Jennifer Glynn is a detailed and enthusiastic TV and Movie News writer living in Tasmania, Australia. She had been part of the Collider team since 2022. When she is not bringing you the latest ...
Dina Paulson is a Film and TV Feature Writer for Collider. Her writing also appears in Cine Suffragette, FanFare, her blog, walk the line, and two poetry chapbooks, Parts of Love, and TOUCH / breaks ...
As a trans and nonbinary actor, a true punk, and a kid who grew up playing Dungeons and Dragons, Daniel Sea is no stranger to complexity, the power of storytelling and the thin line between what ...
NPR's Juana Summers talks with Leisha Hailey and Kate Moennig, authors of So Gay For You and stars of The L Word, about their decades-long friendship and the show's lasting impact on culture.
This story contains spoilers for The L Word: Generation Q, the sixth episode in the third season called Questions for the Universe. The L Word: Generation Q has followed in the footsteps of its ...
When “The L Word” debuted on Showtime in January 2004, gays and lesbians couldn’t serve openly in the military, employees could be fired for being gay in most of the country and no state had yet begun ...
EXCLUSIVE: The L Word: Generation Q is no longer available on Showtime‘s streaming service and the Showtime Anytime app. The removal comes on the heels of the series’ cancellation by the network after ...
(L-R): Jordan Hull as Angie Porter-Kennard, Jennifer Beals as Bette, Leo Sheng as Micah Lee, Sepideh Moafi as Gigi, Arienne Mandi as Dani Nunez, Leisha Hailey as Alice Pieszecki, Rosanny Zayas as ...
Queer TV is facing an uphill battle in the streaming age. The anniversary of Showtime's iconically flawed lesbian franchise reminds us what could have been. Fast forward to 2019; the reboot happened.
There is little media that has played as central of a role in the queer community as “The L Word.” The original series, which aired on Showtime from 2004 to 2009, followed a group of fictional sapphic ...