Dean cain gay
Lois & Clark Celebrity Dean Cain Sounds Off on Superman Coming Out in DC Comic Book
Former Superman actor Dean Cain isn't impressed with the unused direction DC Comics has taken with the Man of Steel. In the Nov. 9 issue of Superman: Son of Kal-El, in which the Superman mantle has been adopted by Kal-El's son Jon Kent, the superhero comes out as fluid. The storyline has generated a lot of discussion online with some Superman fans praising the move with others criticizing it.
Dean Cain, who starred as Clark Kent on Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, is in the latter category. Appearing on Fox & Friends on Tuesday, Cain spoke about the comic book and how he didn't feel it was as "bold or brave" as others have been saying. He also refers to other DC characters coming out in the past, including one series he was personally involved with. As the actor explained:
"They said it's a bold new command, I say they're bandwagoning... Robin just came out as bi - who's really shocked about that one? The new Captain America is gay. My daughter in Supergirl, where I played the father, was gay. So I don't think it's bold or heroic or some irrational new direction. If
Superman actor Dean Cain says character's coming out as bi is 'bandwagoning'
Superman player Dean Cain has accused writers of "bandwagoning" after they said the latest incarnation of the character would arrive out as bisexual.
In a comic next month, Jon Kent - the son of Clark Kent and Lois Road - has followed in his father's footsteps and, as well as saving the world, has fallen for a male reporter.
The storyline was announced on National Coming Out Day, an annual LGBTQ+ awareness day.
But Cain, who starred alongside Teri Hatcher in TV display The New Adventures Of Superman in the 1990s, said it would own been a "brave" storyline 20 years ago but less so now.
Cain, 55, told US exhibit Fox & Friends: "They said it's a bold modern direction. I utter they're bandwagoning.
"I don't think it's bold or brave or some crazy unused direction. If they had done this 20 years ago, perhaps that would be bold or brave.
"But brave would be having him fight for the rights of same-sex attracted people in Iran where they'll cast you off a building for the offence of creature gay."
The actor also appeared to mention to a recent storyline about the superhero fighting against the deportation of refug
Former Superman Dean Cain Doesn’t Get Why Speaking at an Anti-Gay Event Is a Issue
Dean Cain, the actor who played Superman on the ‘90s TV series Lois & Clark, will speak tonight at the 13th Annual Values Voter Summit, a conservative political gathering hosted by the anti-gay hate group the Family Research Council (FRC). He will also screen his unused film Gosnell: The Trial of America’s Biggest Serial Killer, about the infamous back alley abortion provider convicted of multiple murders in 2013. Once the LGBTQ community caught wind of his planned appearance, there was a Dean Cain GLAAD Twitter exchange discouraging his attendance.
GLAAD and longtime gay political writers Matt Baume and Jeremy Hooper engaged Cain via Twitter to discourage him from speaking to the hate group. During the Dean Cain GLAAD exchange, Cain said he didn’t know much about the FRC, proclaimed himself as pro-choice and pro-gay rights and said he was only attending the Summit to argue the film.
The Southern Poverty Statute Center has designated FRC as a hate group because of its long and well-documented history of publicly supporting “criminal sanctions” against people just for bein
Cain: From Superman to Male lover Stud
October 3 -- Dean Cain hopes that his turn as a narcissistic, not-so-bright gay actor-on-the-make in the new indie comedy The Broken Hearts Club will let you unlearn he was once Superman. At least for a few seconds.
But if you're not thinking "Superman" while watching the film, you might be wondering who the guy Cain is romancing is supposed to be.
Cain's character, one of a group of self-involved West Hollywood gays, lands a small role in a married superstar's film and has a classified affair with the guy. Since Hollywood loves showbiz dish, Club has prompted speculation that the plot is based on a real person.
"A lot of people have said to me they reflect it's Tom Cruise," Cain admitted while promoting the independent comedy. "I don't see that at all." Neither would Cruise, who has always denied those pesky rumors that his marriage isn't on the up and up.
On Being Mistaken for GayFor Cain, who, for the record, is straight and an unmarried dad, one question that keeps popping up now is "Do gay men hit on you?"
"Not really," he says. "Because a gay gentleman looks a