Mae Martin’s Queer Horror Netflix Series Will Mess With Your Head
Wayward is not some work of science-fiction; it captures real-life horror.
Wayward is not some work of science-fiction; it captures real-life horror.
Think of any Pedro Almodóvar movie you’ve seen, make it as silly as possible, and then you’d get Gonzalo Cordova’s hilarious and visually imaginative Women Wearing Shoulder Pads.
Amy’s sexuality was kept hush-hush for nearly three decades.
Dope Girls aired in the UK earlier this year, drawing from the lesser-known history of female criminal gangs in interwar London.
If you’ve ever wondered what it would be like for the homoerotic friendship in your favorite campy psychological thriller to become actual lesbian sex, have I got the show for you!
For all the thrills and bloodspill, the scariest part of the show might be…its portrayal of heterosexuality?
Megan Stalter is a fitting lead for a Lena Dunham series that trades the realism of Girls for broad comedy, formal experimentation, and big romcom moments.
So far, Ironheart is everything I love about the MCU when they let themselves have fun. And it’s not NOT gay.
A queer critic who loves Bravo and a queer critic who went to NYU are truly the perfect duo to review this television program.
It made me laugh, it made me cry, and it made me giggle and kick my feet at all the extra queer content.
Underneath the raunchiness and gross-out jokes, the series has been a trailblazer in its efforts to challenge societal norms and welcome LGBTQ representation.
Keke Palmer and Stephanie Hsu are back to voice Klak and Sleech as they navigate gay dates, deep secrets, and the wild and wacky world of The Second Best Hospital in the Galaxy.
It feels like a small miracle that a show like Andor got to exist. An expensive as hell, explicitly anti-fascist, openly queer, and intelligently plotted spy thriller set in one of the biggest media franchises in history feels like it shouldn’t exist, but it did, and it was wonderful.
Maybe I’m being too harsh. Maybe there’s a place for bad TV that hates itself and hates its audience.
Two lesbian “scholars” of reality television weigh in on season two of The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives. Who’s the best villain? Who seems GAY? Let’s discuss.
There is no perfect path to queerness. Oftentimes, it is shitty and gross.
There isn’t a more pressing and thought-provoking series airing right now.
Cynthia Erivo goes full Orphan Black mode for Poker Face season two’s premiere. Plus, other small details including a performance by Sherry Cola continue to make the show’s wacky world casually queer.
Get Hooked, on its face, is a six-part documentary series about, well, fishing. I can hear the non-nature inclined among you sigh, but, if you will, come along on this journey with me, because maybe I (and the delightful cast) can change your mind.
Yes, there was heavily implied lesbian sex in Star Wars. I never thought we’d see the day, but it’s here. The gays have finally taken the Galaxy Far, Far Away.