The Perfect Queer Poem: When You Need to Find Your Body
A gut feeling is intuition, sure, but it’s also something that announces HERE is the body, NOW is the body, RIGHT NOW.
A gut feeling is intuition, sure, but it’s also something that announces HERE is the body, NOW is the body, RIGHT NOW.
Plus a queer country playlist, intergenerational Pride, Late Night is maybe a feminist dream, and more!
Sweaty summer sex, a few ways of looking at asexuality, a bot that will help with your sexting game and more.
“This Pride I’m finally getting over my CATHOLIC GUILT that has prevented me from engaging and enjoying hook-up culture!”
Of course as a black queer woman making lemonade from the sour fruits in life is a highly curated skill of mine…
Plus top hat-shaped holes in our hearts, what if the brownies were gay tho?, and polar bear flirting facts.
Get in here and recommend all the good (gay) books!
It’s cheesecake holiday time, let’s make some cheesecake.
8 queer women books to make you laugh!
Tales of the City leans into some tropes, flips others on their head, makes plenty of jokes at its own expense, and — above all — believes in the power of LGBTQ people who come together to make their own family.
That Wonder Woman 84 image, eh? Plus: Talk of abortions and gay rights on the campaign trail, Straight Pride, Asia Kate Dillon on finding the way to “they,” celebrity LGBTQ trailblazers, all the Women’s World Cup news you need, and more!
What a beach read is anyway, a new book about Los Angeles BDSM, the most cursed days for writers and more.
Pose is hella Black, it’s hella Brown and it’s hella queer, and the second season kicks off next week!
This week, Gaby Dunn has a birthday, Samira Wiley eats Gabrielle Korn’s head, Ellen Page and Emma Portner hit the red carpet, Evan Rachel Wood enjoys her throne deep within the earth’s core and so much more!
Plus more from Ruby Rose on Batwoman, the first woman director to win a Queer Palm at Cannes, fact-checking Booksmart’s lesbian sex, TLW: Gen Q is coming to Pride, and more!
Queer director Nisha Ganatra brings Kaling’s funny, biting, meta-critiquing script to life like a bright, slick, dazzling rom-com for women who fantasize more about their careers than they do about Mr. Darcy.
“In high school, I kissed a girl for the first time. It felt too comfortable and too right to think I was anyone but whom I was in that moment. I’ve followed that honesty my whole life.”
When you’re little, the backyard of your grandma’s house is an entire universe. Growing up is finding the kid in you and being brave enough to take them outside again – without warning them about coming home before the streetlights come on.
“Care-free, pain-free plot, with a genuine happily ever after.”
We don’t get to define Emma’s queerness. We don’t get to tell her the terms of our understanding. She’s going to make those choices for herself.