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The popularity of anime tales featuring man-on-man passion is burgeoning among Japanese women. “Rotten Girls” say it isn’t gay, but about “pure love.”
Updated Jul. 12, 2017 7:14PM ET / Published Dec. 06, 2014 6:45AM ET 
Hana has a secret. She slowly moves her straw through the whipped cream in her designer latte and looks up. “I’m a rotten girl.”
Rotten girls, or fujoshi in Japanese, is a self-inflicted term used by women throughout the country who fall under a certain category of ardent manga (comic book) and anime (animation) fandom. They’re obsessed with what is called BL, or Boys’ Love—fictional stories that detail the romantic entanglements of two men.
While Tokyo’s neighborhood of Akihabara is known worldwide as the center of otaku culture—a veritable capital of geek-dom, if you will—female enthusiasts tend to congregate beyond of the spotlight in Ikebukuro, on the other side of the city. They flock to Otome Road, or “Maiden’s Road”, a wide-set boulevard with a parade of animation-related boutiques selling everything from collectable figurines to thousands upon thousands of comic books.
Hana seeks refuge from the buzzing lights of Otome Road in a nearby café and makes another swirl with her straw. She’s come prepared with notes, like any good otaku, and shuffles her pages of penned thoughts like a deck of cards. She’s never told anyone about her ten-year obsession with BL comics and wants to make sure she gets it right.
“BL is not gay,” she begins, “this is the most important thing you need to know.” The cover art of most of the comics, however, depicts two males embracing, which can make it difficult for the foreign eye to separate a homosexual romance from the themes at hand. But to a rotten girl like Hana it’s all about “pure love”. In fact, the entire genre itself is squarely targeted at a straight female readership and is almost always created by female artists as well.
For Hana, the appeal of BL is largely about the beauty of what she calls a “genderless love.” The fact that it’s two males means she can’t consciously or subconsciously insert herself into the narrative and can thus appreciate the growing romance from afar, like watching a flower blossom.
“When a love exists between a boy and girl, the reader will automatically have empathy with the girl. When it’s just boys, the reader engages in the story from the third person.”
The other problem, according to Hana, with the love between a boy and girl, is that it comes with a lot of societal pressures, like marriage and pregnancy, that can sully the purity of romantic desire. Hana sees great disparity in her country’s gender gap, citing a World Economic Forum’s report, which finds Japan towards the bottom of the gender equality list.
BL has become Hana’s fantasy world where two people are drawn together for no other reason than the simple fact that they love one another and strive to overcome any impeding obstacles in order to be together.
Patrick Galbraith, a visiting researcher at Sophia University and author of The Moé Manifesto, has spent years in Tokyo studying the explosion of BL superfandom, which, according to his findings, pulls in more than $120 million annually, and accounts for roughly 4% of all printed manga in Japan.
Although many young women like Hana prefer to keep their comic book predilections a secret, Galbraith estimates that there are well over a million self-titled rotten girls in Japan, which has created myriad sub-genres within the BL universe.
Galbraith explains that Boys’ Love is also called yaoi in Japanese, an acronym used to reference the homoerotic relationship of two males for a female audience that stands for “no climax, no punch line, no meaning.”
Stories within the yaoi canon run the spectrum of explicitness, from narratives that delicately hint a romantic connection between two characters to full-blown, explicit male-on-male erotica. While the plotlines cater to an immense variety of hyper-specific fetishes within the genre, they all follow a similar course of action that can be parsed into four sections.
“The first part of the story details the initial attraction between the two main characters,” says Galbraith “which usually involves the seme—sometimes called the attacker or inserter—pushing himself upon the uke, a softer and perhaps weaker character who is usually considered the protagonist.”
Although Galbraith cites “rape as a common motif fueled by extreme love,” the most crucial element of the narrative’s first section is the crescendo of tension between the two potential lovers.
The second chapter of the procedural is what Galbraith calls “the relationship realized” when the two male characters overcome a physical barrier and initiate the sexual component of their affection, which can range from a single kiss to something far more explicit.
The final two sections broaden the storyline by throwing a wrench in the main characters’ plans to be together. “Oftentimes their friends disapprove of the relationship, one of the lovers runs away, or a third lover is introduced,” adds Galbraith. “Much of the drama that transpires towards the end of the story is due to the pure love itself, not in spite of it.” But ultimately the two characters lovingly reunite.
Hana delights in the procedural elements of Boys’ Love storytelling, but is most drawn to one particular type of yaoi: fan fiction. Unlike the iterations in Western culture, fan fiction manga is articulated with as much professional finesse as the real thing, and is so incredibly popular that most rotten girls prefer it to commercial fiction.
What’s so compelling about BL fan fiction is that much of it is based on shonen manga—comics specifically geared towards a male audience.
Female readers comb through popular male-dominated storylines involving sports teams or cadres of soldiers and reinterpret a lingering pat on the back after a slam-dunk as the kindling needed to spark a compelling BL relationship. Oftentimes hatred too—like warriors in opposing clans—can ignite the fires of romance in the alternate universe of Boys’ Love literature.
“While commercial BL fiction almost always follows the four narrative stages, fan fiction—which is usually much shorter in length—often ends when the relationship is realized sexually,” says Galbraith. This is largely due to the fact that the characters are well known entities in Japanese pop culture, and the reader’s pleasure is derived in seeing these two characters develop stronger feelings for one another and eventually achieve a certain amount of sexual intimacy.
“Whether or not we want to acknowledge it, the love between two men has been in Japanese culture for as long as we can remember,” adds Hana. “Boys’ Love is a thing of beauty in the kabuki theatre of the Edo era.” (This classical form of dance-drama undertook many homoerotic themes in its Shakespearian depiction and execution of urban narratives in the 17th and 18th centuries.)
"It’s also found in the intimate shudo relationships between an older and younger samurai long ago.” (Shudo, practiced well before Edo times, partnered experienced warriors with adolescent males in an apprenticeship and social-learning role that was heavily sexualized.)
“We self-deprecatingly call ourselves rotten girls because we indulge in this obsession with pure love even though society tells us that it’s a waste of our time. It’s like some kind of self-torture,” Hana says, laughing. “But this rotten girl wonders if the Boys’ Love genre is purely Japanese,” she takes one final spin with her straw—“what’s a Bromance?”
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After the Democratic lawmaker tweeted about Carlson’s son, who works for a MAGA congressman, the Fox host appears to have taken the gloves off.
Updated Aug. 27, 2021 4:56AM ET / Published Aug. 27, 2021 4:38AM ET 
Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast
Several days before Breitbart News ran a story alleging a sexual affair between Democratic Rep. Eric Swalwell and a Chinese spy, the congressman’s top aide received an unusual email from a fellow Hill staffer.
It was Buckley Carlson, a communications director for up-and-coming Republican Rep. Jim Banks and son of Tucker Carlson, arguably the most powerful person in right-wing media and one of Swalwell’s biggest antagonists.
According to Swalwell communications director Jessica Gail, Buckley was reeling from the fact that the congressman had just days earlier referenced him in a tweet bashing his Fox News host father. As a consequence, Gail said, Buckley (not to be confused with Tucker’s brother Buckley Carlson) intimated to her that he was working with a news outlet to push a story on an alleged tryst between Swalwell, who is married with children, and a Chinese infiltrator.
Several days later, a Breitbart article featuring the allegations received extensive coverage on Tucker Carlson’s Fox News primetime program, including a photoshopped graphic of Swalwell in bed with the suspected spy.
The ordeal illustrated not only the way Carlson seemingly uses his massive media powers to attack personal rivals but also how a relatively unremarkable squabble between two political figures has escalated into an ugly personal feud involving the loved ones of both the Fox News host and the Bay Area Democrat.
Swalwell’s appetite for media appearances and his outspoken role in probing alleged Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. election has made him a regular on cable news—and a punching bag for conservatives. But few have spent as much time bashing Swalwell as Carlson. Over the past several months, the TV star has repeatedly run segments alleging a sexual affair with the Chinese spy or simply making fun of Swalwell for, among other things, shirtless photographs of him on a trip to Qatar.
But the feud turned personal when Carlson ran a segment involving Swalwell’s wife, which was followed two days later by the congressman’s tweet roping in the Fox host’s son.
“It feels like a family affair,” Swalwell told The Daily Beast of the Carlson campaigns against him. “It’s gone from politics to the personal. It’s clear it’s not just directed at me now, it’s at my family.” The Carlsons and Fox News did not respond to requests for on-record comment for this story.
While Tucker Carlson’s public persona has long centered around his contempt-laced mockery of Democratic politicians, he and Swalwell weren’t always at odds.
During the Trump administration, Swalwell was once among the few Democrats in Congress to regularly appear on Carlson’s show. At one point, Swalwell recalled to The Daily Beast, the pair had a cordial relationship, occasionally chatting before or after shows in the Fox News host’s D.C. office.
But Swalwell claimed he grew uncomfortable with the host’s increasingly inflammatory rhetoric about immigrants and people of color (as well as his staff’s white-supremacist ties), and began to rebuff requests to appear on the show. Carlson, meanwhile, was highly critical of Swalwell’s role in feverishly pushing the claim that Donald Trump was an agent of Russia.
Trouble between the two began brewing last year after Axios reported that Swalwell was one of the prominent politicians targeted by Christine Fang, a Chinese spy who “took part in fundraising activity for Swalwell’s 2014 re-election campaign,” and “interacted with Swalwell at multiple events over the course of several years,” even helping place an intern in the congressman’s office.
Officials were alarmed enough by Fang’s activity that they briefed Swalwell on their concerns, according to Axios. The congressman then cut ties with Fang, and provided information he knew about her to the FBI. But it was an embarrassing saga for Swalwell—after years of arguing that Trump acted on a foreign government’s behalf, the Democratic congressman had unwittingly let a Chinese spy into his inner circle.
The report made particularly strong waves in conservative media, but seemingly few took more glee than Carlson.
Since late last year, the Fox News host has regularly run segments on the congressman’s connection to the spy, adding his own salacious allegation that Swalwell “repeatedly” had sex with Fang. (Swalwell has largely remained mum on the subject but has broadly denied the allegations, deferring to the FBI’s statement that he was not accused of wrongdoing.)
And Carlson’s claims about the affair have gotten increasingly personal and graphic. In one July show, he jokingly ruminated about what Swalwell looked like while having sex with Fang. And earlier this month, Carlson went out of his way—during a segment on the Jan. 6 riots—to repeatedly speculate that the Democratic lawmaker may have gotten a sexually transmitted disease from her.
This Wednesday, Carlson ran a segment insinuating the congressman is attempting to groom female staffers, connecting his claim to the spy affair allegations (which he called “stomach-turning and unnatural”), and featuring an image with Swalwell’s face photoshopped onto the poster for the 1999 comedy Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me.
Swalwell told The Daily Beast he had attempted to tune out Carlson’s on-air taunts, though he was aware of them due to the many emails or social-media messages he’d receive. But that changed when the Fox host ran a segment on the congressman’s wife.
Swalwell had a “problem with money,” Carlson alleged during his July 20 broadcast, noting that the Democrat spent $20,000 of campaign cash at the Ritz-Carlton Half Moon Bay, where Swalwell’s wife, Brittany Watts, previously worked as a sales director.
And then, the next evening, Carlson ran a segment openly mocking Harry Dunn, a Capitol Police officer who testified about the racist abuse he faced during the Jan. 6 riots.
The segment appeared to set Swalwell off. That evening, the congressman said, he received a phone call from Dunn, who was upset about Carlson’s monologue. And so Swalwell publicly responded by invoking the Fox host’s son.
“Forever grateful to officers like Harry Dunn. He put his body between lawmakers and an armed mob. You know who else Officer Dunn protected…Tucker Carlson’s son, a House staffer,” Swalwell wrote. “RT if you stand with Harry and against white supremacy.”
Two days later, Buckley Carlson emailed Swalwell’s press secretary Jessica Gail saying he wanted to “give you a heads up about something.” And during a subsequent telephone call, Gail told The Daily Beast, the younger Carlson allegedly informed her that he was frustrated Swalwell had mentioned him in a tweet. Further, he allegedly said he was working with a reporter on an imminent story shedding negative light on the congressman’s relationship with Fang. Gail said she told Carlson the allegations were not true.
That same day, the Fox News host also attempted to contact Swalwell, asking the congressman to call him and then calling him a “coward” when he refused to do so, according to screenshots of the exchange Swalwell posted to Twitter. The congressman captioned the images: “Sorry, Tucker, I’m just not that into you.”
On July 26, Breitbart News, a far-right outlet, ran a story claiming a report had circulated among the “U.S. intelligence community” detailing a scandalous affair between Fang and Swalwell, a House intelligence committee member. Carlson gave it major airplay, including the photoshopped imagery of Swalwell in bed with the presumed Chinese spy.
“Father and son are certainly allowed to talk about who they perceive as a common enemy,” Swalwell said before suggesting a connection between the Carlsons and the Breitbart article. “But when the son works for the House of Representatives and is doing his father’s bidding on official House email and at his desk on his official phone, that crosses the line. The House of Representatives is not supposed to be air support for Fox News.”
While Swalwell’s tweet provoked backlash from the Carlsons, who felt the congressman shouldn’t drag Buckley into a feud involving his father, the GOP staffer’s public-facing role in a high-profile congressional office has caught the attention of others.
Vice News reported last month how Tucker Carlson has repeatedly interviewed Banks, a rising star congressman from Indiana, without disclosing that his son works for the lawmaker.
And the Republican congressman’s office has attempted to downplay the ties. In a 2019 interview with Fort Wayne’s Journal Gazette, Banks’ chief of staff David Keller said the legislator had previously never met the Fox News host, and was unaware of the relationship when Buckley Carlson interviewed for an entry-level position as an assistant in his office.
Even by Beltway standards, Banks is considered an especially ambitious politician. Since his election to a northeast Indiana district in 2016, he’s risen rapidly through the GOP ranks; over the past several months, he has served as the chairman of the Republican Study Committee—the dominant bloc of right-wing House Republicans—a post that has often served as a springboard for rising GOP stars, notably former Vice President Mike Pence.
In the view of some Republicans, Banks’ fast ascent has been fueled by a gung-ho willingness to do anything to boost Trump and House GOP leader Kevin McCarthy. His own aspirations for the top rung of party leadership were considered an open secret on Capitol Hill, and were made obvious when Rep. Liz Cheney was booted from her post as the third-ranking Republican.
Banks, once a close ally of Cheney’s, publicly criticized her as she faced a vote of no confidence over her resistance to Trump’s election conspiracies. Privately, Banks put out feelers about running for the job himself. But he was forced to back down after Trump, McCarthy, and Minority Whip Steve Scalise all but anointed another rising star, Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York, to replace Cheney.
Months later, McCarthy did give Banks a profile-boosting moment after appointing him to a special committee to investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection. Speaker Nancy Pelosi rejected his appointment, along with Rep. Jim Jordan’s, citing their objections to Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory.
In some Capitol Hill GOP circles, the ties between Banks and Carlson—and the latter’s ability to elevate the former’s profile—are hard to ignore.
Republican press aides are well aware of how frequently Banks appears on his employee’s father’s very influential TV program. Just this week, Banks appeared on Carlson’s show to discuss how Republicans “have a duty” to punish GOP members investigating the Jan. 6 riots. “The amount that Tucker carries Banks’ water is not lost on anyone on the Repub
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