LGBTQ+
This week’s RuPaul’s Drag Race has the safe queens pull to the front in the Rusical, focusing on life and conspiracies on social media sites.
Page To Screen contrasts Love, Simon and its original source, showcasing what’s lost when a coming-out story is re-molded for the screen.
Queerly Ever After #46 analyzes 2015’s Akron, where two young men find love despite a tragedy that links their families together.
It’s a new day in the workroom and there’s a shift in the universe that is season 13 of RuPaul’s Drag Race.
While this week’s episode was pretty average, it had a joyful, educational maxi-challenge and a sad departure from an amazing queen.
This is ultimately an enjoyable musical rom-com, and fun adaptation of a Shakespeare classic.
The Latest episode of Rupauls Drag Race has continued getting even better and better; let’s just hope the fandom doesn’t ruin the fun.
Supernova is a remarkable little film, highlighted by the beautiful chemistry between stars Colin Firth and Stanley Tucci.
The small pieces that have come into view are creating a bigger picture that will lead the season into rough, unknown waters.
Private Romeo is an adaptation of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet that transposes the action to the fictional McKinley Military Academy.
It has the underdogs, it has the fashion, it has the best performance of the season (so far) and it has given us so much background on some of the queens.
While episode two is a big upgrade from season 13 of RuPaul’s Drag Race’s premiere, a lot happened in this episode and most of it was good but average.
For this Queerly Ever After, Amanda Jane Stern takes a look at the 1996 film: Different for Girls.
It’s not really fun to watch seven queens be so down on themselves, and when the scene changes to the winning queens, it’s difficult to really root for any of them.