Why is buck gay in 911

Is Buck Gay on 9-1-1? Oliver Stark Confirms His Character’s Sexuality

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9-1-1 fans are one step closer to Buddie. After his kiss with with Tommy in Season 7, Episode 4, fans possess had countless questions about Buck’s sexuality on 9-1-1and what’s next for the character’s romantic-life (and whether it could include another firefighter viewers have been shipping him with for years.)

Evan “Buck” Buckley, is a firefighter at the Los Angeles Fire Department’s fictional Station 118 in 9-1-1. The series, which premiered in 2018 and also includes spin-off 9-1-1: Lone Star, follows the personal and professional lives of first responders — including police officers, paramedics, and dispatchers — in Los Angeles, California.

Buck, who is also the brother of 9-1-1 operator and trained nurse Maddie Buckley, is one of five remaining original characters on 9-1-1, along with LAPD patrol sergeant A

Buck finally comes out as gay on 911

Or bi. Fucking finally! It's been a prolonged time coming.

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by Anonymousreply 499April 20, 2025 2:05 AM

This only happened because they finally got rid of that homophobic show athlete who refused to explore Buck’s apparent sexual chemistry with men.

by Anonymousreply 1April 5, 2024 4:52 PM

He kisses appreciate straight actors who play gay characters tend to embrace – make your lips as little as possible, ram them into the other actor's lips, remain perfectly still, and start counting down the seconds until you can mercifully pull away.

by Anonymousreply 2April 5, 2024 4:54 PM

Yes!!!

Buck fans knew it all along.

But we've been shipping Buck and Eddie.

Who's this guy kissing Buck?

I haven't watched the show in a while.

Also, the clip looks more enjoy the other guy kissing Buck, and him not really kissing back.

So is he "out, out" or was he just caught off guard being kissed by another guy?

Can someone who has been watching the show, catch me up on Buck's story?

by Anonymousreply 3April 5, 2024 4:54 PM

How can a Ryan Murphy present have a homophobic show runner, R1?

by Anonymousreply

Oliver Stark Reveals Why '9-1-1' Held Off On Exploring Buck's Bisexuality

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Summary

  • Bisexual Buck was a possibility from the start in 9-1-1, but finally explored in Season 7 due to creative changes.
  • Tim Minear's go back as showrunner allowed for the real exploration of Buck's storyline that fans had anticipated.
  • Oliver Stark, who portrays Buck, had always thought Buck might have a sexual awakening, making the storyline perceive natural to him.

Evan Buckley (Oliver Stark) is canonically bisexual now, and while 9-1-1 fans are glad it happened, the interrogate of why it took so prolonged has lingered. From as early as the first season, viewers thought that Buck was homosexual, and when Eddie (Ryan Guzman) entered the picture, there was no question. A lot goes into creative decisions that affect a show, and something as significant as Buck's storyline would need to be signed off by several parties. In an in

Why 9-1-1's historic decision to construct Buck queer was seven years in the making

For seven seasons,9-1-1 fans have been calling on the showrunners to make the queer-coded character Evan 'Buck' Buckley explicitly queer – and to my colossal surprise, it's finally happened. 

Season seven episode four, 'Buck, Bothered and Bewildered', saw the character increase jealous over Eddie Diaz's modern friendship with Tommy Kinard, only for Buck to understand by the end that it was never Eddie's friendship he was worried about but rather Tommy's attention, and the pair kissed. 

Fans have fallen in love with the character of Buck (played by Oliver Stark) over the past seven years, acknowledging his tender heart and willingness to jump without thinking for those he loves. Many have also argued that the character has long been queer-coded – when a character's sexual orientation is implied by significant subtext without being stated outright – using canonical moments from across the seven seasons in their arguments. 

© Chris Willard

Think back to the early seasons, and how Eddie Diaz's introduction to the 118 came from Buck's poin