Very Special Gay Episode: The One Where I Write About the ‘Friends’ Lesbian Wedding
It could happen in real life, couldn’t it? It had happened on Friends and everyone loved Friends.
It could happen in real life, couldn’t it? It had happened on Friends and everyone loved Friends.
Plus updates on The Equalizer’s queerest episode to date, All American, and the new nonbinary AI character on Beacon 23!
While the first season had an ugly personality, at least it was bold enough to have one at all.
Exes — I mean, ex- boss and employee — Deborah and Ava are back in another brilliant season.
“I know gay people exist, I don’t need to be reminded every time I watch tv… Anyone thinking this makes me homophobic, I feel the same way about vegans and gluten intolerance. Just shut up already and leave the rest of us alone.”
We’ve got a biopic about a queer Italian rock star, a queer high school prom movie, a misanthropic lesbian journalist in a dark crime comedy set in Ireland, new seasons of We Are Lady Parts, Hacks and Acapulco and so much more! (Really!)
I may be a vegetarian, but I want more of this goth lesbian butcher!
But even Kristen Kish’s arms are cold comfort for the travesty that occurs at the end of this episode. Also: Patience and Coop are looking like a reconciliation (or at least a mutual understanding) might be in their future on All-American.
From Doctor Who and Star Trek to Buffy and Wynonna Earp, sci-fi has been one of the more consistent places we, as queer people, have been able to find ourselves on TV over the past few decades. Here are the top 100 of our best.
In this week’s well-crafted episode of true crime drama ‘Under the Bridge,’ we learn a lot about everything including the connection between Cam (Lily Gladstone) and Rebecca (Riley Keough).
“Played by Derry Girl Louisa Harland, Nell Jackson is a fierce, funny, sarcastic woman with no interest in behaving the way people of her time think women should behave.”
From Gomey to Angus to Pierce to Max Sweeney, we weigh in on the men of The L Word and Generation Q, ranking them from most awful men to least awful men!
With an increase in anti-trans and anti-drag legislation, a rise in anti-trans violence, and the possibility of a second Trump presidential term, there is an added weight on RuPaul’s now-worldwide phenomenon
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.
We cannot fight stigmas around transness, queerness, and surviving abuse by reducing the complexities of life into rules and checklists.
I considered turning this whole recap into an ode to Morphine.
Top Chef’s latest chefsbian Rasika is winning hearts and taking names (plus, this week we were given the present of a sleeveless Kristen Kish!). Also: updates on 911 and the second season premiere of Beacon 23!
Bisexual love triangles, queer awakenings, and messy desires abound.
Willow’s win is a testament to the way representation, and our first encounters with it, imprints upon a person. There’s something unshakeable about our connections to the first time we see ourselves. It’s deeper than just nostalgia.
“If he doesn’t like me taking his girls from him, maybe he should try harder,” Katie says of making out with her ex-husband’s date.