The Good Fight Episode 101 Recap: Lawyers, Lesbians & Money
Come for the smooching ladies; stay for the women kicking ass.
Come for the smooching ladies; stay for the women kicking ass.
Minnick and Arizona are about to be sitting in a tree, k-i-s-s-i-n-g; Pippy and TMI are full on smooching in an elevator; and Annalise Keating is taking her rightful place on the Throne of Slytherin once more.
Stef has had it, y’all.
Alex comes out to her friends. Lena sends Kara ten billion roses.
Jesús skateboards around his own imagination while he’s in a coma; yet, somehow, Callie still has the worst luck!
Alex gets accidentally evil for a second. It’s sexy? But also terrifying.
The Fosters and all their friends and lovers go to the hospital. The least dramatic thing that happens is Jesús getting his head drilled open.
Mon-El, go away!
The world is full of horrible things and the mayor is a giant snake-monster and the hellmouth is open but Maggie slept over!
Hey, what if we altogether stop killing off women to advance the plots of men? Even in maybe-not-real flash forwards?
Join Alaina and Cecelia as they talk you through NBC’s latest holiday musical extravaganza!
There’s no such thing as too much Supergirl.
Being an almost-but-not-dead gay woman on a TV show will really force you to sort out your priorities.
Maggie wants to be friends. Alex does not want that. Alex wants so much more than that.
Steven Universe tells kids that they’re loved, that they’re special, and that there is nothing wrong with being themselves. This week it taught them that they don’t have to give up.
Picture it: Sara Lance. Colorado. 1874.
Alex comes out and goes after the girl.
Luisa gets a storyline with Rogelio, Pippy and TMI go dancing, Maggie hosts Sapphic Shabbat, and Stef wonders what Betty and Tara are getting up to.
Catch up with bisexual badass Sara Lance in the ’80s, and the badass women of Arrow in the right nows.
From the beginning, Supergirl has been fundamentally about three things: Women, love, and hope — and knowing how much strength is in each of those three things. Alex’s story is no different. Our story is no different.