15 lesbian led TV shows & where to watch them
These series have lesbian main character energy.
November 10, 2025
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These series have lesbian main character energy.
The series helmed by lesbian comedian Tig Notaro had a mixed week.
Next month Amazon will debut One Mississippi, a new show featuring the lesbian comic that doesn't make her attraction to women the subject of every plot and punchline.
Liberal states stand out for passage of supportive laws, while the sheer volume of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation introduced in some conservative ones means many bills died there.
The Magnolia State's religious freedom bill goes further than any legislation before it in targeting LGBT people.
Fabian Nelson won the Democratic primary for his Mississippi House district and has no opposition in the general election.
The civil rights attorney took on Mississippi three times and won three times, though this decision came down to the wire.
A gay Republican from New York challenged Ted Cruz on how "religious liberty" laws will affect his own marriage.
That's raised concern among LGBTQ+ advocates at Delta State.
The state House gave final approval to the bill, which would allow for widespread discrimination by citing religious beliefs about marriage, sexuality, and gender.
Attorney General Merrick Garland said the guilty men “shamefully betrayed the oath they swore” to uphold the law.
The Mississippi bill would keep transgender girls out of girls' sports, while the South Dakota legislation is a so-called religious freedom measure that would enable discrimination.
Allowing health professionals to refuse services based on their religious objections will harm the most marginalized -- rural, poor, POC, queer folks.
Mississippi’s new law stands in contrast to the expanded federal rules against discrimination under Title IX.
"We want to be known as a welcoming state," Gov. Tom Wolf said.
Even marriage equality will not end the struggles that numerous families face daily.
Tuesday marks one month since 49 people were murdered inside an LGBT nightclub in Orlando. That's the same day Congress will debate a bill legalizing religion-based discrimination.
“These are human beings whether you believe in what they believe in,” said one councilmember.