Blaine Anderson is the epitome of a boy with a chip on his shoulder. He’s spoilt, selfish, and his perceived “homophobic” father is backed up by nothing but his insistence that his father wanting to work on a car with him is his way of telling him he’s not “manly” enough. His arrogance and rampant narcissism stemming from being a self-described “rockstar” at Dalton forces him to act out against Kurt, who represents someone who—while the bullying had affected his self-confidence to an incredible degree— is comfortable with who he is. Blaine Anderson is a child who wants what he wants when hewants it, has the emotional intelligence of a five year old, and works to change and metaphorically “cage” Kurt’s voice and individuality at Dalton. Why do you think he finally decided he liked Kurt after he sang for his dead bird (his metaphorical voice)? The submergence of Kurt’s personality and voice into something he made is what starts his change of heart in the first place. He perceives that he has been somehow wronged, that his father is homophobic, that his “bullying” was at the same level as Kurt’s when in actuality he’s a selfish child who works to stay on top by keeping in the spotlight and making everyone bend to his will.
“… act out against Kurt, who represents someone who—while the bullying had affected his self-confidence to an incredible degree— is comfortable with who he is.” <— I love how this completely describes Karofsky and not Blaine.
Read More “… act out against Kurt, who represents...bullying had affected
No, of course not. I just now get to wallow in how foolish that person must’ve felt when Prom Queen aired. (Or didn’t....
then, which of course still doesn’t take away from...problematic awful insinuations
hate some Kummers threw...after sticking up for...NOT...
everything Megan