When did buck on 911 become gay
9-1-1: Buck's Bisexuality Storyline Was a Long Time Coming
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Summary
- Since Season 2, 9-1-1 fans have advocated for Evan "Buck" Buckley and Eddie Diaz to change into a romantic couple.
- 9-1-1 made a significant step forward in Buck's character development by exposing he’s not straight.
- 9-1-1 has a fresh opportunity to open a new aspect of Buck's character that offers a promising storyline full of growth and acceptance.
The following contains spoilers for 9-1-1 Season 7, Episode 4, "Buck, Bothered, and Bewildered," which aired Thursday, April 4 on ABC.
Other than a great story, character ships have drawn-out been the backbone of many television shows. The slowburn romance between The X-Files' Dana Scully and Fox Mulder coined the term "shipping" and Supernatural's Dean and Castiel is one of the most popular relationships that never came to be. Those are just two shi
Buck finally comes out as gay on 911
Or bi. Fucking finally! It's been a drawn-out time coming.
| by Anonymous | reply 499 | April 20, 2025 2:05 AM |
This only happened because they finally got rid of that homophobic show messenger who refused to explore Buck’s apparent sexual chemistry with men.
| by Anonymous | reply 1 | April 5, 2024 4:52 PM |
He kisses enjoy straight actors who play gay characters tend to touch – make your lips as miniature as possible, ram them into the other actor's lips, remain perfectly still, and start counting down the seconds until you can mercifully pull away.
| by Anonymous | reply 2 | April 5, 2024 4:54 PM |
Yes!!!
Buck fans knew it all along.
But we've been shipping Buck and Eddie.
Who's this guy kissing Buck?
I haven't watched the show in a while.
Also, the clip looks more fond the other guy kissing Buck, and him not really kissing back.
So is he "out, out" or was he just caught off guard being kissed by another guy?
Can someone who has been watching the show, catch me up on Buck's story?
| by Anonymous | reply 3 | April 5, 2024 4:54 PM |
How can a Ryan Murphy exhibit have a homophobic show runner, R1?
| by Anonymous | replyIs Buck Gay on 9-1-1? Oliver Stark Confirms His Character’s SexualityAll products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Soaps.com may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes. 9-1-1 fans are one step closer to Buddie. After his kiss with with Tommy in Season 7, Episode 4, fans have had countless questions about Buck’s sexuality on 9-1-1and what’s next for the character’s romantic-life (and whether it could include another firefighter viewers have been shipping him with for years.) Evan “Buck” Buckley, is a firefighter at the Los Angeles Fire Department’s make-believe Station 118 in 9-1-1. The series, which premiered in 2018 and also includes spin-off 9-1-1: Lone Star, follows the personal and professional lives of first responders — including police officers, paramedics, and dispatchers — in Los Angeles, California. Buck, who is also the brother of 9-1-1 operator and trained nurse Maddie Buckley, is one of five remaining original characters on 9-1-1, along with LAPD patrol sergeant A Why 9-1-1's historic verdict to make Buck queer was seven years in the makingFor seven seasons,9-1-1 fans have been calling on the showrunners to produce the queer-coded character Evan 'Buck' Buckley explicitly queer – and to my huge surprise, it's finally happened. Season seven episode four, 'Buck, Bothered and Bewildered', saw the character grow possessive over Eddie Diaz's new friendship with Tommy Kinard, only for Buck to understand by the end that it was never Eddie's friendship he was worried about but rather Tommy's attention, and the pair kissed. Fans have fallen in love with the character of Buck (played by Oliver Stark) over the past seven years, acknowledging his tender heart and willingness to skip without thinking for those he loves. Many have also argued that the character has lengthy been queer-coded – when a character's sexual orientation is implied by significant subtext without creature stated outright – using canonical moments from across the seven seasons in their arguments. © Chris Willard Think back to the early seasons, and how Eddie Diaz's introduction to the 118 came from Buck's poin |