The walking dead is jesus gay

“The Walking Dead” finally confirmed the ethics of Jesus’ sexuality on Sunday’s episode.

Hilltop Colony member Jesus (Tom Payne) opened up that he was gay in conversation with Maggie (Lauren Cohan).

“For the first time, I feel like I belong,” Jesus, authentic name Paul Rovia, tells Maggie. “When I was first here, I was never here. I always found it hard getting seal to anyone – neighbors, friends… boyfriends.“

In Robert Kirkman’s comic book series Jesus is canonically same-sex attracted. However, this is the first hour Jesus’ sexuality has been mentioned on the show.

Jesus is the sixth homosexual character on “The Walking Dead.” Tara (Alanna Masterson), Alisha (Juliana Harkavy), Aaron (Ross Marquand), Eric (Jordan Woods-Robinson) and Denise (Meritt Wever) are the show’s other gay characters.

Speaking with , Payne says he doesn’t think Jesus’ sexuality should be an issue for the other characters on the show.

“It’s the end of the world. If we really care about what someone’s sexuality is…we’ve got bigger fish to fry,” Payne says.

“The Walking Dead” airs on Sundays at 9 p.m. on AMC.

'The Walking Dead' Just Confirmed That Jesus Is Gay

Ever since Tom Payne made his The Walking Dead debut a year ago as fan-favorite Jesus, speculation has brewed over how much of his persona from the comic books would be retained – and specifically, whether his sexuality would remain the same. Payne said last year that he saw no reason why his on-screen Jesus wouldn't be gay, as he is in the comics, and in tonight's episode "The Other Side," he officially became the show's third major gay character.

Between the fact that Jesus is an elusive and taciturn guy to launch with, and the proof that these characters are living in fear of a fascist dictator during a zombie apocalypse, it's no surprise that it took a while for the subject to appear up. But Jesus knows who he is – he's one of the more self-possessed characters in the cast – and there is no dramatic "coming out" moment here, during a moment of bonding between Jesus and Maggie.

During the same conversation, we learn Jesus grew up in a organization home, and has never felt like he belonged anywhere until no

When The Walking Dead revealed that Paul Monroe, the fan-favorite ethics nicknamed &#;Jesus&#; for his drawn-out hair and beard, was queer, many fans wondered how distant it would be before a religious person or group registered their even recently speculated that AMC might be reluctant to depict a character named Jesus on TV, for fear of alienating potential viewers if the character got up to anything that might offend didn&#;t obtain long: in this week&#;s &#;Letter Hacks&#; column, Kirkman received two very different letters from fans regarding Jesus&#;s sexuality. One was from a Christian reader concerned that making Jesus gay was a subtle &#;jab&#; at people of faith, and one was from a reader grateful for the thoughtful depiction of Jesus as just another character, doing his thing, up until the moment that his sexuality came up somewhat organically.

actually The Walking Dead
When I realized that I&#;d gotten so far into Jesus&#;s story, that he&#;d been in so many issues and I&#;d never addressed his sexuality, I saw it as an opportunity to address the fact that a chara

AMC’s The Walking Dead has been controversial, to tell the least, since its conception. It has managed to upset the racists and the conservatives by showing a man-on-man peck and an interracial association. And it’s likely to rattle further cages, as the show has introduced a new gay nature, named Jesus.

Whilst the business has not explicitly stated that the character is gay, readers of the comic books know this to be the case. The trailer for the 11th episode of season 6 shows new addition Jesus – a fully bearded, long-haired man who shows a resemblance to the religious figure.

While the television series has followed the comic book material closely, it has made some significant changes to the original texts. Having said this, the makers of the show kept the relationship between Aaron and Eric, which also appears in the comics.

Previous reactions to the Aaron-Eric smooch might give us a clue as to possible audience reactions to a homosexual man named Jesus. Conservative fans of the present erupted on Twitter accompanying the first on-screen same-sex attracted kiss &#; but given that this is a character