“Girls5eva” Is Even Sillier and Gayer in Season 2
I didn’t think anything could make me laugh this week, and thank goodness I was wrong.
I didn’t think anything could make me laugh this week, and thank goodness I was wrong.
Pleasure can be sexual, but it also doesn’t have to be. I think I could have a healthier relationship with sex and my body by defining what pleasure means for me, without the influence of sex and attraction.
It will remind you why the world is worth saving and why life is worth living.
It’s nice that trans people are included in this saccharine world at a time when many are trying keep us excluded.
I just wish First Lady had cast Hick with as much care. We deserve to see an imposing butch lesbian bossing the White House around.
Season two pushes the series and its characters into wild new directions, eventually bending those directions back into last season’s story, twisting them, creating a brand new labyrinth to play around in.
When that jaunty theme song hit and Anne Lister’s boot dropped, I hollered. Baby, Jack is back.
Disney won’t stand up for gays, JK Rowling keeps coming after trans women — and then there’s The Owl House, telling the sweetest, gentlest, most beautiful story about two baby gay witches falling in love.
This finale is the perfect example of why I love this show.
Julia’s dynamic with Adriana doesn’t look much different from the myriad co-dependent and somewhat romantic friendship duos of other Housewives programs, but it’s treated differently because of Julia’s bisexuality.
Of course the lesbian episode of this supernatural anthology series is also the werewolf and vampire episode AS IT SHOULD BE.
Astrid & Lilly Save the World is a fun, silly sci-fi show with two fat female heroes, one of which is queer and crushing.
There isn’t just one way to be Black, and with the addition of new characters and the exploration of gender and sexuality, I hope with it comes a depiction of the vast spectrum of Blackness.
Midge finally notices what we noticed long ago — Susie’s yet to get a romantic storyline — and thus our plucky heroine takes Susie on a field trip to the lesbian bar.
In his latest half-hour comedy special for Comedy Central, River Butcher makes an art form out of being “literally just some guy.”
Over the course of the season, Stella and Liv get closer as they work on the bar, smashing walls then smashing — well, each other.
Vox Machina fights off bullies and zombies and…each other in this week’s batch of The Legend of Vox Machina episodes.
Cat somehow links this aggressively heterosexual film with her being able to express herself as an out and proud gay woman, and I am out and proud of her for making this gay.
The TV Team weighs in on all our feelings about Sex and the City reboot And Just Like That’s first season: the good, the bad and the Che Diaz.
By erasing Melody’s queerness, Archive 81 gains nothing and loses a lot.