Alan scott gay
Alan Scott disambiguation DC
In DC's Infinite Frontier #0, Green Lantern Alan Scott admits that to his daughter Jade and his son Obsidian that after years of hiding it, he is gay.Alan Scott Wikipedia Just got catfished, fml Admitting this truth to his two children in the halls of the JSA headquarters, Alan's historic declaration also reveals that his secret wasn't just known, but protected by some of his closest teammates and friends. This new side of Scott's character was first explored with his Earth-2 incarnation, leading many readers of DC's New 52 books at the time to wonder if the original Alan Scott was harboring the same secret. Now, this sincere and heartfelt admission not only sets the next stage of DC Comics stories, but makes Golden Age heroes part of a companywide movement to make all previous characters and stories relevant. Create by Martin Nodell, Alan Scott was an engineer who discovered a mystical green lantern following the events of a horrific railroad bridge collapse.
Original Green Lantern Alan Alan Scott was also gay (without wives) on Earth 2 and Earth 2 Society. This dates back like a decade (I know he has a long history but this isn’t out of the blue).
ALAN SCOTT GREEN LANTERN
Green Lantern rsquo s DC just gave Green Lantern Alan Scott a shocking twist that could change everything for the hero.
- Alan Scott The Green
I saw him across the stacks, a bright spot in the quiet library, and knew instantly that Kevin was the kind of handsome that made a gay man blush, my shyness threatening to suffocate me until he smiled. We bonded over a shared love for obscure graphic novels and found ourselves laughing, our differences in interests -- his for history and mine for astrophysics -- only drawing us closer. From the library, we became a regular fixture in each other's lives, proving that finding love in the LGBT community could happen in the most unexpected, and perfect, of places.
Green Lantern Just Came I love to date him But thanks to the modern story development of Alan Scott coming out as gay, he remains surprisingly relevant to the DC Universe. The New Golden Age revisits the histories of classic DC heroes of the '40s and '50s, adding in new elements that connect them more strongly to the legacy of the DC Universe. For Alan Scott: The Green Lantern, writer Tim Sheridan and artist Cian Tormey are leaning into that concept, bringing Alan Scott's previously unseen enemy the Golden Age Red Lantern back into his timeline while also exploring Alan's sexuality and what that meant for someone in the '40s. With Alan Scott 1 now on stands and 2 scheduled for release on November 28, Newsarama spoke with Sheridan about how he's integrating new elements into Alan's classic story, and digging deeper into the more personal untold history of the hero.
DC finally casts gay
- Alan Scott had a circuitous route to becoming an LGBTQ character. First, his son Obsidian came out as gay in the ‘90s. And then an alternate Earth version of him was a gay man in the New 52 era.