🐱 How the Pink Ranger, Team Rocket, and Jigglypuff Helped Forge My Queer Identity

CatParty

“Pterodactyl!” I screamed. It was “morphin’ time” during our game of Power Rangers and, just like the characters in the show, we had to shout the name of the dinosaur spirit that gave us our morphing powers. My choice of dinosaur stopped the game. My friends, all young boys, were confused. They all asked some variation of, “Why did you pick the girl one?” I am sure I tried to offer some sort of logical response about how there were more of us than there were boy rangers, but I ended up just shouting, “Tyrannosaurus,” and the game carried on as normal. But their question continued to circle my mind. Why did I choose the Pink Ranger?

The backlogs of my memory are filled with moments where the things I liked were questioned by my peers. In the late nineties and early aughts, all the kids in my suburban school watched television. Some cool kids had cable, but most of us spent our Saturday mornings glued to the front of the small screen, watching everything syndicated on network channels. I spent an exorbitant time in front of the TV, eagerly anticipating news adventures with my favorite characters. But, as I learned in many formative moments like the Power Rangers game, my favorites were not the “right” favorites. So, I learned to keep them to myself.

Even if I had to keep them secret, I had the most exciting and entertaining adventures with my characters. Like pretty much every human child born in the nineties, I developed a borderline obsession with Pokémon. I had binders overflowing with cards, boxes brimming with action figures, and bins stuffed with the video game cartridges and accessories. My absolute biggest Poké-high, though, came from watching the anime series. I, obviously, wanted to be a real-life Ash Ketchum and stroll through the world collecting every ‘mon in existence. But I had a special connection to the show’s recurring villains, Team Rocket members Jesse and James. Almost every episode, Jesse and James donned ridiculous disguises to try and sneakily capture Ash’s prized Pikachu, and their disguises never seemed to match their gender. Jesse would throw on a pantsuit and mustache while James put on a dress and make-up.

Though in hindsight it would be easy to make a case that the show pairs gender-bending with villainy, my young self was thrilled to see characters who did not worry nearly as much about what was right and wrong as I did. Even as a child I knew there was something special about seeing James choose the bride or magician’s assistant disguise rather than the groom or magician. Inspired by their lack of rigidity, I experimented with clothing and found freedom in wearing whatever I wanted. I knew I could not exercise this freedom outside the house, but at least I had a space to feel free. Team Rocket may have been “the bad guys,” but they gave me a sense of hope that maybe it was okay to be bad at gender.

Team Rocket were not the only Pokémoncharacters to offer me comfort. While other boys fought about Charizard or Mewtwo being the best Pokémon, I knew the right answer was Jigglypuff. In the series, Jigglypuff is essentially a recurring guest star. They rarely have any impact on the series’ plot, but they show up often enough to be a recognizable part of the show. In nearly every appearance, Jigglypuff shows up, sings a song that puts everyone to sleep, and then gets furious that no one is listening. And that was my story. Really, though, I loved the way Jigglypuff, in all their pink adorability, assertively performed no matter the setting. Even if their main ability was essentially super-lullabies, there was no denying that Jigglypuff was impressively powerful. In my mind, Jigglypuff was a little boy, just like me, who wanted to be heard (and was very adorable).

But all the other kids called Jigglypuff “she,” because they were pink. For them, because Jigglypuff was a “girl’s color,” Jigglypuff was also a “girl’s Pokémon.” The color pink, even if applied to fictional singing balloons, meant “for girls.” To my recollection, the show is never explicitly interested in figuring out Jiggly’s gender. But in a world where gendering everything is somehow crucial to society, it was incomprehensible for a boy to love Jigglypuff.

The issue of pink brings me back to my favorite Power Ranger. For my generation, the Mighty Morphin’ episodes of the Power Rangers series reigned supreme. Kimberly Hart (Amy Jo Johnson) was the original iteration’s Pink Ranger, and she was an icon. As Kimberly, she had big popular girl energy. Everyone on the show adored her, and she even got the original series’ big romantic arc with the team’s eventual leader, Tommy (Jason David Frank). As the Pink Ranger, she sassed the monsters that terrorized the town of Angel Grove while executing impressive gymnastics-based attacks I could only dream of performing. And she did all of this wearing a costume that celebrated my secretly favorite color, hot pink. I, too, wanted to be sassy, acrobatic, and fall in love with the strong hero. The Pink Ranger campily personified all the things I wanted to be but knew I shouldn’t be because they were not qualities for boys. I may have had to pretend to be the Red Ranger to keep up appearances, but in my heart, I always fought like Ms. Hart.

For years, I kept my love for these characters secret and close to me, even after I passed the “appropriate age” for watching children’s shows. Middle school began the reign of popularity and being cool meant acting much older than your age. Suddenly, kids’ television was “for babies,” and now it was all about whatever hot teen show aired on the WB. I kept my favorite characters secret for so long, though, it made it easy to keep going on adventures with them without anyone knowing. I went through phases where I may not have engaged with them quite as much, but I knew they were always there for me.

The fictional adventures I went on with Team Rocket, Jigglypuff, and Kimberly were not the only journey I was on, of course. I did not quite know it at the time, but my list of favorite characters was not the only secret I was keeping. As I started to understand my queer identity, I began to better understand my connection and identification with this vividly colored roster of fictional friends. Team Rocket’s gender-bending partnership demonstrated the alternatives to prescribed gender roles. Jigglypuff’s ambiguous gender comforted my feelings of social displacement. The Pink Ranger allowed me a secret source of identification in a world that did not want me to love pink and be the popular girl I so desperately wanted to be.

Years later, living openly with pride as a queer/gay man, I keep these characters close. For me, they’re not just characters from children’s shows, but significant models for helping me understand and forge my queer identity. As I approach my third decade of life, I no longer keep the things or who I love secret, but my identity still is—and always will be—a work in progress. Luckily, I have grown up with an assortment of characters to whom I can always turn to help me figure it out along the way.
 
I find it so funny when troons use Jesse and James as an example of trans approval. James is literally a pussy whipped bitch with no ego, that's why he's always in the submissive roles.
 
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This guy was obviously a fag, I'll give him that.

I heard the rose was an homage to Tuxedo Mask,

James comes off as pretty fruity. But isn't there a manga where he marries Jessie and they have a baby?
My theory is this is some kind of bot writing these articles. You type in three random things, and out pops an article. "How Jell-O, Golden Retrievers, and Saturday Night Nickelodeon Helped Forge My Queer Identity."

Well there's those Indian content farms that skim for celebrity news and put all the articles in these really similar formats. There was a Reddit post about this. But I can't remember the name of the woman the article was about. Essentially she was a crew member on a bunch of classic sitcoms like Seinfeld ect... She died recently and her son found an article claiming her death was suspicious. He asked posted about it, upset because she died of an illness, and was told it was likely a bot article and the site was Indian.

They just rake through the internet for anything show business related and post very similar bot articles just to get views on their sites. Don't click any of those sites without adblock on. It's hard to tell sometimes if it's a bot site due to clickbait titles getting more and more retarded.
 
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This guy was obviously a fag, I'll give him that.
As much as I hate fags injecting the gay into everything, that one is actually true. James' original English VA, Eric Stuart, admitting to playing the character as flamboyantly gay. And this was in the late 90s, WAY before you could get Twitter cred for that shit.
 
That sounds more like arrested development to me, staying attached to things you are far too young to be enjoying. Or maybe an early warning sign of pedophilia.
They have a very stunted and arrested perspective. Girls more generally like pink things. That doesn't mean boys can't and it also doesn't mean you don't need to toughen the fuck up when someone makes fun of you for it. Instead he's seized on it as his special secret/taboo activity and has fixated on it. Since he's fixated at that maturity level of course there won't be progress beyond these retarded lines of thinking.

It's deeply troubling to me how unable to separate imagination and reality this nigga is. If you've ever found yourself with nothing but your own thoughts to entertain yourself for significant periods of time it isn't hard to conceive of imagining some wild story or thinking it's some silly shit. But you can recognize it isn't real and let it no longer effect your life. How can your personalization of a commercial product shouldn't be this fucking important to you. Ever.

I'm beginning to come around to the Boomer opinion on television and screens. Just giving these stupid fucks the stimulation to do their own preverted shit with is obviously not working out well. I don't know if it would have stopped him from being a fag but I guarantee he'd be less insufferable and probably not as likely to make me see the same red flags you do.
 
I loved the Pink Power Ranger



I feel attacked. :mad:
My childhood's been raped enough by Rule 34 tyvm.
 
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Yea fake ones, and it was the episode that never aired in the US because it also had a man pointing a gun at Ash
Wrong episode.
Ash getting the long dick of justice to the face is the Safari Zone episode. James getting hooters to mock Misty's flat chest is a gag from a filler episode after they escaped a Pokemon theme park with giant mechs.
 
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My entire fucking identity was FORGED in the CRUCIBLE of Pokemon and Power Rangers.

BTW which leads to more autism? Pokemon or Digimon?
 
My entire fucking identity was FORGED in the CRUCIBLE of Pokemon and Power Rangers.

BTW which leads to more autism? Pokemon or Digimon?
Pokemon by a fucking landslide; in the fandom you must NEVER stop hating a character nor grow up and leave the fandom. EVER.
Pokemon and Digimon autism can be combined in fanart/e-roleplaying
 
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Is this the author of the article by any chance?
 
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