Why does everyone hate finn hudson
Told Puck to stay away from Rachel, even though he and Rachel weren't together. HE broke up with HER, and he has no buisness telling other guys they can't be with her. He only did that so when he's doing screwing around with Quinn, Rachel will be still be single. He wasn't to bad in the first 13, but as soon as he dumped Quinn, he's been reverting into this creature of douche-bagness. If I can rewatch the episodes, I'll add more reasons as to why I hate him Shark Bacon.
Questionable Prophet 11, Points Veraion 's Wife. Rhythmic Sound. Invisible Phantom 10, Points He annoys me He is not my favourite character at all. I don't think he is the best male singer in glee either, yes he can sing but Puck, Sam, Artie and Kurt are all better in my mind for the male lead. Plus I do not get how people can find him cute?? He seems awkward to me. Fatgirl and Robin. I agree he's kind of a douche sometimes, but I do like him. His stupidity is pretty adorable every now and then.
And he's done some good things too. Shameless Man-Lover 8, Points At first, I thought nothing of him, but after reading the list, I truly hate him too! Sage Zinnia. I don't hate him, but he IS a douche.
Which is why I don't understand why Rachel and Quinn were fighting over him. They can BOTH do better. Cluttered Browser 9, Points All Rights Reserved. Manage Your Items. Get GCash. She dealt with teen pregnancy, went from good girl to bad girl, and finally ended up going to college and realized she didn't need a man to define her.
I know she did some horrendous things, but all of the characters did. She overcame so much, and I wish they kept her storyline more involved. The show had a new voice, yet they did absolutely nothing productive with it. It was super disappointing when they didn't end up together. It sounded like he sang through his nose. Later in that episode, Finn told his jock friends, "Don't you get it?
We're all losers. Everyone in this school, everyone in this town. At its best, Glee is about small-town losers dreaming about being big-city winners and even when they don't succeed, dreaming on anyway. It's easily the queerest show that's ever been on network TV not just because it features multiple gay characters--and in romantic situations too--but because it's constantly reversing gender norms and placing traditionally marginalized characters front and center.
But making that point required a conventional Everyman for scale like those YouTube videos where a small object is placed next to a whale so you know how big it is.
As played by the recently deceased Cory Monteith, Finn Hudson looked the handsome, wholesome part, but when he joined the glee club, he became something more subversive. What he had was a palpable sweetness that infused his portrayal of Finn. In Monteith's unassuming performance, you believed that a football player would join show choir, befriend a gay kid, and date a theater geek. You believed it because Finn never exuded any of the arrogance or privilege we expected from popular jocks in high-school shows.
Because Monteith wasn't a natural-born singer or dancer, Finn was a vicarious performer for the majority of viewers who can't hit musical notes like Lea Michele or bust a dance move like Harry Shum. Watching back the iconic "Don't Stop Believing," it's clear that Michele outsings him, but Monteith sells the small-town aspiration his arms and gaze reaching for the stars and his chemistry with Michele is electric the two were involved off-screen.
In an era of macho antiheroes, Finn countered that being a man didn't have to include physical strength or objectifying women, but could instead be defined by expressiveness, vulnerability, and compassion. He failed as a quarterback, a soldier, and a boyfriend, but he succeeded in glee club, where he sang and danced and hung around with a bunch of queer kids. Monteith never got a lot of credit for his performance, and that's a shame.
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