Gay hbo series

HBO was an early pioneer of LGBTQ content, and its streaming service HBO Max has a lot of television available for queer women with womxn loving womxn and bisexual characters — some of the most inventive and original lgbtq+ programming we&#;ve seen in recent years, like Search Party, Sort Of, Fantasmas, Somebody Somewhere and Hacks. They&#;ve also got a solid library of shows from networks like Freeform and The CW But, like many other networks in the years of our lord , HBO Max has dropped a lot of beloved gay shows from its roster. Let&#;s talk about the best of what&#;s left!


* indicates an HBO or Max original

Adventure Time ()

Adventure Time is essential viewing for the queer all-ages animation aficionados, a bridge between the subtext of Legend of Korra and maintext of Steven Universe, a series long on-again off-again love story between Princess Bubblegum and Marceline the Vampire Queen. But it&#;s also just really delightful, really weird storytelling for nerds of all stripes. If you&#;ve united the great Dungeons and Dragons Renaissance of the past several years, Adve

10 Best LGBTQ+ Shows On HBO Max

HBO Max might be one of the newer streaming services, launched in , but that doesn't intend it's lacking in LGBTQ+ content. In fact, HBO Max has made it clear that they are serious about creating LGBTQ+ stories with Homosexual creators backing them. With the HBO catalog attached to the streaming service, there are a plethora of titles to choose from on HBO Max, but the streaming service really strives for its first content.

Since June is Pride month, there's no better period to explore HBO Max's LGBTQ+ content than now. It's also easier than ever since the interphase currently features an LGBTQ+ Voices collection tab on the search page. The best part is the catalog features everything from teen LGBTQ+ shows to dramas, comedies, and everything in between.

Betty ()

Betty was adapted into a television series after the victory of creator Crystal Moselle's teen drama movie Skate Kitchen. The characters reprised their roles for the series which centers on a tight-knit all-girls skateboarding group. Together, the girls stick together while trying to m

The Best LGBTQ+ Movies on HBO Max

(Photo by Miramax/Courtesy Everett Collection)

In celebration of Pride month, we&#;ve compiled a list of the best Fresh LGBTQ+ movies you can find on HBO Max right now. You&#;ll find punch classic dramas (Desert Hearts), feel-good comedies (In & Out), and international affairs (Bad Education).

The titles below are sorted from the foremost LGBTQ+ films on HBO Max – those included with a subscription, not those you have to buy or rent for an additional cost – and ranked by adjusted Tomatometer score (which takes into account the number of reviewers weighing in, and the number of reviews per production for movies released in a given year). To be included, films had to have a Fresh Tomatometer score (60% or above).

Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.
Synopsis: Four kids and their families unmask the intimate realities of how gender fluidity is reshaping the family next door, especially [More]

Critics Consensus: It doesn't always find comfortable ground between broad comedy and social commentary, but lively performance

Without being preachy, HBO&#;s &#;Looking&#; offers a fine lesson that being totally out of the closet, as are all the many characters, can lead to a cool cool (and also hot hot) existence.

A moment of togetherness in the HBO series &#;Looking.&#;

By Gerald Peary

You don’t possess to be gay, only queer-friendly, to be delighted by HBO’s new 8-part Sunday night series, Looking, which follows the stories of three gay men, the best of pals, as they negotiate their lives in the Mission Castro district of today’s San Francisco. In some ways, it may even be better being direct (like me, for example) watching the series. My focus is on the easygoing drama, and I’m not cognizant of the tiny details of accuracy and verisimilitude which can drive a knowing queer viewer to distraction. The Boston Globe featured a strident attack by staffer Christopher Muther, whose usual beat is metrosexual fashion and au courant harmony. Muther called Looking “infuriating” and replete with “outdated stereotypes of gay life.” He complained that the characters wore the erroneous “undergarments,” what w