Starz gay tv show
Have you ever watched the Power Book Universe shows on Starz? Produced by 50 Cent, the interlocking web of tv series based around central crime fictional families has get the backbone of Starzs ratings — Im talking bonafide smash hits, to the tune of three separate spin-offs — thanks in no small part to Black viewership. This also means that despite being must watch television in certain households, there are a lot of people who have either never heard of the Power shows or, if they have, now that were four series profound, feel too overwhelmed to jump in. Which is unfortunate for many reasons, primarily for us because these shows are Lgbtq+. And you like male lover things!
So if this is you, I am here to be your mentor. Power Book IV: Force just began its second season on Starz and it co-stars Lili Simmons as Claudia Flynn, a crime boss lesbian who really puts the blood in blood red lipstick. That means there is no time like the present to jump in. The first rule of the Power Book Space on Starz is that there are no actual books, were working purely with aesthetics here. The second rule is that each Power spin-off is gayer than the last. Amen.
If I can be s
Julianne Moore Is a Cunning, Queer-Affirming Momager in Starz's Sacrilegious 'Mary & George'
When I was 9 years old and recovering from a broken ankle one summer, my mom took a gig playing Anne Boleyns sister-in-law Jane Boleyn, the infamous Lady of Rochford in Marylands Renaissance Festival. We watched a metric ton of historical dramas about the reign of King Henry VIII and his wives. In my memory, it was from this point forward my mom and I would take in theater together. Not to build this even more on-the-nose-stereotypical, but I realized with thunderous certainty that I was gay while watching Cat On a Sizzling Tin Roof with my mom. I establish all of these as bona fides of sorts, as both a journeyman-level veteran in the arts of soapy historical dramas and a pretty avid watcher for Gay Stuff. Mary & George takes all of these things, historical fiction, femmes playing dominance games, a queer sons close relationship with his mother, and throws them in a blender with a good dollop of horniness, serving a perfectly prickly parfait of period fun.
Mary & George represents Starzs exit from the relatively staid society of Philippa Gregory adaptations into a saucier,
Browsing: Starz
Its a fresh month, which means brand-new opportunities for queer TV! GLAAD is bringing you some highlights from LGBTQ TV…
The seventh and final episode of STARZs limited series Mary & George airs on May 17 and the period drama find the…
The STARZs upcoming period drama Mary & George is inspired by the true story of Mary Villiers (Julianne Moore),…
The third season of the queer-led crime drama Hightown, featuring Monica Raymund, is set to conclude the series. In…
Grab the remote, set your DVR, or queue up your streaming service of choice! GLAAD is bringing you the LGBTQ highlights on TV this week. Check advocate every Sunday for up-to-date coverage in LGBTQ-inclusive programming on TV.
Starz just premiered its third and final season of VIDA, a show that celebrates queer and Latinx being. Showrunner Tanya Saracho shares some of her favorite songs for Season 3!
“Vida” on Starz has been so many things and all good: Super LGBTQ-inclusive, well written, beautifully shot, sexy, sharp and funny! On Sunday, the show’s third and fin
Two Mexican-American sisters from the Eastside of Los Angeles couldnt be more alternative or distanced from each other and their family. Emma has thrown herself into her career in Chicago, while Lyn has floated around between men. Neither have had a guiding force in their lives for years, and neither has talked to their mother, Vidalia, in years.
When Vida dies (from a cancer they didnt even know she had), the sisters return to their old neighbourhood intending to set things up and leave. Instead they find that the past wasnt everything they consideration it was. Vida was married, for example, to the bartender Eddy. A woman. This is particularly galling to Emma, who had been sent away from the family for entity gay.
While Emma plans to sell the bar, and Lyn falls back into old patterns with her high school boyfriend, they both find out the family they left behind was more meaningful than theyd thought. Have they finally found the place where they need to be, with the people they needed all along?
This show is absolutely dominant and amazing. Unapologetically Spanglish, they touch on the Latinx queer community in a way no other show has.
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