2018 has been a banner year for hot queer people on theo eroticism music churchtelevision. Growing up as a queer kid, this was kind of all I ever wanted (besides being accepted for "who I was," blah blah blah).
But that's the not the only form of progress. Wherever you look (that's not the Trump White House), queer people have been making headway — in Congress, film, music, theater, and on social media.
The queers are taking over, and for good.
SEE ALSO: 'Queer Eye's Fab Five geek out over well-dressed Avengers and Iron Throne hopefulsJust look at all the strangely uplifting facts before us: Queer and trans people had a record-shattering year on television. They broke absurd amounts of ground in government. They made some charmingly slubby and kind cis men look handsome and good.
In the midst of this apocalypse, we had Janelle Monaé and Tessa Thompson locking eyes in hot pink vagina couture.
Here are the best queer moments in culture in 2018.
Congratulations to Sharice Davids, the first openly queer elected official from Kansas, and the first Native American woman elected to Congress. Plus, she's got guns (the good kind).
View this post on Instagram
Who cares what Kanye West thinks about anything when you have videos like this one?
They swapped spit, and it was extremely graphic and good.
The Miseducation of Cameron Postis nostalgic and thoughtful.Boy Erasedis a movie.
View this post on Instagram
How often do we see celebrity queer couples in the public eye, forget young adults? These two have great politics, a tender relationship, and wonderful fashion, especially for Los Angeles, where things can easily go sideways. For god's sake, they're currently reading Price of Salt together. Go to Instagram and watch them like each other's posts and support one another in the comments.
Known as the "lesbian Jesus," "Queero" Kiyoko had a groundbreaking year in music. Not only did she win MTV's Push Award, given to socially conscious artists who make progressive change, she accepted it with this line: "This validates any queer woman of color, that you can follow your dreams.”
Her debut studio album this year, Expectations,won critical acclaim and plenty of Instagram likes from one of the toughest critics in the industry (me).
Sometime in 2014, bisexual lighting, characterized by neon blue and pink light, became a meme on Twitter. The meme was borne out of an episode of the BBC's Sherlock where Watson appears to express homosexual desires for Holmes, all while bathed in pink and blue light. Pink and blue are colors of the bisexual flag.
We saw a lot of that lighting this year, including in the movie poster forBlack Pantherand in Janelle Monaé's music videos for Dirty Computer.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Rippon was America's first openly gay ice skater to perform at the Olympics. He turned down an invitation to meet with notorious homophobe Mike Pence, then heading the U.S. delegation. Both Kenworthy and Rippon treated us to a lot of adorable queer-affirming selfies and biting jokes on Twitter.
Democrat Krysten Sinema will be representing Arizona and all the queer government nerds desperate for representation.
Davis became famous among the Mike Huckabee set after she refused to sign marriage licenses for same-sex couples. In the 2018 election she lost to Democratic challenger Elwood Caudill Jr., by about 650 votes.
The movie's star, Daniela Vega, was also the first openly trans presenter in Oscars history.
Jacobson came out in an interview with Vanity Fair while promoting her movie 6 Balloons.She's bi, and she appears to be a great person. What a combo.
The man responsible for some of the New Yorker's best scoops and basically anything good on Twitter came out in a speech at an LGBTQ awards ceremony.
They both starred in Lizzie, the movie about the infamous, supposedly queer Lizzie Borden, rumored to have killed her parents with her maid and lover, Bridget.
Was the movie good? No, it was awful and monumentally tedious. I nearly fell asleep during the murder scene.
Still, I'm so here for queer romance on screen, especially when one of those actresses is actually queer.
According to a GLAAD report, 2018 was the best year yet for LGBTQ characters on broadcast television. The report found 8.8 percent of all regularly occurring characters on broadcast TV to be LGBTQ. And 50 percent of LGBTQ network regulars are now people of color.
The show, which features a record five actors, tells the story of New York City's ballroom scene in the 1980s. It's deliciously weepy and good.
A soon-to-be Academy Award-winning queer period drama? Yes, please!
Queer Eyeis the best thing to happen to toxic masculinity since forever. This season's cast was particularly woke, kind, and tender. They went deep into the heart of red America and brought out the best of that place.
For that, and for everything else on this list, we should be grateful. Here's to an even more magically queer 2019.
These Michelle Obama memes are the internet's coping mechanismMalia Obama snags movie studio internship for next moveEven Boston’s famous ducklings are wearing 'pussyhats'Twitter just isn't enough. President Trump takes to Snapchat.These Michelle Obama memes are the internet's coping mechanismHere's George W. Bush trying his best to figure out how ponchos work at the inaugurationObama's final tweets as president are a message of strength and hopeA robotic implant that hugs your heart could help it keep beatingPlane full of Women's March supporters headed to Washington, D.C. turns on pink cabin lightsTristan Trump stole the show from his grandpa on Inauguration DayUnicorn ramen is realAll the best protest signs from Women's Marches across AmericaHow to watch the Women's March on WashingtonThe moment Donald Trump became president of the United StatesParty planes full of 'nasty women' are heading to DCWhat does Samsung's Galaxy S8 need to make us forget about the Note7?Who pulled the bigger crowd: Trump or Obama?Black Lives Matter app lets social media users mark themselves 'unsafe' in AmericaDad uses HTC Vive to give daughter immersive VR tour of her dollhouseThe sun's poles have flipped. A spacecraft is watching what happens next. Counter Culture by Amie Barrodale and Clancy Martin Hell Is Other Cats by Sadie Stein Happy Birthday, J. P. Donleavy by Sadie Stein Let the Memory Live Again by Sadie Stein Paula Fox, Work in Progress by The Paris Review Letter from Jaipur by J. D. Daniels Salinger Letters, and Other News by Sadie Stein A World Without Books by Sadie Stein Jimmy Ernst, Untitled, 1976 by The Paris Review The Funnies by Tom Gauld See You There: Paris Review at the Downtown Literary Festival Tomorrow by The Paris Review Perspective by Sadie Stein Remote Viewing in the Sooner State by James McGirk New Emotion: On Kirill Medvedev by Lucy McKeon The Funnies, Part 3 by Tom Gauld Charlotte Brontë Poem at Auction, and Other News by Sadie Stein The Born Identity: An Interview with Sayed Kashua by Alice Greenberg Bull City Summer by Adam Sobsey In the Margins by Sadie Stein Paris Was Yesterday by Sadie Stein
0.8285s , 10223.6796875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【theo eroticism music church】,Feast Information Network