Results for: you need help
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Harlem Season Two Focuses on Black Women’s Joy, Creating a Little Joy of Its Own
Harlem shines the best when it focuses on the relationship between the four main characters. Whenever Camille, Tye, Quinn, and Angie are on screen together, you can’t help but smile.
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Apple TV+’s “Pinecone & Pony” Season 2 Is Wholesome Queer Content
Glads and Wren’s relationship is honestly revolutionary, even though the show’s not loud about it.
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“Candace Parker: Unapologetic” Shows That Behind Every GOAT Is a Love Story
“Unapologetic” may ultimately be a testament to a mother’s love for her children, but it takes the audience on a journey of her career that’s worth relishing.
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The Other Black Girl’s Unsung Hero Is Nella’s Queer Best Friend
Malaika hilariously clues us into her queerness by remarking that she would only borrow clothes from Rihanna while on their honeymoon in Greece.
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‘Heartbreak High’ Somehow Gets Even Gayer in Season Two
Bisexual love triangles, queer awakenings, and messy desires abound.
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Justina Machado Is a Chaotic Bisexual Cannibal Star in “The Horror of Dolores Roach”
It’s an adaptation of “Sweeney Todd,” centered on a Puerto Rican woman in Washington Heights, that tells a story about the prison industrial complex and gentrification. And it’s deliciously good.
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Netflix’s Latest Teen Drama “Everything Now” Provides Very Queer and Honest Depiction of Anorexia
Everything Now finds an impressive balance: It doesn’t romanticize eating disorders, of course, but it also doesn’t sensationalize them.
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Queer Chef Kristen Kish’s “Restaurants At the End Of The World” Is Must-Watch Foodie TV
What makes the show really interesting is that Kristen doesn’t just sit, eat the food, and talk to the camera. She is in the kitchen cooking and creating with the owners and chefs.
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“The Girls on the Bus” Doesn’t Get My Vote Despite Its All-Star Cast
If The Girls on the Bus was a workplace drama featuring these four characters — played by these four engaging actresses — then I’d tell you, without reservation, to watch it. But its efforts to showcase journalism and the political landscape fall flat.
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Bisexual Badassery Abounds in Season 2 of “The Legend of Vox Machina”
The Legend of Vox Machina wraps up its second season with their band of bisexual badasses and, of course, wives Kima and Allura.
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“Class of ’09” Features Sepideh Moafi and Kate Mara Flirting Over 3 Decades
The show eased a fear I didn’t realize I had by guaranteeing that the end of The L Word: Generation Q did not mean the end of Sepideh Moafi playing queer and looking at women like she wants to devour them.
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Hulu’s “Black Cake” Delivers a Beautifully Complex Story of Family, Identity, and Secrets
As Black women, isn’t that what we want to be afforded? A chance to be messy and vulnerable instead of tidy and unbreakable?
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“Hightown” Fails to Fulfill Its Potential In Its Final Season
Given the opportunity to focus on Jackie — to build out her world, to deepen her connections with others — the show has always opted not to; instead, they just bring on more men.
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Stephanie Beatriz’s “Twisted Metal” Is a Little Gay and a Lot of Fun
Imagine my surprise when Stephanie Beatriz’s much-appreciated subtle undertone of queerness wasn’t the only gay content we got!
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Disney+’s “Willow” Has Multiple Queer Characters to Root For
In this story, our princess would much rather end up in the arms of her best friend.
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Even Velma and Daphne’s Queer Romance Can’t Save Mindy Kaling’s Scooby-Doo Prequel
Every episode is a cringy, eye-rolling slog that doesn’t seem to have any idea who its audience is, yet seems to despise them all the same.
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Horny Bisexual Betty Is the Best Part of Riverdale’s Final Season So Far
Even if her attraction to Veronica is mostly relegated to fantasies, that doesn’t make it not “real.”
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“Astrid & Lilly Save the World” Ends on a Gay Cliffhanger
This finale is the perfect example of why I love this show.
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Netflix’s “Ladies First” Recenters the Women of Hip-Hop in Their Complex Grit, Beauty, and Honesty
Ladies First reinstates Black women as the founders, experts, contributors who quite literally built hip-hop that they are.
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Taylor Sheridan’s “Special Ops: Lioness” Makes the Case for Queer Writers Rooms
Special Ops: Lioness is surprisingly queer and female-fronted — and it really makes you wonder if Taylor Sheridan actually knows any women.