“Rap Sh!t” Season Two Finds Its City Girls Desperate for a Win
It’s no longer about stunting for the camera. It’s about putting in the work to make sure this rap shit turns into something real.
It’s no longer about stunting for the camera. It’s about putting in the work to make sure this rap shit turns into something real.
A trans girl lesbian in an Edith Wharton adaptation is like something out of my wildest dreams. Too bad this show is such a mediocre nightmare.
As Black women, isn’t that what we want to be afforded? A chance to be messy and vulnerable instead of tidy and unbreakable?
Doesn’t “Jordana Brewster plays a lesbian drug lord who immediately turns the all women around her weak” sound like a perfect sentence, rolled off the tongue?
The one thing that kept me hooked was the rivalry between nonbinary contestant Tabitha Sloane — the one openly queer contestant on the show — and Lellies Santiago.
If you’re an emotional queer who believes in ghosts and wishes Queer Eye was spookier, then wow is this the show for you!
Doom Patrol has a beautiful spectrum of queerness displayed across a strange, wonderful land; amidst time travel and sex ghosts and horsehead oracles and zombie butts.
Everything Now finds an impressive balance: It doesn’t romanticize eating disorders, of course, but it also doesn’t sensationalize them.
So far season two is darker and moodier than season one, but it’s also somehow funnier, more queer, and more vulnerable.
The good news is, just about everyone is gay in The Fall of the House of Usher. The “bad” news is, well, this is a horror series. Hardly anyone escapes unscathed.
I am high. And I’m only getting higher. And I’m eating ice cream. And I’m about to press play on Saving the Gorillas: Ellen’s Next Adventure.
This season is off to a rocky start but at least there are queer women!!
By immediately introducing gender-shifting Jordan and probably-pansexual Emma, Gen V is already much queerer than The Boys.
Worse sex education and less adolescent autonomy has consequences — consequences no show can overcome. It’s admirable to watch this one try.
Malaika hilariously clues us into her queerness by remarking that she would only borrow clothes from Rihanna while on their honeymoon in Greece.
Jenna Coleman and Ashley Benson star in this psychological thriller, with a bonus appearance by Morgana Van Peebles as the lesbian best friend.
Okay, multiple iconic cameos, but a queer one in particular that made me SCREAM!
Sigourney Weaver and Leah Purcell play lesbians in this tale of secrets, lies, cycles of abuse, and the importance of found family.
Special Ops: Lioness is surprisingly queer and female-fronted — and it really makes you wonder if Taylor Sheridan actually knows any women.
Bess doesn’t just “happen to be” queer. Bess is queer and one of the core four. She’s queer and inextricably important to this show and to Nancy’s life.