Megathread Tranny Sideshows on Social Media - Any small-time spectacle on Reddit, Tumblr, Twitter, Dating Sites, and other social media.

  • 🐕 I am attempting to get the site runnning as fast as possible. If you are experiencing slow page load times, please report it.
Id like someone in current year to write a courageous paper on all this nonsense. In fact no one ever reads past the paper title before they lose their mind, so here are some ideas.

When Kindness Blinds Us: The Evolutionary Role of Bullying

When Your Manny Becomes a Tranny: By David Lammy

Face First Feminism: Risks and Benefits Of Licking A Neovagina
 
I've heard the argument that they're just so happy to finally be the "correct" gender, but why does their happiness translate into being horny and popping a boner? Can men only be happy if their dick is hard?
Yeah this is why it's so weird to me when troons claim that they get boners when they are "happy" that they are the correct gender, since happy and horny are completely different feelings for me. There are no "happiness boners".
 
I'm back with some Twitter incel behavior:
View attachment 2586914
(x)
View attachment 2586916
View attachment 2586918
Most of the comments are like this lol.

View attachment 2586920
Typical AGP profile, nothing new.
(x)
[/SPOILER]

I really hope Madi_with_a_D is purposeful double entendre .

Why did he do this to himself? Gay or straight, his old self would have easily gotten laid compared to the monstrosity he turned himself into.
E_TEWjaX0AArUQs.jpeg
EtLKMZJXcAA-Dbw.jpeg
 
Orlando school elects its first transgender homecoming queen

Screenshot 2021-10-02 03.17.02.png

“It made me feel like I actually belonged,” Evan Bialosuknia, 17, said after she was crowned.

Evan Bialosuknia "made history," as she wrote on Instagram, when she became her school's first transgender homecoming queen.

The 17-year-old said she didn't know what to expect when she decided to run for homecoming queen at her school, Olympia High School, in Orlando, Florida.


“I wanted to have that moment of glory,” she told WESH2, an NBC affiliate based in Orlando.

Students not only supported her, but elected her to homecoming court and then crowned her queen last week.

“It made me feel like I actually belonged,” Bialosuknia said. “Not just like a joke. Cause that was one of my fears. I was in bed one night like, ‘What if they were just doing this to laugh at me?’”

She received her crown on the school's football field alongside the homecoming king, whom she said was also supportive and made her feel "like any other girl."

She said that she came out recently and that "more change is coming" for her.

Screenshot 2021-10-02 11.52.21.png

“Looking back, it doesn’t even feel like that’s me,” Bialosuknia told WESH2. “I played football for like six to eight years, and I remember during practices I would stare at the cheerleaders because I wanted to be with them.”

After her win, Bialosuknia shared a series of photos on Instagram of her wearing her homecoming court sash and posing with the homecoming king.

An increasing number of schools and LGBTQ students across the country are challenging the traditions of homecoming and prom courts.

In 2017, Stiles Zuschlag, a trans teen, was elected homecoming king by his Maine high school. Then, in 2019, Brandon Allen, a gay student, was elected homecoming royalty at his Tennessee high school, which used gender-neutral titles for homecoming court. A photo of Allen being crowned while wearing a gold-sequined gown went viral on social media.

An increasing number of queer couples have also been crowned homecoming or prom royalty. In 2016, a lesbian couple became the first gay prom king and queen in their school's 185-year history. And, in April, another lesbian couple in a conservative county in Ohio were elected the first queer prom king and queen at their high school.

Recent surveys show that younger generations are more accepting and supportive of LGBTQ people.

Roughly half (48 percent) of Generation Z (those born after 1996) say that allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry is a good thing for society, with only 15 percent saying it’s a bad thing, according to 2018 data from Pew Research Center. For baby boomers, those figures are 27 percent and 32 percent, respectively. A separate report published this year by Gallup found that 1 in 5 Gen Zers identify as something other than heterosexual.

For Bialosuknia, being crowned homecoming queen ultimately made her feel better about the future.

“It just made me realize I was not alone and don’t have to go through this alone,” Bialosuknia told WESH2.




Shucks, be homecoming king only to be paired with a troon lmao

Screenshot 2021-10-02 11.54.48.png
 
Last edited:
Why did he do this to himself? Gay or straight, his old self would have easily gotten laid compared to the monstrosity he turned himself into.
E_TEWjaX0AArUQs.jpeg
I might be wrong but I think he's wearing a sorority T-shirt. Typically you only get those shirts if you go to their events and typically you only go to their events if you know a woman in the sorority or if you are in a frat. What I am trying to say is that he probably had a pretty good social life and yet he still managed to troon out. AGP is a cancer to men.
 
I might be wrong but I think he's wearing a sorority T-shirt. Typically you only get those shirts if you go to their events and typically you only go to their events if you know a woman in the sorority or if you are in a frat. What I am trying to say is that he probably had a pretty good social life and yet he still managed to troon out. AGP is a cancer to men.
Or he has a normal sister or brother he gets secondhand clothes from
 
Orlando school elects its first transgender homecoming queen

View attachment 2587108

“It made me feel like I actually belonged,” Evan Bialosuknia, 17, said after she was crowned.

Evan Bialosuknia "made history," as she wrote on Instagram, when she became her school's first transgender homecoming queen.

The 17-year-old said she didn't know what to expect when she decided to run for homecoming queen at her school, Olympia High School, in Orlando, Florida.


“I wanted to have that moment of glory,” she told WESH2, an NBC affiliate based in Orlando.

Students not only supported her, but elected her to homecoming court and then crowned her queen last week.

“It made me feel like I actually belonged,” Bialosuknia said. “Not just like a joke. Cause that was one of my fears. I was in bed one night like, ‘What if they were just doing this to laugh at me?’”

She received her crown on the school's football field alongside the homecoming king, whom she said was also supportive and made her feel "like any other girl."

She said that she came out recently and that "more change is coming" for her.


“Looking back, it doesn’t even feel like that’s me,” Bialosuknia told WESH2. “I played football for like six to eight years, and I remember during practices I would stare at the cheerleaders because I wanted to be with them.”

After her win, Bialosuknia shared a series of photos on Instagram of her wearing her homecoming court sash and posing with the homecoming king.

An increasing number of schools and LGBTQ students across the country are challenging the traditions of homecoming and prom courts.

In 2017, Stiles Zuschlag, a trans teen, was elected homecoming king by his Maine high school. Then, in 2019, Brandon Allen, a gay student, was elected homecoming royalty at his Tennessee high school, which used gender-neutral titles for homecoming court. A photo of Allen being crowned while wearing a gold-sequined gown went viral on social media.

An increasing number of queer couples have also been crowned homecoming or prom royalty. In 2016, a lesbian couple became the first gay prom king and queen in their school's 185-year history. And, in April, another lesbian couple in a conservative county in Ohio were elected the first queer prom king and queen at their high school.

Recent surveys show that younger generations are more accepting and supportive of LGBTQ people.

Roughly half (48 percent) of Generation Z (those born after 1996) say that allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry is a good thing for society, with only 15 percent saying it’s a bad thing, according to 2018 data from Pew Research Center. For baby boomers, those figures are 27 percent and 32 percent, respectively. A separate report published this year by Gallup found that 1 in 5 Gen Zers identify as something other than heterosexual.

For Bialosuknia, being crowned homecoming queen ultimately made her feel better about the future.

“It just made me realize I was not alone and don’t have to go through this alone,” Bialosuknia told WESH2.



Those fucking feet, holy shit.
Screenshot 2021-10-01 151507.png
 
It was only a question of time until a troon hacker collective appeared, huh.


Speaking of which, I've never seen it discussed but then again I'm not too well versed in lolcows outside of troons so I might have missed it, but anybody else feels like the two prominent Repackers/crackers "Fitgirl" and "EMPRESS" HAVE to be troons? Especially Empress, when you read what she's sperging about, coupled with the fact I suspect no biological woman would want to announce them as a woman in those kind of nerdy circles in the first place...



“I have a ‘Goal’ that no one else has,” she says. “I have no need for ‘Ego.’”


Empress won’t say where she is or when she began cracking games. Some have speculated that Empress is actually a collective of people, which she vehemently denies. Aside from her chosen handle, the only indication of her gender came in a fiery Reddit post from late October, addressed to “all the GENDER FREAKS out there who keep claiming out of their own ass that I am male.” In an interview with WIRED, Empress said, “i am 23 years old, and i am beautiful AS HELL. but i don't care 1 bit how i ‘look.’ i care of what i ‘Do.’”
Here's more sperging that was purged from a reddit thread, https://old.reddit.com/r/CrackWatch/comments/lqibnh/empress_there_and_back_again/ that you can get here

  1. PHILOSOPHYY why male level 1 ? -- the answer :because male is the "initiative" side of genders, they are designed to "Build" and "Achieve". if you won't build the "First" level, you cannot reach the "Second".why female level 2 ? -- the answer :because female is the "keeper" side of the genders, they are designed to "save" and "preserve" everything. you cannot save or preserve what did not "Yet' exist, this is why they are the 2nd level of the scale
  1. [CONCEPT EXPLANATION] masculinity : the energy of power,femininity : the energy beauty,and the "numbers" up there explain the level of strength of the energy connected above/below it.
    [CORE THEORY PART 1]the male has the side of masculinity, which holds the "power" side ... if you put beauty on it, sadly it "cancels" its entire meaning rendering it almost useless. but if you try to put power on the femininity's beauty side... it will only "enhance" it.

If that's not a turbo troon I don't know what is
 
Last edited:
Orlando school elects its first transgender homecoming queen

View attachment 2587108

“It made me feel like I actually belonged,” Evan Bialosuknia, 17, said after she was crowned.

Evan Bialosuknia "made history," as she wrote on Instagram, when she became her school's first transgender homecoming queen.

The 17-year-old said she didn't know what to expect when she decided to run for homecoming queen at her school, Olympia High School, in Orlando, Florida.


“I wanted to have that moment of glory,” she told WESH2, an NBC affiliate based in Orlando.

Students not only supported her, but elected her to homecoming court and then crowned her queen last week.

“It made me feel like I actually belonged,” Bialosuknia said. “Not just like a joke. Cause that was one of my fears. I was in bed one night like, ‘What if they were just doing this to laugh at me?’”

She received her crown on the school's football field alongside the homecoming king, whom she said was also supportive and made her feel "like any other girl."

She said that she came out recently and that "more change is coming" for her.


“Looking back, it doesn’t even feel like that’s me,” Bialosuknia told WESH2. “I played football for like six to eight years, and I remember during practices I would stare at the cheerleaders because I wanted to be with them.”

After her win, Bialosuknia shared a series of photos on Instagram of her wearing her homecoming court sash and posing with the homecoming king.

An increasing number of schools and LGBTQ students across the country are challenging the traditions of homecoming and prom courts.

In 2017, Stiles Zuschlag, a trans teen, was elected homecoming king by his Maine high school. Then, in 2019, Brandon Allen, a gay student, was elected homecoming royalty at his Tennessee high school, which used gender-neutral titles for homecoming court. A photo of Allen being crowned while wearing a gold-sequined gown went viral on social media.

An increasing number of queer couples have also been crowned homecoming or prom royalty. In 2016, a lesbian couple became the first gay prom king and queen in their school's 185-year history. And, in April, another lesbian couple in a conservative county in Ohio were elected the first queer prom king and queen at their high school.

Recent surveys show that younger generations are more accepting and supportive of LGBTQ people.

Roughly half (48 percent) of Generation Z (those born after 1996) say that allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry is a good thing for society, with only 15 percent saying it’s a bad thing, according to 2018 data from Pew Research Center. For baby boomers, those figures are 27 percent and 32 percent, respectively. A separate report published this year by Gallup found that 1 in 5 Gen Zers identify as something other than heterosexual.

For Bialosuknia, being crowned homecoming queen ultimately made her feel better about the future.

“It just made me realize I was not alone and don’t have to go through this alone,” Bialosuknia told WESH2.



Lol bigfoot has trooned out.
 
Back