suima
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Alastor’s relationship to his gender is based less on his incredibly “masculine” archetype, a hunter, serial killer, overlord, etc. - he doesn’t perform masculinity in the traditional sense, likely out of a distain for labels or roles, as we see with his need to break out of hierarchies. Much of his characterization draws from radio hosts, vaudeville performers, men whose identities were often built around charm, fashion, performance, etiquette, and social grace.
Alastor exists in a space where violence, elegance, and performance all play into his role as the radio demon, as a character who feels gender nonconforming, because he appears completely uninterested in the rules governing it.


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