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Gal Pals

Part of a series on LGBTQ+. [View Related Entries]

Updated Jan 29, 2025 at 07:22PM EST by LiterallyAustin.

Added Feb 09, 2017 at 10:55AM EST by Adam.

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About

Gal Pals and Live-in Gal Pals are jokes popular in the LGBTQ community made to mock heteronormative media's erasure of bisexuality among women.

Origin

The trend of people suggesting lesbians were simply "girlfriends" or "gal pals" has long been prevalent. On July 3rd, 2014, Tumblr user getsby[5] posted a compilation of headlines that suggested two celebrity women engaging in homosexual activity were simply good friends (shown below).



Spread

The trend began getting more regularly spoofed later in the year. On November 3rd, 2014, Tumblr user stevebucki posted a joke about the media's erasure of lesbian relationship that gained over 36,000 notes (shown below).



In January of 2015, a Tumblr devoted to sending up the trend called justgalpalthings[4] launched. A parody of relatable-style blogs, justgalpalthings posted images of ladies with highly romantic captions, but titled them "just gal pal things" (ex: shown below).



Live-In Gal Pals

The phrase "live-in gal pal" came from a series of Daily Mail[1][2] articles from early 2015 that described Alicia Cargile as actress Kristen Stewart's "live-in gal pal" while running photos of the two holding hands and behaving romantically (example shown below).



The articles' hesitance to suggest that the relationship between Cargile and Stewart was more than platonic generated criticism and mockery for the way the media covers bisexual celebrities and homosexual relationships. On April 21st of that year, Pajiba.com[3] ran an article with screenshots of media outlets' hesitancy to claim that Cargile and Stewart could be dating despite running articles about them "snuggling" and "touching chests in familiar ways."

On July 26th, 2015, Tumblr's memearchives[6] documented the meme, noting that perhaps the media's insistence on calling lesbians "gal pals" was a way to invade celebrities' privacy but avoid potential slander lawsuits.

Various Examples



Search Interest

External References


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