
While it might only feature two titles, both these games are excellent in their own right.
#Supreme commander forged alliance campaign series
Malakar currently works as a bartender - he doesn’t want people wanting to sleep with him because of this, either - and a pastry chef.The Supreme Commander series is considered by many to be one of the most underrated RTS properties of all time.

“I have a lot of self-esteem issues, and I really like to be sure that someone’s interested.” “It’s a detriment because I enjoy the thrill of a chase, and I don’t like feeling like someone’s f-ing me because ,” he said. In fact, he’s clearly enjoying that less people are invested in him than they used to be, describing his time on “American Idol” - and the resultant fame - as a “detriment” when it comes to dating. “For me, at this point I don’t really care about what people know of my sexuality,” he said. And while he’s confident his parents wouldn’t care if he brought a man home, he’s never actually formally come out to them. Now, though, removed from the show and more established in his adulthood and sense of self, Sanjaya says he’s fully confident in his sexuality. They’re reasoning, according to Sanjaya, “No one needs to know anything about anything because you don’t want to lose your fans.” Meanwhile, he wasn’t sure yet how he defined himself, so it felt like “manipulating” a situation to try and get certain fans that may turn out to be disingenuous. With “American Idol” such a cultural juggernaut at the time, the young Sanjaya found himself surrounded with publicists and people who also weren’t helping, instead advising him to say he was single and remain “ambiguous” amid the speculation, despite the face he was involved with a long-term girlfriend at the time. “I don’t even have any attraction to anyone, so why are you telling me this?” “Everyone keeps telling me that I am gay, and I’m like, 7,” he shared. He explained that he was “raised by women” and quickly immersed into the theater culture, and that he had no role models to give him a sense of, “This is how you are a boy.” Even more, he said that sexuality was being projected on him at a very young age.

It was an uncertainty about himself that stemmed all the way back to childhood when the people in his life were already trying to put him in a clearly-labeled box. In other words, the option was to either be straight or gay, but neither of those seemed quite right for Sanjaya. “And coming up in 2007, it was like, ‘Being gay is OK, but you have to define yourself, and there’s this or that.’ You had to be as hyper-masculine as possible to fit in,” said Sanjaya. “I grew up in a time when being called a f-– in school was the worst thing that could ever happen to you. Part of his challenge was because 2007 was a less tolerant time for the LGBTQ+ community, and also one where there was a more binary understanding of sexuality even where being gay was accepted. When that speculation was happening, the singer said that he pushed back, thinking, “Okay, well now I have to say no, because at this point they’re forcing me to make a decision and define myself.” While fans were brutally speculating everything about him while he was competing, Sanjaya says he didn’t know himself, which is “why is why it was so weird for me,” per People. Now, 15 years later, Sanjaya says he’s comfortable with his sexuality, coming out as bisexual during an appearance on “The Adam Sank Show” podcast. He was also scrutinized and analyzed and torn apart for his talent, his hair, his appearance and even his sexuality.


Sanjaya Malakar, now 32, found himself in the middle of this storm of controversy as his improbable rise into the show - despite then-judge Simon Cowell calling his voice “utterly horrendous” - carried the 17 year old all the way into the Top 7 contestants were eliminated one per week back then. But along the way, there was a lot of speculation (and concern) that one contestant could go all the way based on perceived hate-voting. That was certainly still the case in Season 6, when Jordin Sparks would go on to win the title. Younger fans might not remember, but there was a time when “American Idol” was such a cultural phenomenon - in a way no shows are anymore - that every contestant became a household name.
