Is korra gay

It’s somewhat embarrassing to accept, but the only moment I’ve ever cried watching a TV show was during the series finale of “The Legend of Korra.”

I was 15 when the show ended, and secretly started watching three years earlier out of loyalty to its parent show “Avatar: The Last Airbender.” I bought the tie-in merch, went as Aang for Halloween and tried running away from home when my Dad wouldn’t let me watch a new episode. I had, and still have to this night, a strong emotional attachment to the imaginative, colorful universe of the series. Diving back in through “Korra” comforted me during my rocky high educational facility experience.

Still, the first two seasons of “Korra” often left me frustrated. There were highlights for sure: the spectacular animation that made “The Last Airbender” a hit was finer than ever, and I loved Korra as a protagonist. But the reveal had many issues, none worse than Korra’s adore interest and insufferable prick Mako, who cheated on his girlfriend Asami with Korra. The resulting drama

Queer-Coded: It&#;s Not Homophobic To Say Korra And Asami&#;s Relationship Makes No Sense

I have tried to observe and like The Legend of Korra, and I just can&#;t get into it.

I feel like it&#;s a hard series to love after watching the epicnness that is the original Avatar: The Last Airbender. It&#;s shorter, for one. The storytelling, at least in the first season, was haphazard and all over the place. Characterization was off, and there was just so much that seemed half-baked about the series. I watched a video on YouTube that was trying to declare how ideal The Legend of Korra is, but everything they said (and seemingly every video they made) was about how to reorganize and basically rewrite the series so that it made sense and was actually&#;you know&#;good. So suffice it to say, I think The Legend of Korra leaves much to be desired.

However, one of the highlights of the series for a lot of fans is the relationship between Korra and Asami. This relationship is highly important in American animation as one of the few overt queer relationships in a present geared tow

Why Korrasami From The Legend Of Korra Remains A Groundbreaking LGBTQ+ Couple

Korra. Asami. Korrasami. I'll never forget the moment when that actually became a life. It was one of those, "where were you when…" moments that didn't initially seem major at first, because many people believed that Korra and Asami were just entering the Soul World as friends. But then it suddenly clicked, probably simultaneously, with the audience: Korra and Asami were not just friends – they were actually into each other. In fact, I distinctly remember sitting on the couch with my wife while watching the series finale of The Legend of Korra, and then tilting my brain to the side, and wondering, "Wait…Is Korra gay?"  

Apparently, I wasn't alone. Series creators Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko actually had to verify the show’s lgbtq+ relationship after the episode aired because many people were unsure. That's when I acquired a brand new appreciation for it, since children’s cartoons didn’t do things fond of that. Not assist in , anyway. I've

'The Legend of Korra' helped me accept my bisexuality when I was still a closeted teen. It also ushered in a new era for queer cartoons.

On December 19, , "The Legend of Korra" made history. As I like to joke, it also made me bisexual.

The concluding shot of the "Avatar: The Last Airbender" sequel showed the series' heroines, Korra and Asami, facing each other, holding hands as they gazed into each other's eyes. Even without a kiss, the sequence felt decidedly non-platonic, and seemed to clearly parallel "Avatar's" romantic conclusion. 

Days later, the series' creators confirmed that "Korrasami," as fans dubbed the relationship, was canon, and that both characters were bisexual. 

As a fan, I was thrilled to see my two favorite characters end up with each other — a possibility I hadn't even dared to entertain given the dearth of LGBTQ characters in cartoons at that show. I was a year-old gay woman who had barely arrive to terms with her sexuality, and "Korra's" finale struck me deep to my core.

"[The] Legend of Korra has ruined me," I tweeted on the nighttime of th