I Used To Own A Dyke Bar. The Ones Remaining Should Be Preserved Like The Dying Language Of Our People.
It’s up to a younger generation to figure out what the current iteration of a dyke bar should look like.
Reviewing the latest lesbian books, film, TV, music and more.
It’s up to a younger generation to figure out what the current iteration of a dyke bar should look like.
It is standard horror fare to trick the viewer into thinking one character is “good” only to expose them as the villain at the end, or vice versa. But “Ratched” isn’t trying for an aha moment of revelation.
Spirit Halloween is great for everything from basic witch to slightly niche costumes–and it’s especially great for bringing life and commerce into FOR LEASE buildings in midtown–and possibly the White House someday.
Slaying all the bad guys (and the patriarchy, while we’re at it).
The book is about other girls like me and it is also about a time when I discovered that other girls liked me.
No amount of judgement will keep us off the field.
Every second of the show has resonated with me
“It sucks. It feels like I’m being silenced and my voice doesn’t matter.”
It seems almost obvious, especially for a laymen’s understanding of tech, that this specific realm of the world would have no qualms transitioning to a virtual space. And in many ways, that’s correct. But what do we lose in the spaces in between?
Queer representation in horror films is a tradition as old as trick-or-treat.
“If I had seen someone who looked like me onstage taking up space as an openly queer artist, it would have really helped me understand my identity and feel like I belonged.”
“One of the many times I realized I was a lesbian was when I was in the throes of a high school threesome.”
This Sunday, as we honor National Coming Out Day, LA Pride is asking you to do more than just celebrate being out. They also want you to run.
Tellis wants her music to help people — whether it’s inspiring other female rappers, serving as a queer role model, or just having fans connect with her songs.
Lesbians make the world go ’round.
“If you’re going to go to a comedy club and then get upset that you got offended, that’s like getting on a roller coaster and getting upset that you got scared, or you got sick.”
Thanks to “Folklore,” I now see myself in Taylor’s music.
“Keep On” is all the imaginative capacity of the internet and all the solitude of airplane mode.
With “PANTS”, all of our “L Word” reunion dreams come true every week.
Got news to share? A message for an ex? A thought to spare? Call & leave us a voicemail. We’re listening.
Queercore Podcast is your ultimate LGBTQ+ listening experience.
“Maybe a fire will come, maybe a war, maybe death or loss of mind, but today was good.”
“I wish I had a strong, beautiful representation of what it meant to be a trans woman. I wish that the popular girl — the girl who gets the guy, the girl who gets the crown — was trans.”
There’s a unanimous sense of gratitude for She Soho, for this gathering of queer womxn, for the simplicity of this night, for the survival of our community spaces – places we may once have taken for granted, but never will again.
“This is an amazing human and artistic experience.”
“It’s almost taking us back to a time when people really cared about each other.”
We can’t be what we can’t imagine. We need to see ourselves living joyfully, lovingly, fully in the world.
“I’m casting people who are different from me to make changes that affect all of us.”
The goal is to not let go.
“I want people to feel like they have showered after they listen to my music, for it to be a cathartic and cleansing sort of experience.”
It was clear that I needed this community if I was going to learn how to skate.
For those of us who grew up in socially conservative households, shows like Avatar were sometimes the only places we could find heroes.
All I’m asking for is *one* date, Carmen.
TikTok’s For You Page (FYP) is like a choose your own adventure game.
Confidence and badass-ness.
Karyn Blanco opens up about her music, “The Circle,” and how she wants people to really see her.