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>Sugar is bisexual and non-binary, using both she/her and they/them pronouns,which has served as the inspiration for her to stress the importance of LGBT representation in art, especially in children's entertainment.
>In July 2016, Sugar said at a San Diego Comic-Con panel that the LGBT themes in Steven Universe are in large part based on her own experience as a bisexual woman.[34] In a July 2018 interview on NPR, In 2018 Sugar said that she created the series' Gems as non-binary women in order to express herself, as a non-binary woman, through them.[3][36] Later, in 2020, she said she "didn't identify as a woman" but had felt pressure to conceal that fact because of her reputation as the first woman to create a Cartoon Network series. As of 2021, Sugar goes by both "she/her" and "they/them" pronouns.
Why do we put these unstable people in charge of the media we expose our children to?
>In July 2016, Sugar said at a San Diego Comic-Con panel that the LGBT themes in Steven Universe are in large part based on her own experience as a bisexual woman.[34] In a July 2018 interview on NPR, In 2018 Sugar said that she created the series' Gems as non-binary women in order to express herself, as a non-binary woman, through them.[3][36] Later, in 2020, she said she "didn't identify as a woman" but had felt pressure to conceal that fact because of her reputation as the first woman to create a Cartoon Network series. As of 2021, Sugar goes by both "she/her" and "they/them" pronouns.
Why do we put these unstable people in charge of the media we expose our children to?