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Star-studded Disney sing-along is Thursday night

Aguilera, Chenoweth, Buble et. al. slated to perform

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Flounder and Ariel in ‘The Little Mermaid.’ (Photo courtesy Disney)

Itā€™s time for LGBT Disney fans to unleash their inner prince or princess. On Thursday at 8 p.m., ABC will host ā€œThe Disney Family Sing-Along.ā€

Hosted by Ryan Seacrest, the special will feature songs from ā€œBeauty and the Beast,ā€ ā€œToy Story,ā€ ā€œThe Little Mermaid,ā€ ā€œMoana,ā€ ā€œFrozen,ā€ ā€œHigh School Musicalā€ and other Disney movies. An animated character will guide viewers through the onscreen lyrics.

The special will also include PSAs to raise awareness about Feeding America and its efforts to help food-insecure people during the current pandemic.

The special will include performances by Christina Aguilera, Kristin Chenoweth, John Stamos, Josh Gad, Michael BublĆ©, Amber Riley and Auli’i Cravalho, who recently came out as bisexual. There will also be appearances by Luke Evans, Jordan Fisher, Derek Hough, Julianne Hough, Carrie Ann Inaba, Little Big Town, Kenny Ortega, Donny Osmond and Thomas Rhett.

The hour-long special helps to usher the new Thursday line-up on ABC after perennial fan favorite and LGBT-inclusive ā€œGreyā€™s Anatomyā€ was forced to end its season early due to the Coronavirus production shutdown.Ā 

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Television

No, ā€˜Mid-Century Modernā€™ is not a ā€˜Golden Girlsā€™ remake

And thatā€™s a good thing

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The cast of ā€˜Mid-Century Modern.ā€™ (Photo courtesy of Hulu)

Thereā€™s long been a desire for a gay version of ā€œThe Golden Girls.ā€

GenX (and younger) fans who have loved that showā€™s iconic quartet of aging female ā€œfrenemiesā€ have been clamoring for it since the actual ā€œGolden Girlsā€ was still on the air ā€“ so by the time the creators of ā€œMid-Century Modernā€ came up with the concept for a show about three gay friends ā€œof a certain ageā€ (and one cantankerous mother) living together in Palm Springs, it was hardly an original idea. Yet even if they werenā€™t the first to fantasize about a show featuring the gay male equivalents of Dorothy, Blanche, Rose, and Sophia, it hardly matters. They were the ones that actually made it happen.

Thatā€™s due in large part to who they are – or at least, what theyā€™ve done before. The two men who hatched the plot (Max Mutchnick and David Kohan) were also responsible for ā€œWill & Grace.ā€ After they teamed up for a brainstorming session with queer TV powerhouse Ryan Murphy ā€“ who eagerly joined forces with them as the showā€™s executive producer ā€“ there was enough viability behind it to bring the long-gestated dream to fruition at last.

The ā€œat lastā€ came this week, when all 10 episodes of the showā€™s debut season dropped on Hulu, and itā€™s undeniable that there was not only a dream behind it, but also a considerable amount of talent ā€“ most obviously in its casting. Headlining (as ā€œlingerie mogulā€ Bunny Schneiderman) is longtime stage/screen/TV star Nathan Lane, a multi-award winner who is a legend for his ā€œBird Cageā€ performance alone, with eternally hunky Matt Bomer adding a whole different flavor of star power as ditsy-but-sweet-hearted (and blithely promiscuous) flight attendant Jerry. The trio of friends is rounded out by former fashion columnist Arthur, played with imperious aplomb by Nathan Lee Graham, a lesser-known but equally well-rounded veteran performer whose resume includes roles in ā€œZoolanderā€ and ā€œPriscilla, Queen of the Desert,ā€ and as a guest appearance on ā€œAbsolutely Fabulous.ā€ Finally, sitcom royalty (and Tony-winner) Linda Lavin ā€“ who passed away in December, after filming had completed on the showā€™s inaugural season ā€“ is on hand to steal scenes as Sybil, Bunnyā€™s pull-no-punches mother, who owns the house they all live in and makes sure to assert her matriarchal dominance at every opportunity.

In the pilot episode, titled ā€œBye, George,ā€ Bunny, Jerry, and Arthur reunite to mourn the death of an old companion, with whom the trio of friends once formed a quartet. With each of them facing the uncertainty of a new life after changes in the old one have left them to cope on their own, Bunny decides to invite his two remaining buddies to move to Palm Springs and live with he and his mother, in a spectacular mid-century modern (hence the name) house that would probably make Frank Sinatra jealous. The arrangement, however, becomes precarious even before it officially begins, when Bunny connects with a much-younger hook-up and becomes smitten ā€“ forcing his two would-be roommates into a scheme to bring him back to his senses before he rescinds their invitation and offers it to his new ā€œboyfriendā€ instead. Itā€™s classic sitcom material, of course, with lots of crossed wires and jumped conclusions to fuel the wackiness ā€“ though in this case, at least, the show stops short of the zany hijinks one might expect from Lucy and Ethel (or even Rose or Blanche) before wrapping things up in a friendship-affirming bow. We canā€™t fault it for that; thereā€™s a premise to be launched here, after all.

Besides, thereā€™s plenty of other comfortable old-school sitcom fun to be had throughout: a sparring match between Arthur and Sybil, whose love-hate dynamic quickly sets the stage for an ongoing battle of sharp wits and sharper tongues; the air-headed naivete of Jerry, with Bomer both leaning into and undercutting the clichĆ© of the pretty-but-dumb aging ā€œtwunkā€; and Bunnyā€™s sincere but impulsive starry-eyed sentimentality, which is frequently undercut by his ā€œDorothy-esqueā€ natural instinct (and Laneā€™s natural talent) for bitchy queendom.

Yet while there are clear choices to mirror the iconic personality traits of the original ā€œGolden Girlsā€ crew in ā€œMid-Century Modern,ā€ the new series seems less regimented in defining each of its characters quite so succinctly, opting instead for a sort of ā€œblendā€ in which the familiar personas of the former showā€™s leading ladies are spread a little more evenly between the four of them together. The result is a show that is obviously a new variation on an established theme, but one in which echoes of the original can be detected in each of its disparate elements rather than confined within the plainly-delineated parameters from which they have been inherited. To put it more plainly, itā€™s a show that acknowledges and embraces the material which inspired it, but goes beyond mere imitation to carve a space of its own. Neither a remake nor a reboot, itā€™s more like an offspring, a separate entity unto itself despite the DNA it shares with its progenitor.

Which is, of course, the only way a show like this can have any real chance of success; to attempt a direct copy of the series that inspired it would spark inevitable (and well-deserved) criticisms of laziness, along with the myriad quibbles which would undoubtedly arise from displeased ā€œGolden Girlsā€ fans; yet to diverge too radically from the established format would eliminate the very reason for its existence. Its seasoned creators were savvy enough to know that a gimmick only goes so far, and they build a show that leaves room for growth beyond its origin as a nostalgic homage into a series with the potential to succeed in its own right. And with the first season helmed by director James Burrows (an 11-time Emmy-winner for his work on shows like ā€œTaxi,ā€ ā€œCheersā€ ā€œFrasierā€ and ā€œWill & Graceā€), who brings the experienced hand necessary to create the kind of authentically ā€œretroā€ piece of entertainment that this one aspires to be, the old-school vibe feels as fresh as it did when ā€œThe Golden Girlsā€ debuted ā€“ almost 40 full years ago.

Whether that nostalgic pull is enough to make the show a hit is hard to predict. It has laugh-out-loud moments, and convincingly reasserts the importance of genuine friendship and chosen family that has always been a common element in such shows. At the same time, while ā€œThe Golden Girlsā€ was unequivocally queer-friendly, it was not specifically queer-themed. Given todayā€™s polarized sensibilities around queer content, the timing might be wrong to permit this decidedly queer evolution of its premise ā€“ which saucily permits plenty of fodder for colorfully-phrased quips about the spicier details of queer sexuality ā€“ to have the same universal appeal that made the earlier show into a long-running mainstream hit.

Only time will tell. For now, you can watch the entire first season on Hulu, and make that call for yourself. For our part, weā€™re just happy to have another high-profile queer show to enjoy, because we all really need that right about now.

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Television

Queer TV to watch this spring

RuPaul, gay ā€˜Golden Girls,ā€™ horror stories, and more

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ā€˜Mid-Century Modern,ā€™ the most eagerly anticipated queer entry of the spring TV season, debuts March 28 on Hulu. (Photo courtesy of Hulu)

Itā€™s time to plan out our screen time for the next few months, as our favorite television platforms prepare to launch a whole new assortment of bingeable distractions for us ā€“ and weā€™re delighted to say that this yearā€™s crop includes an intriguing array of queer and queer-related choices to add to our list. As always, the Blade is here with the details.

Lost Boys & Fairies (miniseries, March 4, Britbox) Already streaming this spring is this acclaimed BBC production from 2024, a heartwarming three-episode saga about a Welsh gay couple (SiĆ“n Daniel Young and Fra Fee) and their effort to adopt a child. Though the story is queer, the issues it tackles are universal ā€“ hesitance to become a parent because of past issues or fear of failure, coming to terms with an unhappy childhood, and grappling with the daunting prospect of being a parent when youā€™re not even sure you are capable of managing your own life, among others ā€“ and strike all the right notes to make this series a touchstone for anyone with a desire to celebrate the reality of taking on the responsibility of raising a child. Elizabeth Berrington, Sharon D. Clarke, Maria Doyle Kennedy, William Thomas, and Arwel Gruffydd also star.

The Parenting (movie, March 13, Max) In this made-for-TV feature film, a young gay couple, Rohan and Josh (Nik Dodani and Brandon Flynn), rent a country house to host a weekend getaway with their respective parents, only to discover that the three couples are sharing the space with a 400-year-old evil entity. Directed by Craig Johnson, this horror comedy has automatic ā€œfanā€ appeal provided by its stars ā€“ especially Flynn (ā€œ13 Reasons Whyā€), who has acquired a gay heartthrob status that stretches beyond his ā€œqueer youthā€ demographic ā€“ and its embrace of the always popular (if campy) ā€œhaunted houseā€ genre. It also boasts an impressive supporting cast, including Parker Posey (ā€œBest in Show,ā€ ā€œThe White Lotusā€), Brian Cox (ā€œSuccessionā€), Lisa Kudrow (ā€œFriends,ā€ ā€œRomy and Micheleā€™s High School Reunionā€), Dean Norris (ā€œBreaking Bad,ā€ ā€œClawsā€), and Edie Falco (ā€œThe Sopranos,ā€ ā€œNurse Jackieā€). It should be fun.

Oā€™Dessa (movie, March 20, Hulu) An ambitious project from writer/director Geremy Jasper, this self-described ā€œpost-apocalyptic musical dramaā€ follows a farm girl in the future as ā€œshe goes on a journeyā€ in search of ā€œa family heirloomā€ while attempting to ā€œrescue her one true love.ā€ Developed by Disneyā€™s ā€œprestigeā€ Searchlight Pictures division and featuring a music-and-song score by Jasper and Jason Binnick, it premiered a mere week ago at 2025ā€™s South by Southwest Festival and stars Sadie Sink (ā€œStranger Thingsā€) alongside Regina Hall (ā€œScary Movie,ā€ ā€œGirlsā€™ Tripā€), Murray Bartlett (ā€œLooking,ā€ ā€œThe White Lotusā€), Kelvin Harrison, Jr. (ā€œElvis,ā€ ā€œChevalierā€), and singer-songwriter Pokey LaFarge.

Dope Thief (miniseries, March 14, Apple TV) A novel by Dennis Tafoya is the inspiration for this gritty miniseries about a pair of former hoods who pose as DEA agents for a robbery and discover the biggest secret drug operation on Americaā€™s Eastern Seaboard. This one makes our list solely because of the star power of its headliner, acclaimed out Black actor Brian Tyree Henry (ā€œAtlantaā€, ā€œEternalsā€), who gives a rock solid performance alongside co-star Wagner Moura. Also featuring power players like Ving Rhames (ā€œPulp Fictionā€) and Kate Mulgrew (ā€œStar Trek: Voyager,ā€ ā€œOrange is the New Blackā€), as well as Amir Arison, Marin Ireland, and Nesta Cooper, itā€™s the kind of tense-but-engrossing, character-driven crime drama that long-form TV narratives seem to pull off better than any other platform.

RuPaulā€™s Drag Race Live (special, March 16, WOW Presents Plus) Fans of the iconic RuPaul wonā€™t want to miss this special event broadcast, when the 1,000th performance of the groundbreaking ā€œreality competitionā€ showā€™s live residency at Las Vegasā€™s Flamingo Resort will air on World of Wonderā€™s WOW Presents Plus platform. Featuring choreography from Jamal Sims, direction from RuPaul, and performances by current cast of Queens Asia Oā€™Hara, Ginger Minj, Jaida Essence Hall, Kylie Sonique Love, Morphine Love Dion, and Plane Jane, along with multiple special surprise guests spectators, sickening lip-syncs, and the ever-popular (and ever-handsome) Pit Crew, itā€™s undoubtedly going to be the next best thing to being there.

The Residence (series, March 20, Netflix) As if weā€™re not seeing enough drama from the White House these days, Netflix is delivering this mystery miniseries about a fictional murder investigation among the staff of Americaā€™s most famous mansion, from none other than the popular Shonda Rhimes-led powerhouse Shondaland production company (ā€œGreyā€™s Anatomy,ā€ ā€œHow to Get Away With Murder,ā€ ā€œBridgertonā€). Starring Udo Adubo (ā€œOrange is the New Blackā€) as its leading sleuth, it also boasts an ensemble cast that includes Giancarlo Esposito (ā€œBreaking Bad,ā€ ā€œThe Mandalorianā€), Susan Kelechi Watson (ā€œThis Is Usā€), Jason Lee (ā€œMy Name is Earlā€), Ken Marino (ā€œThe State,ā€ ā€œThe Other Twoā€), Randall Park (ā€œFresh Off the Boatā€) and Bronson Pinchot (ā€œPerfect Strangersā€), among many others. As if that werenā€™t enough, it promises appearances from beloved ā€œSNLā€ alums Jane Curtin and Al Franken, as well as a guest starring turn by Kylie Minogue herself, which in itself is more than enough reason to include it on any list of must-see queer TV, if you ask us.

Mid-Century Modern (series, March 28, Hulu) The most eagerly anticipated queer entry of the spring TV season comes late in the line-up, but it is sure to be worth the wait. Centered on three best friends – all gay men of ā€œa certain ageā€ ā€“ shaken by an unexpected death, who decide to spend their golden years living together in Palm Springs, it’s a comedy that celebrates chosen family while also poking fun at the foibles of ā€œthe rich gaysā€ (as Jennifer Coolidgeā€™s Tonya McQuaid might brand them). It’s probably the closest thing weā€™ll ever see to the ā€œGay Golden Girlsā€ remake for which so many among us have long dreamed ā€“ and with a cast led by Nathan Lane, Matt Bomer, Nathan Lee Graham, and the late Linda Lavin, odds are good that it can match the high expectations that surround it. Also featuring a roster of guest stars that includes Pamela Adlon, Vanessa Bayer, Kimberly Coles, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Judd Hirsch, Richard Kind, Stephanie Koenig, Billie Lourd, Esther Moon Wu, Jaime Moyer, Cheri Oteri, Rhea Perlman, Zane Phillips, and more.

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Television

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€™ (Photos 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 those 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, and the ā€œMonsterā€ franchise is a natural progression, which employs 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. 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, but the controversies have come just 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 perceived distortion of facts ā€” which here support a narrative, favoring the boysā€™ version of events, that Murphy (who co-wrote the series as well as producing it) 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 crescendos: they mine it for black humor and milk it for emotional intensity, matching a visual aesthetic that 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. Less obvious, but perhaps more to the true point of the project, the series fixates on the messy, petty, and ignoble traits of its characters, and illuminate the self-serving 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 men ā€œcouldnā€™t be rapedā€); and 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 enough with to make allowances for artistic intention, then ā€œMonstersā€ may not be for you.Ā 

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 particular praise for a jaw-dropping star turn by Koch, who monologues his way through a full-length one-shot episode that was 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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