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— Snake's Codec conversation on Yoshi, Brawl You have been watching this series for a while, be it since childhood or since yesterday. You are just in the middle of an exciting scene where reveals that she was actually wait a minute, Miss? He's not a boy?
Congratulations, you've just become a happy victim of Viewer Gender Confusion! Sometimes this is because a cheap dub uses badly, sometimes because the language you're enjoying your story in, or because they have a, or it was clear from the beginning and you were just holding the for the day and missed it fabulously. Compare, where the character's gender actually was changed while adapting and, where you are expected to be mistaken at first, and, where the characters sex is (probably) known but their gender isn't. Contrast (or compare?) or when it's other characters who are confused. See also for characters who have no canonically stated gender, and for when it happens to an animal or other non-human character. May be solved with the use (or lack) of.
Can be seen as the viewer-perspective version of. Anything that makes the character's sex obvious may act as a.
• Nearly any modern portrayal of Mori Ranmaru falls heavily into this if you aren't already aware of the historical figure. Historical artwork of him is a bit better.
• Recent artwork of Hindu gods or goddesses tends to portray them all as quite. This is only partly true for historical depictions; while male figures were still drawn or sculpted as lithe, slender, and smooth-skinned, the secondary sexual characteristics of females were much less ambiguous. • Renaissance-era depictions of The Beloved Disciple (John) and sometimes even John the Baptist (!) show beardless pretty boys who could be taken for girls. • 's depiction of John is often mistaken for a woman due to Leonardo's attempt to convey youth through John's his long hair and lack of a beard. This confusion has lead to wild mass guessing that Leonardo's John is supposed to be a depiction of Mary of Magdala, although this idea leaves Jesus with an Apostle missing from his supper. • While Siobhan from does have a feminine name, it's a very obscure Irish one, and she dresses in a male school uniform, complete with necktie, for the entire story. She isn't even referred to with female pronouns until well past the halfway point of the book.
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• Xarcce Huwla of the is an alien Tunroth, making her big, muscular, and with a very inhuman face. Since these comics were drawn with minimal concern for, even when ◊ her body is easily taken for male, and since she's largely out of focus pronouns only come up a few times.
It's much the same with Ibtisam the Mon Calamarian, who looks almost exactly like (male) Admiral Ackbar if you discount her having light blue skin instead of red. • In the graphic novel Level Up, one of the angels (the one with orange hair) appears to be a girl, but when she reveals her true form as a Pac-Man ghost and Dennis eats her, she is referred to with male pronouns. However, he/she may have due to being not a human ghost, but an of a broken promise Dennis's father made to his dad. • never displayed a specific gender trait of any type, but was in an ongoing love triangle of sorts between two identifiably male characters. • While this was less true in the early days, post 80s, some people begun to mistake Peppermint Patty from due to a mixture of Schultz drawing her with shorts (rather than a skirt, to illustrate that she is a tomboy),, Marcie always calling her 'Sir', as well as, Patty has been mistaken for a boy later on.
This has, however, still contributed to a few about her and Marcie's relationship. • Swift Heart in is revealed to be a girl.
•: Rabbit and Piglet (both male) are often mistaken to be female by those not familiar with the franchise. Even those who are big fans often think that way despite knowing better.
• Rabbit's voice sounds like it could be a high-pitched man or a low-pitched woman (all of his voice actors have been male), he's (wears a pink bathrobe, curlers, frilly aprons and can ballet dance) and is. • His voice in (provided by Junius Matthews) sounds the most feminine and high-pitched, and because of this,. • Piglet also has a high-pitched voice wears a pink swimsuit-like outfit and has a shy and submissive personality.
His American voice actors have all been male, but some of his foreign ones were female. • The original voice actor for Piglet was John Fiedler (possibly best known as Mr. Peterson, the older, balding, patient on The Bob Newhart Show), who did have a rather breathy and high-pitched voice. Subsequent American voice actors have mostly tried to imitate Fiedler's voice (Fiedler himself died in 2005). •: • One of the strangest examples is the title character. In the book, not only is the toaster explicitly without gender, but this is something of a plot point when the group encounters a mated pair of squirrels that cannot conceive of a genderless being (the toaster ultimately convinces both of them separately that it is the same gender as they —male for the male and female for the female —but really it's just to spare their feelings).
For the film, however, fans are pretty evenly split between 'the Toaster is male' and 'the Toaster is female'. A few lines of dialogue suggest explicitly that Toaster is male: firstly, Lampy says that 'He sank' in the waterfall scene; secondly, Radio refers to Toaster and Blanky as 'you boys' at the beginning of the journey; and thirdly, some of the song lyrics refer to the five characters as 'the new boys in town.' In addition, promotion material and trailers (such as ) refer to the Toaster as male.
Nevertheless, Toaster's personality is fairly gender-neutral, and thanks to, the fact that Toaster's voiced by a woman is no help. And we're still talking about a machine. Ultimately, the toaster can be viewed as a gender-neutral character by those who want to. The voice acting, actions, attitudes, fears, thoughts, and character development do not suggest any particular gender, but don't suggest or either. The Slippy Toad demeanor and voiceover begs the question, but the only reason you'd consider the toaster's gender is if you think about it years after watching, or if someone else brings up the question. • Blanky is just as bad. The fact that he/she/it is in the Toaster's doesn't help.
•: • Who really can be mistaken for female is Flower, the skunk. When he is a child, his voice and speech patterns sound nothing like a male, he acts shy and bashful, is very fluffy, and spends much of his time smelling flowers. A couple years after his introduction, when Bambi meets him again, his voice has deepened and he gets an only slightly more effeminate girlfriend.
There is the picture book of the Disney movie that actually called Flower a female, and • Bambi himself is also a subject to this when he's a child. As an adult he's quite obviously male, though. • did hang a lampshade on this when a young Ronno called Bambi 'Princess' as an insult. • The leader of the Blue Meanies from. • The makers of themselves seem to be confused over the gender of Insectosaurus. A behind-the-scenes book labels the creature as a 'she' while, within the canon of the actual film, the monster is a 'he'.
• The twin dolls 3 and 4 in look completely identical (save for their stamped-on numbers),, and never speak, making it completely ambiguous as to what gender either of them is. This is compounded by the fact that, as living ragdolls, they don't have any external characteristics indicative of sex. The creator has urged fans to come up with their own theories regarding the two. • In the Chinese animated film Nezha Conquers the Dragon King (1979), the title character is a little boy but he looks and acts more like a little girl—the hair style, clothing, and voice don't help either. • The starfish, Peach, in. Its voice actor is a woman, but her voice is just masculine enough to make it sound like a guy. Conceivably intentional, as some varieties of starfish are hermaphroditic.
•: • Terk (voiced by Rosie O'Donnell) is frequently mistaken for male despite her mom stating otherwise in the first minutes of the film. This has been lampshaded by Tantor in. Adding to the confusion, the stage musical adaptation. • Sabor, the leopard, is female but even labeled her as male.
She has no and doesn't speak. • A large number of viewers of trailers for, who were unaware of just whom had been cast as, were in for a shock when they finally saw the film and Master Tigress spoke for the first time. In everyone's defense, not only did the lack of make it very hard to tell her gender, even her voice actress originally assumed, when the casting call was made public, that would be playing the tiger. This confusion only added to the associated with the character ( it didn't lessen the appeal).
• Not many people would have thought Kazuma from was a guy, given both his hair-style, and, which all fits somewhat perfectly for a stereotype. His online avatar is even a rabbit (however, this rabbit is a badass). • Two of the background race cars from: According to their toy bios, the pink race car sponsoring Tank Coat is actually male, and the blue race car sponsoring RevNGo is actually female. • Laverne, one of Quasimodo's gargoyle friends in, is apparently female (as far as stone can have a gender). • Remember the from? You always thought it was a female, right?
It doesn't help that he's never mentioned by name in the film (). Otherwise, the fact that his name is King Gator would be a huge hint to his gender. His singing voice is also very masculine, but could be heard as a deep female voice too. • Rolly from.
In the animated series and his cameo in, he's been given a blue collar. Only female puppies, the boys all.
Oddly he's the only male to be given a blue collar and he's still clearly referred to as male. • Doris from the is actually female. For those of you who did already know that, it is pretty easy to mistake her for being male, and refer to her as 'he'.
• has Edna Mode, or 'E', who first-time viewers sometimes mistake for a guy. This can mostly be attributed to her not having the traditional, or a noticeable figure; not to mention being voiced by the film's director,, for extra androgynous points. • Cupcake from.
She wears pink clothes and a skirt, and is obsessed with horses and unicorns, but looks more like a boy than a girl, and can easily be mistaken for one. •: • Rancis Fluggerbutter. He's one of the few boys among the Sugar Rush racers, his hair is long enough to be mistaken for a girl's pixie cut, and his name is based off of the name Francis, which is a boy's name, but which sounds identical to the name Frances, which is a girl's name. • Swizzle Malarkey is also, surprisingly, a guy. He has long hair and there are more female Sugar Rush racers than there are male, so some fans have gotten confused.
• accidentally gave male Toothless the dragon some feminine symbolism. He regurgitates some food for the main character Hiccup like a mother bird. In a scene where he looks at a bird's nest, the intention was to show how Toothless wanted to fly, but the camera lingered on the eggs for a bit too long, so it seemed like Toothless wanted to get back to his own eggs rather than wanting to fly.
The way he holds onto Hiccup at the climax of the film resembles a mother and her newborn child. To be fair, in many bird species, males participate in taking care of the young just as much, if not more, than females (and in some species, 'sex role reversal' appears and males take over parental care entirely from females). This could as well be the case for Night Fury dragons.
• The baby Lady's owners have in always wears pink and has a very pink room with bows on their crib. He is however a boy and it wasn't uncommon in for boys to wear pink. The sequel film, which was created in the 2000s, altered his design so that he wears blue instead of pink.
• Mei from is an little goat who sometimes wears a pink handkerchier. He is paired with the much larger Gabu, who is a scruffy looking wolf. The entire film has them running away together to escape their clans judgement on their friendship. It's not uncommon for people to mistake him for a girl, especially since it's common to see the film as a romance, though Mei has an unmistakably adult male voice. Mei was in fact in the original books, which caused a lot of fans to assume he was a girl until the movie adaptation. In contrast the has him as a female goat.
• Cri-kee from is officially male, but has no and a gender neutral name, and on top of that, does not speak. • The protagonist Tykvenok of the 1984 Soyuzmultfilm short cartoon And what can you do? ( а что ты умеешь?) is a pumpkin with visible eyelashes, a flower in its head ( Later lost it after it grew up to save his friends, but was given more flowers in its head at the end), and was voiced by veteran voice actress Clara Rumyanova (she provides any number of other cases throughout her career), yet he is always referred to as male. Actually, the Russian word for 'pumpkin' is female, but creating female forms for the young is a bit problematic. • Littlefoot from could easily be mistaken for a female due his somewhat feminine appearance and voice, soft spoken and polite personality, and eyelashes even though he's usually voiced by a boy.
Ostinably made a bit better with the introduction of Ali in the fourth film, who was explicitly colored pink to basically say 'I'm female'. • In the 1972 animated adaptation of, one could easily mistake the titular character as a puppet for a girl, due to having in both the original Italian and English dubs, having a somewhat feminine looking face, and wearing a pink bonnet and a coat that looks like a dress. However he looks much more masculine when he becomes a real boy.
• To especially young children who overlook her womanly figure and 'body language,' the gender of Ursula in is sometimes a point of confusion, due to her large size, shortish hair and deep alto voice. Of course she was modeled after the drag queen Divine.
• In the live-action theatrical version Ursula is nearly always played by a male actor. • Batbayar from movie has odd-looking pigtails probably make him seem more like a little girl to Most Western audiences. • Many a viewer of the original genuinely thought Ra was a woman; Jaye Davidson is. • This trope is purposely and exploited in Neil Jordan's, also starring Jaye Davidson.
• from the franchise was never officially given a gender, but is considered male by most fans. However, that hasn't stopped other fans from thinking he's a female because some aspects of his body structure are similar to that of female crabs. • And, then there's also Mothra Leo from the. For the record, Leo is a boy. Yes, you heard me.
A Male Mothra (Mothrus?) despite every single incarnation previous and since being female. • Even the dub of the films had trouble with this and constantly referred to Leo as both a 'he' and a 'she' and even an 'it'. • And then there's where that version of Godzilla could, causing many to mistaking think all incarnations were female. • An interesting variation of this occurs with the monster Rodan. In the original 1956 film, both a male and a female Rodan are featured. Since then, fans have argued whether or not the Rodans(?) featured in later films are male or female.
• The Showa Rodan is a male. Likewise, so is Fire Rodan from the 1993 film. On the other hand, it's never made clear which gender the Rodan is. • Some people have mistaken Gigan, a male cyborg kaiju, for a female due to his high-pitched roar. • Battra, Mothra's, has also been mistaken for a female; even in officially licensed works.
• And it doesn't end there, with Kroiga from. With the brain of a human female, but the body of a male lion. • Kumonga has been mistaken to be a female by the fandom. This is due to the dub of Son Of Godzilla not using any gender-specific pronouns regarding the giant spider. The original Japanese dub, on the other hand, refers to the monster as a male. • Kamacuras is also officially a male, but fans often mistake him for a female.
However, since there's more than one Kamacuras, it could be possible at least one or more of them is a girl. • Godzilla himself, sort of. See, suit actor believes that the Showa Era (1955-1975) Godzilla is a female while the original 1954 monster was a male. However, Toho Studios has stated that all the incarnations of Godzilla that we've seen are male. Considering that the films establish that there is more than one Godzilla, and that infants like Minilla and Junior show that there's a breeding population, the idea of a female Godzilla isn't that far fetched.
It's just that we haven't officially seen a lady Godzilla yet. • There are people out there who think the Newborn from is a female. For the record, it's a hermaphrodite. The actual prop used for the film had both male and female genitalia.
This actually applies to all members of the species, even the Queen. Giger intended the Aliens to be neither male nor female, but an unsettling blur of both sexes. • Some viewers of were surprised to learn that Billy Kwan was played by a woman, Linda Hunt. She's the only actor to receive an Academy Award for playing a character of a different sex. • Legolas from the 1978 film. • Aragorn being confused about Legolas' gender is a in.
• 's daughter in (played by the then 11-year old ) has a fairly gender neutral haircut, somewhat androgynous looks and wears uni-sex pyjamas and can easily be mistaken for a boy on first viewing. • A lot of viewers of think that Ellen Gallagher (played by child actress Ellen Hamilton Latzen) is a boy because of her short hair and androgynous face. There are frequent heated debates on about whether they 'should have '. It doesn't help that she is seen rehearsing for a school play and playing a male role. Also, some of the adult characters tend to pronounce her name as if they're saying 'Alan' instead of 'Ellen'. •: • Sam the German shepherd isn't revealed to be female until she gets hurt, at which point Will Smith calls her by her full name of Samantha.
• The daughter Marley is this for some viewers. Whenever we see her she has a fairly short hairstyle and gender neutral clothes. It isn't actually said whether or not she's a girl until about an hour into the film. • In, the looks like an effeminate male but has a female voice. This confusion might only be thr Western audiences who might not be as familiar with Chinese legends concerning eunuchs making for extremely powerful soldiers while simultaneously making them evil and manipulative. • Many fans thought Buckwheat from the shorts was a girl.
This is because initially the character was a girl, played by Matthew (Stymie) Beard's real-life sister Carlena. Even after male actor Billie Thomas inherited the role, the character continued to be for several shorts. • Alexa in, which is intentional on the part of the movie. • Robin Williams' daughter in is very androgynous, and it's perfectly possible to go through most of the movie thinking she's a boy. • Dennis, the kid who wanted, from. He has very long hair, a somewhat feminine face, has a gender neutral voice, and is prepubescent from the looks of it. • Quite a few people who hadn't read the source material of mistook the warrior Atreyu to be a girl.
When he was first introduced, Bastian, who was expecting an adult warrior, commented in surprise, 'A little boy.' Which people might have missed if they came into the movie right in the middle. • Intentionally done in; the audience is led to believe that the one prisoner who escaped the prison was Bane, when actually it was Talia Al Guhl. The reveal is shown when after escaping, the child wraps her head and shoulders in a burkha.
• From for alone, many people couldn’t tell the gender of either person in the picture. • During early promotions for, many fans mistakenly believed that Captain Phasma was a man.
The problem being that in the promotional materials initially given, she didn't speak and wasn't seen without her armor on. • The cobra in has a feminine voice but is referred to as male. It can be disassociating, especially since Kaa has a deep voice in comparison.
• Lee Jordan (male) in and, due to having a gender-neutral name, a gender-neutral appearance, and a gender-neutral voice. His voice does deepen in the latter film, but not to the point where it could be unmistakably masculine, especially since he's black and black females tend to have deeper, gruff voices. • In Hungarian, pronouns aren't gender based, leading generations of readers thinking that the Witch-King was killed by Merry, not Éowyn. And coincidentally, neither the appendices nor the prophecy (No man shall kill him—it was a Hobbit!) contradicts this. But it's clear in the original. • For a long time, half of the fandom thought Blaise Zabini was a girl, since he's just a name until.
(Specifically, a name which is masculine in Europe but usually feminine in the United States.) Some who wanted more Slytherin girls used 'her' extensively as an in. It's now known that 'she's' a he. • If you're well-informed enough to know that the Groke of the Moomin series is female, try figuring out Thingumy and Bob, or the Fillyjonk's children from the anime. Too-ticky can also be misleading because of her appearance, but it's pretty clear she's a woman. • Too-ticky is at least partly based on Jansson's sculptor girlfriend, which may account for her relative butchness. • In the original Swedish, the Groke is called Mårran which manages to sound both feminine and threatening.
• Thingummy and Bob wear dresses, and in the original are named Tofslan and Vifslan—so there is no 'Bob' to confuse people. (Their particular way of speaking is an in-joke on the lingo Jansson and her first girlfriend, Vivica Bandler, used.
'Tove' and 'Vivica' become 'Tofslan' and 'Vifslan' when you speak like that.) The whole plot about the Ruby and the Groke is a metaphor for them having to hide their relationship back in the days homosexuality was still a crime and taboo in Finland. • A milder form of this occurs in. The Royal Manticoran Navy has nearly 50-50 gender equality, and many characters are referred to as their title, i.e. Admiral, Captain, Exec., etc. To compound this, many of the women are given masculine nicknames, like Michelle becoming 'Mike', while some men are given female nicknames, such as a Gervais becoming 'Gwen'.
You may need to take notes. • Possibly compounding the issue is the fact—never explicitly stated—that almost any character, when talking about someone of unknown gender, will use their own pronoun (i.e., men call unknowns 'he' while women call them 'she'). • Maybe more of Translator's Gender Confusion, but in Polish translation (where gender pronouns are everywhere) Patricia Givens was a man for two books because she was always referred to as 'admiral Givens' or 'Pat'. • Max, from the series. Considering that the book is written entirely in first person and her masculine name, it's no wonder. It's not clear at all that she's female until at least about fifty pages into The Angel Experiment, when she is finally referred to with a female pronoun. Most of them look male, but that doesn't mean they are.
• This is expanded upon with Cherri Littlebottom, a feminist in a race where discovering the other's gender is part of the mating ritual. She would wear makeup, but refused to shave her beard because to do so would deny being a dwarf. • Never really resolved in with Madame Sharn. She claims female terminology but never really a female identity, and her lover is a gay male (biologically human) dwarf. Thanks to the weird interactions between dwarf and human ideas of sexuality she could equally be male, female, transgender, or not fit cisgender terminology at all.
• Many characters in are very convincing crossdressers. • In the kid's magazine Muse, four New Muses are guys, four New Muses are girls. And nobody can agree what gender Egyptian-born Pwt (pronounced 'pwit') is.
Confirmed that Pwt is a male, but some readers still think he's a girl. • In Goblin Moon, the anthropomorphized Nine Seasons are the setting's equivalent of gods. Four are male, four are female, and one (corresponding to mid-spring, a changeable season) is depicted as androgynous in religious art.
• The first two chapters of leave Scout's gender very much in question. (She's a girl.) • The novella Cascade Point is told in the first person, and the narrator's name is not gendered. Only the cover art assigns a gender.
• The Cherub in 's John Dough and the Cherub. The publishers wanted the author to end the confusion, so he agreed to a write-in a contest. Since the first two winners chose differently, the gender of the Cherub remains unknown.
• Zom-B by Darren Shan: One of the two big twists at the end of the first book is that main character B Smith is a girl. The book had done a damn good job of leading the reader to believe otherwise, from the fact that most of B's friends are boys to the illustrations always showing her from behind (with a slim build and shaved head.) • In the original books Christopher Robin wears flowing blouses and has medium length hair. While this may have been unisex looking or even masculine in the 1920s, to modern audiences he's easily mistakable for a girl. The more well-known incarnation averts this. • In, the first time Bavadin was referred to, it was without a gender pronoun. Maybe because it was in the same sentence as (confirmed to be male) Rayse, but for the next two years, everyone was confident that Bavadin was a man until Arcanum Unbounded explicitely said 'she'. • Data's cat Spot from.
Spot was always referred to using male pronouns. She later gave birth to a healthy litter — despite being de-evolved into a lizardlike creature at the moment () (,, ). • had a segment called 'Guy or Girl', where the viewers were asked if some androgynous video game characters were either male or female. It was later re-used as 'Robot or Human.'
• Grace Polk from, although it was addressed in the first episode when the character got mistaken for a 'very rude boy' by another character. • George from the British kids TV show Rainbow. Despite being pink with long eyelashes, having an effeminate voice and being the girly one of the group ('ooh, you.
(Jeff Neumann / CBS) Does Elizabeth McCord still have it all in control during the fourth season of the Madam Secretary TV show on CBS? As we all know, the Nielsen typically play a big role in determining whether the TV show. Unfortunately, most of us do not live in Nielsen households. Because many viewers feel frustration when their viewing habits and opinions aren’t considered, we’d like to offer you the chance to rate all the Madam Secretary season four episodes below. A political thriller, stars Téa Leoni, Tim Daly, Bebe Neuwirth, Željko Ivanek, Keith Carradine, Sebastian Arcelus, Patina Miller, Geoffrey Arend, Erich Bergen, Kathrine Herzer, Wallis Currie-Wood, and Evan Roe. The drama follows the shrewd, determined Elizabeth McCord (Leoni).
Secretary of State, she battles office politics, while driving diplomacy and negotiating global deals. Elizabeth was once a CIA analyst, who exited that post for ethical reasons. She later returned to public life, at the request of President Conrad Dalton (Carradine). He values her apolitical leanings, knowledge of the Middle East, flair for languages, and unconventional thinking. Elizabeth is married to Henry (Daly), a former theology professor who is now an intelligence operative. Together, they’re bringing up three children, which can really test her diplomatic skills.