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AIDS @40- “It’s a Sin”: Drama at the beginning of the AIDS crisis

The show, which features a largely LGBTQ cast, shines a light on a dark chapter that’s been fading from memory.

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Graphic via CBS News Sunday Morning

LONDON – CBS Sunday Morning reports on the acclaimed HBO Max series, “It’s a Sin.” Produced by the originator of the hit British series ‘Queer As Folks,’ “It’s a Sin” tells the story of a group of gay men and their friends who live and love in London in the early 1980s, at the beginning of the HIV/AIDS crisis.

The show, which features a largely LGBTQ cast, shines a light on a dark chapter that’s been fading from memory. CBS Correspondent Imtiaz Tyab talks with the show’s producer-writer, Russell T. Davies, and with two of its stars: Neil Patrick Harris and Lydia West.

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Uncovering the remarkable trans representation in Netflixā€™s ā€˜The Secret of the River’

Trinidad GonzƔlez stars as a transgender model, alongside La Bruja De Texcoco, a muxe elder

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(Screen capture via Netflix/YouTube)

ā€œEl Secreto Del RĆ­o,ā€ or ā€œThe Secret of the River,ā€ has made history as Trinidad GonzĆ”lez became the first transgender actress to star in a series by Netflix. 

The eight-episode series handles trans and gender nonconforming representation in the most beautiful and impactful way Iā€™ve seen to date on any show or filmā€“especially in a Spanish series, considering the gender identity and sexuality taboos that exist in Mexican culture. 

In a time in history where trans, gender nonconforming and intersex people are under attack and continue to face oppression when they demand basic human rights, this show beautifully and tactfully represents the true trials and tribulations that trans and gender nonconforming people experience throughout their livesā€“especially as children. 

Throughout the first four episodes, we get to know Manuel (Frida SofĆ­a Cruz) and Erik (Mauro GuzmĆ”n). The two childrenā€“whose ages are not disclosed in the seriesā€“become friends, and after they experience a traumatic event that shifts their lives forever, they become even closer. 

The person who is involved in the traumatic event, is a cisgender, straight, man who proves to be the real villain of the show. Heā€™s not only proudly an alcoholic, but he also tries to take advantage of one of the children. The way this unfolds, shows a side of Latin American culture that is hardly talked about. Many young children experience sexual assault at the hands of family members and close relatives and this issue is especially prevalent in Latin American and the Caribbean. According to a report by the National Library of Medicine, ‘… an estimated 58 percent of children 0 ā€“ 17 years of age in Latin America and the Caribbean (more than 99 million) experience physical, sexual, or emotional abuse each year.’

When the series begins, Manuel, or Young SicarĆŗ, is new to town and immediately faces rejection because of how feminine he presents. Seeing his femininity, his grandma encourages Manuel to learn about the muxes (pronounced MOO-shay‘s), who are feminine people that exist outside of the male or female gender binary in Zapotec culture and who are deeply respected by manyā€“but not all. 

They are often the subject of scrutiny as a third gender, and this series clearly shows that the misogyny that exists in this culture is deeply embedded in the Western European concepts of gender binary and gender roles that are upheld at all costs even in Mexico. This involves a deeper discussion of colonization and imperialism that has forced these systems and ideologies on the indigenous communities that, prior to colonization, accepted third and even fourth genders.

Within a Christian and Western ideological framework, muxeā€™s are part of the LGBTQ+ community, which is actually quite inaccurate because that gender classification is not based on sexuality. According to an article on the subject, ā€˜individuals who identify with a cultural third gender are, in fact, acting within their gender or sex norm.ā€™ 

This topic is explored in the episode where decades later, Gonzalezā€™s character returns to her hometown as SicarĆŗ, the transfeminine model who returns not only to mourn the death of a close friend, but also to tie up the loose ends of her late grandmother’s abandoned property where another subplot unfolds. 

Going back to the first 4 episodes of the series, where Manuel and Erik are still children, we see the development of fear that unfolds for the two, as they attempt to navigate life after the traumatic experience they shared. 

Because of the nature of the events that unfolded, we learn why the 2 children feel as though they cannot trust an adult and be honest about what they witnessed. The children fear the justice system working against them, criminalizing them, rather than seeing them as the victims of the traumatic event. This intense fear is very real for Erik and it causes him to become withdrawn and somewhat depressed. This is a good learning point for parents and any adult in the lives of young children. Adults need to be a safe space for children, because if not, children are left alone to deal with the consequences and repercussions of situations that were most likely out of their control. They need to confide in adults and trust that we will keep them safe at all costs. 

The adult in Young SicarĆŗā€™s life who becomes this sort of fairy godparent, is Solange (La Bruja De Texcoco). She is a muxe elder and well-respected member in the Zapotec community. Outside of the series, she is also a musician and an activist for human rights. Young SicarĆŗ takes guidance from Solange and the other muxeā€™s, who keep Young SicarĆŗ safe from the people in town who cannot come to terms with the femininity that she later embraces. 

Jacinto (Jorge A. Jimenez), Erikā€™s father becomes the one of the seriesā€™ villains as he punishes his son for being friends with Young SicarĆŗ, who the town perceives as a muxe, even before she is able to accept that identity. This show does a spectacular job at showing the various faces of machismo that is deeply embedded in Mexican culture and also the difference between muxeā€™s and transgender people. 

In the following 4 episodes of the series, decades pass and as mentioned before, SicarĆŗ returns to the small town as a transfeminine woman who makes it clear to her muxe community that she does not identify as muxe. She identifies as a trans woman and has a conversation with her muxe community about the distinction between the two identities. 

She comes in hot. Both in looks and in character. Her character development is incredibly thought-out as we see her go from being a shy, scared childā€“to a confident woman who is so free in her identity, that she decides to use her freedom to help free others.

This is important to see unfold on-screen because this type of representation is hardly ever seen, much less on the level of discussion that actually has substance and depth. 

Trans people are hardly ever portrayed in a positive way that shows how they develop strength and courage as a survival mechanism and use that to enact positive change or leave behind a legacy of progress. 

Meanwhile, the case that had been closed for decades regarding the traumatic event that unfolded for Young SicarĆŗ and Erik, is reopened by their childhood bullyā€“who unironically becomes a crooked police officer as an adult. 

He reopens the case and comes to find out that SicarĆŗ and Erik were involved in the death, making it his mission to harass SicarĆŗ. 

Another villain. Another cisgender, straight, man with anger issues and deeply rooted misogyny. 

The fourth and final villain of the series, is the cisgender, straight, man who is keeping a young boy captive in the abandoned home of SicarĆŗā€™s late grandmother.Ā  It turns out that he is involved in a sinister business with the town’s police force.

Here, we see the very intentional representation of what real groomers look like and they’re not trans.

SicarĆŗ sees herself in the young child and feels as though it is her sacred duty to save him from the abusive and neglectful situation he is in. 

Another aspect of the series that was deeply moving and impactful, was the way that muxeā€™s deaths are handled in Zapotec culture. Because of Western European religious frameworks enforced on the indigenous communities, they believe that Muxeā€™s must go into the afterlife as either male or female and not a third gender. 

This brings up a very deep theme of afterlife and spirituality in relation to gender identity. This is a struggle for trans, gender nonconforming and intersex people as they exist in an identity their friends, family, society, culture or religion might not understand or accept. 

Finally, the more-than-platonic relationship that develops between SicarĆŗ and Erik when they are older, is a great conversation point that was also handled with care. 

Erik is genuinely confused about his feelings toward SicarĆŗ and the years of misogyny that were forced on him as he grew up, continue to shape his view of gender identity. In some scenes, we see Erik reflecting on what his father would tell him as a child.  Alberto Barrera, creator of the series, gives us a unique perspective into Erikā€™s internal battle by interchanging young Erik and adult Erik in the scenes to help visualize his internal battle. In this scene, we hear Jacinto reinforcing his machismo in the form of homophobia and transphobia toward young Erik. 

When they were both younger, they had a third friend in their friend group, Paulina (Yoshira Escarrega), who later becomes Erikā€™s fiance. She welcomes SicarĆŗ back to town with open arms, only to feel betrayed by her when she finds her and Erik sharing a somewhat intimate moment. 

In that moment, Erik confesses his confusion toward accepting SicarĆŗā€™s transition and she doesnā€™t know what to do to make him understand that she is still the friend heā€™s always cared for. The two navigate a difficult situation in a way that provides the audience with a realistic view of the journey toward acceptance. 

There wonā€™t be any spoilers here, but the ending suggests that there is more to come from this series, as a major problem comes to light that brings turmoil to the entire town.

Overall, this series touches on very serious subjects in a way that can begin to build bridges in the discussions about transfemicide, human rights, misogyny, violence toward children and what the journey toward healing our inner child looks like.

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Putting off watching ā€˜Monsters?ā€™ Youā€™re missing out

Netflix hit about Menendez killings is awards-worthy TV

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Cooper Koch and Nicholas Alexander Chavez star in ā€˜Monsters.ā€™ (Photo courtesy of Netflix)

You know itā€™s there. Itā€™s been lurking in your Netflix queue for weeks now, taunting you, beckoning you with its sure promise of sexy, lurid thrills, but youā€™ve been holding back ā€“ and we canā€™t say we blame you. After all, that ā€œDahmerā€ show was pretty hard to watch.

For many Netflix viewers, there have been no such qualms; though Ryan Murphyā€™s ā€œMonsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Storyā€ debuted nearly a month ago, itā€™s currently the platformā€™s #3 most-watched series in the U.S., despite mixed reviews from critics and controversy over the way the showā€™s narrative depicts the facts of the notorious 1989 murder that put the two brothers in the national spotlight through two highly publicized trials. Even if killing their wealthy parents put the Menandez brothers into prison for life, it also put them into the upper echelon of ā€œTrue Crimeā€ superstars, and that makes anything dealing with their story ā€œmust-see TVā€ for a lot of people.

If youā€™re one of those who have resisted it so far, itā€™s likely your reasons have something to do with the very things that make it so irresistible to so many others. Itā€™s hard to imagine a more sensational (or more gruesome) crime story than the tale of Lyle and Erik (Nicholas Alexander Chavez and Cooper Koch), who killed their wealthy parents with multiple shotgun blasts in their Beverly Hills mansion, claimed the deaths were the result of an organized crime ā€œhit,ā€ and then went on an extravagant spending spree with their multi-million-dollar inheritance. Even knowing just the surface details, itā€™s brimming with circumstances that conjure deep and troubling questions, not least about how two abundantly fortunate young men ā€“ Lyle was 21 at the time of the killing, Erik only 18 ā€“ could possibly have become capable of such a horrific act; their claim they acted in fear, after years of sexual and psychological abuse from their parents, offers answers that only leads to more questions. Itā€™s easy to see how a morbid fascination could develop around the case (and the perpetrators, who at the time were each charismatic, handsome, and somehow boyishly adorable in spite of the silver-spoon detachment they seemed to exude) in a society endlessly fascinated by the dirty secrets and bad behavior of rich, beautiful people.

That, of course, makes the Menendez saga a natural fit with Ryan Murphyā€™s brand of television, which embraces the sensationalism of whatever subject it tackles ā€“ as weā€™ve seen from the transgressively macabre twists of ā€œAmerican Horror Storyā€ to the scandal-icious celebrity backbiting of ā€œFeudā€ to the campy noir-flavored psychopathy of ā€œRatched.ā€ His ā€œAmerican Crime Storyā€ anthology has delivered its true-life dramas with an equal eye toward creating those ā€œWTF?ā€ moments that inevitably have social media buzzing with both glee and outrage the morning after they drop. The ā€œMonsterā€ franchise is a natural progression, using Murphyā€™s shrewd knack for cultural provocation to unearth the underlying social dysfunctions that help create an environment in which such killers can be created.

With the inaugural installment, ā€œMonster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story,ā€ it can be argued that he crafted a chilling masterpiece of binge-able long-form storytelling that not only took viewers into the unspeakable horrors that took place in the killerā€™s apartment, but into the mind of the man who committed them. Yet while the show proved successful, earning an impressive tally of critical accolades, it was met with a harsher tone ā€“ much of it from families of Dahmerā€™s real-life victims ā€“ for capitalizing on his crimes.

For ā€œMenendez,ā€ the reception has been predictably similar, though its critical reception has not been quite as warm, with many reviewers taking issue with Murphyā€™s signature slicked-up style and the showā€™s overt homoeroticism. Controversies, however, have come along as expected; objections over the extremely unflattering portrayal of JosĆ© and Kitty Mendez (the ill-fated parents, played here with star-power intensity by Javier Bardem and ChloĆ« Sevigny), and of the incestuous bond alleged between the title characters themselves, have arisen alongside complaints about the distortion of facts to support a narrative favoring the boysā€™ version of events that Murphy ā€“ who co-wrote the series as well as produced it ā€“ wants to advance.

Itā€™s certainly fair to claim that Murphy plays fast and loose with facts; his purpose here is not to transcribe events, like a docuseries, but to interpret them. He and his fellow writers craft ā€œMonstersā€ theatrically, with bold strokes and operatic moments; they mine it for black humor and milk it for emotional intensity; the series plays up the brothersā€™ pretty-boy charms, caressing their sculpted bodies with the camera and frequently showing them in various states of near or total nudity; it seems to fixate on the messy, petty, and ignoble traits of its characters, and illuminate the messy personal motives driving their public agendas; it even employs a ā€œRashomonā€-esque approach in which it variously portrays different versions of the same events depending on the character describing them. In short, itā€™s not a show that is looking for factual truth; itā€™s searching for a more complex truth behind the facts.

That truth, perhaps, has a lot to do with the shame, stigma, and silence around abuse; the tendency to disbelieve the victims (especially when they are male ā€“ a prosecutor during the trials famously argued that a male ā€œcouldnā€™t be rapedā€); the cultural homophobia that further complicates the dynamic when the abuse comes from someone of the same sex. Does such abuse warrant absolution for murder, especially when the murder is as excessively brutal as the killing of JosĆ© and Kitty Menendez? Thatā€™s a question Murphy and crew leave up to the viewers.

Such moral ambiguity is surely part of the reason that shows like ā€œMonstersā€ and its predecessor are met with such hostility from some viewers; they offer no easy comfort, no straightforward moral order to reassure us that our perceptions of good and evil are just or fair or even correct ā€“ and if youā€™re looking for a hero to step forward and make sense of it all for us, youā€™re not going to find one.

If thatā€™s too bleak a prospect for you, or if the notion of criminals as celebrities is something youā€™re just not comfortable with enough to make allowances for artistic intention, then ā€œMonstersā€ may not be for you. 

For anyone else who has hesitated to watch, however, itā€™s a show worthy of your time. Though it might seem uneven, even disjointed at times, it paints an overall picture of the Menendez case that is about something much more than the murders ā€“ or the murderers ā€“ themselves. The performances are all accomplished, well-tuned together to a sort of elevated authenticity, with special note to a jaw-dropping star turn by Koch monologuing his way through a one-shot full-length episode filmed in a single take.

The latter alone is enough to make ā€œMonstersā€ an awards-worthy piece of television. While it may not be the right show for every taste, itā€™s not ā€œtrash TVā€ either. Itā€™s a bold and challenging work from one of our most prolific and dedicated queer showmen, and if it leaves you feeling sorry for monsters, is that really such a bad thing?

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PBS ā€˜Discoā€™ is a Pride party you donā€™t want to miss

Rich collection of footage highlighting the music and fashion of the time

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Studio 54 in 1977. (Photo by Bill Bernstein; courtesy BBC Studios)

Anyone who was alive and old enough to listen to the radio in the 1970s knows that disco wasnā€™t just a genre of music. It was an entire lifestyle, centered around dancing in nightclubs to music that meshed R&B with new electronic sounds and an infectiously up-tempo beat ā€“ and at the height of its popularity, it had bled into the entire American culture. Every TV theme or movie soundtrack was flavored with a disco vibe, every musician seeking a comeback recorded a disco record, and every would-be dance dandy dreamed of sporting a pair of ā€œangel flightā€ slacks to the disco every Saturday night.

If you didnā€™t live through it yourself, most of what you might know about this era is likely gleaned from its popular culture ā€“ the hot radio singles, the popular movies like ā€œSaturday Night Fever,ā€ the kitschy crossovers like ā€œHooked On Classicsā€ and parodies like ā€œDisco Duckā€ ā€“ after the skyrocketing popularity of the phenomenon had made it a golden ticket for anyone who wanted to capitalize on it. They were crossovers into the homogenizing mainstream, intended to commercialize the disco frenzy for consumers beyond the record stores and nightclubs, which became cultural touchstones, for better or for worse; but because their campy shadows still loom so large, anyone whose understanding of the ā€œdisco crazeā€ has been gleaned only from TV or the movies is likely to remember it as a little more than a fun-but-silly footnote in late 20th-century American history.

Fortunately, PBS and BBC Studios have unveiled a new docuseries that sets the record straight ā€“ or perhaps we should say it ā€œqueersā€ the record, because it offers a detailed and savvy chronicle that illuminates the ties that bind the story of disco inextricably with an essential chapter of modern queer history, revealing its link to the liberation movement that blossomed in the ā€˜70s and continues to weave its thread through American society today.

Produced and directed by Louise Lockwood and Shianne Brown, ā€œDisco: Soundtrack of a Revolutionā€ ā€“ which broadcast its first episode on June 18, and is available for streaming in its entirety for subscribers via the PBS website ā€“ charts discoā€™s origins, success, and demise across a trio of episodes for a comprehensive look at the whirlwind of forces that surrounded and catapulted it into American consciousness. It explores the phenomenon as a vibrant and thrillingly inclusive cultural wave that originated within a blended underground of marginalized communities in New York City, at private loft parties and underground dance clubs, and grew until it had saturated the world. It highlights the sense of empowerment, made tangible in the opportunity and elevation it offered to artists who were queer, female or people of color, and yet it still welcomed anybody who wanted to join the dance with open arms. It was a chance to celebrate, to feel good and have fun after an intense period of social strife in America, which meant it went hand-in-hand with the sexual liberation that was also exploding across society. Most importantly of all, perhaps, it came with a laid-back vibe that gave you permission to let loose in ways that would have shocked your parents; in retrospect, itā€™s hard to imagine how anybody could resist.

Yet of course, there were people who did; and when the juggernaut that was disco inevitably began to lose steam as a result of its ubiquity and the perceived decadence of its hedonistic lifestyle, it was their voices that emerged to tell us all that ā€œDisco Sucksā€ ā€“ a catch phrase that is perhaps almost as much a cultural touchstone as some of the genreā€™s biggest hit records.

Thatā€™s the broad overview that most people who remember the disco era already know, but ā€œSoundtrack of a Revolutionā€ gets much more granular than that. Much of the enlightening detail is provided, as one might expect, through a rich collection of contemporary footage highlighting the sights and sounds ā€“ the people, the parties, the music, the clubs, the fashion ā€“ of the time. Counterpoint to that material, however, comes through modern day interviews with key figures who were present for it all, whose memories help connect the dots between the evolution of disco and the societal environment in which it took place.

Of course, most audiences who are drawn to a documentary about disco will likely be coming ā€“ at least partly ā€“ for the music, and fortunately, this one gives us plenty of that, too. Better still, it gives us deep dives into some of the most iconic tracks of the seventies, not just spotlighting the artists who recorded them, but the DJs and tastemakers whose ideas and innovations built the very sound that fueled it all. Some of these pioneers may be gone, but they are represented via archival footage, and many who are still among us offer up their insider perspectives through candid filmed interviews that are woven throughout the series. Thereā€™s a first-person reliability that comes from allowing these participants in the history to tell their own part of it for themselves, and it gives the series an atmosphere of authenticity ā€“ not to mention an influx of free-wheeling, colorful personality ā€“ that canā€™t be achieved through the observations and analysis of expert ā€œtalking headā€ commentators. 

Itā€™s these voices that also help to impress upon us the feeling of freedom and acceptance that developed in those early disco clubs, where people from minority cultures could come together and feel safe as they danced to music that came from others like them, and the frustration of watching as it was co-opted by a (mostly white and heterosexual) mainstream and watered down into a pale mockery of itself ā€“ something that ā€œkilledā€ disco long before hate-fueled backlash from a racist, misogynistic, homophobic culminated in the infamous anti-disco rally at Chicagoā€™s Comiskey Park, as documented in the seriesā€™ final episode.

Yet although it stops short of blaming homophobia and bigotry for the genreā€™s collapse, ā€œSoundtrack of a Revolutionā€ leaves no doubt of its influence over the environment that surrounded it, nor of the impact of the subsequent AIDS crisis on stopping the advance of queer liberation that was at the heart of the disco movement in its tracks ā€“ and in an election year that might make the difference between preserving or dismantling the ideal of Equality in America, the story of discoā€™s audacious rise and ignoble fall feels like a particularly apt warning message from the past.

Even so, one of the many gifts of the series is that it reveals a continuing creative lineage that, far from being cut off with the ā€œdeathā€ of disco, has gone on to evolve and expand into new genres of dance and musical expression. Disco, it seems, never really died; it just went back into the underground where it was born and continued to develop, reinventing itself to meet the taste and match the needs of new generations along the way.

We could all take a lesson from that.

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ā€˜Interview with the Vampireā€™ returns in triumph

Long-awaited season 2 continues to get story exactly right

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Assad Zaman and Jacob Anderson star in 'Interview with the Vampire.' (Photo courtesy of AMC)

When AMC debuted its long-awaited series adaptation of ā€œInterview With the Vampireā€ ā€“ Anne Riceā€™s seminal proto-postmodern horror novel that set the stage and paved the way for a decades-long literary franchise that has kept millions of readers, queer and straight alike, passionately engaged since first reading its thinly veiled allegorical document of life as a being with heightened awareness on the edge of human existence ā€“ in 2022, we were among the first to sing its praises as a triumph of narrative storytelling,

We were not the last. The series, created by Rolin Jones in collaboration with Christopher Rice ā€“ the original authorā€™s son and a successful horror novelist in his own right ā€“ and the late Anne Rice herself, was one of its seasonā€™s best-reviewed shows, earning particular praise for its writing, in which the queer ā€œsubtextā€ of Riceā€™s original works was given the kind of unequivocal full weight denied to it in the Brad Pitt/Tom Cruise-starring Neil Jordan-helmed film adaptation from 1994. 

Though purist fans of the original boom series took occasional umbrage to some of the showā€™s leaps ā€“ changing the historical period of the story to illuminate themes of racism and deepen its resonance for those living as ā€œothersā€ on the fringe of society, and making the bookā€™s protagonist, Louis Pointe du Lac (Jacob Anderson), a closeted Black Creole man in early 20th-century New Orleans ā€“ the series won most of its naysayers over by its season finale. It delivered a deliciously subversive, unapologetically queer interpretation that remained true to Riceā€™s original gothic re-imaginings while expanding the scope to encompass social and cultural factors that have become central to the moral and ideological conflicts that plague us in the first quarter of the 21st century.

To put it bluntly, the showā€™s willingness to embrace the storyā€™s countercultural queer eroticism and place its transgressively amoral ā€œmoral compassā€ front and center was more than enough to smooth over any nitpicking over faithfulness to narrative detail or tone that might otherwise have kept Riceā€™s legion of acolytes from signing on to the new-and-contemporized vision of the book that Rollins built as the foundation for his daunting project.

Now, after a buzz-tempering delay borne of last yearā€™s actorā€™s strike, the series has returned for its second season. And weā€™re happy to assure you that its feet hit the ground running, keeping up both passion and narrative momentum to pick up the story with electrifying energy after leaving off (at the end of season one) with the shocking murder and seeming elimination of Lestat (Sam Reid), the exquisitely amoral ā€œrock starā€ vampire who served as both protector and lover of Louis, and the departure of the latter and his perpetually juvenile ā€œdaughter,ā€ Claudia (Bailey Bass) on s quest to find others like themselves.

Fans of the book might, in fact, find new reasons to take exception to the showā€™s adaptation, which, as in season one, makes significant departures from the original narrative. After moving the storyā€™s setting forward by roughly half a century, Louis and Claudiaā€™s secretive sojourn now takes place in the traumatized landscape of post-WWII Europe, and spins a scenario in which the two ex-pat vampires, navigating their way through the perils of Soviet-occupied Central Europe after the fall of the Nazi regime, spend time in a refugee shelter while investigating rumors of old-world vampires who might provide a link to their ā€œfamily history.ā€

When we rejoin this pair of relative fledgling vampires, their undead existence is a far cry from the decadent elegance they enjoyed in the New Orleans setting of season one. Enduring a near-feral existence as they make their way through a war-ravaged landscape, they find no shortage of prey in the aftermath of the Third Reich, but the ā€œcreature comfortsā€ of their former ā€œafterlivesā€ are now only a memory. Louis is devoted, as always, to Claudia (now portrayed by Delainey Hayles, presumably due to scheduling conflicts for original actor Bass, who is set to reprise her role from ā€œAvatar: The Way of Waterā€ in the next installment of filmmaker James Cameronā€™s high-dollar sci-fi franchise), but remains haunted by his vampire maker and former lover Lestat, whose undead corpse remains buried on another continent but whose charismatic presence manifests itself in his private moments, nonetheless. In the first episode, the pair have used their supernatural wiles to journey into the ā€œold countryā€ long associated with their kind, tracking human tales of monstrous terrors in the night in hope of connecting with more of their kind. Louis, as always, struggles with his compassion for the mortal beings around him, while the more savage Claudia simply sees them as prey, and holds little hope of finding other vampires, if they even exist. For her part, Claudia has forgiven ā€“ but not forgotten ā€“ his refusal to ensure Lestatā€™s demise by burning his body, and is now solely focused on finding others like her.

Of course, the adventures of these two undead companions are only half the equation in ā€œInterview With the Vampire.ā€ The past is, as always, merely a flashback, as Louis relates the story of his afterlife experiences to mortal journalist Daniel Molloy (Eric Bogosian). In the present, the skeptical Molloy casts doubt on the truth of his memories, forcing the vampire to re-examine them as he goes. Perhaps more interestingly, in the long game of a series which, if it comes to full fruition, will eventually encompass the entire Rice vampire saga, these contemporary scenes give us a look at the relationship between Louis and Armand (Assad Zaman), revealed in the season one finale to be not a mere servant in Louisā€™ household but a centuries-old fellow vampire who is now Louisā€™ lover and companion.

Fans of the books, of course, know that Armand plays a significant role in the story of the past, too, and while we wonā€™t spoil anything, we can say that history begins to unspool as season two progresses ā€“ but thatā€™s getting ahead of ourselves. For now, what we can say is that season twoā€™s first episode, while it may veer away from the familiarity of Riceā€™s original tale in service of reimagining it for 21st-century audiences, continues the first seasonā€™s dedication to breathing thrilling new life into this now-iconic, deeply queer saga; superb performances all around, an elegantly cinematic presentation and literate writing, and a lush musical score by Daniel Hart all combine to sweep us quickly and irresistibly into the story, making us not just fall in love with these vampires, but want to be one of them. 

That, of course, is the gloriously sexy and subversive point of Riceā€™s ā€œVampire Chronicles,ā€ and this long-awaited series continues to get it exactly right.

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Watch ā€˜Feud,ā€™ if you like glam and wit doused with betrayal and regret

New series focuses on Truman Capote and NYC socialites

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ā€˜Feudā€™ features NYC socialites known as the ā€˜swansā€™ and airs on F/X and Hulu through March 13. (Photo courtesy of FX)

Nothing is more of a pick-me-up in the doldrums of winter than a fabulously acted, incredibly stylish feud. Complete with Champagne flutes and a splendiferous mid-century ball at New York Cityā€™s Plaza Hotel. Especially, when itā€™s part of the ouevre of queer TV producer and creator Ryan Murphy, whose beloved shows include  ā€œAmerican Horror Story,ā€ ā€œGleeā€ and the anthology series ā€œFeud.ā€

Season 2 of Feud, ā€œFeud: Capote vs. The Swans,ā€ which premiered on Jan. 31, will air weekly on FX through March 13. Episodes stream the next day on Hulu.

ā€œFeudā€™sā€ powerhouse cast, which delivers stellar performances, includes: Tom Hollander as Truman Capote along with Naomi Watts, Diane Lane, Chloe Sevigny and Calista Flockhart as Capoteā€™s swans.

Demi Moore plays Ann Woodward, a socialite who Capote falsely said intended to murder her husband. Molly Ringwald portrays Joanne Carson who befriended Capote when nearly no one  would take him in. The role of CBS chairman Bill Paley fits the late Treat Williams like a glove.

Hollander makes Capote seem like a brilliant, flawed, cruel, sometimes kind, human being, rather than a ā€œfairyā€ caricature. 

Jessica Lang does a star turn as the ghost of Capoteā€™s mother. Gus Van Sant directs most of the episodes of ā€œFeud.ā€

ā€œFeudā€ is based on Laurence Leamerā€™s book  ā€œCapoteā€™s Women.ā€ Playwright and screenwriter Jon Robin Baitz adapted Leamerā€™s book into the miniseries ā€œFeud.ā€

ā€œFeudā€ is the story of how acclaimed queer author Capote, after becoming their best friend betrayed his ā€œswans.ā€

ā€œThe swans,ā€ were the rich, beautiful, New York society women who confided their secrets (from their insecurities about their looks to their husbandsā€™ infidelities) to Capote. 

These ā€œswans,ā€ who took Capote into their inner circle, were: Babe Paley (wife of CBS chairman Bill Paley), Lee Radziwill (Jackie Kennedyā€™s sister), socialite Slim Keith (ex-wife of Howard Hawks and Leland Hayward) and socialite C.Z. Guest.

ā€œYou canā€™t blame a writer for what the characters say,ā€ Capote, once said.

His swans didnā€™t agree with Capoteā€™s dictum.

Capoteā€™s betrayal of the swans occurred in 1975. That year, ā€œEsquireā€ published ā€œLa Cote Basque, 1965,ā€ a chapter from Capoteā€™s much anticipated novel ā€œAnswered Prayers.ā€

(Capote never completed the novel. An unfinished version was published after his death.)

The ā€œEsquireā€ story, set in the restaurant where Capote often lunched with his ā€œswans,ā€ hurt and infuriated ā€œthe ladies who lunched.ā€ The details revealed in the ā€œEsquireā€ story were so personal and thinly veiled that the ā€œswansā€ felt readers would easily identify them.

ā€œFeudā€ depicts the bonds of friendship that frequently exist between hetero women and queer men. Capote gave his ā€œswansā€ the love and attention their spouses failed to provide. Babe Paley called Capote her ā€œsecond husband.ā€

For Capote, an outsider because he was gay, ā€œthe swansā€ provided acceptance, association with high society (which he both loved and despised) and material for his writing.

Capote became estranged from the ā€œswansā€ right after the ā€œEsquireā€ story was published.

ā€œFeudā€ goes back and forth in time. At first, this is a bit disconcerting. But, soon, it keeps things moving, and provides fascinating glimpses into Capote and the ā€œswans.ā€

Bill and Babe Paley think Capote is the ā€œother Trumanā€ (Harry Truman) when they meet him in the 1950s.

In the 1970s, after the ā€œswansā€ have shunned him, Capote is a washed-up, alcoholic, drug-addicted has-been. (Capote died in 1984 at age 59 of liver disease.)

The third episode is the stand-out of ā€œFeud.ā€ In 1966, Capote was at the height of his power after ā€œIn Cold Blood, his ā€œnon-fictionā€ novel, had been published to much acclaim and commercial success. To celebrate, Capote threw a Black and White masquerade ball. The ball, to which Capote invited 540 guests, was the most famous party of the 20th century. Katherine Graham of The Washington Post was the guest of honor.

The episode is shot as a (fictional) documentary of the ball. Shot in black and white, itā€™s visually stunning. We see interviews with some of the ā€œswans,ā€ who are ticked off, but trying not to show it, because Capote had led them to believe they would be the guest of honor.

Watch ā€œFeud,ā€ if you like glam, hats, white gloves, cocktails and wit doused with betrayal and regret.

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Rough and sexy ā€˜Open To Itā€™ explores lighter side of polyamory

Take a break from prestige cinema and enjoy this new TV series

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Tim Wardell and Frank Arthur Smith explore polyamory. (Photo courtesy of OutTV)

With Hollywoodā€™s big awards season launching into full swing, January tends to be a month all about the movies ā€“ especially for people whose job it is to see them all and write about them. Itā€™s a pleasure, of course, if you love cinema; but letā€™s face it, most of the award-hopeful films getting the spotlight as the new year turns tend to be pretty serious stuff. Everybody needs a break from that, once in a while.

Thatā€™s why weā€™re happy to take a brief pause from the whirlwind of ā€œprestige cinemaā€ to take a look at something that doesnā€™t feel quite so heavy, and the fact that itā€™s available in small doses on your screen-of-choice at home ā€“ via queer streaming service OutTV ā€“ makes it even more appealing. Oh, and itā€™s also sexy, which doesnā€™t hurt.

Cut from a similar cloth as some of the edgier ā€œwacky sitcomsā€ enjoyed by Gen X-ers and Millennials in their younger years ā€“ but with a spicier, more diverse flavor to bridge the three-decade gap in our cultural evolution and infuse things with a more Gen-Z-friendly perspective ā€“ and assembled as a long-form narrative told in short (about 10 minutes) installments, ā€œOpen To Itā€ is the creation of writer/actor/director Frank Arthur Smith. He stars as Greg, a previously repressed gay man now living the dream in West Hollywood as half of a loving, committed relationship with his partner, Cam (Tim Wardell). Though Cam (a self-proclaimed ā€œformer slutā€) is happy to have settled into comfortable monogamy, Greg is curious to explore the more free-wheeling sexual lifestyle he denied himself in the past. The solution, of course, is for the couple to experiment with the possibility of opening up their relationship, which is where we meet them as the first episode starts: anxiously awaiting the arrival of Princeton (Jason Caceres), a sexy twink they met on Grindr and invited to join them for their first-ever threesome.

Since we already mentioned the word ā€œwacky,ā€ itā€™s probably not too hard to guess that things donā€™t go quite as smoothly as planned. Instead of a hot, steamy evening of pushing their sexual boundaries, the two experience a farcical disaster that, for most of us, might be considered a worst-case scenario. That, of course, establishes a formula that more or less repeats in each successive episode, as the showā€™s plucky lead couple determinedly keeps trying to expand into the brave new world of polyamory despite one hilariously awkward sexual debacle after another, complicated even further by the persistent Princeton, who wants more in spite of the less-than-ideal circumstances of their first encounter, and the well-meaning but intrusive couple next door (Elsa Aranda and Reggie Thomas as, respectively, a bisexual wild-child and her prudish lesbian partner), whose efforts to be supportive somehow all seem to have the opposite result. Add to this mix Camā€™s overprotective Drag Mother (Laganja Estranja), and you have a recipe for queer comedy of the most chaotic kind.

Beginning its life on the film festival circuit, where the first few episodes made the rounds and became an audience favorite, ā€œOpen To Itā€ racked up millions of online views, prompting OutTV to pick it up as a series ā€” and affording Smith and his crew the budget to complete the rest of the season. With that in mind, itā€™s not a surprise that the opening handful of episodes are a little rough around the edges, though it doesnā€™t take long before you see the actors gaining confidence and relaxing into a natural rhythm. Even in their clunkiest moments, though, these early chapters manage to convey the blend of over-the-top (and definitely NSFW) absurd humor and cheerfully unfettered sex-positivity the show is going for with its comedy-of-errors storyline, which is enough to make us want more, and watching both the players and the characters they portray develop helps the second half of the season blossom further into itself.

In the showā€™s press material, Smith says his idea for the series came from his weariness over shows about queer life with ā€œself-sabotaging protagonistsā€ and ā€œa downtrodden tone,ā€ which often tended to take something of a judgmental tone about ā€œpolyamorous or otherwise non-monogamous relationships.ā€

ā€œI wanted to make a sex- and relationship-positive show that normalized gay JOY,ā€ he says. ā€œSexy swingers, monogamous married couples, people having a ā€˜50 Shades of Greyā€™ tie-up night ā€” all are welcome and celebrated in the world of ā€˜Open To It.ā€™ā€

Whether or not the series succeeds in ā€œnormalizingā€ anything, it certainly makes a determined effort to depict it. Itā€™s a show about sex, centering on characters exploring their sex lives, and itā€™s not afraid to take us as far as broadcast standards will allow. That boils down to LOTS of sex scenes, some of them looking almost as if they could be judiciously-cropped excerpts from somebodyā€™s OnlyFans content, which might seem more gratuitous than they are if everything else in the show felt like an excuse to show lots of sex ā€“ but, perhaps surprisingly, it doesnā€™t.

While the show (and its main characters, for the most part) may seem fixated on sex, its progression leads inevitably to an exploration not just of the mores and manners of a polyamorous world, but of navigating a relationship through it. And while things may seem drawn in broad, cartoonish strokes in the first episodes which have dropped since the showā€™s OutTV premiere on January 2, developments as the season progresses turn characters that might seem at first like stereotyped caricatures into more complex, unexpected, and refreshingly open-minded individuals, all learning ā€“ or maybe, making up ā€“ the rules as they go along.

Itā€™s that willingness to go deeper ā€” all while keeping things light and as near to ridiculous as possible without becoming pure anarchy ā€” that ultimately helps ā€œOpen To Itā€ pay off. To be sure, the writing, especially early on, sometimes borders on the clumsy and contrived, more nervous exposition than tone-setting introduction, and the tropes it embraces (more in fun than as reinforcement) about queer ā€œtypesā€ and relationships might occasionally be off-putting to viewers looking for a more nuanced approach. Yet in the end, and in surprising ways, the show finds a way forward that promises to expand each of its queer ā€œstockā€ characters ā€” the repressed gay child acting out sexually as an adult, the too-good-to-be-true sexy-but-smart boyfriend, the tough-loving and ā€œteaā€-spilling drag queen, the opposites-attract clichĆ© of the lesbian couple next door ā€” into more fully fleshed-out, complex individuals.

With three more episodes in post-production, and ā€œmuch more to come,ā€ according to Smith, it appears weā€™ll have a chance to watch that process continue. And while it may not be the kind of slick-and-polished fare that bigger-budget streaming services use to attract queer viewers, thereā€™s something about its raw-and-unvarnished quality that makes it feel a lot more sincere than most of them ā€” even if it doesnā€™t make the cut when the next ā€œawards seasonā€ rolls around.

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ā€˜Fellow Travelersā€™ mixes queer love, politics for sexy history lesson

A relationship enduring across the years despite resistance and betrayal

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Matt Bomer and Jonathan Bailey star in ā€˜Fellow Travelers.ā€™ (Photo courtesy of Showtime)

In a time when every streaming platform is falling over itself to present the newest ā€œmust bingeā€ series, the phrase ā€œEvent TVā€ really has no meaning.

Yet once upon a time ā€“ just a few decades ago, in fact, when three major networks and a handful of cable companies highlighted every season with ā€œhot topic of the dayā€ shows from ā€œRootsā€ to ā€œThe Band Played Onā€ ā€“ it was something television viewers expected, a standard part of the small-screen line-up that inevitably generated ratings and provided a cultural touchstone (or at least, a good topic of discussion in the break room at work) for millions of people. If that era were still going on today, ā€œFellow Travelersā€ would be a perfect fit for the category.

Adapted from Thomas Mallonā€™s 2007 novel of the same name, Showtimeā€™s sweeping eight-episode historical romance, which premiered with its provocative first episode on Oct. 27, checks off all the necessary boxes to pique the zeitgeist of our time. Presenting a fictionalized-but-authentic narrative that weaves real-life history into an intensely intimate love story spanning decades, it touches on issues of hotbed importance to our modern world while spinning an irresistible tale of forbidden romance ā€“ tempered by hard reality ā€“ that both blends into and epitomizes the lived reality of a generation.  

To cement its status as a show that is not to be missed, it casts gay heartthrobs Matt Bomer (ā€œMagic Mike,ā€ ā€œThe Normal Heart,ā€ and any number of Ryan Murphy projects) and Jonathan Bailey (ā€œBridgertonā€) as the star-crossed couple at its center, whose love plays out across a period of queer American political experience that spans from the deeply closeted pre-Stonewall era of 1950s America to the cultural trauma of the AIDS epidemic.

Simultaneously telling both the beginning and the end of its story, ā€œTravelersā€ moves back and forth through time as it follows the love affair between two gay men ā€“ war hero turned government man Hawkins ā€œHawkā€ Fuller (Bomer) and political idealist Tim Laughlin (Bailey) ā€“ through three-and-a-half decades of American history. Juxtaposing the story of their increasingly enmeshed relationship ā€“ alongside that of a queer couple of color, a Black journalist (Jelani Alladin) and a gender-bending nightclub performer (Noah J. Ricketts) ā€“ with the years-later saga of their reconnection after a devastating betrayal has torn them apart, its dominant throughline is tied to the underreported (though irrefutably documented) history of homophobic discrimination by the U.S. government that began with the McCarthy ā€œRed Scareā€ era purge of known-or-suspected homosexuals employed within government service. Perpetrated under excuse of the presumed security risk associated with anyone participating in a ā€œdeviantā€ lifestyle, it was a targeted propoganda campaign that would eventually culminate in the debacle of the nationā€™s indifference to AIDS and the rising death toll that was taking place in plain sight.

Itā€™s not the first show to tackle this subject matter; Americaā€™s response to AIDS, and the deeply ingrained cultural homophobia that laid unabashedly behind it, has been explored so much that it has become almost a thematic trope. As to the topic of queer life in an environment where ā€œpassingā€ as straight is purely a matter of survival, itā€™s a subject as relevant to queer existence in much of the world today as it has ever been, which weā€™ve rightly seen reiterated time and again. But given the current push in American politics to erode the hard-won advancements of the LGBTQ community toward acceptance and equality, itā€™s hard to complain about a show that wants to explore it on our screens yet again.

Even so, itā€™s also hard not to go into ā€œFellow Travelersā€ without noting the common ground it shares with other dramatic narratives covering the same ground ā€“ especially, perhaps, playwright Tony Kushnerā€™s seminal and now-iconic Pulitzer-winning ā€œAngels in America,ā€ with which it invites comparison by virtue of its inclusion of real-life poster boy for internalized homophobia Roy Cohn (played here by Will Brill) and its focus on closeted characters working within the U.S. political establishment ā€“ and wondering if it will have anything new or noteworthy to say.

Based solely on its first episode, you might be prodded toward even more skepticism; establishing itself with a broad strokes and a glossy tone, it feels a bit like an old-school tearjerker, evoking the Douglas Sirk-ish social melodramas of its (predominantly) vintage setting even as it moves from past to future and back again. Itā€™s stylish, even lovely, but seems built on a distancing artifice. And its romantic leads, the characters to which we are supposed to attach ourselves, might be hard to swallow ā€“ for some viewers, at least ā€“ simply because they are gay men seemingly content to live their real lives under cover while working for a governmental system that facilitates their oppression. To put it simply, it all feels a little too ā€œHollywood.ā€

Yet despite this, or perhaps because of it, the show draws us in. Though at first we might think it tends toward the shallow, drawing on familiar formulas and offering up two thinly drawn protagonists in hopes weā€™ll accept them simply because they are played by a pair of impossibly handsome leading men, the ideas it presents are important and the history it documents illuminates a past that has remained obscured for far too long, so weā€™re willing to jump on board. Besides, those leading men are not only very handsome, they have a winning chemistry together, and the authenticity of the casting pays off by delivering a queer screen couple that feels genuine ā€“ and thatā€™s not just because of their unapologetically sexy love scenes. Even if their story doesnā€™t quite make sense to us yet, we want to see more of them.

Thatā€™s a very good thing, because as the series moves along, the tone changes drastically. Though the world of episode one is full of blithe denial and resignation to a status quo that might make our hindsight bristle, itā€™s a world that quickly changes as things progress, a point driven home by the showā€™s time-jumping framework. The oppression gets worse, the danger gets real, and the effect those things have on the lives of these two men ā€“ one a seemingly amoral pragmatist who has accepted and embraced a closeted life as a condition for success and the other a passionate ā€œtrue believerā€ naĆÆve enough to fall under the spell of a right-wing political ideology ā€“ has an impact. They change, they make choices and suffer consequences; in other words, they deepen, and as they do, the show does too.

Thatā€™s because show creator Ron Nyswaner, despite making some changes from the novel, understood the throughline at its core and held tight to it in building the series. Ultimately, ā€œFellow Travelersā€ is not a story about politics, or social causes, or any of the other weighty issues that shape its trajectory. Itā€™s a story about love, enduring across the years despite resistance, opposition, and betrayal; whether it ends happily or not ā€“ and you wonā€™t get any spoilers here ā€“ it is lived passionately. Because of that, we care, and because we care, those big ideas land even more soundly.

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Kardashian carries her weight in ā€˜AHS: Delicateā€™

Showā€™s 12th season faces hurdles before weā€™ll know whether it lives up to the promise

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Emma Roberts and Kim Kardashian star in ā€˜AHS: Delicate.ā€™ (Photo courtesy of FX)

The biggest question around the 12th season of ā€œAmerican Horror Storyā€ has nothing to do with the plot, which means it wonā€™t count as a spoiler if we answer it right off the bat: Kim Kardashianā€™s acting is just fine.

At least, thatā€™s true through the first episode; future installments may require a reassessment of her skills, and perhaps that will add an additional layer of suspense to the proceedings as the story unwinds ā€“ a ā€œhookā€ that might be a big part of the reason the reality show ā€œfamous-for-being-famousā€ celebrity was cast for this season in the first place. Whether her performance ends up being a triumph or a train wreck, itā€™s guaranteed that millions will want to watch it, and she herself would likely be the first to endorse that kind of sensationalist strategy to boost audience interest in the newest season of a show that has been around longer than many of its fans have been old enough to watch it. Ryan Murphyā€™s uber-gay, aggressively transgressive horror anthology may once have been ā€œmust-see TVā€ ā€“ but after more than a decade of thrilling, edgy concepts that were just as likely to fall apart into an anticlimactic mess as they were to build to a coherent conclusion, it has become more of a ā€œguilty pleasure.ā€

Before you come for us and call us ā€œhaters,ā€ rest assured weā€™re not dismissing the power and genius of ā€œAHSā€ both as a show and as a brand; camp and horror have always been deeply intertwined, and Murphyā€™s trope-driven premise for the series has never shied away from leaning into that connection. The absurdity of its cobbled-together plots, contrasted with the histrionic over-seriousness of their presentation, is precisely what allows it to drive home its blatantly metaphoric commentary on whatever cultural or social themes it happens to be addressing. At its best, it has been electrifying, provocative, insightful TV, and at its worst, it has been painfully obvious, exploitative schlock that loses steam long before it sloppily ties all its threads together for a season finale, but either way, it has never failed to keep its audience coming back for more. Clearly, it has a power that lies beyond imposed standards of artistic quality, and itā€™s hardly a stretch to suggest that power comes from the showā€™s deeply progressive heart, which invariably and relentlessly exposes the hypocrisy, deviousness, cruelty, and oppression of a programmed and homogenized social order ā€“ with particular emphasis on the experience of those who dare to be outliers from that imposed norm, making it a perennial favorite with the queer demographic as much as its unabashedly gimmicky stunt casting of pop culture icons like Lady Gaga (and Kardashian, of course) to draw queer eyes faithfully to the screen for 10 weeks each autumn.

Yet even if queer subtext is a big part of what makes ā€œAHSā€ tick, the series doesnā€™t always place its focus ā€“ as it did in last yearā€™s grim AIDS allegory, ā€œNYCā€ ā€“ on overtly or exclusively queer subject matter, and for its newest season ā€“ ā€œDelicateā€, the new season adapted from Danielle Valentineā€™s novel, ā€œDelicate Conditionā€ ā€“ the venerable FX tentpole series full-heartedly embraces a feminist milieu. The story wastes no time in evoking questions and concerns about the rights of women to maintain autonomy over their own hearts, minds, and bodies. Led by ā€œAHSā€ veteran Emma Roberts ā€“ who, though Kardashian has been granted the most press attention, is the seasonā€™s central character, and brings her to life with likable charm and compelling intelligence ā€“ it tells the tale of Anna Alcott (Roberts), a blossoming movie star trying to conceive a child with her supportive-yet-controlling partner Dex (series newcomer Matt Czuchry), who finds herself haunted by bizarre visions and unexplainable phenomena as she undergoes IVF treatment from a high-end fertility clinic.

Episode one launches the plot with the seriesā€™ usual blend of stylish panache and unapologetic pulp by subjecting its heroine to a mysterious nocturnal incident, opening into an extended flashback that establishes a back story that will presumably be crucial to the events to follow. Juggling newfound success and fame with her commitment to starting a family, Anna is plagued by strange anomalies that lead her to question her own perceptions, and begins to suspect she is being targeted by a stalker (or stalkers) with potentially sinister motives. When these strange occurrences begin to affect her behavior, she finds herself ever more isolated from the skeptical Dex, who both coddles and condescends to her, and who may or may not still be obsessed by a the memory of a dead fiancĆ©e. She also becomes increasingly paranoid that she is being terrorized and manipulated by everyone around her ā€“ including her doctor (Denis Oā€™Hare) and her recently acquired publicist (Kardashian), who exert conflicting pressures on her as she tries to navigate both her ā€œrealā€ life and the career sheā€™s on the cusp of creating. By the time the episode comes full circle and returns to the mysterious incident with which it opens, it seems clear than Annaā€™s hopeful journey toward motherhood is happening at the center of some sort of arcane conspiracy.

Like most previous seasons of ā€œAHS,ā€ ā€œDelicateā€ starts out with promise. Conjuring and weaving together key themes from classic films from ā€œGaslightā€ to ā€œRosemaryā€™s Babyā€ to ā€œThe Stepford Wives,ā€ it leaves little doubt programming of women to make them conform to male-defined fantasy ā€“ and from the biblically coined notion that their gender is forever ā€œcursed by Godā€ to be punished for Eveā€™s ā€œoriginal sin.ā€ From what weā€™ve seen so far, it seems clear that Murphy and writer/showrunner Halley Feiffer aim to frame that archaic perspective as a deliberate and coordinated effort to render women into expendable, easily managed accessories in a male-dominated world. That is certainly not a new concept, but one that is arguably more important to explore in the America of 2023 than ever before. And though the seasonā€™s inaugural entry is too busy with exposition to give us much in the way of potent frights or shocks, it also provides flashes that hint at a season full of the kind of grotesque body horror that has always been a hallmark of the show.

Still, even if Kardashian ā€“ perfectly cast, by the way, as Annaā€™s publicist and confidante, whose savvy for promotion makes her into one of her industryā€™s leading names but who may also somehow be involved in the forces pushing her client toward a dark fate ā€“ can manage to meet the success of a few surprisingly good initial reviews, there are still a lot of potential hurdles for ā€œDelicateā€ to jump before we can know whether it lives up to the promise from which so many previous seasons have fallen short. 

It hardly matters, though; no matter how it plays out, the show is sure to strike a chord with all the loyal ā€œAHFā€ fans, and those who are less devoted will probably still find much to keep them interested in the seriesā€™ signature gruesome-but-elegant aesthetic, no matter what.

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ā€˜And Just Like Thatā€™ ditches preachiness to become addictive TV

Second season wraps Aug. 24 with Samantha Jones cameo

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The returning women of ā€˜And Just Like That.ā€™ (Screen capture via HBO)

ā€œDo you know where your children are?ā€ New York TV station WNYW asks the parents in its audience every night.

This isnā€™t a worry for Charlotte York Goldenblatt (Kristin Davis) or Lisa Todd Wexley (Nicole Ari Parker) two of the main characters featured on season two of ā€œAnd Just Like That,ā€ (AJLT), the ā€œSex and the Cityā€ reboot, airing weekly on Max through Aug. 24. Their children (from elementary school kids to teens) are safely ensconced at a posh summer camp. While their off-spring are away, Charlotte, who back in the day ran an art gallery, is having sex so good itā€™s like fireworks on the Fourth of July with her husband Harry (Evan Handler), a highly successful divorce lawyer.

Lisa, a distinguished documentarian filmmaker, and her husband Herbert (Christopher Jackson), a wealthy investment banker whoā€™s thinking about running for New York City comptroller, devote themselves to their work. And to enjoying the rare treat of having a drink at a swanky bar by themselves (sans children).

Meanwhile, corporate (turned human rights) lawyer Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon) knows all too well where her son Brady (Niall Cunningham) is. Heā€™s living with Steve (David Eigenberg), his dad, in their Brooklyn townhouse. Mirandaā€™s relationship with Che Diaz (Sara Ramirez), a nonbinary, bisexual, Mexican, Irish comedian whoā€™s making a TV sitcom pilot with Tony Danza (playing himself), has brought Miranda, Steve and Brady into therapy.

Carrie Bradshaw, writer, (Sarah Jessica Parker), Seema Patel, a hot real estate agent, (Sarita Choudhury) and Dr. Nya Wallace (Karen Pittman), a Columbia Law School professor, are so busy grieving, having exit-out-of-grief sex and mourning stolen Birken bags that they wouldnā€™t have time for children. Nya is divorcing her musician husband Andre Rashad (LeRoy McClain) after many years of marriage because he wants kids and she doesnā€™t.

Yes! Itā€™s summer in the city, ā€œAnd Just Like That,ā€ the fab ladies are back! With less sizzle than in ā€œSex and the City,ā€ but still fun watch. No matter how hard the writers try, no amount of additional characters could make up for the absence of Samantha Jones, the utterly fabulous PR maven, who was an integral part of ā€œSex and the City.ā€ Even the highly talented Samantha Irby, a bisexual producer and writer of AJLT, couldnā€™t create a character as captivating as Samantha, who is slated to make a cameo in the final episode.

But the sophomore season of ā€œAnd Just Like Thatā€ has its share of style and juice. How can you resist a series that, in the seven episodes that have aired to date, has given us a (fictional) Met gala and a ā€œcum slut?ā€

The first season of AJLT spent much time trying to make ā€œSex and the Cityā€ (SATC) more diverse.

It succeeded in many ways. Che, Seema, Lisa and Nya, the new featured characters of color, have intriguing stories. They have good chemistry with the original SATC characters. Yet, it sometimes felt heavy-handed and joyless.

The current season of the show, mostly, dispenses with the exposition and preachiness of season 1. In this season, sex and glam fashion are back in the city.

The episode of ā€œAJLT,ā€ when Charlotte becomes Harryā€™s Kegel coach to help him with his ā€œdust ballsā€ when he canā€™t ejaculate and Carrie talks of ā€œCasper, the friendly cum,ā€ is nearly as good as SATCā€™s ā€œfunky spunkā€ episode.

The women on AJLT are fab. But one of the most enjoyable characters is Anthony Marantino (Mario Cantone), who runs the Hot Fellas bakery. In one hilarious scene, he turns to his BFF Charlotte when he desperately needs to find a Hot Fella to appear with him on Drew Barrymoreā€™s talk show. This being AJLT, Charlotte instantly finds a hot Italian poet who more than fits the bill. Dressed in his Hot Fellas uniform, the poetā€™s ā€œpackageā€ is so great, that looking at him makes Barrymore sweat.

In another scene, Lisa, wearing a dress (designed by Valentino) with a huge train that wonā€™t fit into a cab, has to walk 10 blocks to the Met Gala. ā€œItā€™s not crazy,ā€ she says to Herbert, whoā€™s holding her train, ā€œItā€™s Valentino.ā€

ā€œAnd Just Like Thatā€ isnā€™t prestige TV. Itā€™s more important: itā€™s addictive entertainment.

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LGBTQ critics announce winners of Dorian TV Awards

Wanda Sykes, Jennifer Coolidge among honorees

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Jennifer Coolidge in ā€˜The White Lotus.ā€™ (Photo courtesy of HBO)

They donā€™t get as much fanfare as the Emmys, but the Dorian TV Awards ā€“ presented annually by GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics ā€“ have been offering an important queer perspective on the best in the yearā€™s television for a decade and a half, and theyā€™ve just picked their latest round of champions.

On June 26, GALECA announced a slate of winners for the 15th Annual Dorian TV Awards that represented an even mix of high-profile hits and under-the-radar gems. HBOā€™s final season of ā€œSuccessionā€ was a winner, taking the prize for Best Drama while series star Sarah Snook won Best Drama Performance. ABCā€™s ā€œAbbott Elementary,ā€ star Quinta Brunsonā€™s widely praised mockumentary following a clique of idealistic Philadelphia school teachers, took Best Comedy Series.

Less in line with mainstream Hollywood priorities, perhaps, many other awards went to an assortment of under-seen standouts. Amazon Freeveeā€™s audacious prank show ā€œJury Dutyā€ was named Best Reality Show, with Maxā€™s absurdly snarky showbiz satire (and sadly, now-cancelled) ā€œThe Other Twoā€ winning as Best LGBTQ TV Show and HBO comedies ā€œSomebody, Somewhereā€ and ā€œLos Espookysā€ taking Best Unsung TV Show and Best Non-English Language Show, respectively. Director Andrew Ahnā€™s cinematic ā€œFire Island,ā€ Huluā€™s smart queer spin on Jane Austenā€™s ā€œPride and Prejudiceā€ penned by star Joel Kim Booster, scored as Best TV Movie or Miniseries.

GALECA voters seemed to favor dry-but-witty women in most of the performance categories; Bridget Everett of ā€œSomebody, Somewhereā€ was awarded Best Comedy Lead, Jennifer Coolidge for Best Supporting Drama performance for her instantly iconic return trip to ā€œThe White Lotus,ā€ and Ayo Edebiri of FX on Huluā€™s restaurant comedy ā€œThe Bearā€ for Best Supporting Comedy performance. The trend extended to the award for Best TV Musical Performance, which went to Ariana DeBose for her well-intentioned but controversial rap tribute to Angela Bassett and other nominees at the BAFTA Film Awards last March.

Other noteworthy wins: Satirist Ziwe Fumudohā€™s (also recently cancelled) Showtime series ā€œZIWE,ā€ a mix of commentary, sketch and topical interviews, received the Dorian for Best Current Affairs Show ā€“ its third win in the category; HBO Maxā€™s female superhero series ā€œHarley Quinnā€ was named Best Animated Program.

Horror was also a running theme, with Shudderā€™s documentary ā€œQueer for Fear: The History of Queer Horrorā€ (from TV mastermind Bryan Fuller) taking the Dorians for both Best TV Documentary and Best LGBTQ Documentary, and HBOā€™s apocalyptic limited series ā€œThe Last of Usā€ impressing GALECA voters as the yearā€™s Most Visually Striking TV Show.

Season Two of Apple TV+ā€™s musical spoof ā€œSchmigadoon!ā€ was named as Campiest TV Show, an award unique to the Dorians, though that might go without saying.

In other honors, the GALECA membership gave Coolidge another win by naming her as TV Icon of the Year, an award whose past recipients include Christine Baranski and Cassandra Peterson (a.k.a Elvira). Elliot Page, whose superhero character Viktor Hargreeves came out as trans in the most recent installment of Netflixā€™s ā€œThe Umbrella Academy,ā€ was named as the yearā€™s LGBTQIA+ TV Trailblazer, an award given to entertainment figures who create ā€œart that inspires empathy, truth and equity.ā€ He joins the ranks of former winners Michaela JaĆ© Rodriguez and Jerrod Carmichael.

The Wilde Wit Award, designated by GALECA for ā€œa performer, writer or commentator whose observations both challenge and amuse,ā€ went to Wanda Sykes, the venerable comedian whose year has included memorable roles in ā€œThe Other Two,ā€ Huluā€™s ā€œHistory of the World: Part II,ā€ and Netflixā€™s ā€œThe Upshaws,ā€ as well as voicing a charater in HBO Maxā€™s ā€œVelma.ā€ After all those, she triumphed with a Netflix stand-up special ā€“ ā€œWanda Sykes: Iā€™m an Entertainer,ā€ featuring her takedowns of everyone from Kyrsten Sinema to MAGA conservatives afraid of Critical Race Theory.

Itā€™s worth noting that out of the 18 programming categories, HBO (and Max) won nine, with Hulu (including FX on Hulu) and Shudder each grabbing two ā€“ a clear victory for streaming platforms over traditional network TV.

For those unfamiliar with the Dorians, in addition to its TV awards GALECA (originally founded in 2009) also honor the best in film and ā€“ starting this year ā€“ Broadway and Off-Broadway Theatre. They bring recognition to excellence in these three fields at separate times of the year, chosen from mainstream and queer+ content alike by a voting body of over 480 active critics and journalists. Via the Dorians, the group endeavors ā€œto remind bullies, bigots and societyā€™s currently beleaguered LGBTQ communities that the world has long appreciated the Q+ eye on everything entertainmentā€”not only on hair and clothes.ā€ The organization also advocates for better pay, access and respect for its members, especially those in its most underrepresented segments, and sponsors the Crimson Honors, a public college criticism contest for women or nonbinary students in the QTBIPOC rainbow that awards scholarship funds provided by film and TV review aggregate Rotten Tomatoes.

Entertainment and media fans can find out more and support the members and causes of GALECA by following @dorianawards on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram ā€“ and of course, by visiting GALECA.org.

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