Gay lis

Brendan Gaylis, MD, is the director of the Division of Head and Neck Oncology, and acts as the surgeon-in-chief for tumors of the head and neck at Scripps Clinic and Scripps Green Hospital. He treats patients for diseases and disorders of the ear, nose and throat. In addition to practicing the complete scope of otolaryngology, he has craft in the detection and surgical treatment of head and neck tumors, as well as thyroid and parathyroid disease. He is also specialized in endoscopic treatment for Zenker’s diverticulum, a condition that causes difficulty swallowing, and performs minimally invasive trans-oral laser microsurgery with mouth and throat malignancies. Another area of expertise includes reconstruction of the face, nose, ears and neck after skin cancer treatments. In his role as division director, he chairs the multi-disciplinary head and neck oncology tumor board, which provides treatment recommendations for patients with a diagnosis of chief and neck cancer.

In addition to his train, Dr. Gaylis conducts clinical research in the areas of Zenker’s diverticulum and endocrine surgery. 

Dr. Gaylis puts his patients first. It is this patient-centered way of thinking that

So I've been reading the Cullen thread and I've been thinking about Bioware's latest trend of having most LIs bisexual - a la DA 2. I understand the arguments about  resource efficency/meta-gaming/more player options/etc but honestly I really strongly like the way Origins handled LIs. I know the devs will probably notify this meta-gaming so here's some awareness on how I play my game: my first playthourgh is always my canon playthrough but I imagine subsequent playthroughs as "what-if" secnarios -- interpretation this would transpire if events played out slightly differently, etc. I contradict with the devs that this is meta-gaming because I'm not playing to optimize certain outcomes, rather, I'm playing to get a greater feel for the story and the world and using alternate "what-if" scenarios to flesh out my awareness of the events that surronded my canon character. This is why I did playthroughs of all the origins in Origins after completing the game with my canon city elf. 

Thus, if a charater is gay for my Hawke but then I do the opposite gender Hawke on another participate thorough, the personality still seems "bi" to me. I think Origins was a good initiate for LGBT equality in that it

Life is Strange: Every Diverse Character in the Franchise

The heart of the Life is Strange franchise has always seemed to be diversity and inclusion, especially when it comes to the LGBTQIA+ community. From the very first Life is Strange game, players could have a protagonist involved in a queer relationship without it creature fetishized or out-of-place. This trend only continued throughout later releases, as Life is Strange: Before the Storm and Life is Strange 2 both have a variety of LGBTQ+ characters. Though it’s still a month away from unleash , Life is Strange: Genuine Colors has also confirmed that it will own LGBTQ+ characters, including a same-sex romance option for protagonist Alex Chen.

There are technically 11 LGBTQ+ characters found in the entire Life is Strange franchise, with the eleventh Gay character being Alex Chen, who will have both a same- and opposite-sex romance option in Life is Strange: True Colors. However, because the game isn't available yet, it wouldn’t be fair to include her without having a full scope of her personality, motivations, and romantic interactions yet. All 10 remaining LGBTQ+ characters can be found in Life is Strange

lgbt questions not bait...
I have played them all I love them all, i know some characters are gay etc... Is this game overly focused on lgbtq though? or is it minimal like the others? as iv seen pride flags etc on screenshots.

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