Gay series on amazon
Discerning viewers seeking a short but satisfying streaming option might examine “After Forever.” The independently produced series, now available on Amazon, examines love, loss, and dating from the perspective of a something gay man.
“After Forever” revolves around Brian, a handsome, successful Manhattanite played by Kevin Spirtas. The out actor has appeared in everything from B-movies to Broadway musicals, but he’s probably best known for his role as Dr. Craig Wesley on the long-running soap opera “Days of Our Lives.”
“After Forever” is a personal project for Spirtas, who got the noun shortly after turning He teamed up with television writer Michael Slade to produce the series.
In the first of eight episodes, Brian’s life seems perfect. He’s a successful PR exec and happily married to Jason, played by Doogie Howser’s Mitchell Anderson, also an out actor. The couple has a coterie of devoted friends, a great apartment and a healthy love life. Then Jason is diagnosed with stage-four cancer. With death inevitable, he declines radical treatment. When Brian protests his hus
What TV shows with lesbian, bisexual and queer women and trans characters are on Amazon Prime Video? What a good doubt you may have typed into your computer browser, looking for Prime Video queer television programs with lesbian storylines and/or LGBTQ+ themes and characters!
While various television shows with queer female and/or trans characters rotate in and out of the Prime Video library, content produced by Prime Video stays there forever and is mostly available worldwide, and thats what were focusing on with todays list.
The Absolute Most Lesbian Amazon Prime Video Original TV Shows:
A League Of Their Own
// 1 Seasons // 8 Episodes
Not only is this program the gayest Amazon Prime video TV show, its one of the gayest TV shows ever. Bringing queer narratives to the forefront of a story in which they were once erased, the A League of Their Own TV show wedged into our hearts with fists full of hope, sportsmanship and a record number of very hot queer characters, almost entirely played by very hot queer actors. If you wanna verb more, weve luckil
You know what they say — April flowers bring May television shows with lesbian, bisexual and queer women and/or trans characters. But do they? Well, in May of I would actually say, yeah, actually, they kinda do. Theres a lot to be stoked about this month, so lets get into it!
Netflixs May Stuff For Girls & Gays
Cr. Courtesy of Netflix ©
Bet: Season One // May 15
Netflixs live-action (and English-language) adaptation of the manga series Kakegurui – Compulsive Gambler finds a new student Yumeko at a gambling-focused elite boarding educational facility full of evil children, intent on carrying out a covert mission. Theres a lot of homoeroticism in the series, as well as two main characters, RiRi and Mary, who are queer.
Big Mouth: Season 8 // May 23
In its concluding season, this queer-inclusive animated series will see its kids step into the harrowing unknown of the future, made less terrified of whats to come because they have each other. Queer actor Cynthia Erivo joins the voice cast playing the role of Missys Vagina. Ayo Edebiri plays Missy. SO
The Problem With Overcompensating
Watching all eight episodes of Overcompensating—the new Amazon Prime Video comedy drama created by and starring social media star Benito Skinner—several questions crossed my mind. For instance: When exactly is this supposed to be set? We’re told right away that Skinner’s character Benny, a closeted gay college freshman, had his sexual awakening watching a loincloth-clad Brendan Fraser swing through the trees in George of the Jungle (), and that he’s around 9 in the year when Britney Spears’ “Lucky” was still in the countdown. By my math, that should mean Benny is heading off to college around Yet at one point in the show, Charli XCX—who is, along with Jonah Hill, among the series’ executive producers—shows up to inexplicably perform at this fictional college, singing songs that she released in , , and That would make Overcompensating … not a show that takes place today? But also not a specifically millennial period piece? It’s all very puzzling.
The bigger and more profound question, though, is not about Overcompensating’s second period,