“The Good Fight” Really Is the Best (Lesbian) Show You’re Not Watching
The Good Fight returns for a third season on March 14. Here’s why you should catch up on the first two seasons on CBS All Access.
The Good Fight returns for a third season on March 14. Here’s why you should catch up on the first two seasons on CBS All Access.
Tia’s a complete scene stealer. She’s defies so many boxes or tropes of what we’ve been programmed to expect from a black lesbian on TV.
This entire season is so gay its nearly unquantifiable.
The Pretty Little Liars spin-off has a trailer, a premiere date, and a tiny bit of exposition about what happened to Alison and Emily’s happy ever after.
The night of her 36th birthday, charismatic, caustic Nadia is killed in a chance accident, only to find that the evening has reset itself, looping endlessly. The premise is a puzzle, yet there’s no urge after watching Russian Doll to dissect or theorize; that’s not the point. The point is something else.
“I don’t need you to respect me, I respect me. I don’t need you to love me, I love me.”
Latina legend Carmen Sandiego is the most competent, confident person on the show, unapologetic in her femme-ness. A feminist Latina Robin Hood!
Days later, I remain astounded by these writing choices and their cruelty.
“Are you out here Janelle Monae-ing in these streets?” is a real thing a real character said out loud on grown-ish last night.
It’s like a damn Nancy Meyers movie up in here in season five.
Come to have your life ruined by Gillian Anderson; stay for infectious teen drama laced with a very fun, weirdo sense of humor.
Letterkenny might not seem like something you’d be into but HEAR ME OUT.
If you got through 2018 without clinging desperately to the fantasy of a beautiful stranger showing up in your home and telling you she believes in you and sitting with you supportively while you sort through the eight pairs of Vans your ex somehow managed to leave at your place, first of all congrats and second please pipe down because this is all the rest of us have.
Stef and Lena may not show up until episode five, but their spirit is everywhere in The Fosters’ spin-off.
In the early days of 2019 I’ve found myself really drawn to books and TV and movies and podcasts that are full of light and warmth and hard-won happiness. Enter: Days of Our Wives.
The hot evil parents get hotter and eviler!
Derry Girls is genuinely, rawly, categorically funnier than any show I’ve watched in ages — and it’s gay!
This was gonna be a review of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel but instead it’s just an entire thing about how Susie Myerson is a butch lesbian who works at a club surrounded by lesbian bars frequented by other butches and yet somehow she is not, officially, a lesbian, and neither is anybody else on this usually delightful show!!!
Ask me when was the last time I saw a beautiful young black girl come out on television and have both her parents tell her that they love her more than any girl in the entire world? NEVER. The answer is, quite literally, never. None of us have.
Shine bright, shine far! Be a star! Where you live, where you are!