Supergirl cast accused of mocking LGBT fans
The cast of Supergirl has appeared to mock fans who ship lesbian relationships on the show.
In an MTV News interview at San Diego Comic Con this weekend, several of the actors performed an impromptu musical recap of the previous season.
The interviewees included Melissa Benoist, who plays Kara Danvers, AKA Supergirl, Jeremy Jordan – who plays Kara’s friend Winn Schott – Kara’s love interest Mon El, played by Chris Wood, and Katie McGrath, who plays Kara’s friend Lena Luthor.
In the video, Jordan begins the recap song by saying that in the past season Lena and Kara became friends, before yelling repeatedly: “But they’re only friends!”
The cast laughs and Benoist joins in, shouting: “They’re only friends!”
They were referring to a large portion of the Supergirl fan community who want Lena and Kara to have a romantic relationship, a pairing who has been dubbed “SuperCorp.”
Jordan later says: “I’m going to get destroyed for what I just did…I just debunked Supercorp,” and Benoist chimes in, saying: “That’s pretty brave.”
McGrath tried to walk back the cast’s comments, saying that “the great thing about what we do is, like any art, anyone can read into it what they want,” but she was laughed over by the rest of the cast.
Wood then sarcastically added: “Sexuality is all about others’ perception of yours, right?”
A number of fans felt the video was extremely hurtful and dismissive to the fans who ship SuperCorp, many of whom are LGBT+.
They felt it was part of a trend in which fans imagining hypothetical same-sex relationships is seen as absurd, while “shipping” heterosexual characters is accepted.
its so humiliating and makes me so angry and sad, bc for once i’d like my ship to be acknowledged in a good way, i want it to be respected-
— sandra (@karagaynvers) July 22, 2017
it’s always non-canon gay ships that get mocked, as if it’s hilarious & absurd, and hoping for more than friendship is inherently delusional
— sam (@korrasam) July 22, 2017
it’s just sad cuz. lgbt fans can’t trust straight actors lol. they’ll always think gay shipping is something funny or weird or ridiculous
— sam (@korrasam) July 22, 2017
The video is particularly shocking as Supergirl has been previously lauded for their feminist message and positive portrayal of LGBT+ people, particularly through the relationship of Supergirl’s sister Alex Danvers and Maggie Sawyer.
Alex, played by actress Chyler Leigh, had a coming out storyline earlier this year that was praised by critics and fans alike and LGBT+ fans have followed their relationship eagerly.
Some fans have accused the show of tokenism, using their one lesbian relationship to excuse other incidents homophobia and queerbaiting.
+they’ve actually learned nothing about the importance and necessity of LGBT representation DESPITE all the #Sanvers feedback they received
— Eden Singer (@edensinger) July 22, 2017
Related: Supergirl shuts down woman who complained about explaining homosexuality to her kids
Leigh was not present at SDCC, having cancelled last minute due to the death of her father-in-law.
After the backlash to the video, Jordan later published a statement on Instagram.
Initially, his response appeared to be defensive, claiming that it was just a “silly joke” but he later posted again more apologetically.
“I’m gonna try to be better. I’m gonna make mistakes. I want to tell every one of you I’m sorry I hurt you,” he said.
One Tumblr user says she contacted Benoist’s publicity team to express her concerns about the video and received a response that said she was making “baseless claims” and made her feel “disrespected and patronized.”
Fans have found this video particularly upsetting considering the troubling frequency of the “bury your gays” trope in mainstream television.
Last year CW show The 100 controversially killed off a lead character just moments after she had finally kissed her female love interest. The death sparked 300,000 tweets with the hashtag “LGBT fans deserve better”.
In the past two years, 62 lesbian and bisexual women characters were killed off on television, a number vastly disproportionate to the total number of LGBT+ characters.
Watch the full video below: