Results for: queer parenting
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‘Under the Bridge,’ a True Crime Drama With Queer Leads, Wants More for Its Girls and the Genre
Lily Gladstone and Riley Keough deliver magnificent performances as the queer leads of a ’90s-set true crime drama that is less concerned with scandal or mystery than it is with empathy and curiosity.
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Already Very Queer Comedy “The Lake” Gets Gayer in Season Two
Billie finds herself in a love triangle full of queer tension.
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Two Bravo Storylines Explore Paths to Queer Parenthood and Their Complications
Paths to queer parenthood are varied, and they’re also difficult — even for the most privileged members of the LGBTQ+ community.
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Throughout Its Four Seasons, “Sex Education” Showed Us a Better Way
Worse sex education and less adolescent autonomy has consequences — consequences no show can overcome. It’s admirable to watch this one try.
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Marvel’s “Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur” Has Queer Characters and Literal Black Girl Magic
Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur has casual queer characters and voice cast that includes Isabella Gomez, Indya Moore, Asia Kate Dillon, Maya Hawke, Alison Brie, and Robin Thede!
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The Boys Spinoff Gen V Asks, “What if Any Ol’ A**hole College Student Had Powers”
By immediately introducing gender-shifting Jordan and probably-pansexual Emma, Gen V is already much queerer than The Boys.
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SXSW 2023: Amazon’s “Swarm” Is Black & Bloody — AND THERE IS SOME LESBIANING GOING ON!
How far will you go for your favorite celebrity?
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At Long Last, ‘The Acolyte’ Gives Us a Star Wars Series Made by a Lesbian
Star Wars has managed to become an inflection point for culture war grifters who claim that it’s become a radically queer Marxist text. I f*cking wish.
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“Willow” Gives Us the Lesbian Disney Princess We’ve Been Waiting For
Kit and Jade kissed and smashed swords. They said, “I love you.” They lived!
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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 “Ted” TV Show Has Classic Crass Humor Plus a Queer Cousin
The offensive humor of the Ted franchise is called out by a queer character in the new TV series.
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Aisha Tyler Plays Gay Again in “The Last Thing He Told Me”
Aisha Tyler plays Jennifer Garner’s gay best friend in an Apple TV+ miniseries about deception and family.
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“Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies” Can’t Go Both Ways
Rise of the Pink Ladies wants the privilege of deciding when and how questions of race matter, but that’s not how it works — not on a fictional television show where teenagers sing on cafeteria tables for fun, and not in life.
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Hannah Gadsby’s New Comedy Special Is a Hilarious, Feel Good Way To Spend an Hour
I love their more serious work, but I hope this new mix of levity is here to stay as well.
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Netflix’s Beef Is Very Stressful — It’s Also an Incredible Work of Art
Beef grapples with a lot of the same themes of sex, power, wealth, perception, and deception as the popular series White Lotus but does so with a lot more nuance — especially in its explorations of race — and a lot more creative ambition.
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HBO’s “His Dark Materials” Makes The Garden of Eden Gloriously Gay
Dr. Mary Malone reveals that she’s a lesbian in series finale. It’s a revolutionary change from the books.
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I Wish Peacock’s “Queer as Folk” Season One Had Like 14 More Episodes
Peacock’s new “re-imagining” of Showtime’s “Queer as Folk” is brimming with promise, exuberance and sex that is both groundbreaking and incredibly hot — and what I found myself wanting from the show was simply more of it.
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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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“FROM” Season 2 Finds Queer Love in a Hopeless Place
Supernatural survival series FROM delivers us another queer character by bus in Season 2.
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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?