Friends and Modern Family Could Be Banned in Hungary For Promoting Homosexuality newsweek.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newsweek.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
19 TV Shows That Changed Everything for LGBTQ+ Representation Glamour 2 hrs ago Christopher Rosa
Slowly but surely, TV shows are doing a better job at depicting the full scope of the varied LGBTQ+ experience. Things started out small, with series like
Will & Grace and
Glee revealing slices of queer identity. Now sitcoms, dramas, and everything in between have expanded that showcase, dedicating themselves to getting representation right.
But we didn’t get there overnight, and there’s still more work to be done. However, these 19 TV shows, below, did more than just move the dial forward when it comes to LGBTQ+ representation on screen. They broke down the doors, and we should celebrate that.
How to Stream ‘Modern Family’ Without Cable in 2021
ABC
For 11 seasons, ABC sitcom
Modern Family was one of the most popular shows on TV. Since it ended, it’s remained a family-friendly favorite for comfort viewing. Here’s how you can stream
Modern Family even after you’ve cut the cord.
Hulu
Hulu
Subscribers to Hulu ($5.99+ per month after a 30-day free trial) can watch all 250 episodes of
Modern Family. Take in the antics of the various extended branches of the Pritchett/Dunphy clan, from family patriarch Jay (Ed O’Neill) to his younger kids and grandkids, some of whom grow from babies to adolescence over the course of the series.
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Liberals love to brag about how tolerant they can be as they arrogantly shove their beliefs down our throats. The only thing really shocking about the process anymore is how they still find ways to push the boundaries of society - and ABC s
Modern Family still aims to the trendsetter with the newest concept: raising kids to be gay.
In the episode “Do You Believe In Magic,” gay couple Cam (Eric Stonestreet) and Mitchell’s (Jesse Tyler Ferguson) friend Sal (Elizabeth Banks) drops off her son before the three head out for a Valentine’s Day lunch. Seems normal and all until this exchange.
Everyone knows 'Modern Family' is funny, winning and wise. But does this series somehow transcend politics, too? And if so, how does a half-hour sitcom do that in a day and age when the partisan divide in American life is said to be wider than at any time since the Civil War?