



























1
Follow the storylines of Sasha Jo and Quinni Gallagher-Jones as they navigate the ups and downs of being students at Hartley High. Jo and Gallagher-Jones are both openly out as lesbians in the series.
2
Tallulah is the “it girl” in Rachel Sennott’s hit show, I Love LA. Her bisexuality is prevalent as she makes her move from New York City to the West Coast. She starts dating a chef named Tessa and their relationship is everything we need on our screens.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
3
Dive into the world of the fictional small town, Maple Brook, Texas where everything is not as it seems. Main characters, Sophie O’Neill (Brittany Snow) and Margot Banks (Malin Åkerman) spark a secret romance in their primarily heterosexual and conservative neighborhood.
4
When The L Word premiered in 2004, it was groundbreaking television because it finally dared to put lesbian stories at the forefront. The leads were queer women who had full, sexual lives. (No kill your gays here!) Since then, the show has been criticized for its lack of diversity, but the fact remains that it ushered in a new era of queer television.
About a decade after the original show ended, Showtime launched The L Word: Generation Q, a revival that attempted to right the original’s wrongs by featuring a more diverse group of leads and stories, while also catching up with the characters original fans know and love.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
5
Netflix’s first hit original series was also one of the streamer’s most groundbreaking. Based on the book by Piper Kerman, Orange is the New Black kicks off when Piper (Taylor Schilling) is sentenced to jail time for a crime committed years earlier with an old girlfriend—much to the shock of her current male fiancé. The dramedy follows Piper as she finds her way amidst her fellow inmates and reconnects with her old flame. The show featured many lesbian relationships and broke barriers in transgender representation, thanks to Laverne Cox's phenomenal performance as Sophia.
6
Broad City, a comedy about two twenty-something best friends living in New York City, wasn’t always explicitly queer, but throughout the seasons, the queerness became more overt. Ilana (Ilana Glazer) and Abbi (Abbi Jacobson) had many sexual and romantic experiences with many different kinds of partners, including queer ones. And the show was embraced by an LGBTQ audience that appreciated the allowance for sexual exploration on a spectrum—no labels required.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
7
Everything Now is a teen show about Mia (Sophie Wilde), a girl who has recently been released from inpatient treatment for an eating disorder. When she returns to school, she suddenly finds that her friends have all grown and changed without her, which makes her determined to catch up. Thus begins a wild ride of parties, hookups, and a whole lot of drama. There isn’t necessarily a main lesbian couple at the center of this show, but like other modern teen shows, Everything Now allows its characters to explore their sexualities without labels, hence its inclusion on the list.
8
Based on the 1986 Spike Lee film, She’s Gotta Have It initially starts as the story of how Nola Darling (DeWanda Wise), a free-spirit artist who doesn’t believe in monogamy, balances dating three men at once. As the series progressed, so did Nola’s roster of lovers (she identifies as a “polyamorous pansexual”), and the show really came alive when it explored Nola’s relationships with other women.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
9
Lost Girl is an absolute must-watch for any supernatural genre fans. The show is about Bo (Anna Silk), a woman who discovers that she's a succubus who can take energy from her lovers. Her knew discovery sends her on an adventure of self discovery, and, yes, that includes many lovers, both male and female.
10
Mary Ann Singleton (Laura Linney) returns to San Francisco decades after leaving her ex and child to pursue a career in broadcasting in Tales of the City, a show centered on the inhabitants of Mary Ann’s former home at 28 Barbary Lane, which fully welcomes and embraces the LGBTQ community. There are plenty of queer love stories in the 10-episode miniseries, which also stars Elliot Page as Shawna, Mary Ann’s daughter.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
11
Yes, the chilling, brutal post-apocalyptic series has a baby lesbian protagonist! The first season only briefly touched on Ellie's sexuality and love life (you can skip straight to Episode 7 if you're not interested in all the other drama), but those familiar with the original video game know that there's much more to come.
12
I kind of feel like an Odd Couple tale between an older female stand-up and a younger comedy writer in the 2020s would be disingenuous if the younger comic wasn't queer, don't you? Give it up for Ava, who has screwed up everything in her life, including her relationship with her ex-girlfriend.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
13
Say what you will about Che Diaz (Sara Ramirez), but the character’s inclusion in And Just Like That… completely changed the Sex and the City universe. Most notably, Che sparked a sexual awakening in Miranda (Cynthia Nixon), officially making the character queer and setting her off on a whole new sexual journey.
14
I just know there are some Cosima and Delphine fans in here. Orphan Black is about a woman who discovers one day that she is a clone with an unknown number of genetically identical doppelgängers out there. One of them, Cosima, is a queer woman in a relationship with a coworker.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
15
We're familiar with (and frankly over) the homophobic bully who's secretly gay all around. How about a lesbian who's just an HBIC? Riverdale has gotten increasingly sapphic over the years, trading the shock value of Betty and Veronica kissing and Cheryl Blossom and her many, many girlfriends.
16
This hidden gem, from Australian comedian Josh Thomas, features two of the most charmingly chaotic girlfriends I have ever seen in a television show. Matilda is panromantic and heterosexual. Drea is homoromantic and asexual. They make it work—kinda.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
17
There aren't a ton of storylines about our "wee lesbian" Clare (Nicola Coughlan) being gay on Derry Girls, but even just her viral coming out scene makes the show worth the watch.
18
Renee Rapp is, in my humble opinion, the funniest person on this very funny show. Sometimes her choices and relationships on the show aggravate me. (There's definitely one I'm 'shipping and rooting for above others.) Sometimes they make me cry! It's just so delightful to see characters like Leighton who are this complex and hilarious.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
19
Of course, you can't talk about complex young queer female characters on HBO without bringing up Euphoria's Rue and Jules. This show can be tough, and theirs is a bit of a tortured love story, but when they're good they're really good.
20
The anthology series' tense second season had a surprisingly sweet queer story between two of the female characters. In a world with so much nastiness, hurt feelings, secrets (not to mention the now iconic line "These gays, they're trying to kill me"), the romance was a highlight.
此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。