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Depraved Bisexuals in Live-Action TV.

  • Mandy in 24 to an extent. There was really no connection between her depravity and her bisexual nature, and she appeared to genuinely love her girlfriend. On the other hand, both of the male lovers she had, one of whom was also bi, she killed herself.
  • Hazel Wassername from 30 Rock definitely counts. She's willing to use sex to get what she wants from pretty much anybody, dates men, and regularly hits on Liz once Liz becomes her mentor.
  • American Gods (2017): Bilquis has sex with both men and women, which is not surprising since that way there's double the food for her.
  • Aquarius: Charles Manson is fully prepared to seduce men and women to achieve his goals. His girls, likewise, have no problems turning their charms on women or men.
  • Emperor Cartagia on Babylon 5. According to the actor, at least. Cartagia is about as depraved as it gets — he was willing to destroy his entire homeworld, and everyone on it, because the Shadows claimed they could elevate him to godhood — and his position means he is able to show almost no restraint in indulging his sociopathy. He wasn't written as bi, but Wortham Krimmer once told J. Michael Straczynski that "he's the Emperor, he can f*#$ anyone he wants."
  • Norman's alternate Mother personality in Bates Motel is a monster and revealed to be into both men and women.
  • Although she's not violent about it, Amy Farrah Fowler from The Big Bang Theory is desperate. To the point of gleefully squealing at the possibility that she, Penny, and Bernadette might be rolling around in the mud naked together. She is also constantly hitting on Penny and shows attraction to Priya (Raj's sister)...and constantly tries to bribe or trick Sheldon into sleeping with her. Much to Sheldon's dismay, although he seems to be getting used to it.
  • Alby from Big Love. Although initially presented as a closeted homosexual, he stalks Bill's daughter Sarah and clearly has no problems lusting after his co-conspirator wife. His evilness, however, appears to have nothing to do with his sexuality.
  • Gord Enver/Rich Dotcom of Blindspot. Jane is uncertain if Rich Dotcom was propositioning her, or her and Weller. He later clarifies he'd cheerfully have sex with Jane, with Weller, with the two of them at once, or just be happy watching. He also is clearly unstable as shown when he tries to murder them both and is also in a relationship with another man.
  • The Mirror Universe Vamp Willow in Buffy the Vampire Slayer was foreshadowing for Willow's coming out the next season. (Xander's vampire self has some subtext about this, too, regarding the imprisoned Angel.)
    • Joss has mentioned in interviews that the writers knew that either Willow or Xander would be gay/bi but weren't sure which, hence the several subtle hints for both in the first three seasons.
    • It is notable though that Joss Whedon has explained the canon sexual encounter between Angel and Spike that the latter mentioned in "Power Play" with "they're vampires, they were into all kinds of deviancy". Their long-time vampire girlfriends Darla and Drusilla are strongly implied to have had relations with each other as well (and at the very least, admitted outright to having had a threesome with the Immortal) and Vamp Xander in the Mirror Universe episode also lasciviously touches a male victim at one point. The implication is that vampires don't particularly care about gender when approaching sex objects, which ties into this trope quite nicely.
  • Sister Clarice Willow on Caprica is in a group marriage with both men and women, and also sets out to seduce Amanda Graystone in order to gain access to her house and later because she starts to attach a religious significance to her. It is demonstrated repeatedly that Clarice sees all of her spouses, and indeed everyone else, as tools in her quest to advance herself and her religion (in that order). Her spouses are also the members of a particularly intimate terrorist cell with her as the de facto leader. Even most of Clarice's spouses are taken aback when Clarice appears to be trying to seduce Lacy Rand, a teenage girl, and enlists her youngest husband Nestor to assist with this. Interestingly, this trope is further emphasized by the fact that the other adult characters, even the dysfunctional Graystones, are more committed to their monogamous relationships. Most notable is the aversion of the Depraved Homosexual trope with Sam Adama, who is depicted as extremely loyal and devoted to his husband Larry despite being a Ha'la'tha hitman.
  • Averted in the "Vampire Weekend" episode of Castle. Crow is weird, yes, since he's part of a sexual vampire cult, but he's the victim, not the villain of the episode.
  • The Benefactor aka Margot's brother in The Catch is established as the villain in the show, with his sliminess, sexist behavior, the depraved attitude and shooting his bisexual girlfriend Felicity after getting the info he wanted out of her.
  • The victim of one episode of Cold Case was a stockbroker who slept with both his young male protege (who had a crush on him) and the protege's mother solely in order to get them to invest money, which he then stole. Needless to say, this was the motive for his murder.
  • Continuum: Garza's a bisexual terrorist who's also a Blood Knight.
  • Counterpart (2018): Lambert hits shamelessly on anything that moves, and in Season 2 is revealed to have an intimate relationship with his own counterpart.
  • Andrew Van De Kamp on Desperate Housewives came out as gay to his parents but tells a priest he "loves vanilla, but sometimes [he's] in the mood for chocolate." He was also a sociopath who made his mother's life a living hell until his sociopath tendencies dissipated in Season 3, and so did any trace of his bisexual identity, being solely homosexual from that point on.
  • Not that overt, but Bennett in Dollhouse is implied to be bisexual, or at least lesbian for Caroline during their college days. The depraved part comes when she starts torturing Echo in response to Caroline apparently abandoning her with a disabled arm.
  • Euphoria: Cal Jacobs sleeps with underage — or, in some cases, just very young-looking — boys and girls or men and women, despite being married. And he films them without their consent, which is how his son Nate finds them.
  • Eye Candy: The killer murders both men and women after having met them on an online dating site after finding them attractive though dishonest on aspects of themselves. Calligan thus describes him as an "equal opportunity" serial killer due to this.
  • Norman Bohun in the Father Brown episode "The Hammer of God" is an obnoxious boor who practices Sexual Extortion on a married woman and is callous towards his male lover. Said lover insists that he has redeeming qualities, but they go unseen.
  • Artistic director Paul Grayson of Flesh and Bone. Not an episode goes by without him eyeing, flirting with, making advances to, or practically assaulting people of both genders, behavior enhanced whether he's in the manic or depressive phase of his Bipolar Disorder.
  • Game of Thrones:
    • Heavily implied with Ramsay. While Myranda is his mistress, virtually every interaction between Ramsay and Reek in Season 4 oozes with nightmarish sexual undertones.
    • Rorge, if his threats towards "Arry" are anything to go by, whom he threatens to molest with a wooden sword both when he thinks she's a boy and after he finds out that she's a girl.
  • Played for Laughs in The Good Place with Eleanor and Mindy. Eleanor was a comedic sociopath who resented the Go-Getter Girl Tahani due to her own insecurities but occasionally expressed a desire to sleep with her regardless, and Mindy was The Hedonist who tried to sleep with Eleanor and Chidi upon meeting them for the first time.
  • Gotham:
    • Barbara Kean after her descent into villainy, killing her own parents then becoming a full-time criminal. She was engaged with Jim Gordon, then dates Tabitha Galavan. Later she has a baby with Jim after they sleep together once more. The fact that she was bisexual was established before her Face–Heel Turn, as Detective Renee Montoya was her ex.
    • Tabitha Galavan is a ruthless criminal from the get-go and gets involved with people of both sexes.
  • Played with in Homicide: Life on the Street. Recurring villain Tom Marans, who had murdered his girlfriend, is revealed to have struck up a relationship with a man in his final appearance. When his lover is murdered, Tom beats the killer into a coma.
  • Xander Feng's first scene in House of Cards features him being alternately serviced by a man and a woman, while he's tied up and asphyxiated. Also, the main character Frank Underwood had sex with Zoe Barnes and Edward Meechum later on.
  • iCarly: Nora from iPsycho. She kisses a girl at her party, as well as demanding a kiss from Freddie.
  • Imposters: Maddie at first seduces both men and a woman, marrying them before taking their money before vanishing. Over time however, she's remorseful at how she treated her victims and she strives to change.
  • I Know What You Did Last Summer (2021): Margot is revealed to be the killer, a vicious, manipulative young woman who's motivated partly by twisted love for Lennon, her dead female friend (whom she once had sex with) and revenge on Johnny, her ex-boyfriend, because he left her. It's downplayed however as Lennon, Allison and Johnny are also bisexuals but they don't display these traits.
  • Interview with the Vampire (2022): Lestat de Lioncourt is a bisexual vampire who's unrepentant in feeding on humans (usually to the point of killing them), who seduces and turns Louis de Pointe du Lac because he wants an eternal lover. He's not above a little Murder the Hypotenuse, being the possessive, jealous type, including having killed a prostitute he'd also slept with because Louis used her as The Beard, to isolate him so they could get together. Lestat later beats Louis viciously when he's begun to defy him. After they reconcile, Lestat callously forces his mistress Antoinette out of her own bedroom so that he and Louis can have sex there.
  • In the Flesh: Simon Monroe is at first is presented as manipulative and charismatic, possibly seducing Kieran Walker for the purposes of getting him to join his movement while in an ambiguous relationship with Amy Dyer.
  • Dennis Reynolds on It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia is a cruel, manipulative serial rapist who has committed multiple sexual offenses against men and women.
  • Cy the Cyclops from Kröd Mändoon and the Flaming Sword of Fire is an openly bisexual Monster. While he seems pleasant at first, he then turns out to be utterly depraved and shows a desire to "sex and devour" the entire lead cast.
  • La Femme Nikita had a few of these, as episodic antagonists. Notable ones include Caroline in the episode "Threshold of Pain", who kisses Nikita while torturing her, and Helmut Volker, who in the first of his two episodes flirts with an undercover Nikita and Michael—although he turns out to be not what he seems, in the end.
  • Nicole Wallace, Detective Goren's Arch-Enemy from Law & Order: Criminal Intent. The entire franchise has a rather high percentage of bisexual perps for an American series, but (thankfully) only Nicole has become a recurring villain. Goren's remarks in her first appearance paint her as the purely sociopathic form of the trope: emotionally empty, using sex only as a means to manipulate. Her characterization in subsequent appearances gets a lot more complex.
  • Law & Order had one (based on Serial Killer Andrew Cunanan) who came on to Detective Rey Curtis and Jamie Ross quite strongly within minutes of each other.
  • Legend of the Seeker: Though on the good guys' side starting in Season 2, Cara is still a hard-edged Mord Sith who proposes violent solutions to Richard's problems. Cara is soon revealed to have been in a relationship with fellow Mord Sith Dahlia, while also having casual sex with a man she meets and later their new Seeker Leo. She slowly becomes a bit nicer, starting with him (she admits caring for him when Leo dies). This may come off poorly as Dahlia is a Psycho Lesbian, while Cara only gets nicer after she's with a man, though in fairness it's probably not deliberate since the Mord Sith are all messed up given they're brainwashed into being torture technicians through torture and coercion into harming others (so whatever their sexual orientation, you'd expect them to be kind of like this).
  • Lost Girl: The Morrigan is certainly depraved, and is bisexual. How aggressive/violent she is with her partners is unclear, but Lauren certainly didn't mind. In fact, she used it to her advantage. To the show's credit, the heroine Bo is openly and positively bisexual. Also, then Tamsin and Vex are also bi...Lost Girl isn't quite Everyone Is Bi, but they're in that direction.
  • The Lifetime Movie of the Week A Lover Scorned has a pair of these conspiring to kill one's wife so that they can run off together. However, the husband doesn't know that his lover double-crossing him — he is also sleeping with his wife and planning to kill him so that he and the wife can be together.
  • Lee Garner, Jr., the overprivileged and idle head of North American Tobacco (the makers of Lucky Strike) in Mad Men, who has hit on both men and women to exercise his naked power and humiliate his business partners. Even at Sterling Cooper, he was powerful enough to get Sal Romano fired for rejecting his advances. After the action moves to Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce, Lucky Strike makes up (at one point) 79% of SCDP's revenue, and so when Garner says he'll be attending the company Christmas Party (which leads to this famous gag) — initially something of a joke, as Lane wanted to run it on a shoestring budget to save money needed for other things — SCDP is forced to put on a full-on party with music, a bartender, a fully-stocked bar, and decorations up the wazoo. Garner shows up incredibly late and starts hitting on Roger Sterling's wife (never mind that their marriage isn't a good one, it's still insulting), and forces Roger to play Santa. Since Lucky Strike is 79% of the budget:
  • In the comedy show MADtv (1995) sketch "Sexual Harassment", a new male employee at an office sexually harasses various coworkers until he gets his comeuppance. Most of his targets are women, but it also includes one man.
  • Midsomer Murders:
    • In "Dance with the Dead", Laura Sharp had half the village wrapped around her little finger, charming people of both sexes in order to ensure that she could maintain her comfortable, "free spirited" lifestyle without having to deal with unpleasant things like morals or responsibility. While Barnaby supposes that she used sexual favours to get her own way, most of her targets seemed to be genuinely smitten and protective of her, rather than lusting after her.
    • In "Not in My Back Yard", one of the victims used seduction to manipulate several people of both sexes.
  • Motherland: Fort Salem: Zigzagged. Scylla is a member of a terrorist organization the Spree and seduces Raelle in order to bring her to their side. She also kills her ex-boyfriend when he seemed about to expose her. However, she ends up genuinely falling in love with Raelle and betrays the Spree for Raelle.
  • Tyrell Wellick from Mr. Robot seduces people of both genders to further his nefarious goals. As of the Season 2 finale, he's in love with Elliot, or at least Mr. Robot in Elliot's body. It's not mutual.
  • The Nevers: Hugo is a pansexual pimp who blackmails customers of his sex club, and exploits desperate Touched to get them working there. This is zig-zagged throughout the first season, to keep the audience guessing whether he's behind attacks on the Orphanage Touched, and ultimately this is a very downplayed instance of this trope. He's certainly a sleaze and uses people, but at the same time he has a lot of elements of the Ethical Slut: he doesn't seem to care much about his random sex partners - but they're also never presented as expecting more from him than a no-strings-attached romp and they show zero awe/fear of him, despite his much higher social power - not even his housemaid. His brothel looks more "burlesque" than seedy/exploitative and the sex workers all seem to be there voluntarily and at least partly seem to be the kind of sex worker who takes pride in their advanced skillset. And, as he's quick to point out, he doesn't "make" them do anything - he pays them fairly to do stuff and readily agrees to provide housing as well. Also, he seems to genuinely care about keeping them safe, and about consent: when he gets in trouble with a wealthy client who was injured by one of his employees because the guy wouldn't respect that employee's wish not to be touched, he's totally on the side of the employee and only angry at the client. He seems to genuinely like Augie despite his severe social awkwardness and, as Augie points out, unlike most people of their social class, he doesn't judge you for being "odd". note  As for the extortion/blackmail: remember that he's doing that to a bunch of rich, powerful assholes who are exactly the establishment guys keeping the harsh Victorian anti-homosexuality laws on the books, and he's doing it in an effort to keep his queer-inclusive sex club from being raided and closed down - to create what he thinks is a safe space, not just for personal profit. The only sympathetic victim we know of is Frank - and from Hugo's outside perspective, Frank is just another closeted hypocrite copper who is apparently ready and willing to enforce those laws and to throw "his own kind" in jail. And there may be an element of "punish your ex who was too ashamed of you to keep the relationship" involved in that particular dynamic.
  • Season 3 of Nip/Tuck: The Carver victimized both men and women. Also, the person behind the White Mask of Doom, Quentin Costa, had some intimate encounters as himself with a couple of female characters and a male patient.
  • PC on NYC Prep, although his sexuality is more of a side note to the fact that he is a manipulative, cocky asshole.
  • In Orange Is the New Black Piper Chapman develops into one of these during her time in prison. She was already bisexual (when we learn about her feelings for Alex and Larry) but time in prison made her hostile, cold, and develop sociopathic tendencies. This is to the point of getting her one-time lover Stella sent to max because she stole from her.
  • The Outer Limits (1995): In "Caught in the Act", the parasite-infected girl who absorbs people's lifeforce through sex tries to force herself on both men and women.
  • Oz is practically overflowing with these characters, seeing as how it is about a prison that houses some of the most heinous criminals imaginable. The worst of which would be homicidal sociopath Chris Keller and homicidal psychopath Simon Adebisi. Also, Tobias Beecher. He had a wife who committed suicide and he falls in love with another woman while in Oz and falls in love with Chris Keller. He also has sexual relations with several men while in Oz and shows Ax-Crazy tendencies the longer he's in Oz as well, such as when he killed a prison guard with long fingernails.
  • It's hard not to put Root and Shaw of Person of Interest here, although they're mostly good (by the end of the series, at least) - still, one is a sociopath assassin and the other is a fanatic and hacker. We definitely see at least Shaw on-screen seeming to also have interest in a man, and both seem surprised about their growing attraction to each other. What they have in common is a love of mayhem and chaos. And snark. And guns. Lots of guns.
  • Pretty Little Liars offers three examples:
    • Mona, the original Big Bad of the series, is Ambiguously Bi and seriously psychotic. She says part of the reason she terrorized the other liars was her jealousy of their closeness with Hanna. She also implies to be attracted to Allison.
    • Allison herself is also Ambiguously Bi. She claims to have true feelings for Emily, but it is unclear if she truly feels this way or is she just being her usual Manipulative Bitch self.
    • Jenna also fits the trope — she is very manipulative, and uses sexual partners to get what she wants (Garret and Noel are probably the best examples), and is described as being sexually aggressive (she forces her stepbrother into a relationship). The only subversion here is that it seems that her one relationship with a woman (with Shana, who happens to be a class A Psycho Lesbian), she truly has feelings for her.
  • In Prison Break, the Politically Incorrect Villain T-Bag is another example of the really bad kind. He's not just a rapist and a murderer. He's a child rapist and a murderer. Despite that, he seemed to genuinely love the single mother he was involved with on the outside (who didn't know his real identity) and doted on her two kids. However, his psychosis caught up with him when he's exposed and bizarre attempts to force them to participate in a "picket fence" delusion after his escape forced him to cut ties permanently — he apparently considered killing them, but he couldn't bring himself to.
  • Bobbi Stakowski from Profit is a prime example of the "manipulative" subtype; when her very rich, very married boyfriend turns out to come with a prenup stating that the first partner to ask for a divorce forfeits all the couple's assets, she goes out and seduces his wife.
  • Psych: The serial killer "Mr." Yang. In her first appearance, her sexuality isn't discussed. Later in the series, she appears to be a Psycho Lesbian since all her victims are women and she mentions being attracted to famous actresses and flirting with a female orderly, but she does also have crushes on various male characters including Shawn and the psychologist Mary Lightly.
  • The Royals's Cyrus is unhinged and abusive, and is shown to be having sex with men and women.
  • In Saul of the Mole Men, Saul's hated rival Nathaniel Baltimore, Old-Fashioned Bisexual. Nathaniel is really just a jackass, pointlessly firing his gun while Saul is talking just to interrupt him and never once admitting that Saul was right about the Mother Rock.
  • Scott, Bonnie's roommate in Seinfeld, was interested in having a threesome with George and Bonnie. George clearly didn't want to and gives an expression of horror when Scott advances on him, a scene which several fans have described as "creepy".
  • Shameless (US): Ian Gallagher dates Caleb, who is initially presented as supportive and loving. Ian begins to suspect Caleb of cheating with an ex-girlfriend, but Caleb lies that he isn't. When Ian catches them, Caleb insists sleeping with women doesn't count as cheating, and suggests that Ian try to do the same. Ian does, mostly to prove women aren't what he wants, and dumps Caleb anyway.
  • The Shannara Chronicles: Downplayed at first. Eretria starts out as a ruthless bisexual thief who flirts with or seduces people regardless of gender solely to rob them blind, but doesn't do anything worse. However, over time her being with Wil and Amberle (who both appeal to her) transforms Eretria into a much nicer woman, subverting it. She has a lover in Season 2, Lyria, whom she's genuinely caring and loving to.
  • Shortland Street: Lincoln not only carried on an emotional and sexual relationship with Nicole (leading to a pregnancy) while insisting he wanted to marry and start a family with boyfriend Jack, he did meth with Jack, ultimately leading to a bad reaction. The drug-drenched chaos didn't end there, as he was doing drugs and having sex with Jack's ex-boyfriend while Nicole was in labor. His attempts to be there in time led to driving under the influence and an arrest. He spent the night in jail as his two lovers said goodbye to his dying newborn son. Lincoln left town in shame.
  • Tony from the first series of Skins. While he gives his gay friend Maxxie fellatio on a school trip, it was "to try something new"; his college headmaster also refers to him as "polysexual". Up to the finale of Season 1, he manipulates everyone around him, but he reaches Moral Event Horizon when after his girlfriend Michelle hooks up with another guy, Josh, he sends her pornographic pictures of Josh's sister from his phone to convince her he's mentally unstable. This fails since Michelle still doesn't take him back, and Josh ends up enacting a truly twisted plan of revenge on him involving his sister.
  • Smallville: Non-straight people come one of two ways: this (in the form of some vampires and a woman at a fight club that is attracted to Lois) or the rare female Stalker with a Crush for Lana (the female part is rare, not the stalker/crush part. Not by a very long shot).
  • Agent June Stahl from Sons of Anarchy.
  • The Mirror Universe Intendant Kira in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. The character originally hit on her regular counterpart only because she was so highly narcissistic. Only later was the character made a Depraved Bisexual, with the actress herself being well aware of the stupidity. But work's work... In point of fact, this is a trait inherent in nearly all the women of the Mirror Universe (Dax, Ezri, and Leeta), with the sole exception being Jennifer Sisko.
    -The Agony Booth: Yep, it’s an alternate universe, alright. An alternate lifestyle universe.
  • Star Trek: Voyager. The male Body Surf villain in "Warlord" appears to enjoy the implications of jumping into an attractive female body. And when Alice Krige reprised her role from Star Trek: First Contact in "Endgame", she was told to vamp it up as she did with Picard. So we have a scene where the Borg Queen is suggestively stroking Seven of Nine and purring "you always were my favourite, Seven". Despite a large lesbian Shipping community pairing Seven with her mentor, Captain Janeway, these are the only overt gay scenes in the series.
  • Star Trek: Discovery.
    • The Mirror Universe Phillipa Georgiou has a scene displaying both her bisexuality and her ruthlessness. The regular universe Phillipa Georgiou sexuality has never been discussed.
    • Likewise, with the prime universe Paul Stamets explicitly stated to be gay, Mirror Georgiou asserts that his evil mirror counterpart was pansexual.
  • On Supernatural, the demon and later King of Hell Crowley's introduction sees him buying the soul of a middle-aged businessman, then coercing the man into a kiss to seal the deal.
    • He later does the same with Bobby Singer, with photographic evidence, even.
    • During a negotiation with Crowley, Season 7 Big Bad Dick Roman seems already aware of this little tradition.
      Crowley: You have a deal. I suppose you want it in writing?
      Roman: I don't kiss on the mouth.
      Crowley: Your loss.
    • Crowley has also been known to flirt with Sam, Dean, and Castiel on occasion.
    • It's hinted at that Crowley and female angel Naomi once had a thing.
      Crowley: (to Naomi) If you remember our time in Mesopotamia the way I do, you know I'm a lover, not a fighter.
    • Made explicit in the Season 11 premiere where he possesses a woman and winds up having a foursome with her husband and another couple... before butchering them all.
  • Swarm: Dre has a one night stand with a man in the series early on. Later she dates another woman, and murders her for not liking Ni'Jah. In fairness though, it's the only case where she murders someone who was involved with her and she's portrayed as unhinged before her sexuality is made clear too.
  • Tidelands (Netflix): Adrielle, the main villain of the series, has sex with Augie that displays serious Questionable Consent while also showing attraction to her henchwoman Leandra, a Psycho Lesbian whom she shares a kiss with.
  • Bill Haydon in Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (and the novel it’s adapted from). Haydon is charming, unconventional, promiscuous, and bisexual, taking younger female and male lovers. He is also the mole and the story’s arch-traitor, carrying on a manipulative affair with protagonist George Smiley’s wife at the behest of his Soviet spymaster, and betraying his likely former lover and closest friend Jim Prideaux by sending him into a Czech trap which results in him being shot, imprisoned, and tortured. Prideaux kills him for his betrayal.
  • Captain John Hart in Torchwood who will throw a mugger off the roof of a multi-story car park without so much as the batting of an eyelid and has lines like this:
    Capt. John: Oh, that's gorgeous.
    Gwen: That's a poodle.
    Capt. John: [eager] It's nice!
  • True Blood: Quite a few of the vampires in this show have shown an interest in sex with both genders (at one point during the third season, before Erik Northman has sex with Russel Edgington's male lover, he remarks that it's been a long time since he indulged in it "with a vampire", and both Pam and Nan Flanigan have both been shown having intimate moments with other women). The notable exception to this is Bill, who has only ever had eyes for Sookie, and his past lovers were also female.
  • Isobel from The Vampire Diaries is heavily implied to be one. She keeps a sex slave of each sex. Moreover, both are mind-controlled. The male is actually gay, and would presumably be repulsed if he were not mind-controlled, making this all the more Squicky.
  • (Miss) H. G. Wells in Warehouse 13 is bisexual ("Many of my lovers were men."), and depraved (she tried to destroy all of humanity), but the two are not related, so there you are. She also eventually loses the depravity and becomes an Anti-Villain, and was, at worst, a Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds. She eventually does a full Heel–Face Turn culminating in a Heroic Sacrifice.
  • Why Women Kill: Zigzagged. Jade, who's bisexual, turns out to be a serial killer, who targets her own lovers. However Taylor, one of those lovers, is herself bisexual and a nice, ordinary woman.
  • You (2018): Peach appears to be bi as she's obsessively attracted by Beck, seeking to manipulate her. She also willingly has sex later with Raj, though it's clear that she was hoping to have sex with Beck (or at least a threeway). Peach is in the closet about it because her family wouldn't be accepting, and this possibly drives part of her negative behavior.

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