Leave any recommendations of autistic rep in the comments! Download Love & Pies here -> pixly.go2cloud.org/SH4D5
@trinaq8 ай бұрын
Matilda, Drea and Nicholas from "Everything's Gonna be Okay." I love that all three actors are Autistic in real life, and Drea's actress even used her real life service dog.
@Teajay218 ай бұрын
This is not confirmed representation but it's very popular to read Stede Bonnet fron OFMD as autistic. I joke that Ed is my ADHD traits and Stede is my autistic traits 😅
@hermione2888 ай бұрын
My favourite representation is definitely Drea, seeing another autistic asexual lesbian, who I related to was definitely important to me! Also I love all your videos Rowan and I’m so happy you covered this topic!
@oraw1234W8 ай бұрын
Norma Khan Deadendia comics/Dead End Paranormarl Park Netflix series (creator Hamish Steele is also autistic)
@sofiamn_058 ай бұрын
Abed in Community was definitely missed in the video
@martianpudding95228 ай бұрын
I think sometimes people accidentally write reasonably accurate representations of autism is because they do know autistic people but don't know they're autistic. So they might base a character on a person or type of person they know and accurately represent them, and then thta person or people just happen to be autistic
@FrozEnbyWolf1508 ай бұрын
In my own stories I inadvertently wrote a lot of autistic coded characters, both because everyone in my friends group is autistic, and I turned out to be as well. I was undiagnosed at the time, but it's obvious in retrospect like so many other things.
@unholierthanthou77488 ай бұрын
A good example is Abed from community! Abed was written with no intention for him to be autistic but was based on Dan Harmon (the writter) and a friend of his. Fans started pointing out Abed's autistic traits and that's how Dan Harmon found out he's autistic! The difference between characters like Abed and characters that are specifically written as "the autistic one" is so severe
@martianpudding95228 ай бұрын
I feel like I see it a lot in anime too. I think having a special interest in anime/manga/drawing and not much of a social life really helps people get in that industry so there might be a lot of (undiagnosed) autistic writers as well as writers who are around a lot of autistic animators etc.
@obsessedme54848 ай бұрын
@@martianpudding9522 luffy in one piece and even other characters on the crew is one of the best example of this. i don"t think oda is neurotypical and luffy is absolutely autistic coded and i love that for him
@roadrollerdio5658 ай бұрын
The Always Sunny gang seem to fit this "accidental" situation too. There's so much autistic coding and there's whole fan compilations of moments! The show was created by the actors who are themselves the showrunners and head writers too, and they put so much of themselves and each other into their characters, especially Charlie, Mac and Dennis (for example Dennis and his misophonia), so it comes from their own experiences unintentionally. In the past year, Rob McElhenney and Glenn Howerton (who play Mac and Dennis respectively) seem to have found out they have autism and ADHD. As for Charlie Day, he says everyone had been telling him for years that he's autistic and pointed out traits, so he thinks it's probably the case, but he avoided testing because he was tested as a school child in the 80s and they couldn't identify anything back then and wrote him off as lazy. (This was as of a few years ago before his friends got diagnosed.)
@aerozord8 ай бұрын
Rudolf is a great unintentional autism metaphor. You are excluded and hated for being different, until what makes you different is of use to us NOW you can join in.
@Kurushimi17298 ай бұрын
I really don't think that was unintentional. It's a thing a lot of people can identify with and Rudolph was written to represent all these people.
@mootbooxle8 ай бұрын
I have always identified with Rudolph a lot. You nailed it!
@dazzlingdexter50608 ай бұрын
I don't think that is autism specifically. There are several groups that get treated in this manner. Anything that isn't mainstream which is beer, Hollywood, trash TV and sports is often considered unimportant. Yet often people who are too flamboyant, eccentric, queer, corky, different, often have talents and gifts that give back to society that we only realize later. This type of othering happens to several groups. Rudolph, is best freinds with a elf that wants to be a dentist. This doesn't indicate anything different about the elf. They simply didn't want a job that thier family did for Years. So I don't think Rudolph is specifically one type of group but the concept of people being othered for not confirming to society, or things they can't change like disfigurement, handicaps, mental differences. The snitches goes over a similar idea. In the end the star and none stars are mixed up. The star is a difference that one side is using to look.bettwr than the other. Yet, in the end they realize it doesn't matter. If someone has a star or doesn't is not a sign of better or worse. Everyone matters in some way a focusing on the difference as bad vs realizing how we are the same is the problem. Everyone has differences but everyone matters. Different doesn't mean bad or better. Different sometimes just means different and we should realize everyone are at the end of the day just people.
@TheBluestflamingos8 ай бұрын
@@Kurushimi1729yeah, but the point is that the allegory works too well. The intended read of "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Raindeer" is that people will eventually learn to accept you, quirks and all, but the actual implication of the text is that deviation from the norm will be punished unless it is exploitable. The other reindeer didn't come around because they felt bad about making Rudolph cry, or because they realized having a red nose doesn't make him any less of a reindeer than the others. They came around because it happened to be useful on that foggy night
@Kurushimi17298 ай бұрын
@@TheBluestflamingos I always thought the first point of Rudolph was that someone that seems weird at first can actually turn out to be useful. I guess you could call it "exploitation" if you want and I can see that it kinda sucks that it suggests acceptance happens only if you're useful. But still, autistic people, among other people, does seem to fit the framework of the intended message.
@crackle68753 ай бұрын
In the books, Sherlock emphasizes that his detective & deduction skills aren't because he has a much higher level intelligence than the average human (the 'superpower' level of intelligence is solely in certain screen adaptions) but that he actively practices his craft everyday so as not to get rusty, and he strongly believes others can train themselves to get to his level of deduction. The further into the stories you go, the more often you'll see Watson successfully deduce things, thus causing Sherlock and his work relationship to become one more of detective partners instead of a detective and his very useful assistant.
@Kaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat3 күн бұрын
YES. Holmes is also shown as being socially adept despite his quirks in the stories. I think that’s partially why I like the Robert Downey Jr portrayals: Holmes is strange, but attends functions and is socially adept and Watson is a smart partner in deduction rather than a bumbling idiot.
@AverageSundayLikerКүн бұрын
This is exactly what I have wanted to say but was not able to put into words
@cajunguy65028 ай бұрын
In hollywood, ASD = Insufferable genius and ADHD = Manic Pixie Dream Girl
@aubreyplazafan8 ай бұрын
Guess im both
@YumLemmingKebabs8 ай бұрын
I always hear it as Manic Pixie Dream Girl is literally just an unintentional autistic girl.
@cajunguy65028 ай бұрын
@@aubreyplazafan samezees. Which is lame because they cancel each other out in the worst ways. How you gonna be a loner with rejection sensitivity, bro? Can you cancel out the unhelpful stuff, ffs!?
@lajourdanne8 ай бұрын
Me, AuDHD, in hollywood = an insufferable manic pixie genius
@cajunguy65028 ай бұрын
@@lajourdanne basically Ed from Cowboy Bebop 😂
@JennaGetsCreative8 ай бұрын
What frustrates me the most about Sia's choice to cast Maddy in Music because "it would be cruel" to cast someone actually at the character's needs level is that the film is full of scenes meant to be in Music's head that are so incredibly unfriendly to the autistic experience and make absolutely no sense for the character. Like Maysoon Zayid said in her TED Talk when talking about how she didn't get the roll of a cerebral palsy character in the high school play because the drama teacher didn't think she'd be physically able to perform the role said: If I can't do it, neither can the character.
@whimsiclaw8 ай бұрын
The thing is, even as a low support autistic person I found the scenes Sia set up in "Music" extremely overwhelming and almost meltdown inducing. The problem is not with the disabled actors themselves, the problem is that she made these sets completely inaccessible to said actors. Sia didn't see the inaccessibility of the sets as a problem, she saw the disabled actor who was a victim OF the inaccessibility as a problem.
@JennaGetsCreative8 ай бұрын
@@whimsiclaw Agreed, the set wasn't inclusive to disabled actors and so much of what the main character doesn't fit the autistic experience at all. I've only seen clips in reaction videos, but even what I have seen as someone who made it past 30 before identification, it's a lot.
@schwarzerritter57248 ай бұрын
If you look at how obsessed Sia is with Maddie, the whole movie was clearly written for Maddie from the start.
@JennaGetsCreative8 ай бұрын
@@schwarzerritter5724 Definitely. She wanted to write a niche story that would get attention so that she could show off a song & dance collection for her and Maddie. That's all it was. And let's not forget the "blackfishing" backlash they got for showing Maddie in the dark orange tan with the blue braided hair texture ear muffs.
@SkyeSoleil8 ай бұрын
The irony is that Sia has been diagnosed as autistic, years after the movie and we (the autistic community) don’t want anything to do with her
@UrsulaDaSeaWishh6 ай бұрын
Love that people are saying that having a romance subplot with an autistic character isn’t ok because they’re “childlike”, but the born-sexy-yesterday trope is fine as long as the character is allistic. And by “love it” I mean “pass the brain bleach, please”
@Ozzianman4 ай бұрын
Meanwhile one of my previous flatmates are autistic and a lot of "happy sounds" could be heard from her room whenever her bf was visiting. The walls were soundproofed, doors are not soundproof. I am also Autistic, libido and the wanting for a romantic relationship is indeed still a thing for us "childlike" people.
@JaxAttax4513 ай бұрын
Can I get a shot of that brain bleach? Jameson ain’t working anymore 😂
@Quinn-he3vn2 ай бұрын
Honestly what they should be saying is making a romance with a character that is designed to look and act like a child is creepy, which happens far too often 😭 that whole "She's immortal so she looks like a child but she's actually 3000 years old!" Thing
@whydoikinsoowonАй бұрын
it's giving lore olympus tbh
@satsujin-shathewitchkingof61856 күн бұрын
That's a new trope for me
@gFamWeb8 ай бұрын
"don't claim to be autistic, autistic people can't travel by themselves" is so baffling it's incredible. It shows not only a narrow understanding of what autism is, but a complete lack of wanting to learn more about it.
@zeekmatthews6808 ай бұрын
The thing is will autism it hard to know what it is even poeple with it can not fully understand can to self but for over can not .
@commentor20138 ай бұрын
i actually never do travel by myself, but not because i cant. i just dont like to go anywhere unless i have to lol
@liviwaslost8 ай бұрын
@@commentor2013same. The only place I travel to by myself is school and work which is the same place.
@robokill3878 ай бұрын
I couldn't for most of my life, but last year I just did and managed fine, just had to plan it out really well.
@commentor20138 ай бұрын
@@robokill387 thinking about it, i would probably get bad anxiety. i dont like being away from my family too long. i worry about them. ironically i also like being by myself, just with people around in other rooms. indirectly close lol
@trinaq8 ай бұрын
I love that the writers and cast openly acknowledge that Abed is Autistic, rather than making it vague, like Sheldon's portrayal. Abed is a fully rounded, realised character as a result, and Dan Harmon even found out that he himself was Autistic when researching Abed.
@ems33768 ай бұрын
Abed is also one of the most likable characters in Community imo. He’s often the hero.
@eoincampbell15848 ай бұрын
Hey I've been meaning to ask someone. Why do so many people have the Addams Family musical poster as their profile picture on youtube?
@phosphenevision8 ай бұрын
he actually found out after people started pointing out abed being ND, because he wrote Abed based on the mix of his friend and his own personality
@call-rickey8 ай бұрын
@@eoincampbell1584 It's genuinely just this one person, @trinaq. if you're on the video essay side of youtube you're bound to see them everywhere lol
@DustyyBoi8 ай бұрын
@@eoincampbell1584idk
@gantzllat7 ай бұрын
As an autistic person. I've noticed that the most accurate representations of autistic characters tend to be characters that are not introduced as autistic, but rather weird and quirky. Hollywood seems to think that autism is a specific and special brand of weird with a check list of symptoms. And forget that, most quirky and weird people they know of, probably where autistic.
@dontmisunderstand60416 ай бұрын
This is generally how character writing works. If you write a character as a thing, they'll fail to be that thing. If you write a character as a character, they will be that character, with all that entails.
@dylanfooler6 ай бұрын
@@dontmisunderstand6041 Another few good examples of this are the main character in The Living Dead who's name escapes me, he wasn't intended to be black, but his audition was so good they kept him in, a lot of the arguing with his leadership wasn't meant to be race related but it added an amazing dynamic to the movie. Another is Ripley in Alien, the writers didn't intend for her to he played by a woman but also ended up hiring Weaver and it made the character more dynamic and believable bc that bias wasn't put in mind
@ThePrincessCH5 ай бұрын
I find Disney's Renaissance princesses to be the most relatable. Ariel treats her special interests like a roller coaster on a loopty loop, Belle is so enamored by one book that the rest of the world seems to melt away, and Mulan has such a hard time with social cues that she has to rely a lot on external sources in a professional environment.
@gantzllat5 ай бұрын
I first noticed this trend with Jack Reacher. The character is obviously autistic, so incredibly obvious that I found it hard to believe the whole season that no one noticed nor mentioned it. I figured it most be because the author himself didn't noticed it.
@dylanfooler5 ай бұрын
@@gantzllat That's my favorite rewatch show rn. I'd also say with his deep sense of justice, being able to read peoples body cues, and how he likes things in a Particular ™ way, yeah, lol. I think no one mentioned it bc it could be explained away as "strong stoic type"
@sandrakranzwinther32868 ай бұрын
"You can hold eye contact, you are not autistic." The no 1 criteria for not being checked out for autism in Denmark.
@biazacha8 ай бұрын
Wouldn’t be surprising if they don’t believe women can be in the spectrum with such parameters.
@patrickmccurry15638 ай бұрын
That's like saying you're not allergic to shrimp if you're able to eat it. Sure you can, but you will suffer after doing so. Same with eye contact. I can force myself to do it, but I likely won't hear a darn thing that's said, and I'll be very stressed while doing so.
@ShieniLicksOnLemons8 ай бұрын
As if many neurodivergent people didn't get shit on for not holding eye contact and just had to learn it so people would stop yelling about it 💀
@promisemochi8 ай бұрын
my psychiatrist doubted my autism diagnosis because i smiled at her and could hold a conversation. she said "inspite your 'autism' (yes, she used air quotes), i think you're very social." she 100% said it like it was a compliment. it was jarring.
@LillyP-xs5qe8 ай бұрын
what if I had to learn to look people in the eyes? I don't mind doing it, but it doesn't come naturally to me.
@christianatunni8 ай бұрын
Another important reason why Sia's movie caused outrage is because there is a scene where her therapist uses a restraining hold that could block her airways. A parent of an autistic child wrote an open letter to Sia to ask if she could remove the scene (it sounds like Sia did not). When autistics and parents of autistics agree on something, you know it's messed up
@draalttom8447 ай бұрын
My ex believed in that methode, it made me so furious that I became violent and dangerous and ended up being hurt and hurting others everytime. All of that because people assume Im out of controle when I actively try to regulate by myself
@xofyck52327 ай бұрын
@@draalttom844 i hate it when people touch me in general when im overwhelmed, that hold sounds like a total nightmare
@draalttom8447 ай бұрын
@@xofyck5232 it sure is! The worst you can feel in that state, id rather a punch!
@caitemby6 ай бұрын
Sia is a mess of a person. VOX LUX was also a deeply offensive movie to me and I still haven't been able to articulate why.
@lolucorn15 ай бұрын
@@draalttom844I'm so insane lucky that my friends notice when I'm suffering and just ask yes or no questions then leave me alone when I ask for it, honestly their handling of it ever since we were in primary school almost made me think I didn't have meltdowns because it just seemed normal.
@chancegreenlee96007 ай бұрын
I never even considered Elle Woods. I need to rewatch Legally Blonde from that lens now
@bogeymanbear2 күн бұрын
I had this exact same reaction lol. It makes so much sense and I love that headcanon.
@trinaq8 ай бұрын
I really appreciate the inclusion of Julia, an Autistic muppet on "Sesame Street", as it normalises the condition for a younger audience. Julia's puppeteer has a son who's on the spectrum, which helps with her portrayal of the character.
@thecinematicmind8 ай бұрын
Shame about Autism Speaks on Sesame Street.
@bibivallejo8 ай бұрын
@@thecinematicmindwas about to say the same thing
@Matty2728 ай бұрын
Why is everyone ignoring that Bert is OBVIOUSLY autistic. And Ernie is probably ADHD.
@s0aggro0tan8 ай бұрын
Thank you for adding this! I'm a 23 years old autistic man and Julia is one of my special interests, like my cats. I even have a puppet of her that I really cherish and watching her episodes always calms me down. I've been dreaming of owning a merchandise hoodie and will buy one once I get a spot in the payed disabled work training. ❤ However, it is highly unsettling that the producers of Sesame Street have decided to collaborate with Autism Speaks.
@AngryPug768 ай бұрын
Yes, but her and Bert need a conversation that ends with Earnie realizing Bert has been undiagnosed autistic the whole time “Sounds like she’s talking about you there, Bert.”. Because he is definitely autistic too. Be a good late in life diagnosis explanation for kids who know adult autistics.
@marshmallsy8 ай бұрын
It's a shame that I can't bring myself to watch Love on the Spectrum. I have nothing against the show itself (since I haven't seen it), but every time I've seen clips the comments from clearly neurotypical people gushing over the "simplicity" of autistic love and saying shit like "autistic people must experience the world in such a pure, wholesome way compared to everyone else" made me deeply uncomfortable and annoyed.
@ukchanak8 ай бұрын
Every single person seems to be very high needs, and it seems like that's all they think autistic people can be
@MegaSpideyman8 ай бұрын
Don't let that stop you. Just watch 10 minutes of an episode, see what you think and then you'll know whether you like it or not.
@limner1238 ай бұрын
I totally understand a toxic audience making a fandom object less fun. Maybe you can find a different subset audience. I’ve seen creators review or talk about the show, and seen a low percentage of that kind of response in the comments. So I know people who really like it but also aren’t creeps about it exist. Although skipping things where the audience is icky is something I do, so I support it.
@motleycritique81288 ай бұрын
It is worth watching a few episodes. It may not be for you, but it is nice to see a show where not every story is a success (some are). You can really empathize when watching people deal with a difficult and very human part of life.
@SemiIocon8 ай бұрын
Lmao. I am the most cynical guy on the planet, are they just equating every condition they see to how they think of people with Down's Syndrome? Because they are also called "beauitful pure angels" even as adults all the time.
@xyz10877 ай бұрын
22:03 that's actually not true. Grunya Sukhareva, a Jewish Soviet child psychiatrist was the first person to identify ASD in children, and she did that nearly 20 years before both Kanner & Asperger. there's even evidence Asperger plagiarized her work (and the fact he did that to justify the deaths of nearly 800 autistic children makes it especially disgusting)
@leoniea.56207 ай бұрын
Yes, I was just about to comment the same thing! She published her first findings on autism (at the time using a different term for it) in 1925! (in russian) One of the many reasons her work seems to be overlooked by so many (apart from her being a jewish woman) might be, that it was translated to german in 1926, but only translated to english long after Asperger had plagerized her work. (1996) Not only was she the first to describe the autistic spectrum, her patients were described as kids with talents AND disabilities. She also described autism in both girls and boys. (6 boys and 5 girls in total)
@xyz10877 ай бұрын
@@leoniea.5620 very important addition!! also important to mention, unlike Asperger, her research was purely scientific, instead of ideological. She also (accurately!) mentioned that many problems in children are caused by unsupportive & cruel environment, instead of the eugenic belief that some people are "wrong" or "evil" at birth. Truly a wonderful person, too often forgotten in history
@Direwolf17716 ай бұрын
Well, this surprises me not at all. A Jewish woman was erased from history after doing the actual work of discovering us. By the Nazis. Figures.
@SynthApprentice4 ай бұрын
Can we please get more information on this hidden history? I don't know anything about this woman, but I would like to!
@xyz10874 ай бұрын
@@SynthApprentice comments with link get deleted so I can't link it (I tried lol), but there's a great article about her in The Transmitter, written by Lina Zeldovich, titled "How history forgot the woman who defined autism" - you'll be able to find it by googling :) that's how I found out about her!
@vaguely70408 ай бұрын
Way early on, in reference to the Good Doctor and the misgendering: my dad is neurodivergent, and he is also hyper HYPER logical. When I came out to him as nonbinary and then trans, he was confused, but then considered it for only a brief period before becoming outwardly supportive. In my eyes, his logic has always played a large part in guiding him toward the support of minorities and underrepresented folks.
@DeChihauha8 ай бұрын
@@joaocosta3374d'uh, it's more logical to love than to hate. ❤
@MAFDOMiNUS8 ай бұрын
Opposite for me. Im confused by Non-binary because it makes no logical sense for me. Transgenderism I get because of Gender Dysphoria, an actual biological explanation. Non-binary has no explanation other than social feelings which can change at any time.
@IwonaKlich8 ай бұрын
Technicaly if youre a doctor you learn biology. Humans sex is a spectrum, its a scientific fact. So the guy from Good Doctor is just a big idiot...
@guydunn82598 ай бұрын
@@DeChihauhaBeautifully said.
@kidlewinter50278 ай бұрын
I’ve always been VERY aware of how gender is a social construct so in my brain it’s just like well why wouldn’t we try to reconstruct it in a way that at least lets these people be who they want to be?
@eepmeep85508 ай бұрын
I'm so annoyed with the misconceptions we face. "Not able to travel alone"... buddy, I'm studying abroad in a foreign country, have spent a week in a 1person tent speaking a second language and volunteering and another week backpacking along the Irish coast. Did I face difficulties because of my autism? Sure, lots. Did this make the journeys impossible? No. *whirrs angrily*
@sarahr83118 ай бұрын
My first thought (having done some camping myself) was "pfff, one person tent is easy! Having someone else's feet in your face is what makes it really rough!". 😂
@gwestmalle49508 ай бұрын
I guess it really depends where you are on the spectrum or the impact your diagnosis has on your autonomy. My son loves nature but probably wouldn't be able to go camping or travel alone.
@badwulff8 ай бұрын
@@gwestmalle4950 I mean yeah, part of the point is that a lot of these "representations" are made by people with extremely narrow views of what being autistic entails (or anything else, really - as someone diagnosed with schizophrenia, I can say that certainly applies to mental illness as well); where they don't take into account the idea that neat little checklists of "symptoms" can't really ever be some Universal Truth™ Guide to describing a person or their specific relation to autism. It's nice that compared to, say, the Middle-Ages, society has evolved to the point where it can sort of describe and try to help autistic people with what they need, but quite a few uninformed people, often with the best of intentions, make the fundamental mistake of putting real humans, and their real specificities, into mere categorized boxes with various restrictive labels on them, and thus fail to both grasp the complexities of something like autism, as well as portray the people they say they want to represent.
@toothfairy101337 ай бұрын
travelling can be extremely overwhelming for me but it is possible and i do it fairly often (it take 5 hours by train to visit my parents and ive done it three times this year). usually i just ask the staff for help if i need it. usually this takes multiple goes lmao. some autistic people can travel alone easier than me and some cant do it at all. i consider it less a misconception and more of an overgeneralization, but either way its still bad
@copperberry7 күн бұрын
I could travel indipendently, it would knock me down for who knows how long. Later this month I am traveling to see my grandparents, and I have my dad coming with me
@TUTANOTA-w2y8 ай бұрын
Top 3 comments I get when I come out as Autustic 1. "wow I would've never guessed you're so smart/highfunctioning/normal" 2. suddenly treats me like an idiot/child despite having already interacted with me normally the whole time without issues 3. "no you're not" 🙄🤦🏽
@leafylynx9838 ай бұрын
for me people are usually like "I already knew"
@sylvanfreckles5576 ай бұрын
My favorite response was from my mother. "Well, I read all the information you sent me, but I have most of those characteristics too, so it's not autism it's just genetics." 😂
@remusblack68755 ай бұрын
YES!! Or they say “oh yeah my nephew is autistic🥺 he likes blank….do you?” No i doubt that I have anything in common with ur 5yo nephew bc I am a 22yo woman 😐. Which I guess falls under ‘treating me like a child despite having already interacted with me normally’
@radnbad955 ай бұрын
Oh sameeee@@sylvanfreckles557
@bellajonson67655 ай бұрын
Yup 100%
@crashb8008 ай бұрын
I think the narrowness in which we understand autism (white, middle-class, boys) even leaves out some white middle-class boys. What if that boy's autism shows itself in ways that you might expect from a girl? Does the doctor just miss that he has autism? I state this to point out how I think the previous conceptions of what autism looks like are even narrower than people think. I also think we need a drastically different approach to how we view disability and ability. If someone has a certain noise sensitivity (for example), they shouldn't need to explain why they have that sensitivity, they should be able to do what they need to deal with it.
@alexdiaz42968 ай бұрын
I have what is understood commonly as a girls autism and is constantly invalidated by the gender biases.
@katies37338 ай бұрын
My dad is a white middle-class man who i highly suspect got missed because he would present a more "feminized" version of autism. I have autism and I got diagnosed in my early 30s. And I've talked to him about this, and been like there's a large genetic component to this. And he knows that I suspect my grandma (his mom) was autistic. And my mom will pick up on me saying there's a genetic component, and be like oh so do you think I have autism? And I'm like nope. And my dad has never asked, but has social anxiety, diagnosed ocd, he burns out at various times, he has the most specialized of interests that he can talk about for days. His small talk game is absolutely non-existent. He has a lot of food sensitivities, and he's ate an omlette for dinner on a specific weekday for over 20 years. But he's just living his life. And I'm just sitting here going .... it's not my mother.
@Wafflez4all8 ай бұрын
I agree. The idea of gendering autism seems absurd to me.
@matthewevans1078 ай бұрын
I wasn’t diagnosed until my 30’s and I wasn’t picked up because I could mask. The current notion of feminised autism is due to the medical field’s, especially its most prominent members, refusal to admit they got things wrong. We started off with autism as a white male child syndrome caused by mothers who didn’t she then enough love (refrigerator moms). Then it was just a white male child syndrome. When women started getting diagnosed, Simon Cohen came up with/popularised the idea of women with a “male brain”. When more women started getting diagnosed later and masking was identified, masking became a female trait because it wasn’t doctors’ fault women were bring missed, it’s because they had special autism that was harder to diagnose than men.
@robokill3878 ай бұрын
No, Simon Baron-Cohen came up with the "extreme male brain" theory decades ago, before women started getting diagnosed in large numbers, and it was specifically an attempt to explain why there were so few female autistics. Well, that and the stereotypes of autistic people being into STEM fields which a lot of researchers back then viewed as "male-brained". The idea of inherently gendered brains is an old idea that used to be popular in neuroscience in the 00s but was discredited in the 2010s.
@CearoT8 ай бұрын
I appreciate you bringing up Entrapta. The audiance infantalisation of her was so frustrating, when the show runners wrote her so well. There is clearly romance between her and Hordak, and shebis a grown woman that is both extremely well versed in her special interest, technology, and also needing her tiny cute foods as all she will eat. Her robots help her with her needs so she can thrive and be her best. The show doesn't infantalize her and it really also puts into perspective how powerful an audience and their biases can color a character.
@Diana-tl8pn8 ай бұрын
I am not Neurodivergent myself, but I actually felt the opposite. When I first discovered that the creator said she was 30, I felt that it made no sense. It felt like an excuse, as her dating Hordak was the cause of controversy. For the most of the show, based on how fellow characters behave around her, I thought she was around Adora's age or at best slightly older. She is supposed to be an adult, but the teenage characters rarely act like they are talking with someone older than them. Contrast how characters like Spinnerella and Netossa, characters that canonically are more similar to Entrapta's alleged age, and it feels different. To clarify, what I mean is not that because Entrapta is neuratipical, she is acting as a child, but at least as portrayed by the show, Entrapta characterization led me in the whole of the show to believe she was a teen agewise. None of the characterization or the way characters act around her, led me to believe she was written as an adult woman regardless of her status in the autism spectrum.
@CearoT8 ай бұрын
@@Diana-tl8pn so i am nuerodivergent, and i identified a LOT with entrapta. I am in my 30s and part of my masking has always been trying not to act cute, or "childish." I naturally do silly voices, move and dance, collect cute things, and it took me a loooong time to be okay with that. So, for me, she seems refreshing and validating to see a character like her. I find it interesting, after watching a youtube video talking about how media infantalizes divergent people, you have done just that too. And mind you, i don't think it is your fault you have done this. Society tells us that we are supposed to be a certain way when we get older, so we use these standards as age indicators. Just, neurodivergent people don't always follow these norms, but it doesn't make us younger or childish. Just, different.
@MB-pc3kp8 ай бұрын
@@Diana-tl8pnI have autism and adhd and have collection of soft toys and love watching cartoons - I’m 28. I also do data analysis at my company and have taken soft toys into a meeting with a coworker when discussing a data project. I am very emotional and have meltdowns. i am what you would class as childish. In fact I am probably more childish than entrapta. She wasn’t infantilised at all.
@Diana-tl8pn8 ай бұрын
@@CearoT I think the use is not Entrapta in herself. I don't find it that unusual that adults have "childish" hobbies or are "childish". I am that adult too. What I tried to explain and maybe it didn't come across is that, based on how the other characters act towards Entrapta, it doesn't come across as she is supposed to be an adult. That is why I mentioned Netossa and Spinnerella. With other canon adult characters, Adora and friends act like teens talking to an adult, but not with Entrapta. The only character that acts with some level to respect towards Entrapta, in the sense towards a superior, is Bow. And it is only because Entrapta is better in mechanics than Bow. No matter how "childish" an adult is, a teen wouldn't act how Adora and Co act towards Entrapta and it shows with the other cannon adult characters.
@vilmublues7528 ай бұрын
I've seen a lot of people who assume she is aromantic asexual and seem to view her as very sexless. Meanwhile, in the actual show there are moments where she acts about as horny as you can show in a kids' show, and the show's creator has stated that she's down for having boyfriends and girlfriends.
@kazukazoo6 ай бұрын
I'm autistic and South Korean, and I personally adore "Extraordinary Attorney Woo". I related a lot to Woo Young Woo, and the show has many well represented symptoms of autism such as her struggle with facial expressions, her stimming and how whales are her special interest. While there are a few aspects of the show I do think could come off as turning her autism into a superpower, I never felt that way about it; Young-Woo doesn't just magically calculate her cases, it's her different way of thinking that lets her see other sides of a situation, which aids her. But her seeing different perspectives isn't some magical genius attribute. As for her photographic memory, I believe you are referring to her memorization of South Korean Law. This, I also don't find to be a special genius moment. Woo Young Woo seems to also value law itself as something of a special interest, and that's why she memorized a whole law book. Delving so deeply into something you appreciate is something I, and many other autistics, can really relate to. Young-Woo's autism may seem stereotypical to many, but I related to most of her behavior. I think it's very good representation. Her autism isn't considered a good or bad thing, and it interferes with her social life and how people perceive her. She overcomes lots of prejudice, but is also disheartened by it a lot. The show does a good job, to me, of tackling lots of issues that occur with an autistic main character. It explicitly points out that autism is a spectrum, and with an autistic client on a very different part of the spectrum, Young-Woo has to explain to others that her autism is not a universal experience. Young-Woo has to deal with being infantilized by others, and while in some cases she changes the persons mind, in others they simply continue to see her as lesser, and this discourages her. Her autism isn't treated like a joke, it's just a part of who she is, and while some characters in the show may mock her and look down on it, they're always treated like they're in the wrong. She's autistic, and she's just as capable as them, even if she has certain struggles that they don't. Also, it's nice that she falls in love with an allistic man, and they have a loving relationship. He's way too perfect and boring I think, but that's how lots of South Korean Drama men are, so it's okay. People seem to think autism makes you not able to fall in love, but they do, and it goes well despite certain obstacles. I think that's very good. The only real criticism I've seen of it so far, that I've thought is a decent point, is that the lead actress is not autistic. I totally see why this could be seen as bad. But the main actress initially turned down the role, not wanting to misrepresent anything or harm anybody, but the studio then delayed the show until she gave in. That's a very big deal, since the K-Drama industry is so fast paced and volatile. That was a very risky move, but the creators really felt that she would be able to do a good job, and I think she did do a good job. The lead actress has said that she never copied autistic people when acting, she just acted the way she felt was the more true to Young-Woo's character, so I don't think it's a problem. Young-Woo was not being mocked or stereotyped, and care was put in to make sure she wasn't. And, I think this might sound odd to American audiences, but finding an autistic actress to act in the show would have been very difficult, and I think that if a popular actress wasn't chosen, people would be really making a lot more of a mockery of the show. Korean reception is still somewhat unkind towards the show, because of how discriminatory Korea often is towards small groups of people. If they had managed to find an openly autistic actress, she might not be a good actor, or people would insult her heavily, or maybe she would be on such a different part of the spectrum, it wouldn't really be that different than if an allistic actress had been hired. But other than that, I think lots of criticism towards the show is unfair and not actually very considerate of autistic people's feelings. I really like the show, it's my favorite drama. I can't find any major flaws with the representation, even when I try. There's lots and lots of good traits in it, instead. I would really recommend it, so I just hope people don't see the portion of the video devoted to "Extraordinary Attorney Woo" and instantly imagine it to be bad or misrepresenting. I hope this doesn't sound like a sponsorship, I just wanted people to know that most autistic viewers of the show do consider it good representation. So if you were ever considering watching it, I think it's a good idea. That's all.
@anaboxx55 ай бұрын
as another autist, i LOVE extraordinary attorney woo!!!
@donnie_duckling5 ай бұрын
As another autistic, I agree completely Young-Woo became both one of my biggest comfort shows as well as an outlet I could rely on to make sense of the situations happening in my life at the time I was watching the show, when my diagnosis was confirmed.
@Unhappytimeaper4 ай бұрын
Personally as another Autistic person in South Korea but has lived abroad, to some level there tend to be a thought that things like cultural and background don't shape aspects of what it's like being within different parts of societies. While the show itself isn't perfect representation, it gives a feeling of thoughts expressed as someone within parts of culture that are common to a level. I work in education for example and as you mentioned memorization of the law-- ND and NT I see a lot of my students be forced into corners were memorization is the only way to pass things within narrow time frames and amount of work placed in education systems. For many they might forget after the exam but Young-Woo having an interest was able to maintain and keep learning beyond how other peers might do so in order to keep up with the demands. There are other ways the show to me comes off as understanding what it's like to be autistic or ND not within the western framework of how a society functions. I am someone who isn't very open with my diagnosis at work or in non-personal relationships because of certain things the show is able to present and at least is able to start setting a foundation for discussion about how parts of ND can be viewed within a work place that most of us are just as qualified for, even more in societies that still have a lot way to go with representation, topics, and nondiscrimination.
@heedmydemands4 ай бұрын
Might have to check it out, thanks for the big talk about it
@rosiv96174 ай бұрын
It does have a bit of that protigy trope, but after watching it, it's also so much more than that. It's really informative on autism, especially for East Asia where they are less progressive in this area than in the US or UK. I like the episode where it features another autistic character, and distinguishes how big of a spectrum autism is...how no two autistic people are the same, sometimes drastically different.
@Jay329548 ай бұрын
Hot take, there are no neuro-typical characters in Bob's Burgers. Not a single one
@juliareck66508 ай бұрын
Maybe Jimmy Pesto?
@Rikigals8 ай бұрын
@@juliareck6650Nah, Jimmy is a solid closet bisexual
@sophiacheon22458 ай бұрын
@@Rikigalsah yes bisexuality. My favorite neurocognitive disorder.
@ChristopherSadlowski8 ай бұрын
@@Rikigals I think you misunderstood the assignment... 🙂
@changella8 ай бұрын
is... is this a hot take? like, genuinely, is this NOT a well known idea?? i've only been watching it with my very neurodivergent family (mom has adhd traits out the roof, sister has adhd diagnosed and autistic traits, etc) and i just figured this was like... a common thing...
@sannh8 ай бұрын
I really hate the belief that the Big Bang creators have that "being medicated" is a bad thing. And medical autism diagnosis is awful, particularly during the 90s, so Sheldon could have absolutely be autistic.
@pauldaigle23448 ай бұрын
They all could... take Leonard... he counts the number of seconds that Penny hugs him before he leaves for Antartica, then he then brings it up with her. That is not neurotypical.
@BelindaShort8 ай бұрын
Right, especially when you already have it being a sitcom, which basically is just a get out of writing free card to make every interaction people miscommunicating.
@sideshowmob8 ай бұрын
@@pauldaigle2344 Everyday people make the concept of neurotypical narrower. Being weird is not beingND.
@donagaleta8 ай бұрын
I really think that all the characters in The Big Bang are very very very autistic except Penny 🤷♀️🤷♀️🤷♀️🤷♀️
@taoist328 ай бұрын
@@sideshowmobCounting seems to be part of neurodivergence, not necessarily autism. I count all the time on different things, different situations and contexts. I am autistic, so it’s just a small part of what I do, but not everyone does this.
@bivcbmtgstgtssscqcrddgtrsm22573 ай бұрын
I can fully attest to the whole "autism is a super power" thing horribly backfiring. I am a very intelligent person, but my Autism still holds me back by a lot. Unfortunately, during most of my school life, everyone only focused on the fact that I'm super smart, ignoring that I still had a learning disability. And what do you know, I'm horribly insecure about my intelligence now.
@measlyfurball378 ай бұрын
I'm interested to see where TV depictions of robot/alien characters might intersect into this discussion. All of my favorite characters were robots growing up. I was always "the weird robot girl". Then, as an adult, I was diagnosed.
@valkyrie_cain868 ай бұрын
This. Makes me think of The Doctor in Doctor Who too.
@brookejon36957 ай бұрын
Overly Sarcastic Productions did a great video called "Trope Talk: Robots" that explores this topic. Their Trope Talk on queer coding is also great, as are the rest of the series. Red is an ace queen.
@goldenapple39526 ай бұрын
For me i always liked the weird scientist character and hated others for not listenning to their logical solutions because of bs reasons (im getting a diagnosis appointment in may 😀🧍♀️)
@lordhoot1Ай бұрын
Star Trek has so many autistic coded characters it's hard to keep up with it
@SteppefordWife8 ай бұрын
Even before diagnosis, myself and many of my autistic friends were treated like a spectacle by our allistic peers at school and by other children who picked us out in public. The fact that allistic people see no issue with milking autistic people as their personal lolcows is one of the many reasons I have no respect for people who don't see the problem with making fun of autists / bullying behaviour and abuse perpetrated by children. They are culpable and their age shouldn't distract from the fact that they should be held to account and taught better.
@promisemochi8 ай бұрын
exactly!!! not to "trauma dump" but this resonates a lot with my high school experience. i was just minding my business. i never made waves. i just wanted to blend in. a group of "friends" invited me over for a slumber party and spent the entire night making fun of me. another instance, two boys came up to me and asked which one of them i'd date as a bet. i was so confused in the moments because it didn't make sense to me. i hadn't done anything to these people. i was just existing. but to them, that was a problem.i didn't get diagnosed until i was in my 30s. looking back, it's very jarring to think that's why certain things happened.
@SelinaFireen8 ай бұрын
@@promisemochi yeah, my school years were horrid too, then again it was thanks to the day treatment program therapist of a "school for problem students" that my family n I were made aware of me bein on the spectrum..ugh the TEACHERS joined in bullying me despite knowing my diagnosis...
@destined2bebossy8 ай бұрын
I like that Attorney Woo Young had an episode where they have another character whose autism displays differently than hers. She had to confront that difference and how, though she does struggle, she still has some privileges and social support because of how hers is displayed.
@rubyy.73746 ай бұрын
I know people have problems with the rep in the show, but for me it was really comforting seeing someone with an exaggerated version of my traits managing to find a support structure within her work and outside of it. Such basic things feel so unreachable when you’re neurodivergent and it’s nice to see representation where, while difficult to obtain, it IS obtainable.
@nunnyabznz6 ай бұрын
@@rubyy.7374 Yes, that was the thing I liked about the show, too. For all its issues, at least they did show how she was liked and supported and even respected in her workplace.
@fartface89185 ай бұрын
@@rubyy.7374 a big part of it is that on order to be obtained it must be given, neurotypicals do not give support to neurodivergent at the same rate or with the same grace as they do with each other, a friend or family member can get past that stumbling block thro love, bosses and coworkers the people most in control if you get support at work are very directly disincentivized to treat coworkers/employees with that love/care needed to right the wrong of our mistreatment witch might sound workable if you think of being work buddys with people but you need to get hired first for that happen a gamble a lot of neurodivergent people can't pay the entry fee over and over and over without leaving marks, this social and financial strangling meaning is a deep injustice to witch we have little systemic fault, im sure you likely know this but its worth saying for others reading later
@Serenity1135 ай бұрын
I remember that episode. They also had her there as if she was could help translate what he was saying or doing because they were both autistic. Iol
@romicor9Ай бұрын
@@Serenity113 The scene when the mother apologizes for treating her badly is really heartfelt. It helped me understand as well why parents of very disabled autistic kids feel threatened by the mere presence of us, the "high functioning" ones.
@justingerald8 ай бұрын
The popular portrayal of neurodivergent people is also extremely white, which leaves the rest of us really isolated.
@AngryPug768 ай бұрын
Writers and producers treat white as the default because that’s the core viewership in the US. So if they are writing a story about bigotry based on mental health they leave the character default because they don’t believe viewers are smart enough to understand where racism ends and ableism begins. They also worry about writing about how mental health is viewed in different non-white demographics like Asians and black people. The under diagnosis of mental health issues in those areas is staggering due to the “you’re either normal or crazy” stigma. Parents often flat out refuse any kind of testing. Writers are afraid of being judged for being called out for ignoring things like that as much as they are for being called racist for including it. And remember, most writers, as in almost all, in TV and film are white non-autistics who got their job through connections and being willing to do whatever the producers want opposed to talent or integrity. It would be them writing about 4th hand accounts of people they can’t understand who grew up in a cultures they know nothing about. At least per all the screenwriters I’ve heard speak at comic conventions and writer gatherings. Also they believe, or their executives believe, many average white viewers won’t watch shows about autistic characters and many more won’t watch shows about non-white characters, and per ratings they’re right. So combining the two guarantees much lower ratings and lower revenue. Few are willing to accept a job that pays half as much or less money for the same level of work and investment. I’m not defending them by understanding and explaining them. I am pointing out this is a genre with very little competition and big demand in certain circles if you are interested in writing novels or screenwriting. And places like KZbin with attached Patreon would be a great place to make money off stories like this that big media won’t touch.
@InsightfulUndercurrents8 ай бұрын
And male
@DeadAugur8 ай бұрын
@@AngryPug76 These are all great points. I find it surprising how little media actually wants to cover intersectionality when it's such an important thing to understand
@AngryPug768 ай бұрын
@@DeadAugur I don’t. It’s because most those in power are bigots against multiple groups of people and the rest are happy to appease bigots if it gets them money even if they are in the groups hated by their bosses.
@kellychuba8 ай бұрын
I had this conversation with a younger black man. Eye opening, truly. Even further derision for things we just cannot help. Life is absurd.
@shirleymarie22888 ай бұрын
I love how you mentioned us with ADHD listening while doing other tasks. That is basically the only way I "watch" KZbin. I'll listen while caring for baby, doing chores, playing a video game. I intentionally watch folks who's content doesn't rely too heavily on visuals, if the content creator is neurodivergent and/or queer that is a huge plus. Your channel kinda checks all my boxes. Thank you for doing what you do.
@OddOzzy8 ай бұрын
I had to stop for a minute to laugh cause i was literally listening to this on 1.5x while also while formatting an e-book for future publishing. Literally called out lol. Can't be productive without max inputs
@RoweClementine8 ай бұрын
I almost always have some kind of video essay/podcast on when I’m at work or doing chores. It’s the only way I can get my laundry done lol
@Pinkywinkykinky8 ай бұрын
i just watch all videos at maximum speed 😭even if I don't have an official diagnosis
@JeantheSecond-ip7qm8 ай бұрын
I do the exact same thing. I can’t do just one thing at once, with the possible exception of reading.
@killerbee.138 ай бұрын
Likewise, I'm playing Sawayama solitaire (from Zachtronics Solitaire Collection/Last Call BBS) with this on my second monitor lol. I'd like to be doing chores because my room is a huge mess but I'm also attempting to recover from a migraine so physical exertion is off the table for now.
@ThePhantom94955 ай бұрын
Thanks for mentioning Autism Speaks. I cannot properly express the feelings of horror and disgust I feel when someone says they want to "cure" people like me...
@Rikigals8 ай бұрын
The way that Mayam said that they ‘didn’t try to change their characters’ as if they didn’t spend the whole show trying to change BOTH Sheldon and Amy
@pamelapeters33428 ай бұрын
They didn't change them. Their characters grew.
@jijitters8 ай бұрын
@@pamelapeters3342 Thinking that autistic characters have to become like the other characters and that becoming more "normal" is "growth" is the problem to begin with, jerk.
@gallifreyfallsnomore12628 ай бұрын
Mayim generally has really weird takes on things.
@Ice-Climber7 ай бұрын
@@pamelapeters3342 Not really. They were both Flanderised. Shedlon became a petulant child and Amy became manipulative and clingily.
@pamelapeters33427 ай бұрын
@Ice-Climber Sheldon became a petulant child because Penny began to mother him, and he felt more comfortable being himself. Amy became more clingy because she fell in love with Sheldon and had to find ways to open him up and express his love physically. She wasn't manipulative, but she did become more cohersive. Like I said, they grew and changed.
@ryn28448 ай бұрын
Leo Kanner and Hans Asperger didn't just happen to discover the same condition independently at the same time. Both of their work was based on the work of Georg Frankl and Anni Weiss. They worked at the Viennese autism clinic Asperger worked at, far before he did. Asperger was a newbie. Anni and Georg then fled to the US, because they were Jewish. Leo Kanner was actually the guy who helped them flee Austria. I guess he thought it'd be a fair deal to then take the credit for all of their knowledge on autism. Source: Edith Sheffer's book 'Aspergers' Children', would recommend, but wow it is not for the feint of heart because that Asperger guy is an absolute villain.
@valtariarc49318 ай бұрын
Let's also not forget about Grunya Sukhareva.
@ryn28448 ай бұрын
@@valtariarc4931 Thank you. I was not aware of her, but reading up on this is really interesting :) It is kind of strange to say someone 'discovered' or 'first described' autism, isn't it? We've always been around and we've always been like this, and I'm sure people throughout time have noticed and written about us, but their writings just usually haven't been preserved. Given that aut!stic people tend to have excellent pattern recognition, and that we do inordinate amounts of research into and writing about things that especially interest us, and that we often develop a special interest in understanding why our brains work the way they do, I think it's very unlikely that there weren't loads of aut!stic people who've written about autism, but well, epistemic injustice is a thing. I'm sure those aut!stic people were considered too 'biased', or their brains too weird, to be taken seriously. Ew, 'me-search'. Personally I despise both Kanner and Asperger, so any amount of credit taken away from them is good in my book. They're not 'the fathers of autism'. They were just privileged enough to be taken seriously and remembered, and arrogant enough to take the credit of decades of work and ascribe it all to themselves. I don't want my identity to be related to these b!goted f*ckwits in any way. I'm censoring words that often get my comments auto-deleted. I know it's annoying.
@Idkpleasejustletmechangeit8 ай бұрын
@@ryn2844 why would youtube autodelete comments for containg the word "autistic"? That's kind of fucked up.
@ryn28448 ай бұрын
@@Idkpleasejustletmechangeit It sure is f*cked up. I guess it's used as a slur a lot.
@luchirimoya8 ай бұрын
Thanks for this info! I have just downloaded the book, very interesting topic that is barely ever discussed in mainstream media
@empyrestwilight7 ай бұрын
it's interesting how varied the experiences of autistic people are, and how something deemed "bad representation" by most of the community can still make specific members of it feel seen. I'm autistic and have never seen The Good Doctor, but as soon as you played the clip of the character's meltdown, I immediately identified with it. When I was younger, that was what a lot of my meltdowns looked like - I would feel frustrated and misunderstood, and get very caught up on the source of my frustration. I couldn't mask until I got older, and would scream over and over until I felt like someone (usually an adult with power over me) actually understood what I was trying to say. My skin would feel like it was on fire, I wouldn't be able to stop crying, and my emotions felt so big that I had to scream until it hurt to get them out. If I hadn't learned to cope so well, I could easily imagine myself in his position, fixated on the unfairness of having my capabilities doubted and unable to handle feeling like I needed to prove myself. Having my autonomy denied, or being assumed to be incompetent, not being able to advocate for myself, etc. were frequent things that would set off my autistic rage.
@pendafen74058 ай бұрын
Does anyone else find that relatives, coworkers & friends start condescending and talking down to you once they find out you have ASD? (or even suspect you do?) Or even that you just have a comorbid condition such as severe depression or agoraphobia? It's happening to me, and it's so frustrating. As a grown woman, I don't want people baby-talking to me, censoring themselves around me or 'yes, dear'-ing me. I can and want to participate in adult life, discussions, activities. It's just that sometimes my mind & body won't get with that programme.
@Whyjustwhy7728 ай бұрын
Mine usually say “no you don’t” or “but you’re so competent” so I just don’t say anything anymore. They have an image of what autism looks like in their heads and it’s not a high masking autistic woman
@pendafen74058 ай бұрын
@@Whyjustwhy772 yes, that's equally frustrating. You must feel very invalidated and abandoned by such treatment, so sorry that's happening to you. Society seems like it's punishing us on purpose, sometimes. It's like we're damned if we do mask, and damned if we don't. E.g. my internal stress levels have somewhat reduced since I relaxed my masking, however external judgement and negativity and limiting from others who don't like that certain of my functions are impaired has ramped up, so it doesn't even make a difference. Sigh.
@Whyjustwhy7728 ай бұрын
@@pendafen7405 Eh, I don’t mind as much as I used to. My best friend is a psychologist specializing in autism and ADHD and she guessed I was autistic pretty much as soon as we met. That was super validating. And my mum (also autistic) has always been in my corner, arguing with doctors and advocating for a diagnosis, which I eventually got at 23. I totally get you on the catch 22 of masking though, it’s like we have to choose between our own comfort and NTs’ comfort, and both choices get negative reactions from people around us
@oscarthegrouch238 ай бұрын
I'm in school to be a social worker. Autistic, socialized female (identify as trans/genderqueer). I "outed" myself as Autistic for the first time in an abnormal psychology class because the professor was teaching about person-first language and presenting it as the only option. I had classmates suddenly decide they couldn't work with me in groups anymore, because suddenly I wasn't capable... Since that experience, I've made it a point to Be Autistic Out Loud in every one of my social work classes, because students who are unable/unwilling to work with me as their peer have no right to go into this field with their harmful stereotypes about what disabled clients can achieve. Sometimes there's no discernable reactions to me, but other times the differences in both student and teacher interactions is so incredibly jarring. I'm an adult, same as any other. I earned my way into this program, same as everyone else. I deserve to be treated the same as everyone else and be made to feel like my presence is valued and important.
@pendafen74058 ай бұрын
@@oscarthegrouch23 Sorry to hear it, sounds frustrating and confusing, when you're just trying to complete education and move on with your adult life. Does this happen to you at home and work as well? Or in any other classes? And is it definitely because of your autism being known? (i.e. is the correlation between your 'outing' and the different treatment undeniable?) Would that be worth gently inquiring about, in private either with your tutor/s, pastoral rep/care officer or friends in a different class who you trust? I ask because on paper the situation sounds highly context-specific (i.e. confined to one small class). We simply don't know until we find out what other people have heard or assumed about us--could there be a miscommunication or misunderstanding at play here? Or an error in tone? These tend to go over autistic peoples' heads sometimes--it took me physically overhearing gossip spoken about me to come to the conclusion in my OP, before that I had no idea anyone spoke or thought less of me. I've also been in situations where what I've said has been misconstrued as antisocial, sarcastic or malicious because of my low affect or poor delivery--could this be the case for you? Also, from what you've said about your case, it's probably pertinent to realise and respect that some women are distressed or wary around male & male identified people because of past trauma (depressingly common)--perhaps your female classmates are this way. Until we ask or it's disclosed, we never know what other people have been through. Everyone has a right to boundaries and self-protection, over anyone's right to feel 'important'. And as far as prejudice toward autism goes, if someone's had a really bad experience (so, more than mild temporary inconvenience or discomfort) with someone in the past who had autism, then personally I do totally understand their wariness around us and give it a pass. Not everyone has to be ok with everyone, sadly life just doesn't work like that. Even neurotypicals with good social skills sometimes meet a person or small group who take exception to them for no reason. That said, this is a major issue when the aversion behaviour we encounter is constant and systemic from most or all of society, and if that's happening to you, then I hope you can graduate very soon then move community to somewhere more accepting or find a chosen family who don't judge. Wishing you every success and happiness.
@kristinclark88438 ай бұрын
What's actually so frustrating about Benedict Cumberbatch's whole thing about playing Frankenstein's monster as autistic is that a portrayal like that COULD be good if it weren't so essentialist and ableist because a lot of autistic people DO experience being othered and their autism treated as this horrible obstacle (which of course Cumberbatch's quote betrays). And what's funny is that Shelley's book (and the 1930s movie) does present the idea that the Monster is only monstrous because he is perceived that way similar to how many of the difficulties of being autistic are there because society makes it that way. All of this said with the caveat that it would be best if an autistic actor took that approach rather than a non autistic actor playing autistic.
@Z3r0_g8 ай бұрын
I know. I read the original Frankenstein for school, and as an autistic person I really resonated with Adam (that’s how Mary Shelley referred to the monster in letters to her friends) because I often felt like a misunderstood monster myself. It’s pretty sad that Benedict Cumberbatch’s portrayal of him as autistic was so close yet so far from what the original story was about.
@LostApotheosis8 ай бұрын
Guillermo Del Toro does a really good job of using what people perceive as monsters to portray the feeling of otherness and he does it in really compassionate way.
@bibivallejo8 ай бұрын
Also, what Benedict said was way worse, in the complete statement he said ““I went to schools and met people, some of whom are very high functioning on the autistic spectrum. I met a 17-year-old who had the mental age of a one and a half year old. Everything was just about bodily functions. Smell. Sexual arousal. Shitting. Whatever. So when I hear people use diagnostic labels casually - Sherlock is autistic, Turing is autistic - it really upsets me.”” Which is why I don’t watch anything he’s one anymore
@wmd408 ай бұрын
Frankenstein's monster is LITERALLY A WALKING CORPSE LOL 💀 I cannot believe that's their angle. that is absolutely horrible. the monster acts that way because he's made of dead parts ... so he can't think very well. if anything, he should be based on people with serious traumatic brain injuries instead of autism. it is obviously a metaphor for feeling "other" but coming out and saying that subtext ruins the point. it's relatable, it doesn't have to be a direct explanation
@TheLittlestViking8 ай бұрын
@@bibivallejo Welp, guess that's another actor on my avoid list. -sigh-
@TheKamel14357 ай бұрын
fun story, when i was in 5th grade i really struggled to see the whiteboard, i said nothing because i assumed that’s just how everyone else sees, was absolutely mind blown when i finally got glasses and realized oh, this is how it’s supposed to be. cut to present day, im 22, was recently diagnosed with autism same concept am consistently blown away daily about how many masks i wear, because i simply believed that’s how everyone else was
@lisanorwoodtreefarm6 ай бұрын
Same! For me: 3rd grade, gym poster, and asd dx at 35, but otherwise exactly the same ^_^
@dylanfooler6 ай бұрын
Also same, but for me it was in 1st grade with my glasses and 21 about my autism
@sophiering21026 ай бұрын
Had a similar experience with glasses, but also, weirdly, about being anosmic (unable to smell from birth). Genuinely didn't realise that when people said they could smell things that it was a sensing of the air particles. Obviously I cannot ever physically understand what smell is, but because of this, I didn't realise everyone else had a different experience and that, consequently, mine was abnormal. Just goes to show that you can't necessarily tell that your experience is different to other people's, so you don't know you might need additional help
@palomo22735 ай бұрын
Same for me, I got diagnosed with myopia and astigmatism at like 8/9yo (third grade here) and I was amazed on how the world looks. Then with the ASD thing I got it diagnosed at 20yo, before I was asked by the teachers if I was on the spectrum and I was like "ughhhh Idk, I never got a diagnosis". Then at like 18 started reading Asperu Kanojo and I was like "SHE IS JUST LIKE ME, FR" (and I can't recomend it because is kinda raw on how depicts autism), I got into a psychologist (bc uni stuff) and ended up diagnosed with asd. Finally I can tie up some points on my life and that was my big "Ahhh that's why"
@remusblack68755 ай бұрын
YES! I had the exact same experience with glasses and being severely HOH (98% hearing loss in my left ear and 23% loss in the right) and am currently trying to see if I’m autistic (I’m not seeking a formal diagnosis bc I see no reason too/ mainly it’s expensive and time consuming and could impact my ability to get a job even more bc I’m already disabled)
@TT-yl1wp8 ай бұрын
"It's possible to find two autistic people with diametrically opposed needs..." YES! I feel like not enough people acknowledge that.
@tk5800thesecond6 ай бұрын
i once said to someone i know "my stims are your triggers and your stims are my trigger" after that we had a much better understanding on how to interact
@spruce-ui2eh5 ай бұрын
There's a youtuber who made a short on exactly that (youtuber called "Rabarrabon_bon") It was a skit of two autistic people sharing what their symptoms were. They were *exact* opposites, however both were correct depictions of an autistic person. You could not single either out as "that one is not autistic" Yet they where total opposites. (Example: when stressed out, A wants to just be alone while B prefferes to be body slammed by someone who can act as a weighted blanket untill calmed down.)
@cartwheelkids5 ай бұрын
@@spruce-ui2eh Do you remember the name of the short? I'm struggling to find it
@spruce-ui2eh5 ай бұрын
@@cartwheelkids so apparantly I switched up what youtuber the short was from- It's from Reberrabon_bon. They look a bit alike, which is probably why I got confused. Sorry for that! kzbin.info/www/bejne/pIa6gWSdfqdortEsi=mpcQOkXD0UifvgIz this is the exact short
@sarahmaxima4 ай бұрын
@@tk5800thesecond that is litteraly me and my brother who i shared a room with.
@hazmathaver41118 ай бұрын
I really resonated with the "I am a surgeon" scene. Silly as it may be, it reminded me of the grip acceptance has on you when you've constantly been turned away as an autistic person, so I don't think the reaction is unrealistic or bad. It made me cry honestly with how much I resonated with the feelings and circumstances that brought the meltdown on.
@HikaHima8 ай бұрын
I also felt seen during this. I'm highly intelligent but highly autistic. Unfortunately, some people do think that means you are we're not capable of things (even when we may just need some accommodations). For me the only thing missing from this seen was the physical signs of rocking/fidgeting in place or flailing body parts. But - it appears in everyone differently so others may see it as perfect representation. At the end of the day - the goal is to give props where genuine attempts with thought for representations were made and to call out when it's blatantly off.
@xofyck52327 ай бұрын
yeah sad how the internet reacted to it though, especially with nts making fun of it
@toothfairy101337 ай бұрын
yeah i agree. i know the scene looks dramatic and over the top through an allistic lense but that's how autistic emotions look a lot of the time. it doesnt mean its not real or that we shouldnt be taken seriously about it.
@sendingstone7 ай бұрын
i hadnt seen anything relating to the show or that scene before watching this video. i am autistic, and at first the way the actor performed the emotional meltdown felt disingenuous, but seeing these comments makes me wonder if the full scene might feel less jarring. it's interesting!
@vulpesrocktails9186 ай бұрын
I'm a bit embarrassed now, cuz I was one of the people who poked fun at that scene. It was wrong of me to do that.
@allykholodov8 ай бұрын
Part of the reason a lot of autistic people identify as genderqueer is because of how socially constructed gender is. We tend to struggle with understanding and applying social norms, and this often applies to our gender as well. Many of us have a rich and nuanced understanding of our identity, including our gender identity, which we might not feel is adequately represented by the labels of cisgender boy or girl. Many autistic people identify as queer or transgender, but more specifically, many autistic people identify as not a part of the gender binary.
@BelindaShort8 ай бұрын
haha I'm working and writing a story
@Fushishou8 ай бұрын
I dont agree with the phrase "struggle to understand gender norms". We often understand them very well, better than neurotypicals and cis people. The correct way to say it would be we can more easily spot discrepancies related to (gender) norms. But that makes NTs the stupid ones and they dont like hearing that.
@Sing_A_Rebel_Song8 ай бұрын
Yess! Completely accurate!
@oscarthegrouch238 ай бұрын
I am an Autistic genderqueer person. I've never seen someone connect genderqueer with the fact that we as autistics struggle with social norms and constructs- but that makes so so much perfect sense. Even as I chose to pursue medical transition in my gender, I've never been able to fully put my understanding of my gender fully into the binary options. Wow, this concept makes me feel so seen.
@sassylittleprophet8 ай бұрын
AuDHD enby here 🙋
@Ironattheend8 ай бұрын
I'm autistic, my partner has ADHD, we have an incredible (bio) daughter and we... do not tell people anything we don't *absolutely* have to. I can count on one hand the number of people in our lives who know both of those things and we keep it that way, both to protect our daughter from general judgement and (frighteningly to consider) to protect our ability to keep custody of her. Media representation starts as this very interesting, kind of low-stakes feeling thing, but I can guarantee you that the stakes are high and dangerously close to getting higher. Thank you for doing the work to shed actual light on these things in such a fascinating way!
@kittysunlover8 ай бұрын
I'm really glad you brought this up. Especially with recent laws in places in the US (or attempts at passing said laws, fortunately a lot of them don't make it all the way to actual law, at least no so far) that skirt dangerously close to "people with autism/similar ND diagnoses can be legally considered incompetent solely based on their diagnosis." I wish my brain would let me remember more detail but I remember reading articles and being just outraged and also terrified. And I don't have kids to worry about. Wherever you are in the world, I hope your social surroundings do (or will someday soon) treat you and your family with respect as autonomous individuals.
@Chungussy8 ай бұрын
I'm also autistic with a partner with ADHD and we have a son. I think we're doing an incredible job and he's amazing.
@catalysts948 ай бұрын
@@kittysunlover actual who have actual autism have an IQ around 70 and are incompetent.
@chaoschaos44638 ай бұрын
@@kittysunlover WTF. I am so happy I live in Europe
@sampahr8 ай бұрын
A lot of people have zero idea of how much danger an official Autism Dx can put Autistic people in, not only after it's on paper but during the process of trying to acquire the Dx. It ranges from the inconvenient & slightly upsetting to completely life destroying/taking. And unfortunately there's no real standardization (both legally and interpersonally) so the danger the Dx could bring someone can change drastically depending on a ton of different factors. This danger only compounds for Autistic people who are otherwise marginalized.
@Tattedsnakezz8 ай бұрын
Noticing no one has said him(at least from what I've read), I have to say my favorite 'autistic' character is in fact, Spencer Reid(from Criminal Minds). While his autism is never really announced in the show, he shows very clear signs and he's never infantilized. He's a VERY good agent and doctor and his autism is one of the things that makes him so good and oh my god. He was the first ever character in media where I was like 'Hey! I do that!' Especially with his fixations on certain dark subjects. I have hyperfixations on so many dark things and I've always been called a freak or told I'd end up being a murderer in the future. Reid showed me I wasn't alone in my 'creepy' fixations and they could possibly help me in certain works!
@theluiginoidperson10977 ай бұрын
Funny enough, I actually decided to play through the Criminal Minds mobile game, and while I wouldn't really recommend it, I noticed an interesting detail that adds on to this. There is a certain 'looking for clues' task that varies specifically from character to character, with some examples being 'match the icon to the object', or 'tap the flashing spots in screen'. Reid's searching task involves having to find the onscreen spot through 'tunnel vision', blocking the entire screen outside of a tiny peripheral. Although it's not a direct indication of 'autism' by any means, this does happen to heavily resemble a semi-common symptom/trait among people on the spectrum, which adds a little more substance to the idea that Reid has Autism. Sure, it's not in the show itself, but it's still interesting that something like this shows up here in relation to Reid.
@mortuaryerror6 ай бұрын
The one unsub who calls Reid 'autistic' in the first season was the only instance I heard of him being announced as autistic and, while it was used as an insult in a bout of anger, it definitely set me in the mindset of keeping an eye on Reid as the 'autistic savant' type. Have to say, CM is one of my favourite shows, and the way they treat Reid is absolutely a part of that. No one acts like he's overreacting or like he's less than, he's young for an agent but treated no less even for that. Incredible show with surprisingly good mental health rep, I love it
@BliffleSplick6 ай бұрын
Early seasons Grissom in CSI as well, then it got popular and they "rescued the weirdo from himself" and made him blah
@lunatronlina5 ай бұрын
yes i love him and he's perfect
@MusesWhim5 ай бұрын
@mortuaryerror There are a few instances where it is brought up. One of the more significant moments is where Blake basically says Reid is autistic on the jet, and then apologizes to him later, and he's like, "What are you talking about?" The overall vibe is that everyone pretty much realizes he is autistic (except possibly Reid), but he's not concerned with the label, so they aren't either.
@hollyturner41868 ай бұрын
There's now a podcast version of the Sherlock Holmes stories, Sherlock & Co, in which Sherlock is canonically confirmed to be autistic. The representation is (to me) very kind and realistic. Sherlock has sensory difficulties, he struggles with social situations, he talks about how exhausting masking is. John is accommodating and accepting of Sherlock's struggles and needs, and corrects him if he's causing upset or offence to someone. It's just so lovely to see (hear) and so important to me.
@abbieananas8 ай бұрын
I love sherlock & co!!!! Its a great podcast and i think sherlocks autism is handled well. Hes an autistic character with his own personality and not just a walking list of symptoms.
@casandra08 ай бұрын
Is this original Sherlock or a new Sherlock story? I’ve noticed some Sherlock inspired stories feel like they could be autism coded.
@hollyturner41868 ай бұрын
@@casandra0 it's a modernised adaptation of the original stories. I absolutely agree - Holmes does show autistic traits many times in the original canon. I strongly interpret him as autistic in any version.
@patrickmccurry15638 ай бұрын
@@hollyturner4186Probably as close as a writer from that era could make a character. Hyper focused, but with a complete lack of caring about subjects that don't pertain to his special interest of solving cases was what struck me first when reading Holmes.
@introusas8 ай бұрын
Right, and what I love about the original series (that I really strongly dislike about the BBC version) is that Sherlock was never being rude just for the sake of it, or because he thought he was better than everyone else. Oftentimes he was being brash as a way to push someone towards the answers to the mystery, give them a chance to solve it themselves before revealing what he knows. He also regarded Watson as being a clever guy, despite the fact that Watson was “NT”, or whatever is the equivalent word Holmes would use lol.
@froggiepie8 ай бұрын
My friend once called Sherlock’s mind palace ‘floating png autism powers’ and I just think that is so true because every time I think about things pngs start flying around my head (joke)
@jenaf42088 ай бұрын
Yeah its actually jpegs
@idle_speculation8 ай бұрын
Imagine not thinking in .webp files
@vigilantcosmicpenguin87218 ай бұрын
For me it's mostly .gif files. Just playin' on repeat.
@dragoninthewest18 ай бұрын
@@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721Honestly, that's my brain on weed. I guess Asperger's + Weed = Sherlock mind palace
@toothfairy101337 ай бұрын
lmao i keep forgetting that allistics cant see the uid. losers. related but uh hey guys mine's been flashing red for a while now do y'all know how to turn that off?
@kitsunekun23458 ай бұрын
I was very lucky to find a therapist who specializes in autism in AFAB people. I wasn't diagnosed until I met her when I was 24
@JDMimeTHEFIRST8 ай бұрын
I do like the couple in Australia that laughed at the interviewers when they asked about sex. “Duh, that’s the easy part!” I agree. As an autistic adult, sex is not an issue. For me, it’s neurotypicals not understanding me. I also was called for the show but refused to date the one guy from MA . So they rejected me. I think it was also that I am over 35. I noticed they don’t have autistic women over 30 on the show. I find that odd.
@-homechord-29087 ай бұрын
From MA?
@matthewevans1078 ай бұрын
I also find the Wednesday headcanon to be problematic and out here in the same category as Sheldon. It’s a glorification of the tropes instead of using them as the butt of a joke but it’s still tropey. Wednesday’s autistic traits are linked to her violence, her disdain for people and her superiority complex. They are also very much played as her choosing these traits and that she can stop anytime. The autistic traits are set dressing to make her look cool.
@Z3r0_g8 ай бұрын
Thank you! Sometimes I feel like the only person to not like the Netflix version of Wednesday. I’m kind of sad as an autistic person that people headcanon her as autistic when she’s honestly a pretty insufferable person. Don’t get me wrong, insufferable people can be autistic too, but they’re not very helpful when it comes to creating positive representation.
@ewrvwergwergwergwerg8 ай бұрын
There's plenty of different types of autistic people out there, and in my experience the Wednesday-style autistic woman is incredibly common. Most of the autistic women I know love her for being like them. It's the edgy autistic woman version of those autistic guys (me) who cringily like edgy, smart anime antiheroes. That character trope isn't the most flattering or realistic, but in my experience a lot of autistic people absolutely do develop a less intense version of that personality when they're young as a way to cope (and from emulating their favorite characters, like Wednesday). And likewise, most of those people I know did consciously choose to grow out of those Wednesday-y traits once they realized how negative they were.
@promisemochi8 ай бұрын
i'm an autistic woman and i cannot stand wednesday adams and the recent portrayl of her. she just seems mean. and not a misunderstood mean or a funny mean like her character in the past. but just...mean. she reminds me more of the girls who'd bully me than myself as an autistic girl back in the day.
@Z3r0_g8 ай бұрын
@@promisemochi I’m another autistic woman who really doesn’t like this recent portrayal, and sometimes I feel like “the only sane person” because of it. Ironically enough, I think Wednesday’s original character would despise this incarnation too. I liked the original character because as you mentioned, she had more of a hilariously blunt dark humor (which is an autistic trait I show sometimes) rather than just going out of her way to be purposely mean and I was pretty devastated to see what just felt like a pathetic bully that was pretending to be her.
@Eat_shit--die_mad8 ай бұрын
This is such a bad take no, she didn't choose the way she is, it's negative influence on her life, that she feels like is the correct thing to do, and is actively told by basically every character that her limited degree of beliefs is actively harmful to her, she's not a detective because she's autistic, that's just who she is as a person
@malapropia6 ай бұрын
Wow, I'm not used to wandering outside of specifically autistic spaces and finding such sane, scholarly, humanistic understanding of autism. You had me scratching my head wondering if you are also autistic, because your understanding is so good. And what a brilliant breakdown of the problematics of advocacy and accommodation. The sad truth is, a lot of non-autistic people really can't "hear" autistic people. We need more non-autistic people to get to this level of understanding and speak out. I'm bookmarking this for sharing. Thank you for turning your mind to this topic.
@PerEdlund5 ай бұрын
Totally agree, it almost feels weird being seen at such a granular level compared to your everyday experience. Very impressive.
@ukchanak8 ай бұрын
The misgendering is the strangest part. Those on the spectrum are very willing to hear one's own experience and stick to it. It's one of the many things i love about my husband's autism
@kwowka8 ай бұрын
I genuinely know more trans autistic people than cis autistic people… like…
@Emily-fm7pt8 ай бұрын
@@IgnoreMeImWrongI think what they were getting at was that Autistic people are generally going to be more open to other people's identities, and thus less likely to cling to things like transphobic societal assumptions. I can say that I don't know a single openly autistic person that's transphobic in real life.
@IgnoreMeImWrong8 ай бұрын
@@Emily-fm7pt"openly" I like that word addition. Well, if you take that response to the logical extreme wouldn't it imply that the Left is mostly Autistic? The next question then becomes, why are so many Trans folk Autistic?
@rokor35788 ай бұрын
@@IgnoreMeImWrong use your brain 🤡
@Hezkun8 ай бұрын
As an autistic person, it's very clear that the best person to know about one's self is literally one's self, not me, not anyone else Gender and identity are all very personal things, it literally doesn't make sense to assign it for other people
@jscire__8728 ай бұрын
21:53 A woman called Grunya Sukhareva characterized autism nearly two decades before Leo Kanner and Hans Asperger but it appears that her research wasn’t translated from Russian etc. etc. plus her being a woman most likely led to her not being credited historically 😕 Although it seems that the men who ”discovered” autism did know about her so..
@MariaJoseRozas8 ай бұрын
Very glad her pioneering contribution is mentioned in the comments section! Her written observations were comparatively more on the acceptance side than what these other two credited men wrote.
@josueramirez72478 ай бұрын
Wow, I had never heard of Grunya Sukhareva before
@jraybould15886 ай бұрын
As for the "Is Sheldon Autistic" discussion, I (Person with Aspergers) used to have "sheldon" used at me as an insult, very much so in the tone of a slur. I dont care what the writers say, sheldon was written in a way that acts as an example for people to make fun of autism, simple as.
@Cordman12214 ай бұрын
Sheldon (if the writers actually acknowledged he was autistic) is so fucking awful that having him be a 'portrayal' of autistic people would be about as bad as having a white dude in black face played completely straight.
@maridomi83033 ай бұрын
Isn't Aspergers an outdated term?
@jraybould15883 ай бұрын
@@maridomi8303 Technically yes, but its what I was diagnosed with and identify with. Without going too deep into the politics of it I personally disagree with its abolition as a diagnosis and think it is important to have a distinction between more severe forms of autism that affect learning and function to the point of needing significicant and my condition which essentially just makes me socially awkward and wierd. In my view to describe someone like me as having the same condition as others with ASD is to be reductionist towards the more widespread issues faced by them.
@quandaredevil3 ай бұрын
@@jraybould1588…did you miss the whole thing about autism being a spectrum? there ARE ways to make distinctions. “aspergers” is now known as asd level 1. the higher levels represent forms of autism that affect a person more physically. even then, some people are in between, because as the video said, it can be hard to pinpoint. that’s just part of it. that’s why autism is a more general term now and not specific to certain kinds of people. that’s why it’s called autism SPECTRUM disorder. sorry, but I feel like you missed a very important point in this video.
@AgingStudentАй бұрын
@@quandaredevilI think you are missing a different point of view is ok
@notoriouswhitemoth8 ай бұрын
Every Star Trek has had at least one autistic-coded character. The most relatable for me personally was Reginald Barclay. There are people who somehow insist he's allistic despite him having shutdowns, having meltdowns, having no difficulty whatsoever socializing with simulations, and spending nearly every moment onscreen visually stimming. _We know our own when we see them!_
@AngryPug768 ай бұрын
Yep. Because it was created and written by an autistic man 😊. My favorite is Odo, especially with his romantic adventures.
@drtaverner8 ай бұрын
The three main diagnoses: Clinical, Self, and Peer Reviewed. If enough Autistics say "One of us", one should look into it.
@Michael-uj4jp8 ай бұрын
@@AngryPug76 I love Odo too! He reminds me of myself and I love seeing him be happy and also have real* problems. (*real for star trek)
@kezia80278 ай бұрын
I don't know how anyone could look at Barlcay and say "neurotypical" imo he's almost possibly the most accurate if it was possible to have an average of autistic representation (which obviously is dumb) but like he is probably the most nuanced with accuracy? Like Data is the savant type, same with spock/vulcans in general, same with Bashir, and while Barclay obviously is shown to be intelligent and within the realm of his confidence - skilled, he doesn't have that same 'savant-like' presentation that almost every other star trek autism rep has.
@llynxfyremusic8 ай бұрын
@AngryPug76 yes Odo! I love his grey ace vibes and I wish they'd stuck to a more ace identity throughout the show
@heloisacorrea2378 ай бұрын
I've been diagnosed at 26 (and I have OCD along with autism). I identify very little with those characters. I'm no genius. I like making new friends, although it's hard to. There's a long way to go till they represent us well, the spectrum is a multiverse.
@michimatsch58628 ай бұрын
Preach. It is so hard sometimes though (especially if you got additional conditions).
@DaughterApollo8 ай бұрын
Until neurotypical people see us as human, they will always get our representation wrong. As someone who is autistic and has been treated like shit by all but a handful of neurotypical people my entire life, good fucking luck.
@pemanilnoob2 ай бұрын
There ain’t much representation for us who can do a lot of things decently, instead of one thing magically perfectly. And of course, autistic people can’t be OUTGOING! What a concept (that’s sarcasm, im very outgoing lol)
@ThePrincessCH5 ай бұрын
As an autistic person or Aspergers (it was the term I was diagnosed with), I related more with Disney Renaissance princesses. Ariel treats her special interests like a roller-coaster doing a loopty loop, Belle is so engrossed into the same book that the rest of the world seems to melt away, and Mulan has to rely on outside sources in a professional environment because she can't read social cues that well. They might not have meltdowns, but they're characterized as both child like and mature. Though, if you want a show about the autistic perspective, I recommend "A Kind of Spark."
@lolarae84763 ай бұрын
I relate to spongebob honestly hes silly and loves his friends and doesn't understand emotional tones usually. But he's also like me in the way of that when he's done or like over something he gets really mad and blows up like I do
@anzaia21648 ай бұрын
Entrapta actively makes flirty comments in the show. Granted, they are directed at robots and not overtly sexual, but it is a kids show so this is the most we can expect, anyways. She isn't childlike and it's fine to ship her.
@anzaia21648 ай бұрын
The way she looks at tech resembles a sort of middle ground between the way I look at a crafts project and my partner looks at me
@FrozEnbyWolf1508 ай бұрын
Entrapta was my favorite character on the show because I found her most relatable. I never felt like the narrative infantilized her. She had insights that others might overlook, and she saw the good in people that others wouldn't give a second thought.
@Naruto85RasenShurike8 ай бұрын
There are also some scenes in SHE-RA where Entrapta engages in some pretty unsubtle innuendos that she’s sexually attracted to robots (younger audiences won’t pick up on them, but adults watching certainly will)!
@anzaia21648 ай бұрын
@@Naruto85RasenShurike My favourite is in the star siblings episode, quality time with Darla. Hell yea.
@Naruto85RasenShurike8 ай бұрын
@@anzaia2164 THAT’s the innuendo I was thinking of!
@aster17498 ай бұрын
I love the head canon that Kageyama Tobio is autistic especially because his “special skill” is not just a “natural special power” but something he has worked on for years and his pattern recognition helps with it
@biazacha8 ай бұрын
And he isn’t utterly useless on everything else; sure he isn’t a top student but he doesn’t need codling, dude is just a dumb teenage boy with some serious hyper focus and clearly lower social awareness.
@j.kaimori38488 ай бұрын
If he and Hinata were autism meets ADHD that would be so cool.
@Dootridge8 ай бұрын
@@j.kaimori3848This is absolutely my head cannon.
@popp59266 ай бұрын
Ushijima is 1000% autistic posterchild. He struggles to read social cues and says literally what he thinks while not realizing he comes off as rude. Brutally honest and doesn't understand tone/expression. That, added to him generally being kind of intense, makes him totally intimidating until you figure out that, oh, he's never needed to mask his entire life. Quite a lot of autistic person humor going on there imo. I see Kita as having the same brand of ASD where he's very black-and-white and kind of takes things literally... on top of that there's also his need for strict order and routine. Is Kenma a given? (High-functioning enough to mask but doesn't do it because of social anxiety?) I would call those out as highly probable. Meanwhile I've got head canon borderline-autistic Akaashi (seems to have a little bit of everything), I want to say he's very good at masking. Jury's out for Sakusa. He definitely understands nuance and social convention, but at the same time he does not enjoy talking to people or involving himself in social situations. That being apart from the "lol OCD" thing, of course. I'm sure the characters are partially based on real-life people - which really confirms the notion that it's much more genuine when you set out to write characters as individuals rather than a set of perceived/defined "autistic" traits.
@popp59266 ай бұрын
@@j.kaimori3848 That would be cute as hell but I actually find Hinata to be more on the neurotypical side - compared to myself and most ADHD people I know. When I think ADHD I think Koganegawa (inattention leading to stupid mistakes), probably the Miya twins (impulsivity), and THE ENTIRE JOZENJI TEAM i.e. party team 🙃
@angrynoodletwentyfive64638 ай бұрын
IMHO as an autistic individual, Sheldon is kind of a mixed bag to me. He is a much more complicated and nuanced depiction of autism then people give him credit for, and i think that nuance is actually what ended up being the biggest problem because the writers of the show were unable to handle the nuances of the character they created and it got a bit messy. I think he is actually a pretty accurate portrayal of what happens when autism becomes intertwined with slight narcissism (which does happen). I think the biggest issue with his portrayal is less that the depiction is "inaccurate" and more that it doesn't do a very good job of seperating Sheldons narcissism from his autism and instead of making it clear that they are two seperate aspects of his personality that feed into each other, its almost implied that autism causes people to become narcissistic or vice versa. Honestly I think the writers didn't set out to make an autistic character originally, i think they were trying to create a goofy Socially awkward scientist who was too self absorbed and oblivious to realize he was socially awkward, and that type of character is just naturally going to become at least somewhat autistic, and then when people started pointing out the similarities bewteen sheldon and autism the creators kinda just ran with it without fully understanding what they were doing, and that is how we ended up with an 'autistic' character that is some how simultaneously nuanced, stereotypical, and problematic. But I think the unintentional nuance is what draws so many allistic people to the character, because it was a much more nuanced depiction of autism than you typically see and i think it did actually help some allistic individuals understand autism a bit more because it did prompt people who found the character interesting to look into autism in a way they probably wouldn't have otherwise, through video essays and such. Also sheldon is given alot of agency, growth, and social acceptance, which is pretty rare for autistic characters. Often autistic characters are treated as a stagnant character that people put up with out of pity and kindness, but with sheldon you can tell that even though they are often exasperated by his behaviors his friends really do love and respect him, and that's ind of refreshing to see. I might eventually do a long form essay on sheldon becuase i find his depiction such a fascinating mixture of good and bad.
@gabssza85698 ай бұрын
shoutout to Ayda Augefort from Dimension 20's Fantasy High! Canon autistic after Brennan, the dungoen master of the campaign, realized that he modeled that NPC after his autistic friends specifically, she's only one of many geniuses amongst of extraordinary characters overall, and the best character to ever exist honestly, best girl forever
@fiikahlo8 ай бұрын
Dimension 20 has always such a wonderfully diverse cast of PC's and NPC's that after binging it, regular tv shows started to feel insanely discriminating and heteronormative. So props to everyone at D20!
@1Hadram18 ай бұрын
I love Ayda! I like that her story heavily involves friendship, love, romance, family, and being a high level wizard blowing stuff up.
@madelynecole55018 ай бұрын
YES I LOVE HER
@just__abee8 ай бұрын
I was just coming down here to sing Ayda’s praises!!! Definitely the best autistic character I’ve seen. Her romance with Fig is still one of my favorite subplots in all of D20.
@fern.petrichor8 ай бұрын
I clocked Ayda as autistic almost immediately, and seeing it confirmed in-game with Jawbone giving her a book about ASD was so cute!
@John-bj1zx8 ай бұрын
Sia's response that she made Music with "special abilities" sounds more like she's putting Autistic people on some kind of high horse, or making them out to be Super human rather than human.
@ktgrnhig8 ай бұрын
But in the next breath, says that casting a person at “Music’s level” would be “cruel”. It’s sad, because I’m sure that Sia could have created something much more authentic using her own experiences instead of going off half baked.
@rabaneteist8 ай бұрын
The fear of just saying disabled is pretty annoying, imo, as someone who is disabled for being on the spectrum as well as for a physical disability. I had a friend once go on a full rant about how it's wrong to use the word disabled for autism because "she was studying about autism when she was in college and read that autistic people don't consider themselves as disabled", to which I had to remind her a few times I'm autistic and am very ok with referring to myself as disabled.
@thewingedsiren93668 ай бұрын
@rabaneteist I think the problem comes with the ableist stigma, often legal, that is associated to being titled as such. In a lot of states, if you request financial/social assistance they WILL take any children in the home; if there isn't an nt involved. (The thinking being if you are not able to be financially stable while "mentally disabled", than you aren't fit to be a guardian). You lose the benefit of the doubt allistic people are given in making social mistakes. Ironically backwards to how needs play out; but it is the reality of the situation. Less privileged people on the spectrum, with no familial ties or social structure are at a huge disadvantage, best case scenario. And in a lot of danger for harassment, worst case scenario; even when qualified as high functioning.
@Homodemon8 ай бұрын
@@rabaneteist is always neurotypicals talking over what words and descriptions and things should apply to us and feeling offended on our behalf because obviously we're too dumb to speak up or understand why is bad
@Insertia_Nameia8 ай бұрын
@@thewingedsiren9366yeah but when it comes to those things, using a different term doesn't change that. They will still yank your kids from you. I'm not labeled "disabled" but I'm still having social workers warning me that if I lose my job due to my heart issues, they WILL take my kids away and I will not be getting them back. Funnily enough, me having autism, ADHD, and MDD aren't being held over my head. (Which I'm not complaining about.)
@Meanness_Scar8 ай бұрын
I noticed one additional thing in the "Good Doctor" part about him being shown as disrepectful to some groups. You mentioned that it is explained by him thinking logically a lot. So it also kind of suggest that this bad behaviour as being rasist, misgendering and so on is "logical". Something like being bad to those groups is "logical" and only our emotions stops us from doing the same.
@anna_in_aotearoa31668 ай бұрын
That's a good point, and extremely disturbing!
@Minerva_Sparkle5 ай бұрын
I kinda disagree though. I mean yeah the idea that logical thinking leads to racism of sexism sucks but in these episodes Shaun is literally presented like the bad guy and his friends aren't afraid to show him which I think was a good move in that it showed that autism doesn't prevent you from having responsibility towards others and Shaun really end up realistically it. It doesn't make sense to think about the human condition in terms of norms, and it's part of the growth of Shaun as a character to learn to part ways with the comforting idea that his relationships can be understood through logic alone.
@Meanness_Scar5 ай бұрын
@@Minerva_Sparkle You also have a nice way of thinking. I remember one episode where he constantly called young lady "he" because of the body but in the end he told her granny "she likes purple". I agree with your idea of growth as we can see how he changes because of knowing the person better. But I still saw it a bit as logical thinking causing his actions and knowing the person caused him to change his mind. It reminds me of people who are racist, homophobic and so on but still can make exceptions for their friends, like saying "all those people are bad, except for John, but only John is ok" kind of think. Or trying to show that logic causes us to be scared of different people (even if it's just instinct) but emotions, closeness causes us to like others. Something like saying it's ok to hate different people but like those you personally know. Or like if the only reason why we accept others is emotions, like if it was illogical move, something logically only thinking person must learn. So on one hand it is like you said, showing how much social norms, people are hard to understand for autistic people. But also he always repeats statistics, "medical facts" that are denyed by other doctors. So it still looks like if logic and scienes were against those people and he learns to accept them only when he learns about emphaty. Like low-key saying that accepting people is only emotional, not logical. Still I admire your way of thinking. I'm sorry for having a different view.
@Minerva_Sparkle5 ай бұрын
@@Meanness_Scar Don't be sorry. I understand what you say, I just felt that the series precisely worked its way around this trope. I didn't feel like he was making an exception for her but rather reconsidering the very logic that lead him to misgender her in the first place (trying to understand the human condition via physical forms). And in a later episode he encounters another trans patient and the problematic of gendering them is not put into question at all this time around. But anyway I understand your point and I'm not going to die on this hill.
@Meanness_Scar5 ай бұрын
@@Minerva_Sparkle I'm sorry. Maybe I just don't remember it well. I always forget everything. I'm sorry.
@exhaustedpunk14778 ай бұрын
My 10 year old cousin who is into k pop and watched the Attorney Woo series recently said out of the blue during family dinner "Damn how I wish I had autistic intelligence"... Everyone at the table looked at her extremely confused and even more so when she then proceeded to turn to me and ask me to explain to them what she was talking about since I'm apparently the "know it all" of the family... only to keep correcting me and making it sound like autism was actually a superpower of some kind!... Now, she doesn't know that I am actually autistic myself, but her parents and most other adults there did and they were mortified and super lost by the whole ordeal. For sure one of the weirdest things that has happened to me in relation to autistic representation in the media and its impact.
@simonji29406 ай бұрын
Great example of why proper representation is needed for groups that differ from societies 'norm'
@georgethompson9136 ай бұрын
Children often don't truly comprehend around them. Good thing you had a conversation with her and tried to explained your difficulties to her?
@TheReZisTLust5 ай бұрын
Makes sense the younger autist thinks the elders a know it all lmfao same wavelengths or something or other 😭
@LiNestHetalia4 ай бұрын
Tbf it's a kid, she don't understand the world just yet, she probably wasn't aware she was being ableist and just see autism as an ability, it's weird but innocent in a way kids generally are
@Herzfeld104 ай бұрын
@@LiNestHetaliano one was blaming the kid ? They say that it says a lot about the representations of autism in media.
@TheRoseMirror8 ай бұрын
Mayim Bialik has also pushed starseed and indigo children talking points, which in my opinion disqualifies her for ever defending poor autistic representation/stereotypes. If you're not familiar with those, they were hippie/New Age ways of saying "My child is 'special,' but not autistic"
@kailawkamo15688 ай бұрын
The fact that she's also a Zionist -
@Δ-Δ-Δ-Δ8 ай бұрын
Jesus Christ, you nailed it 💀
@lelalu1018 ай бұрын
As a teen I thought I was an indigo child, I'm Autistic 🤣
@can-of-pringles8 ай бұрын
Unrelated but she's also a zionist so.. :|
@Δ-Δ-Δ-Δ8 ай бұрын
@@can-of-pringles What's that?
@MachtyB6 ай бұрын
I felt seen when you said: "Shout out to my fellow adhders, you have this playing in the background, you're listening to it while doing the task". I cleaned my appartment and done the dishes while listening.
@coutterhillАй бұрын
That's not ADHD? That's just using your time wisely.
@HamishSteele8 ай бұрын
Love the video! Josh Thomas and I have a similar experience. During the production of Dead End, I also got my autism diagnosis thanks to writing the characters and talking with our consultants. And then we had other autistic writers, story boarders and animators throughout the production. Sometimes it was scary, as early on, we were told by one consultant NOT to hire autistic people because they'd struggle... that's when I decided to finally get my diagnosis, so that I could be a better advocate and have people trust I knew what I was talking about.
@StuCupid8 ай бұрын
Hi Hamish :D
@celestialcass8 ай бұрын
I ADORE Quinni and Abed, they are both very comforting portrayals for me as an AuDHD haver with similar special interests to them. Thank you for this insightful video, as autistic representation is SO hit or miss [usually miss] so its great to note whenever someone does it right.
@GiantPetRat5 ай бұрын
I'm on the Spectrum, and meltdowns (sometimes public) have been a recurring theme in my life. As a child, they brought me immense feelings of shame, and as a 33-year-old today- although their frequency is much, much lower than they were in my childhood- they make me question my capacity to be a full-fledged adult. At times, they even make me sympathize with the Karens in those viral videos, because I recognize how easily I also could have a bad day and be caught saying or doing extreme things as a reaction to extreme, internal emotions. All this to say that the online reaction to the "I am a surgeon", which I personally find extremely relatable, is very upsetting to me. We know how ridiculous we look. We know it makes us look unprofessional. We know most people are better at hiding intense emotions, and we are deeply, deeply ashamed about it. It is not something we can control. We've tried. (PS, the Good Doctor actor's portrayal was FINE. This it often what it looks like when I'm pushed to my breaking point, too. Leave the man alone.)
@haruhisuzumiya66505 ай бұрын
I'm on the spectrum but lack the meltdowns lately I have panic disorder
@rosaliethurkins13598 ай бұрын
You are so right about neurodivergent people who might have gotten by a good half century ago without accommodations having trouble today. My dad has ADHD, but grew up in a paper and pens time where he didn’t have to keep track of things he couldn’t hold in his hands. Every assignment was on a piece of paper, so he just coasted through school without any accommodations. He definitely missed a bunch of homework, but it wasn’t as bad, and he aced every test. He might be slightly farther ahead right now if he was medicated in college, but he certainly isn’t doing bad. I just don’t see him finding the same success today without at least a 504.
@omnipotentfaces15148 ай бұрын
I think it depends, my dad is ADHD too and seriously struggled. He was severely punished and made to feel stupid, in the end he essentially stopped going to stay home teach himself drums and formed a band. But it totally affected his self worth and mental health for many many years, only now with my official diagnosis is he realising it wasn’t his fault.
@Lucky_Dagger8 ай бұрын
also social expectations have changed and more jobs have an unwritten "work place culture" requirement and the types of employment in the US have changed. Add in the companies giving out inconsistent schedules for hourly jobs and you get extremely stressed people not allowed to stick to their own routine.
@changella8 ай бұрын
As an adhd/autistic student I feel this :/ I hate virtual-only assignments because I CONSTANTLY forget they exist.
@jameskelly35028 ай бұрын
True story: I was diagnosed with Aspergers in 2000, the first time I saw an example of an autistic person, in media, was on an episode of Law & Order C.I. The Autistic person was a serial killer and an incel type. Today's representation of autism is certainly imperfect, but it's better than "Autism = incel, serial killer".
@anitacacosta17acosta98 ай бұрын
In regards to that, you can see Sheldon Cooper being good hearted, and not a creep with women. It not perfect but is better than what you just commented.
@duskonanyavarld17868 ай бұрын
Many serial killers have Aspergers syndrome so the writers most likely based him on a real serial killer.
@hayuseen66837 ай бұрын
@@duskonanyavarld1786 "Many" serial killers. Been eating your propogand'Os my boy?
@faye82367 ай бұрын
i wrote an autistic character heavily based on my experience as an autistic person. i’m so scared to post/talk about her though, because i know certain people will automatically think that she’s a stereotype of autistic girls. like she doesn’t like talking to people, doesn’t like being touched, is uncomfortable with romantic/sexual topics, really loves math, is offputting in appearance and behavior, struggles with communicating with others, etc. but she’s not a stereotype, she’s a character that is based on my own traits. she also likes to talk about lobotomies and medieval torture methods, because that’s something i’m really interested in.
@l33tsaber8 ай бұрын
I went to an employment seminar a few years back as part of going through Vocational Rehab, and it was... *very* obvious that they worked almost entirely with allistic, physically disabled job-seekers and not a lot of neurodivergent ones. They used clips of Sheldon during the PowerPoint presentation as an example of What Not To Do During Interviews, and I had *a lot* of things to say about that on the feedback survey at the end. Hopefully that seminar's improved these days, but gods did it grind my gears at the time.
@hayuseen66837 ай бұрын
I've found the job 'help' is usually geared toward trying to squeeze you into the typical-mould instead of compensating what jobs entail to fit to you.
@LuisMercadoorg8 ай бұрын
I always wonder why, when discussing complex and rich representations of autism in media, we often forget to mention Will Graham, from the series Hannibal. The showrunner has recently denied Will is autistic (maybe as a nervous effort to distance the show from any polemic) yet the first line uttered by the character in the entire series is that he most probably is and the character is written and coded as that. Graham is a very interesting character: nuanced, humane, layered. He’s not a savant but a very highly intelligent hyperempath who constantly suffers from this ability, and ability that’s being instrumentalized and weaponized by the people around him. But he constantly fights back against these pressures but also against his own impulses. And despite on how the show and the character ended (or maybe because the very way the character ended) to me he’s a very respectful, intelligent and elegant representation of an autistic coded character. Addendum: it’s also so refreshing to see a good autistic representation outside a cartoon.
@Kagomai158 ай бұрын
Oh I loved Will, I should really finish watching that show 😅 I just didn't want to see him so beaten down and manipulated even though I knew it was the point of the show it was upsetting me 😅. The gaslighting! Ugh! Hard to watch!
@matthewparris82608 ай бұрын
One thing I liked about Will Graham’s character was that he wasn’t unempathetic-the default “flaw” for autistic characters-he was so empathic that it often put him in danger.
@LuisMercadoorg8 ай бұрын
@@matthewparris8260 indeed. He was capable of truly loving everything; feeling everyone. Feeling so so much.
@Snowbird57798 ай бұрын
Was looking for this comment lol. Will has always been one of my favourite characters, and both in the novel and in the show he is very autistic-coded, and he says himself in the show that he is “on the spectrum closer to Asperger’s and autistics”, which given the novel was written in the 80s, says to me he is autistic. Yet while the characters sometimes treat him as fragile or easily manipulated, at the end of the day he is an independent and nuanced character. I definitely feel like he should get talked about more, although he does fall into the “autistic savant/superpowered autistic” category. But at least they show the positives and negatives of having a skill like that.
@LuisMercadoorg8 ай бұрын
@@Snowbird5779 I don’t know how savant he truly is. He’s exceptional, yes. But sometimes he’s not even the smartest person in the room and I’m not only talking about Hannibal. That’s what I like. Everyone on the show, except for Chilton, are truly remarkable and that’s a great setting to insert a talented autistic character.
@madkitty543216 ай бұрын
I'm nonbinary afab, 21, and pretty sure I'm neurodivergent of some kind. I went to get a diagnosis, the doctor said I'm too smart and that was pretty much all I got. When I first met with him he said if someone comes in saying they are autistic they most likely aren't and that rubbed me the wrong way. I've decided I don't need a diagnosis but I have an anxiety diagnosis that is able to get me the accommodations I need. But if I didn't have that I would need a diagnosis
@cecedobbs47028 ай бұрын
I’m ngl I just got off of a sixteen hour shift at my hospital and was so exhausted at the end of it that I cried in the car before heading home. I know it might seem stupid but something as simple as being able to come home and unwind to one of your videos and a nice meal is just making me feel very grateful. Sorry for all the mellow drama lolol, love your content and keep up the good work❤
@Mello-2088 ай бұрын
that's not stupid at all! 16 hours is very long (isn't that illegal tho) and coming home where you can finally relax is very nice
@RisaPlays8 ай бұрын
Not stupid at all. That's such a long shift and I'm sure it was stressful. Hope you're able to relax and have a good evening.
@VultureSkins8 ай бұрын
@@Mello-208it is not illegal, nor is there an OSHA standard concerning extended or unusual shifts (can you tell I googled it lol). It certainly sucks though. Regulations regarding breaks and consecutive shifts probably vary by state
@VultureSkins8 ай бұрын
Thank you for the work you do :)
@Mello-2088 ай бұрын
@@VultureSkins worker's rights in the us suck so much
@kittysunlover8 ай бұрын
@36:05 - This was literally me. One of the commonly repeated "when Kittysunlover was a kid" stories my parents would tell is how they were told by various professionals (teachers, caregivers, etc.) that I was potentially autistic and they should have me tested, and their response was just "well she's nothing like Rain Man." So.... they never took me to be tested or seek out any of the possible supports that might have been available for me growing up.
@ZethsCraftDesk8 ай бұрын
My mom did the same thing about me RE: my ADHD - I was "no where near as 'out of control' as [my] godbrother, so they were clearly wrong" according to her. Oopsie doopsy my symptom and characteristics cluster looks different than his did.
@kittysunlover8 ай бұрын
@@ZethsCraftDesk I'm sorry that happened to you. I hope you're getting the support and resources you need now!
@Lavinia447 ай бұрын
I think for a full discussion of Woo-young-woo, we'd have to discuss the episode that includes a higher support needs autistic character too. That said, although there are issues with the writing, as an autistic person, I personally really adored Woo. I don't think that counteracts any criticisms, just that there is good to be found too.
@sadisticgamer1233 ай бұрын
I think that Woo comes from a fundementally good place from people who were just not quite educated enough to make good representation. So she's flawed but relatable and an actual character rather then a collection of stereotypical traits. I think it also helps that she's in a K-Drama universe which is just a very exaggerated place to live in. Her struggles and arc are also not totally about her autism, but things like the drama with her mom and figuring out how to best do her job.
@Kindlywaterbear8 ай бұрын
The way infantilization of autistic character so often manifests as them being asexual is also harmful not only to autistic representation but also to asexual representation. It’s like it’s saying that asexual people are child like or just not mature enough. It’s interesting to see how ignorance compounds itself sometimes.
@WatashiMachineFullCycle7 ай бұрын
I accidentally had a bit of a blind spot here myself, because I am both ace and autistic, so for a time I got very caught up in seeing aspects of myself in characters and projecting my aceness onto them - which is fine by itself, but I didn't realize how being very overenthusiastic online about that came across to other ace or autistic people
@Kindlywaterbear7 ай бұрын
@@WatashiMachineFullCycle yeah I definitely understand projecting aceness on characters you identify with, I do it all the time. Honestly I think it’s great to have autistic characters who are ace, it just insulting when them being ace is implied to be the result of immaturity rather than just a part of their identity.
@elliart74328 ай бұрын
Something that bothers me and makes no damn sense is that there are absolutely zero, ZERO autistic characters out there who communicate primarily with an aac device. That's like if every single gay character in the world had a great relationship with both their parents, it would be fucking weird. I'm really excited about the story I'm making cause one of the leads in non-speaking! The plot isn't about that either, it's a horror romance between him and this divorced father he gets trapped in a nightmare dimension with edit: apologies, my mistake, I seem to have forgotten that our lord and savior Sia took care of it /s
@patrickmccurry15638 ай бұрын
I admit to never having heard of such a device. It probably would have been quite helpful when I was a child and went non-verbal for close to 2 years. My family had to just deal with my pointing and grunting. (I'm nearly 50, so diagnosis back then wouldn't have been on the table.)
@elliart74328 ай бұрын
@@patrickmccurry1563 I don't know what kinds of things were around when you were growing up, but now a days a lot of people use proloquo2go. It's 230$ app you get on the ipad, which is very epensive for an app but it comes with a default of over 4,000 words, different voices, the option to add a second language, and a keyboard
@allurajane49798 ай бұрын
i've seen a clip of a kid who uses an aac device in a kids show but idk what show it was
@valkyrie_cain868 ай бұрын
Use of AAC devices in the media is so under-represented in general. I can only think of the main character in Speechless as a fleshed out character who uses an AAC device, but he has cerebral palsy, and isn't autistic.
@idonotresidehere.57098 ай бұрын
Yo your story actually sounds super interesting
@fragile44085 ай бұрын
Someone with autism here! One of my favorite autism headcanons is Mob from Mob Pyscho 100. I just found his story and character to be very relatable journey. With his relationship to Reagan mirroring that of mine and the wonderful social workers I've had through out my life. Minus the con man part 😅
@madsb.80978 ай бұрын
I'm really glad you pointed out the differentiation of 'spectacle' in representation, I appreciate that being put into words. Shows like 'Love on the Spectrum' just in their advertising alone have always made me feel deeply uncomfortable for exactly the reasons you described, the observation of the infantilising music accompaniment is especially true and feels really gratifying to finally put a nail on it.
@mayanightstar8 ай бұрын
"Just because someone can push through a work week and then spends the rest of their free time recovering from it doesn't mean they are able to work a full time job" I've been struggling with coming to terms with this as we speak asufhahljksdfhjkdfhgkjasdf
@mauricejansen10915 ай бұрын
I'm a mental healthcare professional (aka I work in mental healthcare) and I both have autism and specialise in it. I have studied it and exclusively work with people who have autism (ASD). And I just wanna say, your explanation/ defining of autism (ASD) was very spot on. Good job!
@Slightecho_8 ай бұрын
Some of my favorite autistic and ADHD rep AND popular headcanons come from The Owl House. Luz and Eda both canonically deal with ADHD (as well as Eda’s curse being a clear metaphor for chronic illness) and many characters surrounding them have varying levels of neurodivergence (namely Amity and Hunter being the most popularly headcanoned autistic characters, but Willow and Gus both display traits as well). With the show’s entire narrative being Eda’s famous “us weirdos have to stick together” byline and how colonialism and its power structures seek to actively disenfranchise and destroy those “weirdos,” the characters difference and neurocomplexities are at the forefront of the conversation about the show. Highly recommend!!
@edamamame4U8 ай бұрын
My friend introduced me to the Owl House as I was struggling with my sexuality and ADHD and needed something comforting. I have been thoroughly enjoying the show so far and adore the characters of both Eda and Luz (heck, I'm loving all the "weirdos" so far). I'm a grown adult, but I find the show so comforting and really enjoy its themes off found family and representation.
@syedrahman32518 ай бұрын
Wow i kinda felt what you meant with Eda's condition but never realized it until i read your comment now.
@nervousbreakdown7118 ай бұрын
Don’t forget Camilla accidentally passing down the generational trauma of distancing yourself from your neurodivergence for wider social acceptance because she was bullied and wanted to spare her daughter, something my dad did throughout my childhood and still does (and then she redeemed herself and became peak mom)
@Saphthings8 ай бұрын
I think one aspect we need to understand as a society is the temporal aspect of activism vs stereotype. It happens a lot when it pertains to equality and minorities. For example, take autism itself. There was a time we didn't have representation anywhere, and having some guy in some show be very low function and acting up was a huge deal and nice to have conversations. Whereas now that we have more inclusion it's nice to flesh that out a bit more. Same thing happens for things like lgbt representation, where at one point having the ultra femme gay guy die tragically was a cool deal, now getting other types of gays and having them live a full life ala Last of Us is great. What was once a step forward, is a step back once we've walked far ahead. The issue arises because people will have fond memories of those characters like, "No ____ is great!! He was my idol growing up because of _____!". And yes, at that time he was great, and he's still important to our community history. But now unfortunately he's been weaponized and used as a way to keep alive several negative stereotypes. When something becomes so known as an example of a group, that the general population doesn't even know there are others, and it even starts creating new negative stereotypes, it's no longer a positive representation for the current time. Even if it at one point was.
@tigersily8 ай бұрын
💚
@nervousbreakdown7118 ай бұрын
I’m glad you mentioned that. Media representation is nuanced and not usually a straight line. I see a lot of baby queers who hate Rocky Horror Picture Show for example and call those of us who love the movie evil and misogynistic and rape apologists. Girl, you weren’t there. This was all some people had.
@alicemay358 ай бұрын
This was SO well researched and presented I'm actually in awe!!! Only just found you and your videos through suggested stuff while on my own post-2021 self discovery journey where I've picked up bits here and there, but the way this neatly knits everything together and pretty much covers everything is amazing. Going to send to people, thank you!
@spantigre31908 ай бұрын
Wow! I didn't expect Jim Parsons to have such a scathing critique of his own character.
@jaycewood70718 ай бұрын
DONATELLO HAMATO FROM RISE OF THE TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TUTLES. Rottmnt is first of all, an exceptional animated series, but on a more related note, Donnie is pretty well know as Greta autistic representation and just an incredible character. A lot of his traits align somewhat with savant tropes but in reality he isn’t a savant. He’s not a genius because of his autism, he’s a genius because he’s a magical mutated turtle. He has multiple other personality traits, and is just great. They don’t justify his behavior with his skills, when he fucks up there are consequences and they specifically point out in the show that his worth is not determined by what he can provide. Is very good :3
@beabie85288 ай бұрын
FUCK YEAH ROTTMNT MENTIONED!!@!*@&@*# i think at some point one of the creators confirmed he was autistic somewhere?
@plutodragon48 ай бұрын
RISE DONNIE IS AN AUTISTIC ICON LETS GOOO
@CouldntThinkOfaGoodUsername7 ай бұрын
YESSS I was waiting for someone to bring him up! Rottmnt is my favorite show 💜💙🧡❤
@i.75257 ай бұрын
i'd like to add aziraphale and crowley as a stellar example of the autistic/adhd power couple dynamic. as a person with adhd myself, crowley is prob the most relatable character i've ever seen in anything lmao
@loquatjar115 ай бұрын
I have been scrolling for so long to find someone from the GO fandom
@corpsekid59518 ай бұрын
Ah!! Special interest things! I have written multiple essays (of my own volition) on this topic. Also I am autistic myself, and my older brother and my two stepbrothers are also on the spectrum. Anyway, during a psych class in my first year of college, I did a project on the so-called epidemic of autism. What I found was that, yes, while there is an increase in the number of people diagnosed with autism, it's less that more people are autistic and more that the diagnostic criteria are changing. Autism was first coined in 1911, and the DSM-5 criteria for it was updated most recently in 2013. It's that people can recognize symptoms that previously they didn't have a word for. The best way for me to describe this in a way everyone can understand is like this: When being lefthanded was illegal and stigmatized, there weren't many left-handed people. But when it became legal, the number of people who were lefthanded shot up again. It wasn't that people were suddenly becoming lefthanded; they weren't being hidden anymore.
@AurinneA8 ай бұрын
The amount of times I've used left-handedness as a simplified (over-simplified) way to conceptualise Autism or Neurodivergency is high. It's obviously not exactly the same, but somehow when people relate it to something as "normal" as being left-handed is now perceived to be and how difficult it once was to be left-hand-dominant, a lot of other things about being neurodivergent today seem to click into place for people.
@mostprofoundquiet8 ай бұрын
At the end, when you mentioned UBI, and how you think it's important that neurodivergent people can live a comfortable life, I teared up. I don't know if I have autism (have never been diagnosed one way or another), but I do have crippling anxieties and couldn't hold down a job for the reasons you mentioned - I could force myself through it, but all the time OFF work was then spent in miserable mental recovery. It's been impressed upon me my whole life that I'm lazy, faking, not contributing to society, etc. Just hearing that compassion at the end meant a lot, so, thanks. This was a fantastic video.
@Gurianthe5 ай бұрын
sorry but I'm autistic and **I AM A SURGEON!** had me cackling like a witch the delivery/acting is so bad it's hilarious
@ofthewilderwoods3 ай бұрын
Yeah I get secondhand cringe from it so bad 😅
@winrycarver77018 ай бұрын
Touching on the outdated/unhelpful diagnostic criterion issue, this is something that I have struggled with myself, but from a different avenue. My partner and I both strongly suspect that I have discalculia (in basic terms, dyslexia but for numbers). This impacts my life drastically. I have to have other people double check most of my math, even for very basic things. I'll often estimate stuff by eye when it comes to measurements because I don't want to constantly be a bother to other people, and its embarrassing not being able to do something that they can do quite easily. But the worst for me is to try to do anything anything time related. I get a huge load of anxiety whenever I need to be somewhere at a specific time, because I cannot figure out how long I have to get ready, how long i have to travel, if I'm going to be early, late, or on time. I have, at multiple points, arrived somewhere hours early because I did my math wrong, and I almost missed a doctor's appointment because after I double checked my math, I realized that I had written it out that I needed to leave the house _after_ my bus was scheduled to leave. There are other struggles that I have, but this is the one that is the worst, and its a horrible feeling. I have tried to pursue a diagnosis for this because it is so difficult for me to navigate these issues, and i wanted some help. I was told by mental health professionals that they generally only diagnose children, and that me seeking a diagnosis wasn't an issue worth looking into because "Adults have already found ways to cope." WHAT!? If we've figured out how to deal with it, then why am I struggling so hard!? It was one of the many cases where mental healthcare has completely failed me, and only left me feeling worse about myself. I have never had a good experience with therapy or psychiatry. It makes me feel really alone, and honestly kind of worthless when I can't even get professional help. Some of my experiences were so bad, I've had nightmares about it. They never listen to me, or really seem to hear what I'm struggling with. I've have far more luck with just talking with friends. I've completely lost faith in basic professional mental healthcare because of so many bad experiences.
@JShepLord8 ай бұрын
Lily Simpson actually did a really good analysis on the trans misgendering episode of the Good Doctor and it actually wasn't as bad as "his autism makes him unable to grasp the concept of transgenderism." It showed more that he learned all of his medical knowledge through extensive study in medical school and our medicals schools are severely lacking on information regarding transgenderism. He didn't know what was going on because his education had failed him.
@ixxiex61916 ай бұрын
That is a good interpretation, and could technically clear the characters name, but if the show didn’t accurately portray/explain that medical teachings failed him, then it’s still in the wrong. If the larger public takes the scene as autism = not believing in trans people or something like that then the message wasn’t communicated well enough, and the harm remains.
@zakourille5 ай бұрын
he actually does keep up with advancements in research like they showed that in the show unfortunately
@airshipswashbuckler64207 ай бұрын
Growing up in the dark about my autism/ADHD and having no obvious representation in media here’s a few tv show characters I was drawn to before even knowing what autism was: - Both Data and Spock from Star Trek (data for wanting to be more human and trying to understand them, Spock for his masking of his emotions) - The literary version of Sherlock Holmes (how his habits and mannerism were described and the way he thinks is very similar to my own) - Daria (loving books, being brutally honest, feeling like an outsider and being the “brain”. Only later did I realize it’s my special interests happened to make me look gifted in areas when in reality I had dyscalculia and other issues like ADHD) - Ferb from Phineas and Ferb (because he talked about as much as I do around people) - Abed from Community (doing research on Abed was how I discovered autism was even a thing!) - BMO from Adventure Time (it’s been so long since I’ve watched the show I don’t remember why) There are more but that’s all I can recall off the top of my head. I think it’s important to remember that there are autistic stereo typed traits but they still are real traits autistic people have. It’s what’s done with that representation that’s important. Some are very childlike, are often under the asexual umbrella and can be very, very skilled or knowledgeable in a subject or skill to the point you might as well give them a phd! I myself feel like I’m stuck for ever as my twelve year old self, I’m asexual/aromantic, and I have encyclopedic knowledge of many of my numerous special interests! However I struggle and strive to have independence as an adult; I am not naive about sex (in fact it’s very interesting and I probably know more information about every possibly type and sexuality than most people out there); I may be able to give university level lectures about my special interests but if you make me do math or put me in class and have me interact with others I’d fail 100% of any of that!
@ThatFlamingFroggo8 ай бұрын
The music movie was not only problematic in the way it represented Autistic folk, but the fact that they had a white girl, play a mixed race character. That just feels off.
@melissawickersham99128 ай бұрын
That doesn’t just sound “off” to me. It sounds like either blackface or whitewashing.
@IgnoreMeImWrong8 ай бұрын
Sorry but are you unaware of what acting involves?
@melissawickersham99128 ай бұрын
@@IgnoreMeImWrong Are you defending blackface or whitewashing? Because that’s what having a white actor play a mixed race character resembles.
@IgnoreMeImWrong8 ай бұрын
@@melissawickersham9912I love that you avoid the question entirely in an attempt to force an accusation on me. I'll do what you did and avoid and ask a question. Why can't you answer the question?
@ThatFlamingFroggo8 ай бұрын
@@IgnoreMeImWrong Yes. But, you understand that casting the right actor for each role, is also apart of the acting...besides the acting, yeah? SIA just really wanted an excuse to hire Maddie for a movie, rather than taking care for portraying the actual character in question. Maddie is neither mixed nor autistic, so, in both arena's, her best portrayal was going to be a miss. Especially in the direction that she was pushed to. I have no ill will towards Maddie, but all the ire for whoever cast her in that role, and then decided to tan up her skin to portray that.
@Naruto85RasenShurike8 ай бұрын
As AWFUL as I’ve heard Sia’s MUSIC is (I absolutely refuse to watch it since I know it will cause me nothing but pain; and I’ve sat through two Uwe Bowl movies for crying out loud!), I do honestly feel really bad for Maddie Ziegler since she apparently once stated that she felt deeply uncomfortable about playing a non-verbal autistic character when she herself is neurotypical, and even voiced those concerns to Sia. But Sia completely ignored Ziegler’s concerns and was just like, “Screw it! Just do it anyways!” So yeah, I place all of the blame on Sia’s directing & writing, rather than Ziegler herself…
@sarahlelys92688 ай бұрын
Agreed, especially when you read what Sia has to say about her relationship to Maddie. It sounds very creepy, like Sia created a heavily codependent relationship and is manipulating Maddie. I don't think Maddie had any choice or agency in the making of the movie, and from what Maddie herself says it sounds like she was forced to do it even if she didn't want to. I don't like any of it, and I don't think Maddie should be blamed at all. The blame entirely belongs to the grown woman who made a teenager her "best friend, confidante and muse without whom she can't work or create anything or even function."
@anitacacosta17acosta98 ай бұрын
Exactly, maddie wasnt an adult, all of her life her mother aloud all kind of abuse on her to make money. So she was always forced to everything.
@Naruto85RasenShurike8 ай бұрын
@@sarahlelys9268 Yeah… everything about the relationship & power dynamics between Sia & Ziegler is very suspicious & legitimately concerning…
@sundriedstudios5 ай бұрын
the underrepresentation of autsim in media is such an issue and thank you for talking about it, I was diagnosed at 18/ 19 and the thing that pushed me to look into autism was a video made by illymation where they talk about their personal expereince, and how they always felt that something was fundimentaly different about them and how they interacted with the world. It was the first time i heard anyone else actually talk about that feeling and was a key turning point in my journey.
@sweets4life2308 ай бұрын
I've always felt uncomfortable around stories that have neurodivergent, disabled or mentally ill characters that focus on how it affects the neurotypicals in their lives. It only enforces how these communities are treated as burdens by a neurotypical abled society. It's so often you see the family member character that doesn't even get their own personality aside from being the 'trauma' for their neurotypical counterparts. There's discussions of how hard it's been for the nts. Of how hard it is to have changed their life for this 'inconvenient person' and how proud people around them are for them dealing with the 'situation'. Especially if it's a parent. There's nothing wrong with portraying the struggles of every party involved. But at the end of the day, the main voice should be that of the neurodivergent person. Of the complexities of it and how feeling like you're a burden on those around you hurts a lot. It's the trope that has personally hurt me the most as someone who both suffers with very obvious Mental Illness and Neurodivergence. I'm sick of seeing people like me in media get treated like some awful obligation instead of a living person with nuance who loves deeply and deserves to be treated as a positive person to know. Edit: I don't think this was actually touched on that much in this video but I would love to see someone's take on the trope of the 'Disabled Burden' and how it takes the side of the Neurotypically Abled perspective whilst dehumanising the disabled individual. Edit Edit: In terms of autistic rep, I would recommend the podcast "SCP Find us alive", there are quite a few neurodivergent coded characters as well as a specific character called Raddagher who is canonically Autistic and has sensory issues, goes non verbal, stims and although she works in a scientific facility as a security guard, her special interest is actually boats! (Also she is sapphic and has this adorable relationship with this other character I think is also intended to be written as autistic and/or ADHD)
@אוריוייל8 ай бұрын
That shout-out to ADHD people right there at the end caught me like a deer in the headlights, currently tidying up my room😅
@pawprawks8 ай бұрын
Saaaame - but I'm working on a monotonous design!! I came here looking for this comment!!
@spiralmewtrix8 ай бұрын
@@pawprawksI’m working on a graphic design project for work while this played in the background!
@ScarletMidnight8 ай бұрын
me too 🤣
@jam-the-hologram8 ай бұрын
Ha! I wish I was tiding my room! I was instead playing Spider Solitaire.
@sirnird99828 ай бұрын
Netflix has a show called Atypical which follows a young male adult who navigates life right after graduating high school and beginning college with autism. I have not been tested for autism but I do have ADHD and I connected with his character almost immediately. I don’t actually know what work was put into writing and portraying the characters as authentic as possible but I connected with him and his struggles very quickly.
@chertheworm8 ай бұрын
i have a high number of autistic traits and had a pretty high score on the raasd test consistently for the last few years but when i went to my state healthcare mental health clinic they refused to even test me because they "don't diagnose adults", positing that its only possible to diagnose autism in a child. i was not diagnosed with autism as a kid, but they did diagnose me with adhd (further diagnosis apparently said i don't have it either). when i asked my mom about it, hoping she would provide some details from my childhood, she laughed at me and said that i can't be autistic, citing extreme examples of "spectacle"-like autism presentation in children as the only kind of autism and mentioning "rain man" as the pinnacle of representation. the misinformation about this condition is truly astounding
@goma30888 ай бұрын
I was diagnosed with ADHD as a child, but I often wonder if I am also on the Autism spectrum. I went to get rediagnosed as an adult for ADHD (to get meds approved) after a decade of not taking any medication. I asked her if I might also be on the spectrum and simply got the reply: "Why would it matter? What would that change?" So, I still don't know. It was frustrating that my question was not taken seriously. But I suppose as long as information about autism continues to be helpful to me, it does not matter too much what someone with a coat and clipboard tells me I am or am not.