flamingshorts wrote:
In some way this is a parallels a lot of the experience of AS, not fitting in, being excluded. With all the differences and disabilities on the show, AS is the one that’s being ridiculed. It doesn’t fit in with the others.
Indeed, too much like real life. Again I refer you to my last post and my request for a gun.
Plus for someone who actually was in choir in high school this brings back too many bad memories. I was a decent singer (definitely not tone deaf) but the problem was I was never a good stage singer. Every time I auditioned for something I shook horribly and could not make proper eye contact or facial expression. Even when singing with a large group, I wasn't able to stage in all the choirs everyone was disciplined as if we're professional Broadway stars like the rival high school choir Vocal Adrenaline on the show. It would've saved me a lot of pain, time, and voice lesson money if my ungodly uptight choir teachers just came up to me after my first year audition and say "we don't think you should be in choir anymore. You're not stage material and we think you're autistic" (which the teachers did admit later I showed some signs of). Not only would I have been spared years of pointless pain and embarrassment, I could've been diagnosed sooner!
Point being, I just hope that Sugar Motta doesn't give the wrong idea (to people who still don't know that she's faking it) that people with AS can't sing.