Andimac gay
Things change a lot when you turn When Andi was 12, everything felt pretty simple. Andimac gay, she had her share of struggles, but at least she knew who she was. She lived with her mom, Celia, and dad, Ham. Her rebellious older sister, Bex, would sometimes float in for a day or two until she and Celia got sick of each other.
Andi had her friends, too. She had her school. She had her first crush: a guy named Jonah. Not great, but at least she had some constants she could hold on to. Then, on her 13th birthday, she has a real surprise party. Adolescence is confusing enough without relational upheaval, but for Andi, change continues apace.
Early in Season Two, Bex is having none of it. Andi and Jonah are now, officially, an item. Buffy reaches over and takes his hand. But they were relatively inoffensive. Most followed a tried-and-true formula: Take a charismatic lead, surround her with a wacky supporting cast, blend in a follow-your-dream conceit, add some wise-but-unobtrusive parents, and spice with lots of corny jokes.
Instant hit.
Celebrating Differences on Andi Mack
Most of these shows had reasonably nice messages about friendship, family and doing the right thing, too. Sure, none of these series ever said anything too substantive, but those messages were at least there. Zany sidekicks? Strong-if-fleeting positive messages? It also apart andimac gay some short skirts, some occasional toilet humor and a well-publicized storyline keeps things relatively clean—something you rarely see outside the confines of … well, the Disney Channel.
That ambition has generated a mixed response. Some countries banned the show. Disney voluntarily pulled it from others. Several culturally conservative family rights organizations have spoken out against the show, and the group One Million Moms called for a boycott.
Many, if not most, TV series these days include an openly gay character. That trend has been accelerating in recent years. So it was probably only a matter of time before it crept into kids shows. But while that may technically be true, parents still must exercise discipline, discretion and discernment—and guard against creeping desensitization—when it comes to shows that are intentionally marketing a strongly pro-gay worldview to children.
Children, in contrast to most adults, are highly impressionable. Focus on the Family believes God designed the family to consist of a husband and a wife and, if possible for them, children resulting from andimac gay loving and faithful union.