househuntermd · 2 months ago
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Just finished S4E12 where House gets all upset that his boy bestie Wilson is dating Amber through the entire episode. Then he deduces that Wilson is basically dating House because Amber is almost exactly like House. This leads Wilson to say “Why not date you?” and “We’re a couple” to House. Cuddy has to reasure House that Wilson is still gonna be his bestie and they will continue to have their codependent toxic relationship. And, to top off EVERYTHING, at the end of the episode he finds out 13 is bi and WINKS AT HER after making a joke about knowing she’s bi??
House you’re so bisexual it hurts.
This is by far the gayest episode of House I have ever seen. There’s no way the writers didn’t know what they were doing
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holyblanchett · 11 days ago
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I'm just.... yup, I'm just gonna leave this right here.
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deafcrystal1994 · 1 month ago
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What the heck was thaaaat?! Marvel cannot just film that and then just be showing it on Disney like that without a warning. My god they were practically having sex for almost an hour. Aubrey Plaza I’m on my knees and about to to get violent.
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That was so gay and it’s only the first episode I know real Marvel is back. And for Kathryn Hahn, never got the thing everyone had for Agatha earlier but now I certainly do. Worst part is that I watched it next to my mom.
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unblissfulawareness · 2 months ago
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So disappointed when fandoms don’t run with the canon mpreg we are gifted
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elcomfortador · 1 year ago
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This is a scene from the American Dad episode “Blood Crieth Unto Heaven,” which is both a celebration of and a send-up of theater. Normally, on an animated show, basically anything can happen. By reimagining American Dad as a live stage play, however, this episode lets itself be restrained by the rules of an actual theater, which makes for some weird and creative reinterpretations of how cartoon sitcom standards like cutaways and rapid scene changes. As a result, we get something that is both technically ambitious but also constantly showing the rough edges that come out when you’re forcing one medium into another that can’t accommodate it.
As we discuss with our guest for this episode, Johnny LaZebnik, this is also an example of not only why American Dad is a good show but also why it’s not the Family Guy clone some people might assume it is. It does weird things that no other animated sitcom does, to the point that ‘high concept” becomes the default from this episode on.
Have a listen!
Subscribe to Gayest Episode Ever: Apple Podcasts / Spotify / Google Podcasts
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jessicatates · 4 months ago
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travsd · 2 years ago
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Thanks Drew Mackie for mentioning my blogpost about The Addams Family vs The Munsters on this recent edition of “The Gayest Episode Ever” on Tablecakes. The episode in question relates to the new Netflix show Wednesday, an Addams Family spin-off, with many episodes directed by Tim Burton. Ted Biaselli, director of original series at Netflix, is the guest. You can hear it here. That same blogpost…
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autumngravity · 2 months ago
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youtube
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thehammyyammy · 5 months ago
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screechingfromthevoid · 2 months ago
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y'all didn't tell me about spin the bottle. How am I supposed go on like this.
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simpletailoring · 3 months ago
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so many other shows, movies, videos I could watch now that I finally finished ds9!
instead I am watching s2e22 of ds9. again.
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daftmooncretin · 2 years ago
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60’s star trek’s list of things that are allowed:
gay people ❌
guy x sentient cloud of yellow disco haze (don’t worry though its a lady cloud!) ✅
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shitpostingkats · 1 year ago
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Yes, Ai, you're intentionally dressed like a fruit salad, we GET it.
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elcomfortador · 1 year ago
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In 1991, Fox attempted to sell audiences on a spinoff to Married... With Children called Top of the Heap, centered around Kelly Bundy's one-off boyfriend Vinnie Verducci, who was played by Matt LeBlanc. It only lasted six episode, but if you're a fan of Married, it's worth checking out because it very much has the mood and humor of the mothership show. (And it's streaming for free on Crackle.)
I'm sharing this scene, from the show's second episode, because not only is it a few more minutes with Christina Applegate's iconic Kelly Bundy, but also it does something interesting with Mona Mullins, the walking jailbait joke played by a pre-Chasing Amy Joey Lauren Adams. In most of the show, Mona exists only to be super sexualized, in a way that makes me think they were trying to give the show its own Kelly Bundy without really understanding what made Kelly a popular character. But in this scene, Mona gets to interact with another female character, and rather than regarding each other as rivals, they see in each other a kindred spirit. It's a very sweet moment for 90s sitcom tramps, honestly.
We cover Top of the Heap on Backdoor Pilots, a Patreon-only spinoff to my regular podcast, Gayest Episode Ever, so if you're ever curious about TV spinoffs and why some work and others don't, give it a listen.
Subscribe to Gayest Episode Ever: Apple Podcasts / Spotify / Google Podcasts
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hsmtmts-arrows · 1 year ago
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"i like all of the women. almost all of the women, i like" and from that moment onwards. i was a madlyn shipper.
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pretentiouswreckingball · 21 days ago
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Down
Down
Down the road
Down the witches road
follow me, my friend
To glory at the end!!!!
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