Let’s be clear about this: Bluey isn’t made for adults obsessing over representation politics. It’s for kids. It’s about play. Imagination. Tantrums over lost socks. But kids absorb messages beneath the surface. And adults project their hopes—sometimes anxieties—onto cartoons. That’s where things get interesting.
Understanding Representation in Children’s Media
Representation isn’t just about showing a gay couple on screen. It’s about validating experiences. Making kids feel seen. And yes, sometimes, that means including families that don’t look like the 1950s sitcom mold. Back in 2000, fewer than 3% of animated children’s shows featured LGBTQ+ characters. By 2022, that number climbed to 12%. Still low—but moving. Bluey sits in an odd blind spot: wildly popular, emotionally rich, and yet, stubbornly neutral.
What does neutrality actually mean here? Is it avoidance? Or is it intentional universality? The creators haven’t said much. But they’ve emphasized that Bluey reflects “real life” as they see it in Australia—suburban, diverse in subtle ways, but not performative. Chilli is part Indigenous Australian. That’s mentioned gently, once. Not shouted. Not turned into a Very Special Episode. Same with Bandit’s job at a museum. It’s background texture.
Which raises a question: if a character were queer, would it need to be spelled out? Or could it just… be?
What "Inclusion" Looks Like Without Labels
Inclusion doesn’t always require a rainbow flag. Take the episode “Daddy Robot.” Bandit pretends to be a robot so Bluey can control him. It’s silly. It’s sweet. And it flips traditional parenting roles—dad as servant, kid as boss. That kind of emotional flexibility is often seen in queer households, but the show never says that. It just shows it. The thing is, Bluey isn’t about identity politics. It’s about behavior. And the behavior it promotes—listening, adapting, being present—that’s where inclusion lives, even without labels.
And that’s exactly where some parents feel seen. A single mom in Melbourne told me (in a tweet that stuck with me) that she watches Bluey with her daughter and feels less alone. Not because Chilli is single—but because the show treats involved fatherhood as normal. That changes everything. So maybe representation isn’t always about who’s on screen. Maybe it’s about what’s possible.
Why Bluey’s Silence Speaks Volumes
There’s a tension here. On one hand, families come in all shapes. According to the Williams Institute, about 29% of LGBTQ+ adults in the U.S. are raising children. In Australia, same-sex couples make up 0.7% of all couples, but 3.7% of same-sex couples are raising kids. Numbers matter. Visibility matters more. So when a show as massive as Bluey—aired in 180 countries—features zero same-sex parents, some feel erased.
But—and this is a big but—the show also doesn’t police gender roles. Bluey wears red. Bingo wears blue. Sometimes it’s reversed in pretend play. Bandit does the dishes. Chilli climbs trees and wrestles. The kids play “Mums and Dads” and switch roles fluidly. In one episode, Bluey marries her teacher. In another, she’s a pirate king. Gender isn’t a cage. It’s a costume.
Because of this, some viewers argue the show is quietly progressive. It’s not waving a banner. It’s dismantling norms brick by brick. Is that enough? Maybe not for activists. But for a 6-year-old? It might be revolutionary.
The Risk of Forcing Representation
Here’s a unpopular take: not every show has to carry the weight of representation. We’re far from a world where LGBTQ+ kids see themselves everywhere. But forcing a queer subplot into Bluey just to check a box? That could backfire. Imagine a clumsy “very special episode” about a classmate with two moms, delivered with the subtlety of a sledgehammer. Kids would notice the shift. They always do. The magic of Bluey is its consistency. Its warmth. Its refusal to lecture.
Which explains why some parents would rather wait for authentic inclusion than get tokenism. And yes, that means enduring silence a little longer. But because Bluey builds trust slowly—episode by episode, joke by quiet moment—when it does show a same-sex family, it won’t feel like propaganda. It’ll feel like life.
Comparing Bluey to Other Kids’ Shows
Let’s put this in context. Arthur featured a same-sex wedding in 2018—Mr. Ratburn married another man. The episode sparked backlash from some conservative groups but was praised by GLAAD. Steven Universe went further: fusion as metaphor, queer relationships woven into the plot. Then there’s Teen Titans Go!, which plays it safe. No explicit identities. Just vibes.
Bluey fits somewhere between Arthur and Teen Titans. It’s more grounded than the latter, more restrained than the former. It’s also unique in its format—short 7-minute episodes centered on play. There’s no room for dramatic coming-out arcs. But there is room for a classmate whose two dads pick them up from school. A throwaway line. A normal detail.
To give a sense of scale: Bluey has aired 134 episodes as of 2024. In all that time, no adult character has been confirmed queer. Not one. Compare that to The Loud House, where two of Lincoln’s neighbors are a married gay couple. Or Doc McStuffins, where a father comes out as gay in a 2017 episode. That’s 7 years ago. Bluey feels behind—except it’s not trying to be that kind of show.
What Other Animated Series Get Right (and Wrong)
Sometimes inclusion feels like a trophy. A network points to one character and says, “See? We’re diverse.” But real representation is saturation. It’s not one gay character. It’s three. It’s incidental moments. It’s a kid saying, “My moms” without it being a plot point. Bluey could do that tomorrow. Slip in a pronoun. Show a family photo. It wouldn’t break the show. It would deepen it.
And that’s exactly where fans are frustrated. Not because Bluey is offensive. But because it’s safe. A show this influential could push culture forward—gently. Like when Chilli talks about her Indigenous heritage in “Shadowlands.” One line. No fanfare. But for a kid who shares that background? It’s everything.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Bluey Have Any Queer Characters?
Not that we know of. No character has been confirmed LGBTQ+. But absence isn’t erasure—unless it’s intentional. The show includes diverse skin tones, body types, family structures (like grandparents raising kids in “Grannies”), but same-sex parents? Not yet. Data is still lacking on the creators’ intent. Experts disagree on whether this is oversight or artistic choice.
Is Bluey Appropriate for LGBTQ+ Families?
Absolutely. The show’s core themes—love, patience, creativity—are universal. Many LGBTQ+ parents report feeling represented in the parenting struggles, even if not in identity. One dad told me his twins ask, “When are the two daddies coming on Bluey?” He laughs. But it’s not really a joke.
Will Bluey Ever Include a Same-Sex Couple?
Possibly. Creator Joe Brumm has said the show reflects his observations of real families. Since same-sex parenting is growing—Australia saw a 34% increase in same-sex couples raising children between 2011 and 2021—it’s only a matter of time. But when it happens, you won’t need a press release. You’ll just see it. In the background. Like everything else.
The Bottom Line
Is there LGBT in Bluey? Not explicitly. But representation isn’t always about labels. It’s about values. And Bluey nails those. Empathy. Flexibility. Joy in the ordinary. You don’t need a rainbow sticker to teach love. But—let’s be honest—a rainbow sticker helps. Especially for a kid who’s never seen their family on TV.
I find this overrated: the idea that a show must “do more” just because it’s popular. Bluey does what it set out to do—capture childhood in its messy, magical reality. But I’m also convinced that inclusion isn’t a favor. It’s accuracy. Australia has queer families. So does Canada. The U.S. The world.
Because of that, Bluey isn’t failing by omission. Not yet. But it could be so much more. A single line. A family photo. A pronoun. That’s all it would take. Not to be political. But to be true. And in a show that prides itself on truth? That changes everything.
