Displaying items by tag: bisexual character
Filming Of “Star Trek: Picard” Season 2 Should Begin In January
As with many TV series, the filming of the new season of “Star Trek: Picard”, which was scheduled to take place this summer, has been postponed because of the coronavirus pandemic and is normally scheduled to start in January.
The Last Of Us Is Back With A Part 2 Just As Queer As The First One!
Released in 2013 by Naughty Dog and regularly described as a masterpiece, The Last Of Us is an action game that has revolutionized video games with its exceptional LGBTQ+ representation.
Good news! An equally queer second part has just been released!
Macarena Is Back For The Final Spin-Off Vis A Vis: El Oasis
Vis a Vis (Locked Up), a Spanish television series broadcast from 2015 to 2019, is in the same vein as Orange Is The New Black, Bad Girls, Unité 9, and Wentworth in that the story takes place in a women’s prison. Afterward, the series differs. Vis a Vis is a thriller show, much darker than Orange Is The New Black for example. Both are Spanish series with guns out, fights, drama, violence, suspense, and ultimately you love to follow the characters’ evolution and their relationships.
Also, the main character in the series, Macarena, is bisexual and falls in love with a very pretty inmate, Rizos (Berta Vázquez).
A Romance Between Two Queer Women Ending Star Trek: Picard Season 1
Star Trek: Picard had a surprise for us in the Season 1 final broadcasted on CBS All Access.
Harley Quinn And Poison Ivy Finally Get Closer In Season 2 Of The Series
There’s a queer relationship between the lead character Harley Quinn and Poison Ivy in the comic book “Harley Quinn.”
Season 3 of Marvel’s Runaways Will Be The Final One
Inspired by Marvel’s comic series of the same name, “Runaways” tells the story of 6 teenagers who unite to face their bad parents.
GLAAD Has Released Its Report On LGBTQ+ Representation
GLAAD and Harris Poll’s ‘Accelerating Acceptance’ study shows that 20% of Americans aged 18-34 identify themselves as LGBTQ+, but in 2018, only 8.8% of the characters were from the LGBTQ community.