Was the Cartoon ‘He-Man’ Really About Conservative Gay Men and HIV in the 1980s?

Was the Cartoon ‘He-Man’ Really About Conservative Gay Men and HIV in the 1980s?

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In a recent episode of The Fandom Files, the SYFY-related geek podcast, David Chlopecki, founder of fetish wear company Slick It Up, called the ‘80s-era animated superhero He-Man gay and called the cartoon series “the gayest show that has ever been on TV.” He then argued that Skeletor was actually the show’s hero and emblematic of gay HIV-positive men during the ‘80s.

 

Is He-Man gay?

In the cartoon, He-Man’s superpowers are described as “fabulous secret powers” and they only happen when he pulls out his sword (wink, wink).

“They are not regular super powers,” Chlopecki said. “These are fabulous secret powers. Heterosexuals, they don’t have fabulous secret powers.”

He-Man’s royal persona “Prince Adam” also has a very gay blond pageboy haircut and an outfit made entirely of form-fitting spandex.

“He holds aloft his magic sword, and, poof! His clothes are gone. And he’s wearing a harness,” Chlopecki said. “The only time my clothes have been gone and I’m wearing a harness is when I’m having sex with men.”

He-Man was created during the repressive Reagan-era, Chlopecki says, when TV had no other recurring gay characters. So, he continues, gay subtext was worked into media subversively through pro-wrestling, torture scenes and superheroes.

In the 1987 He-Man live-action movie — created by gay director Gary Goddard — He-Man’s nemesis Skeletor seems titillated when his henchman whips He-Man.

Chlopecki also considers Skeletor gay with his high-pitched voice, painted claws and band of social outsiders. The podcasters agree that Skeletor is more interesting because he’s witty (always cracking insults), a genius (he builds robots) and a magician.

Provocatively, Chlopecki said Skeltor resembles gay men dying of HIV in the ‘80s who were given steroids as a treatment, leaving them with buff bodies but skeletal faces (something called “facial wasting”). Thus, Skeletor resents He-Man as a “perfect” HIV-negative gay man.

Chlopecki considers He-Man a rich spoiled brat and a “conservative (Aryan) voice” who opposes Skeletor’s attempts to change the world.

In 2011, Chlopecki and Slick It Up! held a fundraiser of NSFW He-Man art for New York’s Ali Forney Center for homeless LGBT youth.

 

Featured image by Justin Winslow 

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