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#gavin troy – @fred-erick-frankenstein on Tumblr
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Pardon, but your tie is not symmetrical.

@fred-erick-frankenstein / fred-erick-frankenstein.tumblr.com

Fred|27|he/him|bi|I'll never tag any of my posts as "q slur", "d slur" or any of that matter - unfollow me if you think IDENTITIES are a slur!|Instagram: @fred_erick_frankenstein|German|icon from a gif by @poirott
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I just found Midsomer Murders

And I need everyone to know that DCI Tom Barnaby is the SASSIEST

THE SASSIEST

SNARKIEST

SHAMELESS LEAD DETECTIVE

Some examples: (his sergeant’s name is Troy)

Troy: “It’s [the murder scene] just in here sir.” Tom: “Oh, where the blood and the police photographers are? Thank you Troy.”

Tom: “Check out that camera, and the telephones. Find out what calls [spoiler] made after 6 o’clock.” Troy: “So you’re taking it seriously, sir?” Tom: “No, Troy, actually I’m just filling in time till tea.”

SOMEONE PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE GIFSET TOM’S SNARKINESS FOR THE INTERWEBS TO ENJOY

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//In Market for Murder, Barnaby and Troy’s conversation about the comic book, especially Barnaby’s causal “You think you know someone…” line while he is skimming The Hawk, is so interesting. On one hand, it’s a bit of Andrew Payne being cheeky, giving a fun little interval that riffs on the age and priority differences between Barnaby and Troy. Barnaby’s fretting about his pension while Troy is thinking about his comic book, a theme further underlined when Barnaby asks Troy about if he’s got his pension sorted, and Troy insists he’s too young to worry about that. On the other hand, it is such an interesting nod to Barnaby’s character because, so often, we see that he doesn’t know people as well as he thinks he does. Multiple Midsomer episodes, like Death and Dreams, Destroying Angel, Sins of Commission, the Axeman Cometh, The Chocolate Box, The Noble Art, Sauce for the Goose, and Down Among the Dead Men all feature plots where Barnaby befriends/is soft upon the character who later proves to be the killer.  He gets to know the persona they present to him and, because he is fond of that persona, he is reluctant to dig deeper until he absolutely has too. In Troy’s case, it’s pretty harmless. Troy is just much more private then Scott or Jones, and wants to hide the fact he has a nerdy side because it clashes with his perception of masculinity and professionalism. In a lot of the other causes, it is much, much more serious because Barnaby is blissfully taking advice from, and discussing the current case with the murder themselves. And yet, Barnaby still tends to hold the opinion that he can read people well—temporarily being proven wrong in that area does not deter him for long.

That scene. I love it, it’s so them. From Troy’s secret nerdiness to how well they know each other and how comfortable they are sharing stuff.

Because from the moment Troy announces he wants to buy a newspaper, Tom knows that’s bullshit. That boy doesn’t read the paper. But Tom goes along with it even when Troy returns with a finance magazine (hiding his comic). Tom takes Troy’s bullshit at face value but not in the same way he crushes on murderers in other eps. It’s a deliberate ignorance that comes from a place of closeness.

And it’s answered the same way. Troy not only admits to his little hobby: he actually tells Tom what it means to him as part of his relationship with his dad. He even nerds out a little. By the end of the ep he talks to Tom like the proud comic collector he is.

There is always an element of hierarchy and distance with these two as a duo. But they are very close, especially in their later seasons. Especially if it’s done well, and Andrew Payne wrote some beautiful stuff for them (Painted in Blood is so good too).

[ID 1: a close up picture of a comic, called "The Hawk".

ID 2: a picture of Tom Barnaby and Gavin Troy from the show "Midsomer Murders", sitting next to each other in a car. Troy hands Barnaby the aforementioned comic. /end ID].

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Barnaby: This is Sergeant Troy. And this is a spade. Between them, they are going to dig a hole in your backyard with your permission.

Hollingsworth: Which I don’t give.

Barnaby: Thank you very much.

Barnaby being high af is very charming 🤣🤣

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On one of the rare occasions when he and the chief were having an off-duty drink Barnaby had said that he felt sometimes his sergeant objected to murder not so much because it was an outrageous violation against a human soul but because it was chaotic. Troy had been both hurt and angry at this remark and the lack of moral sensibility that it implied. He had dwelt upon it at some length after the two men had parted, which process made him angrier still, for introspection was not his forte and he avoided its dangers whenever possible.

- Caroline Graham, Written in Blood

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“Handbag Henry!… Oh, sorry, it’s just an affectionate nickname. He’s always carrying a bag.”

Midsomer Murders and Queer Themes 1/?

Midsomer Murders, Season 3 - Death of a Stranger

I like how Gavin doesn’t laugh. Let’s be real, s1 Troy would have laughed at this, but s3 Troy probably thinks he’s a jerk, and that is some character development

THIS !!! It’s one of the reasons I love this scene. Troy just looks like this

The whole point of the scene is that these people are assholes. And it’s not pertinent to the story to pin this point on their bigotry, but that’s what the show does, especially with the duo’s reaction shots. This is the show making a small statement. While also doing some character development with Troy. It’s such a good little scene. Midsomer has a lot of heavy-handed moments dealing with queerness. But there are also surprisingly subtle, well-written tones. Even… and especially with Troy.

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galcake534

I really want to know what Gavin Troy asked Kate Meakham's problems/ relationship advice agony column in stranglers wood

ohh. that is such a good scene!! the thing about Troy is, at least part of his childhood/youth must have been difficult?? hated school, passionately, as we learn in Written in Blood and Murder on St Malley's Day.

though he was probably not a lonely kid: played sports (Dead Man's Eleven) and had some uhh fun looking at naughty pics with his schoolmates in the woods (Death of a Stranger).

as to why he wrote in, the ep itself gives a tongue-in-cheek answer to that, with the problem case the agony aunts discuss just before the detective duo arrives??

the show doesn't do a lot of character stuff but it's great with small moments and especially Troy gets some love from the writers.... an arc, character details, recurring themes, backstory... and small scenes like with the agony column!!

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tiger-moran

Also you know something I found interesting in this book

It’s that it actually, in a way, acknowledged a difference between homophobia and biphobia from Troy. I mean subtly, not in so many words exactly, but it says that Troy’s “resentment against Tim was now doubled” when he finds out Tim is bisexual not gay as Troy assumed and that he has slept with a woman Troy fancies.

And when we still even now live in a world where so many people are like “biphobia doesn’t exist that’s just homophobia!!!”

it’s interesting that someone managed to acknowledge a distinction and recognise that a bi man can experience both and not simply homophobia in a novel from over 30 years ago.

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tiger-moran
““Well, Troy. What do you think?” Troy knew that it was not his opinion of homosexuals that was being solicited. There had been a particularly repulsive example of the species in a case the previous year at Badger’s Drift and Troy’s suggestions as to how the man’s activities might be curtailed had been very frostily received. His chief was funny like that. Hard as iron in many ways. Harder than the iron men who thought they could never be broken and were now serving their time. Yet he had these peculiar soft spots. Wouldn’t come out and condemn things that everyone knew to be rotten.”

from Death of a Hollow Man by Caroline Graham

I’m not saying the books or the show are perfect in terms of queer representation and some of decisions about the transferral from book to screen seem especially questionable but

I love this, that in the books Troy (who is not presented as a particularly likeable person) is an oblivious, huge homophobe and biphobe but Tom Barnaby is repeatedly referred to as being, shall we say, massively unimpressed by Troy’s bigotry (and his attitude to that was also kept in the show, in Blue Herrings for instance).

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“One of the old boys behaved very strangely when he found out I was a detective. Jumpy, ill at ease, seemed scared… Arthur Prewitt, retired schoolmaster. Poofter.”

“It was a crime when he was young, Troy, to be gay. Maybe that’s why he was ill at ease. Bad memories. People like you.”

Midsomer Murders and Queer Themes 6/?

Midsomer Murders, Season 3  -  Blue Herrings

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