“RuPaul’s Drag Race” Episode 1606 Recap: Come On, Barbie
Plane makes a crack about Morphine’s stomach which is rich coming from someone so desperate for curves she’s confused her breastplate for a personality.
Plane makes a crack about Morphine’s stomach which is rich coming from someone so desperate for curves she’s confused her breastplate for a personality.
Someone gave Abby McEnany and Robin Weigert the prime post-Super Bowl spot this Sunday, and you’re gonna fall in love immediately. Also updates on: Death and Other Details, La Brea, and Hightown!
That’s always a tension in these kinds of competition reality TV shows: do you want to sacrifice your integrity, and win, or maintain your integrity, and lose?
For all the shortcomings of Good Trouble, I’m hard pressed to recall a show — other than The L Word, Pose, and A League of Their Own — that integrated so many queer characters into its narrative.
Couple to Throuple wants the couples to find their forever third. But the couples are still trying to decide what they want for themselves.
I want to take some time here to talk about how much I love Charlie, because I feel like she doesn’t get enough hype in the chat.
I need Morphine the way a person in surgery might need her namesake. She’s so hot and talented and funny and I’m in love with her.
Death and Other Details engages in a ye olde cheating plot worth watching. Plus updates on Good Trouble, Hightown, and Raising Kanan.
This show can oscillate from a basically funny, chill challenge to one that requires a lot of running, manual labor, and crossing freezing cold rivers with strong currents.
Vanderpump Rules is back, and a preview of the season to come hints at bisexual chaos.
The Drag Race comedy challenges make The Californians look like Wayne’s World.
Also, updates on “Hazbin Hotel” and “Death and Other Details.”
Below Deck’s Kate Chastain is back to shake things up.
With talent and charm, Nymphia is the star of this episode. While others are stressing, she has time to flutter around the workroom being funny and chaotic.
In Good Trouble’s final season, Alice and Malika are both growing out of old habits and trying out new paths.
The challenge for the day is an extremely theatrical, preemptive funeral march/trivia game for the yet-to-be-identified poison victim.
Her sign should’ve read: “If you love drag on TV, don’t let your conservative families and shitty husbands vote against our rights.”
“The Traitors” demonstrates how groups of people define otherhood, rightly or wrongly, based in reality, assumption, fantasy, or some mix of all three.
Both Malika and Alice’s storylines this week left me feeling like “Good Trouble” had done a disservice to its characters and the story they’ve told for the past five seasons.
Kyle Richards says she’s open to dating a woman.