The couple was shown with no signs of discrimination for their sexuality. Many social media videos and posts have been sharing their support to Nickelodeon for representing the LGBTQ community. Nuñez also said that the gay couple in the cartoon shows the reality of this world, and that people should be able to live without fear for the kind of lives they have decided to live. Having different family set ups is okay.
Loud House , one of Nickelodeon's newest TV series, made a monumental decision to feature a same-sex married couple into the show — a first for the children's network. According to a report from Entertainment Weekly character Clyde McBride's parents Harold and Howard, are a gay, interracial married couple in the series. The characters will be voiced by Wayne Brady and Michael McDonald respectively. The show follows Lincoln Loud, the only boy of his family that's also outnumbered by his 10 sisters.
He's probably a new Loud House watcher and is just starting to see Clyde's dads. He also might not be used to the idea of seeing an official same-gender couple on a kid's cartoon. It's my guess because I'm a late starter to watching cartoons starting to watch them months or years after they first aired or even after they end production, especially with older cartoons and I was surprised and possibly shocked when I first learned that a kid's cartoon, that being The Loud House, was featuring an officially gay couple, something I thought I would never see in a kid's cartoon! But I'm used to that idea now now that it's become the norm!
London : Nickelodeon created history this week by providing a better representation of LGBTQ characters. Nickelodeon's new cartoon series, ' The Loud House ,' which began in May, became the channel's first show to feature a bi-racial married gay couple dropping off their son, regular character Clyde, at a friend's sleepover, reports the Independent. Clyde's parents, who appeared in an episode airing on 20 July, were voiced by Wayne Brady and Michael McDonald. Nickelodeon is no stranger to introducing well-represented LGBTQ themes into its shows.