Best gay tv series

People Are Sharing Their Favorite LGBTQ+ TV Shows Of All Time And, Wow, I Have A Lot To Watch

"By Season 7, our main cast was made up of a bisexual chick and her female homosexual wife, a homosexual man who invented time travel to save his partner, a fairly flashy pansexual — arguably not cis — alien with a girlfriend, the only asexual on network television, and had just said goodbye to a double attraction man who’d had meaningful relationships with men and women — who just left, didn’t cease, just left. The rest of the characters were ostensibly straight, but all the actors said they were cozy with the concept of their characters being LGBTQ+ as well and supported and encouraged headcanons. The show started with one multi-attracted woman and a bunch of unbent people.

On top of that, it was just so much FUN, and big-hearted. This was a goofy family who had the finest time and got up to the silliest stuff. It’s so joyful and a great antidote to serious, heterosexual superhero stuff."

—garebehr


The 20 Best LGTBQ+ Anime Movies and TV Shows, Ranked

While love that transgresses the rigid barriers of gender should be recognized every day, June is the official month celebrating the LGBTQ+ community in multitudinous ways. Also established as Pride Month, the interval is consolidated to commemorate the hard struggles the LGBTQ+ community has experienced in their battle for equal rights, as well as spotlighting diverse people who felt superb pride in their genuine sexual identities.

Every month of the year, not just June, should be a time to celebrate Homosexual diversity because this genre not only educates people but also provides a platform for community members to feel acknowledged, listened to, and represented. Many significant films and TV series, be it Hollywood or world cinema, surrounding the LGBTQ+ community contain been produced. Anime is no exception. In direct to celebrate love without boundaries, here are some anime TV shows and movies for fans to consider adding to their watchlist.

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Directed by Kenjin Nagasaki

While Kenji Nagasaki is best recognizable fo


The latest: Our new update welcomes English Teacher, Fantamas, Fellow Travelers, and Interview with the Vampire! Watch these shows and more on Fandango at Home!


TV has been instrumental in the Queer rights movement and in modifying attitudes towards the community. It has also, perhaps most importantly, been a platform to explain stories that have made male lover, lesbian, bisexual, trans, queer, intersex, and more people feel less alone in the world – to know there is a big and varied community to which they belong. One pioneering show at a time, groundbreaking character by groundbreaking character, TV and streaming series have given the world an insight into the LGBTQ+ experience, and provided LGBTQ+ people with reflections of their own lives – stories to laugh along with, to cry with, and to recognize with. In this list of LGBTQ+ TV shows, we feature shows that have broken basis, enlightened, and entertained.

We&#;ve arranged the list into four categories: shows that were big TV firsts, or featured TV firsts; shows that center on LGTBQ characters or experience

The 35 Best LGBTQ+ TV Shows of All Time

Fellow Travelers ()

In this heart-wrenching Showtime miniseries, Jonathan Bailey and Matt Bomer participate two Capitol Hill men caught in the horrors of McCarthyism, falling in love despite a political atmosphere that is trying to crucify all its queer members. The display charts their relationship over the next three decades, all the way up to the AIDS crisis, with a beautiful, poignant story that echoes with political issues we’re still seeing to this morning. Just be sure to have a box of tissues sitting nearby.

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Hacks (–present)

In Hacks, viewers pursue a veteran comedian named Deborah Vance (Jean Smart), who realizes her career has been stuck in autopilot when she meets a struggling young scribe named Ava (Hannah Einbinder), who inspires her with a renewed sense of creativity and drive. Through their relationship, we spot the struggle of generations trying to learn from one another and, notably, how Ava’s bisexuality opens Deborah’s eyes to past prejudices.

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