator Studios, first premiered in 2013 on Frederator's Cartoon Hangover channel. A year later, after smashing records with a lucrative Kickstarter campaign, Frederator rolled out a full season of Allegri's show. It received millions of views on YouTube before the majority of its episodes moved to Cartoon Hangover Select, a subscription service that is available through platforms like Vrv.
Visit Tubefilter for more great stories.
Bee And PuppyCat, produced by Frederator Studios, first premiered in 2013 on Frederator's Cartoon Hangover channel. A year later, after smashing records with a lucrative Kickstarter campaign, Frederator rolled out a full season of Allegri's show. It received millions of views on YouTube before the majority of its episodes moved to Cartoon Hangover Select, a subscription service that is available through platforms like Vrv.
Visit Tubefilter for more great stories.
- 6/13/2018
- by Sam Gutelle
- Tubefilter.com
Continuity is a bitch.
For example, how old is Patsy Walker? She first appeared as a teenager in 1944’s Miss America Magazine #2, which would make her an octogenarian in 2018. If we use her in-universe high school graduation date — 1964, after twenty years of high school — she’d still be in her early seventies.
Even the superhero version of Patsy should be in at least middle age, given that she was on the Defenders in the mid-’70s. Admittedly, she’s been dead at least once, which might have provided some rejuvenation — but, still, there’s no reason she should be running around like a crazy Millennial when she’s clearly Greatest Generation.
But Marvel Comics has a powerful interest in keeping Patsy Walker as a property they can exploit, and they know well that the Wednesday Crowd doesn’t buy comics about old ladies. [1] And there are creators with inexplicable fondness...
For example, how old is Patsy Walker? She first appeared as a teenager in 1944’s Miss America Magazine #2, which would make her an octogenarian in 2018. If we use her in-universe high school graduation date — 1964, after twenty years of high school — she’d still be in her early seventies.
Even the superhero version of Patsy should be in at least middle age, given that she was on the Defenders in the mid-’70s. Admittedly, she’s been dead at least once, which might have provided some rejuvenation — but, still, there’s no reason she should be running around like a crazy Millennial when she’s clearly Greatest Generation.
But Marvel Comics has a powerful interest in keeping Patsy Walker as a property they can exploit, and they know well that the Wednesday Crowd doesn’t buy comics about old ladies. [1] And there are creators with inexplicable fondness...
- 5/24/2018
- by Andrew Wheeler
- Comicmix.com
Cartoon Hangover is pressing "go" on a dozen new animated projects. The channel run by Frederator has launched Go! Cartoons, a partnership with Sony Pictures Animation that will include 12 episodes.
The installments of Go! Cartoons are all helmed by different creators and contain their own narratives. Taken together, they are the entrants in an incubator project that will ultimately see one of them developed into a full series to be released on the Cartoon Hangover channel.
Up first in the Go! Cartoons canon is The Summoning, in which a witch and her feline companion attempt to make magic. Elyse Castro created and wrote it, and Natasha Allegri -- the woman behind the popular Cartoon Hangover series Bee & PuppyCat -- served as director.
Go! Cartoons was first announced way back in 2014, when Frederator put forth a call for submissions from aspiring animators. From that group, 12 creators earned funding from Sony and...
The installments of Go! Cartoons are all helmed by different creators and contain their own narratives. Taken together, they are the entrants in an incubator project that will ultimately see one of them developed into a full series to be released on the Cartoon Hangover channel.
Up first in the Go! Cartoons canon is The Summoning, in which a witch and her feline companion attempt to make magic. Elyse Castro created and wrote it, and Natasha Allegri -- the woman behind the popular Cartoon Hangover series Bee & PuppyCat -- served as director.
Go! Cartoons was first announced way back in 2014, when Frederator put forth a call for submissions from aspiring animators. From that group, 12 creators earned funding from Sony and...
- 11/7/2017
- by Sam Gutelle
- Tubefilter.com
On August 2, Netflix announced a massive slate of original anime programs, all of which it plans to premiere for its subscribers over the coming years. The lineup includes a majority of shows led by notable Japanese animators, but the project that caught our eye here at Tubefilter comes from an American creator. Cannon Busters, from creator LeSean Thomas, will tell the story of an AI who seeks the aid of a wanted man, and its writing team includes Natasha Allegri, who is known as the woman behind the hit web series Bee & PuppyCat.
The protagonist of Cannon Busters is S.A.M., who a Netflix press release describes as a "high-end, royal-class friendship droid." With the help of a maintenance robot and a fugitive, S.A.M. will search for a long-lost friend. In 2014, Thomas raised more than $150,000 on Kickstarter to fund a pilot for his series, which he released for backers in 2016. Now,...
The protagonist of Cannon Busters is S.A.M., who a Netflix press release describes as a "high-end, royal-class friendship droid." With the help of a maintenance robot and a fugitive, S.A.M. will search for a long-lost friend. In 2014, Thomas raised more than $150,000 on Kickstarter to fund a pilot for his series, which he released for backers in 2016. Now,...
- 8/2/2017
- by Sam Gutelle
- Tubefilter.com
Netflix is going all in on anime as they add the eagerly anticipated Godzilla movie and 12 other projects to their slate of upcoming programming. Deadline says in addition to the series the network is also overseeing the development of Cannon Busters, Devilman Crybaby, B: The Beginning, and Knights Of The Zodiac: Saint Seiya just to name a few.
The Godzilla and Saint Seiya grabs really show that Netflix is working to grab their Western audience who loves anime, but with competitors like Crunchyroll and Funimation (who was recently bought by Sony) in the mix, who knows if they'll be able to compete on that front. Time will tell, but the addition of so many projects seems promising for the future of anime on the platform.
Below you'll find details photos and some trailer for the anime projects that Netflix has picked up!
Cannon Busters
Created, directed and executive produced...
The Godzilla and Saint Seiya grabs really show that Netflix is working to grab their Western audience who loves anime, but with competitors like Crunchyroll and Funimation (who was recently bought by Sony) in the mix, who knows if they'll be able to compete on that front. Time will tell, but the addition of so many projects seems promising for the future of anime on the platform.
Below you'll find details photos and some trailer for the anime projects that Netflix has picked up!
Cannon Busters
Created, directed and executive produced...
- 8/2/2017
- by Mick Joest
- GeekTyrant
If you were raised on a steady diet of Castlevania growing up, then Netflix is surely bringing back some good memories with their new animated series based on the enduring video game franchise, and they're only just getting started, as the vampiric show has already been renewed for an eight-episode second season:
Press Release (via The Futon Critic): Toronto and Vancouver, July 7, 2017 - Netflix has ordered a second season of Castlevania, its new animated series based on the popular video game series. In addition, the network has increased the episode order from four in its first season to eight for the second season. The new Netflix original series Castlevania launches globally today and is the first proprietary production of Frederator Studios under the umbrella of parent company Wow! Unlimited Media (Tsx-v Wow.A and Wow.B).
Inspired by the classic video game series from Japan's Konami, Castlevania is an...
Press Release (via The Futon Critic): Toronto and Vancouver, July 7, 2017 - Netflix has ordered a second season of Castlevania, its new animated series based on the popular video game series. In addition, the network has increased the episode order from four in its first season to eight for the second season. The new Netflix original series Castlevania launches globally today and is the first proprietary production of Frederator Studios under the umbrella of parent company Wow! Unlimited Media (Tsx-v Wow.A and Wow.B).
Inspired by the classic video game series from Japan's Konami, Castlevania is an...
- 7/9/2017
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
Comic Book Reviews: Indie Comics To Look Out For!
Much like music or television, the comic book industry is full of all types of comic books. Most come from big time publishers like Marvel or DC, but there are also some from smaller publishers such as Image, Idw, Dark Horse, and Valiant, among others. However, there is an entire new community of independent comic book creators emerging thanks to the digital era.
These creators are finding ways to get their book together and produced without relying upon a bigger publishing house. Comic book creators can now market their product via Amazon, Comixology, Drivethru, and even their own self-designed website (as long as they set up an online-store). To help fund and produce these books, creators might pay their teams out-of-pocket, or simply be a one person, all-inclusive creator. Another avenue many creators have taken too is crowd funding. Sites like Patreon,...
Much like music or television, the comic book industry is full of all types of comic books. Most come from big time publishers like Marvel or DC, but there are also some from smaller publishers such as Image, Idw, Dark Horse, and Valiant, among others. However, there is an entire new community of independent comic book creators emerging thanks to the digital era.
These creators are finding ways to get their book together and produced without relying upon a bigger publishing house. Comic book creators can now market their product via Amazon, Comixology, Drivethru, and even their own self-designed website (as long as they set up an online-store). To help fund and produce these books, creators might pay their teams out-of-pocket, or simply be a one person, all-inclusive creator. Another avenue many creators have taken too is crowd funding. Sites like Patreon,...
- 8/23/2016
- by Jeremy Scully
- LRMonline.com
Comic Book Review: Indie Comic Spotlight: Clarity Girl #1
Story: Bill McCormick Art: Chris Thomasma Letters: Alex Giles/Matt Roscetti
Publisher: Gente Entertainment
Review: Clarity Girl centers on the story of a young girl with unique telekinetic powers just trying to live a normal life and do some good while she’s at it. At least, I think that’s what the story is about, because it’s all kind of jumbled together in this first issue. I think it’s a case of trying to do too much in too little a span.
We have Clarity Girl arguing with her boyfriend in a park over video games, then a text telling her to go home, and at the same time suddenly a thief stealing a woman’s purse. Then there's a strange flashback to a moment where I’m guessing someone stole Clarity’s purse as well. Clarity Girl uses her powers on the thug,...
Story: Bill McCormick Art: Chris Thomasma Letters: Alex Giles/Matt Roscetti
Publisher: Gente Entertainment
Review: Clarity Girl centers on the story of a young girl with unique telekinetic powers just trying to live a normal life and do some good while she’s at it. At least, I think that’s what the story is about, because it’s all kind of jumbled together in this first issue. I think it’s a case of trying to do too much in too little a span.
We have Clarity Girl arguing with her boyfriend in a park over video games, then a text telling her to go home, and at the same time suddenly a thief stealing a woman’s purse. Then there's a strange flashback to a moment where I’m guessing someone stole Clarity’s purse as well. Clarity Girl uses her powers on the thug,...
- 8/9/2016
- by Jeremy Scully
- LRMonline.com
Yes, you read that right! Now experience it like you’ve never seen as a bevy of all-star creators bring you the All-new, All-different Avengers Annual this August! Featuring contributions from G. Willow Wilson, Mahmud Asrar, Mark Waid, Chip Zdarsky, Natasha Allegri, Zac Gorman, Jay Fosgitt, Faith Erin Hicks and Scott Kurtz – the best and brightest creators in comics bring you a tale of Earth’s mightiest that should not be missed! Kamala’s been busy saving the world lately. She’s an Avenger and a big time super hero, after all. But she still might be surprised at the stories about her and her teammates on the super hero fan fiction message boards. Are you ready for the first meeting of Kamala Khan and Mar-Vell? What about the “Amazing New Adventures of She-Hulk”? But nothing will prepare you for the flurry of fists and fur in “Ms. Marvel Vs.
- 7/14/2016
- by Michael Connally
- LRMonline.com
Nearly 17 months after it first debuted on the Cartoon Hangover channel, Bee and PuppyCat is back. Natasha Allegri's imaginative animated series, which follows a plucky heroine and her mysterious pet across space and time, has begun a ten-episode run on Cartoon Hangover. Bee and PuppyCat began as a two-part short, in which a girl named Bee finds an adorable creature named PuppyCat. A few trans-dimensional portals later, Bee and PuppyCat begin taking intergalactic temp jobs in order to pay the bills. The short was well-received, particularly by women and fans of Adventure Time, on which Allegri works as a character designer. Bee and PuppyCat's success led to a Kickstarter campaign launched by Frederator Studios. That campaign proved to be wildly successful, raising $872,133 and setting into motion a ten-episode series chronicling the adventures of Bee and PuppyCat. The first two episodes of that series are now available, and they're a...
- 11/7/2014
- by Sam Gutelle
- Tubefilter.com
Despite having zero Hollywood clout, no major awards, and little risk of ever being described as a household name, Natasha Allegri recently made filmmaking history. She raised $872,133 for her surreal animated web series, Bee and PuppyCat. Not only does that make her the sixth-most successful filmmaker on Kickstarter (bested only by Spike Lee, Zach Braff, the Veronica Mars movie, and other big names), it also makes her its most successful woman filmmaker. It’s safe to say Allegri and her series are cult phenomena.Bee and PuppyCat is difficult to describe, which is part of its charm. It debuted in July of 2013 on Cartoon Hangover, a YouTube network of animated series run by a company called Frederator. Allegri, who was at the time working on the hit cartoon Adventure Time, crafted a two-part saga about an unemployed woman named Bee (voiced by actress Allyn Rachel) and a strange half-dog/half-cat...
- 11/6/2014
- by Abraham Riesman
- Vulture
Bee and Puppycat #1-2
Written by Natasha Allegri and Garrett Jackson
Illustrated by Natasha Allegri (with additional colours by Patrick Seery)
Published by Kaboom!
Bee and Puppycat is undoubtedly unusual and also utterly unique, which is a little surprising considering it wears it influences on its sleeve. The brain child of Natasha Allegri, Bee and Puppycat owes a lot to the shojo and magical girl genres of manga and anime, particularly Sailor Moon, with a side helping of influence from shows like Powerpuff Girls. It also takes after the animated creations by Allegri’s peers: Adventure Time, Bravest Warriors, and Steven Universe. A Venn diagram illustrating the overlapping fanbases of these four properties might as well just be a single circle.
Natashi Allegri is a storyboard artist and writer on the Adventure Time TV series, and she’s even the creator of the Fionna and Cake characters (she also wrote...
Written by Natasha Allegri and Garrett Jackson
Illustrated by Natasha Allegri (with additional colours by Patrick Seery)
Published by Kaboom!
Bee and Puppycat is undoubtedly unusual and also utterly unique, which is a little surprising considering it wears it influences on its sleeve. The brain child of Natasha Allegri, Bee and Puppycat owes a lot to the shojo and magical girl genres of manga and anime, particularly Sailor Moon, with a side helping of influence from shows like Powerpuff Girls. It also takes after the animated creations by Allegri’s peers: Adventure Time, Bravest Warriors, and Steven Universe. A Venn diagram illustrating the overlapping fanbases of these four properties might as well just be a single circle.
Natashi Allegri is a storyboard artist and writer on the Adventure Time TV series, and she’s even the creator of the Fionna and Cake characters (she also wrote...
- 7/15/2014
- by Trevor Dobbin
- SoundOnSight
Freddie Wong launched the crowdfunding campaign for the third season of Video Game High School under the banner of his, Desmond Dolly, and Matthew Arnold’s RocketJump production studio on January 23, 2014. 30 days later, it broke a record. 10,932 funders contributed an aggregate $900,907 to help make the last six episodes of Vghs a reality. That’s the highest dollar amount raised by a web series via a crowdfunding campaign on any crowdfunding platform to date. RocketJump’s final season of its original series about an elite school for gifted gamers took the Most Well Funded Crowdfunding Campaign For A Web Series, Ever title away from Bee And Puppycat. That campaign was orchestrated by Frederator Studios for an animated series conceived by Adventure Time storyboard artist Natasha Allegri and raised $872,133 from 18,209 backers back in November 2013. Wong and company certainly have a track record of success in their crowdfunding initiatives, but never quite to this scale.
- 2/24/2014
- by Joshua Cohen
- Tubefilter.com
For years, Frederator Studios has created some of the most popular and innovative cartoons on TV, including The Fairly OddParents and Adventure Time. The studio's web home, Cartoon Hangover, shows Frederator's similar aptitude for producing web content. As Cartoon Hangover has crossed one million subscribers (and completed one of the most successful Kickstarter campaigns ever), we talked to Frederator founder Fred Seibert about his approach to YouTube content. Tubefilter: What do you have to say to Cartoon Hangover's one million YouTube subscribers? Fred Seibert: Frederator loves you! Tf: What do you think Cartoon Hangover offers that other YouTube animation channels do not? Fs: That's hard to answer since there are so many approaches to online animation. Cartoons, motion graphics, videogame parodies. That being said, our strong suit, ultimately, has been our approach to talent. The great talent that makes the films, of course. But also the expert--and unique--programming group we've put together from scratch.
- 1/9/2014
- by Sam Gutelle
- Tubefilter.com
Frederator's Kickstarter campaign for Bee and Puppycat has concluded, but not before taking down some Kickstarter records. The animation project from Adventure Time storyboard artist Natasha Allegri raised $800,000, becoming the most funded web series project in Kickstarter history. Bee and Puppycat, which began as a two-part short on Cartoon Hangover back in July, easily reached its initial goal of $600,000. Since achieving that mark, stretch goals encouraged fans to keep donating, and they responded with aplomb. Based on the final total, Frederator will be able to fund nine episodes of Bee And Puppycat, with some change left over. Freddie Wong previous held the record for the most funded web series project on Kickstarter, but Bee and Puppycat exceeded the final total of his Video Game High School season two campaign by $00,000. Overall, Bee and Puppycat is the fourth-most funded film/video project on Kickstarter, behind entries from Hollywood directors Rob Thomas,...
- 11/14/2013
- by Sam Gutelle
- Tubefilter.com
The latest big-name web series Kickstarter campaign comes from Frederator Studios. The company known for producing series like Adventure Time and helming the Cartoon Hangover YouTube channel has launched a Kickstarter campaign seeking funding for a full-length version of The Adventures of Bee and Puppycat, which debuted as a two-part special earlier this year. Bee and Puppycat is the creation of Natasha Allegri, best known for her work on Adventure Time. Allegri released the pilot of her cartoon over the summer, and it became an instant hit, scoring nearly four million views to date and drawing plenty of critical acclaim. With Adventure Time still snatching up Emmys and Pen Ward's Bravest Warriors web series set for its season two debut, Frederator is striking while the iron is hot and seeking a considerable sum of money to fund Allegri's further flights of fancy. Should Bee and Puppycat reach its lofty goal,...
- 10/15/2013
- by Sam Gutelle
- Tubefilter.com
Having been responsible for several of the highest-rated episodes of the extraordinarily successful Cartoon Network series "Adventure Time" (those featuring Fionna and Cake, the gender-bent versions of main characters Finn and Jake), artist Natasha Allegri has joined Frederator Studios to create her own original cartoon show, "Bee and PuppyCat." The prospective series is based on Allegri's original two-part animated film of the same name, which you can watch below, and which debuted on Frederator's YouTube Channel Cartoon Hangover, where it was viewed millions of times. "Bee and PuppyCat" follows 20-something woman Bee, who has a collision with a mysterious alien she calls PuppyCat that vaguely resembles both a cat and a dog. Unemployed, broke and in an awkward relationship with her cute neighbor, Bee is swept into an intergalactic adventure with the surly PuppyCat. Frederator, the company behind "Adventure Time," "The Fairly OddParents" and other past...
- 10/15/2013
- by James Hiler
- Indiewire
With more than 560,000 subscribers, Cartoon Hangover has been one of the most successful entries in YouTube Original Channels Initiative, and the animation hub can thank Bravest Warriors for the majority of those fans. Devised by Adventure Time creator Pendleton Ward, it scored over one million views for each of its first season's 11 episodes. Cartoon Hangover's latest effort represents its attempt to make the Adventure Time lightning strike twice. The channel recently released the first episode of Bee and PuppyCat, a series created and written by At character designer Natasha Allegri and directed by At contributor Larry Leichliter. Like At, Bee and PuppyCat follows the adventures of a young adult and a magical animal sidekick. And like both At and Bravest Warriors, it features regular flights of fantasy. However, what makes Bee and Puppy Cat stand out is the degree to which it is grounded in reality. Our heroine, Bee, doesn't...
- 7/17/2013
- by Sam Gutelle
- Tubefilter.com
Tags: Notes on a FandomsubtextshippingfemslashcrackshippingFaberryRizzlesIMDbRizzoli & Isles
In last week’s column, we delved into the world of canonic relationships. This week however, is all about femslash and crackships. The term femslash can be applied to really any female romantic/sexual pairing between characters, even OTPs, but its original purpose was as a reference to alternative lesbian romances based on subtext. Crackships, which is frankly just fun to say, are pairings that are very unlikely to ever occur. In a nutshell, it comes down to the difference between subtext and pure, fun fantasy.
(Fem)Slash her? I Hardly Know Her!
Fangirls, I admit to being a fairly vanilla shipper up until recently. I love my OTPs and canonic relationships. Subtext seemed so old school to me, and I gravitated towards established lesbian/bisexual/trans characters and relationships. Looking back, it was the moment Bette Porter melted my brain with her white...
In last week’s column, we delved into the world of canonic relationships. This week however, is all about femslash and crackships. The term femslash can be applied to really any female romantic/sexual pairing between characters, even OTPs, but its original purpose was as a reference to alternative lesbian romances based on subtext. Crackships, which is frankly just fun to say, are pairings that are very unlikely to ever occur. In a nutshell, it comes down to the difference between subtext and pure, fun fantasy.
(Fem)Slash her? I Hardly Know Her!
Fangirls, I admit to being a fairly vanilla shipper up until recently. I love my OTPs and canonic relationships. Subtext seemed so old school to me, and I gravitated towards established lesbian/bisexual/trans characters and relationships. Looking back, it was the moment Bette Porter melted my brain with her white...
- 1/16/2013
- by DanaPiccoli
- AfterEllen.com
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