Hello, Sailor!: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.HelloSailor 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.HelloSailor, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
(Rescuing 0 sources and tagging 2 as dead. #IABot (v2.0beta9))
 
(11 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{trope}}
{{trope}}
{{quote|"''Don't talk to me about naval tradition. It's nothing but [[The Drunken Sailor|rum]], [[Manly Gay|sodomy]], and the [[A Taste of the Lash|lash]].''"|'''[[Winston Churchill]]''' unwittingly inspiring a name for an album by the Pogues.[[hottip:* :[[Beam Me Up Scotty|Churchill didn't actually coin this phrase, but certainly wished he did.]]}}
{{quote|''"Don't talk to me about naval tradition. It's nothing but [[The Drunken Sailor|rum]], [[Manly Gay|sodomy]], and the [[A Taste of the Lash|lash]]."''|'''[[Winston Churchill]],''' unwittingly inspiring a name for an album by the Pogues.<ref>[[Beam Me Up, Scotty|Churchill didn't actually coin this phrase, but certainly wished he did.]]</ref>}}


It's a lonely life in the Navy. Perhaps outside [[Prison Rape]] or [[Schoolgirl Lesbians|single-gender schools]], one of the well-known versions of [[Situational Sexuality]] is in the naval service. For years, men would be left alone together on ships for weeks on end, as female sailors served in a very limited capacity if at all (this is slowly changing), causing these men to have their sexual urges met ''somehow''. This has led to sailors becoming sex symbols among gay men. Definitely [[Truth in Television]] on occasion, and in fiction, a common subtrope of the [[Manly Gay]] and [[Straight Gay]] types. Pretty much [[Older Than Steam]].
It's a lonely life in the Navy. Perhaps outside [[Prison Rape]] or [[Schoolgirl Lesbians|single-gender schools]], one of the well-known versions of [[Situational Sexuality]] is in the naval service. For years, men would be left alone together on ships for weeks on end, as female sailors served in a very limited capacity if at all (this is slowly changing), causing these men to have their sexual urges met ''somehow''. This has led to sailors becoming sex symbols among gay men. Definitely [[Truth in Television]] on occasion, and in fiction, a common subtrope of the [[Manly Gay]] and [[Invisible to Gaydar]] types. Pretty much [[Older Than Steam]].


[[Dead Horse Trope|A somewhat outdated trope nowadays]], however, as most military fetishists have been leaning towards the sweaty and [[Perma Stubble|permastubbled]] soldier or marine as of late.
[[Dead Horse Trope|A somewhat outdated trope nowadays]], however, as most military fetishists have been leaning towards the sweaty and [[Perma-Stubble|permastubbled]] soldier or marine as of late.


Note that the British Navy abolished the practice of flogging in 1948, and that rum rations were discontinued in 1970. [[Insane Troll Logic|The modern navy runs on sodomy, and sodomy alone.]]
Note that the British Navy abolished the practice of flogging in 1948, and that rum rations were discontinued in 1970. [[Insane Troll Logic|The modern British Navy runs on sodomy, and sodomy alone.]]


{{examples|Examples:}}
{{examples}}


== Anime And Manga ==
== Anime And Manga ==
* In the ''[[Area 88 (Manga)|Area 88]]'' TV series, former US Navy pilot Mick Simon is seen reading a ''Playgirl'' magazine in the cafeteria.
* In the ''[[Area 88]]'' TV series, former US Navy pilot Mick Simon is seen reading a ''Playgirl'' magazine in the cafeteria.
* ''[[Kurogane Pukapuka Tai (Manga)|Kurogane Pukapuka Tai]]'' fills the Indian Ocean with lesbian sailors during [[World War II]].
* ''[[Kurogane Pukapuka Tai]]'' fills the Indian Ocean with lesbian sailors during [[World War II]].




== Comic Books ==
== Comic Books ==
* In the second volume of ''Heroes For Hire'', the main characters [[Action Girl|Misty Knight]], [[Ninja|Colleen Wing]], [[Everybody Was Kung Fu Fighting|Shang-Chi]], and [[Classy Cat Burglar|Black Cat]] find themselves in a stolen boat with the Coast Guard about to board them.
* In the second volume of ''Heroes For Hire'', the main characters [[Action Girl|Misty Knight]], [[Ninja|Colleen Wing]], [[Everybody Was Kung-Fu Fighting|Shang-Chi]], and [[Classy Cat Burglar|Black Cat]] find themselves in a stolen boat with the Coast Guard about to board them.
{{quote| '''Misty: '''What do we do?<br />
{{quote|'''Misty: '''What do we do?
'''Colleen Wing: '''Relax, they're ''sailors''. Just look cute.<br />
'''Colleen Wing: '''Relax, they're ''sailors''. Just look cute.
'''Shang-Chi: '''That might not work for all of us, Colleen.<br />
'''Shang-Chi: '''That might not work for all of us, Colleen.
'''Black Cat: '''They ''are'' sailors, Shang. }}
'''Black Cat: '''They ''are'' sailors, Shang. }}
* [[Deadpool]] accidentally invokes this trope by walking into a bar full of sailors in a [[Fan Disservice|tiny tank top and short shorts]]. Bright pink tank top and short shorts. In San Francisco. And then he comes up with his hairbrained scheme to join the X-Men.
* [[Deadpool]] accidentally invokes this trope by walking into a bar full of sailors in a [[Fan Disservice|tiny tank top and short shorts]]. Bright pink tank top and short shorts. In San Francisco. And then he comes up with his hairbrained scheme to join the X-Men.
Line 29: Line 29:


== Film ==
== Film ==
* Captain Shakespeare of the ''[[Stardust (Film)|Stardust]]'' [[The Movie|film]] (though not the book) is a [[Camp Gay|flamboyantly gay]] secret [[Drag Queen]]. Technically not a Navy man, but a sky pirate. Played by [[Robert De Niro]], of all people!
* Captain Shakespeare of the ''[[Stardust (film)|Stardust]]'' [[The Movie|film]] (though not the book) is a [[Camp Gay|flamboyantly gay]] secret [[Drag Queen]]. Technically not a Navy man, but a sky pirate. Played by [[Robert De Niro]], of all people!
** It's said DeNiro took the role of Shakespeare out of deep regret at having passed on playing [[Pirates of the Caribbean|Jack Sparrow]]. Make of that what ye will.
** It's said DeNiro took the role of Shakespeare out of deep regret at having passed on playing [[Pirates of the Caribbean|Jack Sparrow]]. Make of that what ye will.
* ''[[Top Gun]].'' Yes, they're pilots, but they're still Navy.
* ''[[Top Gun]].'' Yes, they're pilots, but they're still Navy.


Line 38: Line 38:
* Referenced vaguely a few times in the ''[[Temeraire]]'' series, when Laurence reflects on some of the hazards of the Navy, while musing he was lucky to escape that part of it himself.
* Referenced vaguely a few times in the ''[[Temeraire]]'' series, when Laurence reflects on some of the hazards of the Navy, while musing he was lucky to escape that part of it himself.
* Herman Melville's unfinished novella ''[[Billy Budd]]'' makes this [[Older Than Radio]]. It's all about homosexuality among sailors on ships in the age before steamships.
* Herman Melville's unfinished novella ''[[Billy Budd]]'' makes this [[Older Than Radio]]. It's all about homosexuality among sailors on ships in the age before steamships.
** Even ''[[Moby Dick]]'' is stuffed full of it. Including Ishmael and Queequeg's status as [[Heterosexual Life Partners]] and Ishmael wading, nay, [[Have a Gay Old Time|wallowing in sperm]]<ref> Spermaceti, an oil found in the head of the sperm whale, which was originally thought to be whale sperm</ref> along with the rest of the crew.
** Even ''[[Moby Dick]]'' is stuffed full of it. Including Ishmael and Queequeg's status as [[Heterosexual Life Partners]] and Ishmael wading, nay, [[Have a Gay Old Time|wallowing in sperm]]<ref>Spermaceti, an oil found in the head of the sperm whale, which was originally thought to be whale sperm</ref> along with the rest of the crew.




Line 45: Line 45:
* ''[[Monty Python's Flying Circus]]'' has its own parody on the subject, exchanging "homosexuality" for "cannibalism", and making countless of jokes of navy men casually eating one another, or discussing nonchalantly of who should get eaten. This comes right after a sketch with a letter from a member of the Royal Navy who is ''outraged'' that the show would demean Her Majesty's naval forces... that soon descended into describing the "perfect little buttocks" of the sailors, and John Cleese saying, [[Take Our Word for It|"And we can't show you the rest of that letter."]]
* ''[[Monty Python's Flying Circus]]'' has its own parody on the subject, exchanging "homosexuality" for "cannibalism", and making countless of jokes of navy men casually eating one another, or discussing nonchalantly of who should get eaten. This comes right after a sketch with a letter from a member of the Royal Navy who is ''outraged'' that the show would demean Her Majesty's naval forces... that soon descended into describing the "perfect little buttocks" of the sailors, and John Cleese saying, [[Take Our Word for It|"And we can't show you the rest of that letter."]]
* ''[[Veronica Mars]]'' first season episode "M.A.D.":
* ''[[Veronica Mars]]'' first season episode "M.A.D.":
{{quote| The Navy? Cover my back, wingman. The rear admiral wants us to pound away with the 10-inch gun. [[Fridge Logic|I mean, isn't just joining the Navy alone gay enough to get you thrown out of the Navy?]]}}
{{quote|The Navy? Cover my back, wingman. The rear admiral wants us to pound away with the 10-inch gun. [[Fridge Logic|I mean, isn't just joining the Navy alone gay enough to get you thrown out of the Navy?]]}}
* Used in ''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000]]'', of all shows, in the [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VucFQe_vhmI&feature=related#t=2m37s final host segment] of ''[[Teenagers From Outer Space (Film)|Teenagers From Outer Space]]''. Tom Servo has a rather...spirited reaction to the sight of Joel in a homemade Navy-style uniform.
* Used in ''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000]]'', of all shows, in the [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VucFQe_vhmI&feature=related#t=2m37s final host segment] of ''[[Teenagers from Outer Space]]''. Tom Servo has a rather...spirited reaction to the sight of Joel in a homemade Navy-style uniform.
* In one round of the ''[[Whose Line Is It Anyway]]'' game "If you Know what I Mean," which involves speaking in nothing but sexual innuendos, one of the players reminisces, "When I was in the Navy, I was surrounded by seamen!"
* In one round of the ''[[Whose Line Is It Anyway?]]'' game "If you Know what I Mean," which involves speaking in nothing but sexual innuendos, one of the players reminisces, "When I was in the Navy, I was surrounded by seamen!"
* ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'' had a continuing serial Dickens parody with guest Michael Palin, who as the youthful hero gets initiated to the manly life on the sea with manly men on the "Raging Queen".
* ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'' had a continuing serial Dickens parody with guest Michael Palin, who as the youthful hero gets initiated to the manly life on the sea with manly men on the "Raging Queen".
* The second-season ''[[Black Adder]]'' episode "Potato" is full of gay sailor jokes since it revolves around explorers and sea voyages. The next episode has Baldrick suggest making money down at the docks by exploiting this trope.
* The second-season ''[[Blackadder]]'' episode "Potato" is full of gay sailor jokes since it revolves around explorers and sea voyages. The next episode has Baldrick suggest making money down at the docks by exploiting this trope.
* In the UK comedy ''Brass'', the [[Camp Gay]] son borrows his mother's perfume, "[[Everything Sounds Sexier in French|Bonsoir Matelot]]."
* In the UK comedy ''Brass'', the [[Camp Gay]] son borrows his mother's perfume, "[[Everything Sounds Sexier in French|Bonsoir Matelot]]."




== Music ==
== Music ==
* The subtext of the [[Village People (Music)|Village People]] song "In the Navy".
* The subtext of the [[Village People]] song "In the Navy".
** Just remember what "subtext" is an anagram for!
** Just remember what "subtext" is an anagram for!
** Hilariously, this song was originally recorded as the theme for a US Navy recruitment spot. The deal fell through when conservative activists complained about the Village People's association with the gay community. While the Navy yielded to the right-wing screeching, they took umbrage to the implication there was anything at all gay about the Village People or the song "In The Navy" in any way promoted homosexuality.
** Hilariously, this song was originally recorded as the theme for a US Navy recruitment spot. The deal fell through when conservative activists complained about the Village People's association with the gay community. While the Navy yielded to the right-wing screeching, they took umbrage to the implication there was anything at all gay about the Village People or the song "In The Navy" in any way promoted homosexuality.
*** Or on a less insulting note, people questioned the legitimacy of the government using taxpayer money to fund a music video.
*** Or on a less insulting note, people questioned the legitimacy of the government using taxpayer money to fund a music video.
* Martin Mull sang a rousing sea shanty about being on a 'ship all filled with men' - he does note "But none of us are sissies/And so we sleep in sep'rate beds/and blow each other kissies!"
* Martin Mull sang a rousing sea shanty about being on a 'ship all filled with men' - he does note "But none of us are sissies/And so we sleep in sep'rate beds/and blow each other kissies!"
* This trope has been immortalized in song for well over a century at the very least. [[http://www.csufresno.edu/folklore/drinkingsongs/mp3s/1950s/1955ca-bawdy-songs-vol-5-bawdy-sea-shanties-<!-- 28LP29/09-backside-rules-the-navy.htm "Backside rules the Navy; backside rules the sea...."]] -->
* This trope has been immortalized in song for well over a century at the very least. [http://www.csufresno.edu/folklore/drinkingsongs/mp3s/1950s/1955ca-bawdy-songs-vol-5-bawdy-sea-shanties-%28LP%29/09-backside-rules-the-navy.htm "Backside rules the Navy; backside rules the sea...."]{{Dead link}}
* The Frogs' song [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iliwt9h6-a0 Sailors Board Me Now] is one big ode to seaside sodomy.
* The Frogs' song [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iliwt9h6-a0 Sailors Board Me Now] is one big ode to seaside sodomy.
* Damon Albarn, while working on the [[Gorillaz (Music)|Gorillaz]] album ''Plastic Beach'', apparently worried that the nautical theme would come across this way, according to [http://www.digitalspy.com/music/news/a280059/albarn-worried-gorillaz-would-look-too-gay.html this interview].
* Damon Albarn, while working on the [[Gorillaz]] album ''Plastic Beach'', apparently worried that the nautical theme would come across this way, according to [http://www.digitalspy.com/music/news/a280059/albarn-worried-gorillaz-would-look-too-gay.html this interview].
* Subverted in Cosmo Jarvis' [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dysG12QCdTA&feature=feedlik Gay Pirates], which has nothing to do with [[Situational Sexuality]] and everything to do with [[The Power of Love]].
* Subverted in Cosmo Jarvis' [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dysG12QCdTA&feature=feedlik Gay Pirates], which has nothing to do with [[Situational Sexuality]] and everything to do with [[The Power of Love]].




== Video Games ==
== Video Games ==
* In the video game ''[[Tradewinds]]: Legends'', the burly Berber swordsman Hasan Tazere is a [[Straight Gay]] with occasional [[Camp Gay]] ("Does this tattoo complement my eyes?") and [[Manly Gay]] ("Visit meat market. Find bear.") concerns--and he's out! E.g., when he makes a particularly large deposit, the Banker is likely to ask if Hasan has met his or her son, and the other playable characters inquire if he's had any success searching for his . . . brother. (Since a [[Running Gag]] of the game is that the playable characters persistently misunderstand each other, this gay troper is convinced that Hasan's warrior brother Omar is straight.)
* In the video game ''[[Tradewinds]]: Legends'', the burly Berber swordsman Hasan Tazere is a [[Invisible to Gaydar]] with occasional [[Camp Gay]] ("Does this tattoo complement my eyes?") and [[Manly Gay]] ("Visit meat market. Find bear.") concerns—and he's out! E.g., when he makes a particularly large deposit, the Banker is likely to ask if Hasan has met his or her son, and the other playable characters inquire if he's had any success searching for his . . . brother. (Since a [[Running Gag]] of the game is that the playable characters persistently misunderstand each other, this gay troper is convinced that Hasan's warrior brother Omar is straight.)
* The trope name is actually a recurring [[Catch Phrase]] in the old ''[[Zork (Video Game)|Zork]]'' games.
* The trope name is actually a recurring [[Catch Phrase]] in the old ''[[Zork]]'' games.




== Web Comics ==
== Web Comics ==
* Apparently referenced in this [http://www.thecrewdogs.com/2009_11_13 Crew Dogs] strip by an Air Force member.
* Apparently referenced in this [http://www.thecrewdogs.com/2009_11_13 Crew Dogs]{{Dead link}} strip by an Air Force member.




== Western Animation ==
== Western Animation ==
* Used in an episode of ''[[The Simpsons (Animation)|The Simpsons]]'' with the Sea Captain, where he was shown purchasing lots of pornography before a long voyage to keep himself and his men straight ... for about five minutes.
* Used in an episode of ''[[The Simpsons (animation)|The Simpsons]]'' with the Sea Captain, where he was shown purchasing lots of pornography before a long voyage to keep himself and his men straight ... for about five minutes.
{{quote| '''Sea Captain''': "I don't swing that way ... on land!}}
{{quote|'''Sea Captain''': "I don't swing that way ... on land!}}
** "Simpson Tide" had the Village People sing on the submarine with Smithers dancing along.
** "Simpson Tide" had the Village People sing on the submarine with Smithers dancing along.
* In some ''[[Popeye]]'' cartoons from WWII era (such as [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2qfcPJS5IBc "Seeing Red, White and Blue"]), Navy sailors (except Popeye of course) were portrayed as "funny", groping, mincing and occasionally cross-dressing.
* In some ''[[Popeye]]'' cartoons from WWII era (such as [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2qfcPJS5IBc "Seeing Red, White and Blue"]), Navy sailors (except Popeye of course) were portrayed as "funny", groping, mincing and occasionally cross-dressing.
* A rather odd version would be Mirage of ''[[Transformers Energon (Anime)|Transformers Energon]]'' who is most of the Decepticon navy by virtue of being ''a boat''. He's also completely gay for Megatron.
* A rather odd version would be Mirage of ''[[Transformers Energon]]'' who is most of the Decepticon navy by virtue of being ''a boat''. He's also completely gay for Megatron.
* Shore Leave a [[Camp Gay|walking stereotype]] from ''[[The Venture Brothers]]'', a parody of Shipwreck from the ''[[G.I. Joe]]'' cartoons.
* Shore Leave a [[Camp Gay|walking stereotype]] from ''[[The Venture Brothers]]'', a parody of Shipwreck from the ''[[G.I. Joe]]'' cartoons.
* [[Getting Crap Past the Radar|Used]] in an episode of ''[[Johnny Bravo]]''. After being told that women like a guy who's "in touch with his feminine side", the not-very-bright Johnny ends dressing in drag to impress a girl and gets hit on by a couple of [[Ambiguously Gay]] sailors who tell him suggestively that they're "on shore leave."
* [[Getting Crap Past the Radar|Used]] in an episode of ''[[Johnny Bravo]]''. After being told that women like a guy who's "in touch with his feminine side", the not-very-bright Johnny ends dressing in drag to impress a girl and gets hit on by a couple of [[Ambiguously Gay]] sailors who tell him suggestively that they're "on shore leave."
* A naval school in ''[[Family Guy (Animation)|Family Guy]]'', described by an instructor:
* A naval school in ''[[Family Guy]]'', described by an instructor:
{{quote| '''Instructor:''' ...Our curriculum consists of being on boats for long periods of time with men, just men, for many days at a time. Up on the deck with lots of men, or down in the galley with lots of men.<br />
{{quote|'''Instructor:''' ...Our curriculum consists of being on boats for long periods of time with men, just men, for many days at a time. Up on the deck with lots of men, or down in the galley with lots of men.
'''Chris:''' Is this some kind of pirate school?<br />
'''Chris:''' Is this some kind of pirate school?
'''Instructor:''' Well... a certain kind of pirate. Yes, we've been called that.<br />
'''Instructor:''' Well... a certain kind of pirate. Yes, we've been called that.
'''[[Ambiguously Gay|Stewie]]:''' Is there some kind of preschool program? }}
'''[[Ambiguously Gay|Stewie]]:''' Is there some kind of preschool program? }}
** Also this short of Stewie as an old British Navy Captain
** Also this short of Stewie as an old British Navy Captain
{{quote| '''Stewie''': I'm the greatest captain of the queen's navy<br />
{{quote|'''Stewie''': I'm the greatest captain of the queen's navy
'''Sailors''': And your record will stand as proof.<br />
'''Sailors''': And your record will stand as proof.
'''Stewie''': Be it galleon or freighter, I'm an expert navigator.<br />
'''Stewie''': Be it galleon or freighter, I'm an expert navigator.
'''Sailors''': And you're also a world class poof.<br />
'''Sailors''': And you're also a world class poof.
'''Stewie''': My manner quite effete/Is mistaken on the street For a sailor who can pirouette on -->cue.<br />
'''Stewie''': My manner quite effete/Is mistaken on the street For a sailor who can pirouette on -->cue.
Well despite your point of view, I can thrill a girl or two...<br />
Well despite your point of view, I can thrill a girl or two...
But I'd rather get it on with you!<br />
But I'd rather get it on with you!
'''Sailors''': Ha Ha Ha! }}
'''Sailors''': Ha Ha Ha! }}
* ''[[Robot Chicken]]'''s advertisement [http://robotchicken.wikia.com/wiki/More_Don%27t_Ask_Then_Ever_Before More Don't Ask Than Ever Before ]
* ''[[Robot Chicken]]'''s advertisement [http://robotchicken.wikia.com/wiki/More_Don%27t_Ask_Then_Ever_Before More Don't Ask Than Ever Before ]
Line 115: Line 115:
[[Category:Queer As Tropes]]
[[Category:Queer As Tropes]]
[[Category:Military and Warfare Tropes]]
[[Category:Military and Warfare Tropes]]
[[Category:Hello Sailor]]
[[Category:Hello, Sailor!]]
[[Category:Trope]]

Latest revision as of 02:43, 17 September 2018

"Don't talk to me about naval tradition. It's nothing but rum, sodomy, and the lash."
Winston Churchill, unwittingly inspiring a name for an album by the Pogues.[1]

It's a lonely life in the Navy. Perhaps outside Prison Rape or single-gender schools, one of the well-known versions of Situational Sexuality is in the naval service. For years, men would be left alone together on ships for weeks on end, as female sailors served in a very limited capacity if at all (this is slowly changing), causing these men to have their sexual urges met somehow. This has led to sailors becoming sex symbols among gay men. Definitely Truth in Television on occasion, and in fiction, a common subtrope of the Manly Gay and Invisible to Gaydar types. Pretty much Older Than Steam.

A somewhat outdated trope nowadays, however, as most military fetishists have been leaning towards the sweaty and permastubbled soldier or marine as of late.

Note that the British Navy abolished the practice of flogging in 1948, and that rum rations were discontinued in 1970. The modern British Navy runs on sodomy, and sodomy alone.

Examples of Hello, Sailor! include:


Anime And Manga


Comic Books

Misty: What do we do?
Colleen Wing: Relax, they're sailors. Just look cute.
Shang-Chi: That might not work for all of us, Colleen.
Black Cat: They are sailors, Shang.

  • Deadpool accidentally invokes this trope by walking into a bar full of sailors in a tiny tank top and short shorts. Bright pink tank top and short shorts. In San Francisco. And then he comes up with his hairbrained scheme to join the X-Men.


Commercials


Film

  • Captain Shakespeare of the Stardust film (though not the book) is a flamboyantly gay secret Drag Queen. Technically not a Navy man, but a sky pirate. Played by Robert De Niro, of all people!
    • It's said DeNiro took the role of Shakespeare out of deep regret at having passed on playing Jack Sparrow. Make of that what ye will.
  • Top Gun. Yes, they're pilots, but they're still Navy.


Literature

  • Jean Genet's Querelle De Brest, later made into a film by Rainer Werner Fassbinder.
  • Referenced vaguely a few times in the Temeraire series, when Laurence reflects on some of the hazards of the Navy, while musing he was lucky to escape that part of it himself.
  • Herman Melville's unfinished novella Billy Budd makes this Older Than Radio. It's all about homosexuality among sailors on ships in the age before steamships.


Live-Action TV

  • Homosexuality in the Royal Navy was the subject of one episode of the Channel 4 parody news show Brass Eye. Sailors did ridiculous things like marching in pairs pressed right up against each other and devoting over 90% of their medical training to treating "penis wounds." It also showed footage of a naval officer fellating a gun.
  • Monty Python's Flying Circus has its own parody on the subject, exchanging "homosexuality" for "cannibalism", and making countless of jokes of navy men casually eating one another, or discussing nonchalantly of who should get eaten. This comes right after a sketch with a letter from a member of the Royal Navy who is outraged that the show would demean Her Majesty's naval forces... that soon descended into describing the "perfect little buttocks" of the sailors, and John Cleese saying, "And we can't show you the rest of that letter."
  • Veronica Mars first season episode "M.A.D.":

The Navy? Cover my back, wingman. The rear admiral wants us to pound away with the 10-inch gun. I mean, isn't just joining the Navy alone gay enough to get you thrown out of the Navy?

  • Used in Mystery Science Theater 3000, of all shows, in the final host segment of Teenagers from Outer Space. Tom Servo has a rather...spirited reaction to the sight of Joel in a homemade Navy-style uniform.
  • In one round of the Whose Line Is It Anyway? game "If you Know what I Mean," which involves speaking in nothing but sexual innuendos, one of the players reminisces, "When I was in the Navy, I was surrounded by seamen!"
  • Saturday Night Live had a continuing serial Dickens parody with guest Michael Palin, who as the youthful hero gets initiated to the manly life on the sea with manly men on the "Raging Queen".
  • The second-season Blackadder episode "Potato" is full of gay sailor jokes since it revolves around explorers and sea voyages. The next episode has Baldrick suggest making money down at the docks by exploiting this trope.
  • In the UK comedy Brass, the Camp Gay son borrows his mother's perfume, "Bonsoir Matelot."


Music

  • The subtext of the Village People song "In the Navy".
    • Just remember what "subtext" is an anagram for!
    • Hilariously, this song was originally recorded as the theme for a US Navy recruitment spot. The deal fell through when conservative activists complained about the Village People's association with the gay community. While the Navy yielded to the right-wing screeching, they took umbrage to the implication there was anything at all gay about the Village People or the song "In The Navy" in any way promoted homosexuality.
      • Or on a less insulting note, people questioned the legitimacy of the government using taxpayer money to fund a music video.
  • Martin Mull sang a rousing sea shanty about being on a 'ship all filled with men' - he does note "But none of us are sissies/And so we sleep in sep'rate beds/and blow each other kissies!"
  • This trope has been immortalized in song for well over a century at the very least. "Backside rules the Navy; backside rules the sea...." [dead link]
  • The Frogs' song Sailors Board Me Now is one big ode to seaside sodomy.
  • Damon Albarn, while working on the Gorillaz album Plastic Beach, apparently worried that the nautical theme would come across this way, according to this interview.
  • Subverted in Cosmo Jarvis' Gay Pirates, which has nothing to do with Situational Sexuality and everything to do with The Power of Love.


Video Games

  • In the video game Tradewinds: Legends, the burly Berber swordsman Hasan Tazere is a Invisible to Gaydar with occasional Camp Gay ("Does this tattoo complement my eyes?") and Manly Gay ("Visit meat market. Find bear.") concerns—and he's out! E.g., when he makes a particularly large deposit, the Banker is likely to ask if Hasan has met his or her son, and the other playable characters inquire if he's had any success searching for his . . . brother. (Since a Running Gag of the game is that the playable characters persistently misunderstand each other, this gay troper is convinced that Hasan's warrior brother Omar is straight.)
  • The trope name is actually a recurring Catch Phrase in the old Zork games.


Web Comics


Western Animation

  • Used in an episode of The Simpsons with the Sea Captain, where he was shown purchasing lots of pornography before a long voyage to keep himself and his men straight ... for about five minutes.

Sea Captain: "I don't swing that way ... on land!

    • "Simpson Tide" had the Village People sing on the submarine with Smithers dancing along.
  • In some Popeye cartoons from WWII era (such as "Seeing Red, White and Blue"), Navy sailors (except Popeye of course) were portrayed as "funny", groping, mincing and occasionally cross-dressing.
  • A rather odd version would be Mirage of Transformers Energon who is most of the Decepticon navy by virtue of being a boat. He's also completely gay for Megatron.
  • Shore Leave a walking stereotype from The Venture Brothers, a parody of Shipwreck from the G.I. Joe cartoons.
  • Used in an episode of Johnny Bravo. After being told that women like a guy who's "in touch with his feminine side", the not-very-bright Johnny ends dressing in drag to impress a girl and gets hit on by a couple of Ambiguously Gay sailors who tell him suggestively that they're "on shore leave."
  • A naval school in Family Guy, described by an instructor:

Instructor: ...Our curriculum consists of being on boats for long periods of time with men, just men, for many days at a time. Up on the deck with lots of men, or down in the galley with lots of men.
Chris: Is this some kind of pirate school?
Instructor: Well... a certain kind of pirate. Yes, we've been called that.
Stewie: Is there some kind of preschool program?

    • Also this short of Stewie as an old British Navy Captain

Stewie: I'm the greatest captain of the queen's navy
Sailors: And your record will stand as proof.
Stewie: Be it galleon or freighter, I'm an expert navigator.
Sailors: And you're also a world class poof.
Stewie: My manner quite effete/Is mistaken on the street For a sailor who can pirouette on -->cue.
Well despite your point of view, I can thrill a girl or two...
But I'd rather get it on with you!
Sailors: Ha Ha Ha!


Real Life

  • Many sailors have no problem making fun of this trope themselves as evidenced by the jokes "It's only queer at the pier!" and "It's not gay underway!"
    • Everyone knows submariners are all this way, everyone of them, just ask anyone else in the Navy "100 men go down, 50 couples come up!"
  • Referenced often by Army personnel in most nations who wish to start a fight with their navy comrades -- "Backs to the wall boys, here come the Navy!" is a favorite in the UK.
    • "How do they separate the men from the boys in the Navy? With a crowbar and a bucket of cold water!"
  • Also referenced in England's old anti-sodomy laws, which had one exception: it was legal "after ninety days at sea."
    • Though bear in mind that, by 1750, even crossing the Atlantic didn't take 90 days, and fooling around- or even trying to- with another man, at least in the Navy, would be punished by being strung from the yardarm if anyone reported it.
  • Strangely this might be less Truth in Television the further back one goes. In the days of Wooden Ships and Iron Men it was common for sailors' wives, girlfriends, and whores to slip aboard ship whenever the ship was in port for an extended period of time. Leaving port always called for an attempt to run the women off the ship, which was rarely 100% successful.
  • Discussed in depth in the book Sodomy and the Pirate Tradition (which Johnny Depp read in preparation to play Captain Jack Sparrow): the argument is basically that gay sex actually wasn't nearly as taboo and shocking in the seventeenth century as it is today, and that those who lived as pirates had little regard for societal norms and "rules" anyway, so it wouldn't really have been a big deal for men stuck onboard a ship for months at a time to turn to one another for sex and/or love.
    • There was even a term for a more permanent arrangement: matelotage. Two sailors who were matelots would often share possessions and have some of the commitments of a married couple (sometimes indicated by 'matelot marks', a significant tattoo.) This wouldn't necessarily include sexual exclusivity, however- the 'possessions' shared would sometimes include having a three-way marriage to a woman as well.
    • Tolerance probably varied between cultures and vessels, however. (On the other hand, deep-sea sailors were pretty much a self-selecting group anyway- they might have been men who were less bothered than others about spending a long time in a male-only environment...)
  • The UK Merchant Navy/US Merchant Marine were well known for being (in practice) accepting of homosexuals compared to the permanent branches of the military and even to most of civilian society prior the gay rights movements improving treatment across the board. This meant homosexuals were far overrepresented in the merchant fleets at those times.
  1. Churchill didn't actually coin this phrase, but certainly wished he did.
  2. Spermaceti, an oil found in the head of the sperm whale, which was originally thought to be whale sperm