Colleagues Sophie (Rosanny Zayas) and Alice (Leisha Hailey) are perfect examples of women from different generations supporting each other on "The L Word: Generation Q." There’s often a bitterness ...
With another season of The L Word: Generation Q on the way, fans are once again wondering who might appear on the show. The series is a revival of Showtime‘s 2004 series The L Word, featuring Jennifer ...
"I am making space for other stories," says the Showtime series regular and executive producer about how her fan-favorite character will appear for the remainder of the season. By Abbey White ...
Fans finally learned what happened to Jenny Schecter in the first season of The L Word: Generation Q after being left on a cliffhanger for a decade. But she was never mentioned again after that brief ...
Television I Was Worried High Potential's Finale Cliffhangers Would Take Forever To Get Resolved, But Kaitlin Olson Says Not So Fast Television Elsbeth's Kaya Is Already Returning For Season 3 After ...
Dina Paulson is a Film and TV Feature Writer for Collider. Her writing also appears in Cine Suffragette, FanFare, her blog, walk the line, and two poetry chapbooks, Parts of Love, and TOUCH / breaks ...
For Kate Moennig, getting to play lesbian icon Shane McCutcheon across two decades feels like a privilege. Now that she’s getting to do it again on the second season of The L Word: Generation Q, which ...
The ensemble of “L Word: Generation Q” is back for another season, and this time the sapphic circle of friends is tackling all things matrimonial. But not all is wedded bliss for the often ...
Dina Paulson is a Film and TV Feature Writer for Collider. Her writing also appears in Cine Suffragette, FanFare, her blog, walk the line, and two poetry chapbooks, Parts of Love, and TOUCH / breaks ...
Maybe it was the rumpled hair. Maybe it was the tiny, laced leather vest that barely qualified as a shirt. Or the leather cuff bracelets. Or the low voice. Or the androgynous name and look, still a ...
"We can clearly see how crucial it is to hear and to see one another's stories." When The L Word first premiered on Showtime in 2004, portrayals of queer characters were rare and one-sided. "So often ...