『Gayest Episode Ever』のカバーアート

Gayest Episode Ever

Gayest Episode Ever

著者: Drew Mackie & Glen Lakin
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Back in the day, a major sitcom doing a gay episode was a big deal. A proper gay episode would get headlines, but it would get the attention of two young guys who were still figuring things out — sexuality-wise and culture-wise. Gayest Episode Ever has screenwriter Glen Lakin and stay-at-home journalist Drew Mackie going through the great and not-so-great gay episodes of sitcoms past.All rights reserved アート 社会科学
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  • The Golden Girls Meet a Gay… for the Final Time?
    2025/12/10

    "The Artist" (December 19, 1987)

    Over the years, we've shared a lot of laughs with the girls on the laini, but our journey with the four horniest seniors in the history of Miami has come to an end, as "The Artist" is the final gay episode of The Golden Girls that we have much to say about. It's a slight episode, in terms of gay rep, but it actually has a lot to say about the show and the way gay men relate to it, we'd rager.

    Links what Drew discusses:
    Drew on Super Mario Moment podcast (video and audio)
    Drew on Cinema Oblivia
    Drew on Call Me By Your Game
    Drew on What a Cartoon

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    1 時間 10 分
  • Happy Endings Comes Out for Thanksgiving
    2025/11/27

    "More Like Skanksgiving" (November 20, 2012)

    Here you have it: the one other gay-themed Thanksgiving episode of a sitcom. Three seasons in, this one reveals heretofore-unheard canon that the Happy Endings characters exist as they do solely as a result of MTV's The Real World — and that Max things he might have been the first gay person on TV. Meanwhile, no one is remarking how Jane's 2002 raver outfit is one of the more explicitly bisexual things she's ever done on this show, and we at one point meet her ex-girlfriend.

    Listen to our previous Happy Endings episode, and if this one isn't Thanksgiving enough for you, check out our Bob's Burgers bi Thanksgiving extravaganza.

    We have episode transcripts courtesy of Sarah Neal. Our logo was designed by Rob Wilson. This episode's art was designed by Ian O'Phelan. Sound cues for this podcast were composed by Meika Grimm.

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    1 時間 21 分
  • The Gay Subtext of Dobie Gillis, TV's First Teen Sitcom
    2025/11/12

    "The Ruptured Duck" (October 10, 1961)

    On the surface, The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis tells the story of a teen boy who falls in love with every girl except Zelda Gilroy, who pines for him hopelessly. All of this is complicated by the fact that the Sheila Keuhl, the actor who played Zelda was in real life a gay woman who ultimately lost out on getting her own spinoff because she didn't fit the idea for what a leading lady was in the early 1960s. But Keuhl got the last laugh IRL, and Zelda Gilroy's queer adjacent legacy lives on in Velma from Scooby-Doo.

    We have episode transcripts courtesy of Sarah Neal. Our logo was designed by Rob Wilson. This episode's art was designed by Ian O'Phelan. Sound cues for this podcast were composed by Meika Grimm.

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    1 時間 29 分
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