Apple’s AI Thriller Sunny Puts a Lesbian Mixologist and a Robot in the Most Bizarre Platonic Love Triangle on TV
Apple TV’s new Rashida Jones-starring AI thriller Sunny asks a time-old sci-fi question: What if robots became too powerful?
Apple TV’s new Rashida Jones-starring AI thriller Sunny asks a time-old sci-fi question: What if robots became too powerful?
In the second episode, before we learn of her transness, Kate gets flustered in a meet cute with a lesbian mechanic. This allowance of a trans girl, first and foremost, to have lesbian storylines is unprecedented.
Also, as an added queer bonus, the new theme song is written and performed by Julien Baker.
‘Wreck’ turns the horrors of capitalism into slasher-comedy thrills.
Just in time for Pride, PBS is releasing the three-part documentary series ‘Disco: Soundtrack of a Revolution’ that tracks the rise and fall of disco over the course of the 1970s.
Jodie Turner-Smith is an absolute scene stealer in “Destiny.”
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.
We Are Lady Parts is back and even better with overt politics, a sharp self-awareness, and more great songs.
Siobhán Cullen is the undeniable star of the new Netflix series Bodkin. And not just because her character is a lesbian.
Only the first two episodes of Summer School are out so far, and it’s already adding more queerness to the mix.
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 may be a vegetarian, but I want more of this goth lesbian butcher!
“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.”
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.
Bisexual love triangles, queer awakenings, and messy desires abound.
Nearly everyone on-screen is a bisexual sex fiend. Nearly everyone on-screen would kill blood, boo, or bestie to rise in society.
There’s something about the way she looks into the camera, both smirking and glaring at the same time, that makes me want to watch Top Chef until the end of time … but also turn off the TV immediately because it is TEW MUCH.
When watching Apples Never Fall, the new Peacock series based on a novel by Big Little Lies author Liane Moriarty, I kept thinking about the woman who put $50,000 in a shoebox and handed it to her scammers.