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Gayest Episode Ever

Gayest Episode Ever

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Gayest Episode Ever posts

What Should Drew & Glen Talk About This Month?

Vote for as many as you like. I did nix some of the suggestions however, so these represent the options that I think would make for the best episodes. If you want to know why yours didn't make the cut, hit me up or post in the comments.


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Two and a Half Men Meets a Trans Man

“An Old Flame With a New Wick” (March 1, 2004)

Despite the preconceptions you might have about Two and a Half Men, the fact remains that its first season features an episode centered on a trans man when few other sitcoms ever bothered to tell a story about someone who’s trans and male. In fact, the previous sitcom of note to do a trans man storyline was the previous episode we had guest Henry Giardina on for: ...

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What should Drew and Glen talk about this month?

Drop a suggestion in the comments!

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PREVIEW: Weirdest Episode Ever: Darkwing Duck Goes to Twin Peaks

This is a preview for the Weirdest Episode Ever about the time Darkwing Duck did a parody of Twin Peaks. The full episode is an exclusive for patrons pledging $5 or more a month, but this preview is going on the other Patreon tiers both as an enticement and also because I share some quotes from Tad Stones, creator of Darkwing Duck, about how this strange piece of TV came to be. If you want to hear the full episode, head over to 2023-04-28 05:33:03 +0000 UTC View Post

Green Acres Never Did a Gay Episode

“What’s in a Name?” (February 16, 1966)

On a show all about the zany inhabitants of Hooterville, Ralph Monroe (Mary Grace Canfield) stands out because the most unusual thing about her is her name. She works as a carpenter and dresses for her work, but that name alone is enough that most Hootervillians don’t know what pronoun to use for her. As we discuss with special guest Josh Trujillo, Ralph is not a tr...

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Weirdest Episode Ever: Darkwing Duck Goes to Twin Peaks

“Twin Beaks” (February 10, 1992)

At the same time, it makes perfect sense and it seems very strange that a children’s cartoon would parody Twin Peaks, but that is exactly what Darkwing Duck did, waterlogged corpse wrapped in plastic and everything. For this bonus WEE, you get not only the history of both Darkwing Duck and Twin Peaks, but also you get to hear bits of an interview about it that Drew did with Darkwing creator Tad Stones back in 2014… and have never seen the light o...

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Cinema Oblivia

In case you still haven't had enough of me, I am also on the newest episode of Cinema Oblivia discussing SWITCHBLADE SISTERS, the 1975 girl gang flick. Video clip above, listen to the episode here.

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Bosom Buddies Never Did a Gay Episode

“Sonny Boy” (February 12, 1981)

Is it surprising that TV’s most famous drag sitcom never dared to do anything actually gay? It shouldn’t be! And for all that could end up going wrong with this premise, this episode, concerning Peter Scolari’s character having to explain to his mother why he’s wearing a dress, weirdly (and probably accidentally) gets a lot right about coming out. It’s a story about someone saying it doesn’t matter whether anyone understands your decision....

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Drew on Teen Creeps

I am still editing this week's episode, but if you absolutely need voices in your ears, my episode of the Teen Creeps podcast is live, and you can hear me talk to someone who is not Glen!

Listen here or also other places.

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Bosom Buddies

Today is my edit day, but I'm actually going to be away from my desk for a bit being a guest on a different podcast, so this week's episode won't be available until mid-Wednesday. As an apology, please enjoy the episode we're covering: the season one Bosom Buddies, titled "Sonny Boy."

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The Cartoons That Made Us Gay: Biker Mice from Mars

“Pitfall” (April 14, 1995)

Sure, the series Biker Mice From Mars only exists because someone asked “What if Ninja Turtles, only with bikers and some other animal?” but it at least gets some bonus points for some of the most human-passible anthropomorphic animal torsos of the era. We talk about the fuckability of these cartoon heroes but also the history of biker culture and why dudes dressed up in leather gear are sometimes gay but not always.

This episode was, in fact, th...

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Parks & Recreation Marries Gay Penguins

“Pawnee Zoo” (September 17, 2009)

Okay, fine, we did the Parks & Rec episode you asked for, but here’s the thing: The one where Leslie Knope marries gay penguins is not the pro-gay piece of TV history you think it is. Nowhere in this episode does Leslie ever say she gives a single squirt about gays or same-sex marriage. In fact, the episode never takes a position, and the fact that it won a GLAAD Media Award makes it all the more galling that “Pawnee Zoo” plays out as Lesl...

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John Goodman Played Gay on Normal, Ohio

“Caught on Tape” (November 15, 2000)

John Goodman’s follow-up sitcom to Roseanne was Normal, Ohio, which only lasted seven episodes before Fox yanked it from its schedule in late 2000. Unfortunately, the take-away from its failure was that audiences wouldn’t buy a guy like Goodman playing gay, which is perhaps not one of the problems this show needed to fix? This week, special guest / homosexual academic Hollis Gri...

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Brothers Brings a Sitcom Sensibility to Gay Bashing

“It Only Hurts When I’m Gay” (October 25, 1985)

On paper, the idea of a sitcom taking on the subject of gay bashing seems like the worst idea, but somehow Brothers — TV’s first gay sitcom — manages to tell a real story about violence against gay people while avoiding the hokey “very special episode” tropes. We’re as shocked as anyone how good this turned out, and what’s more, it’s genuinely funny without underselling the gravity of the attack.

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Hollywood Hammylon

The larger version of the Miss Piggy art Ian did. It's actually parodying the cover of  Hollywood Babylon!


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Barney Miller Protects the Rights of Gay Parents

“The Child-Stealers” (January 24, 1980)

A hundred episodes and one pandemic later, we’re finally returning to the least offensive police precinct in TV history. This sixth-season episode sees the return of Marty and Daryl, the recurring homos at the center of the previous Barney Miller we covered. What results is an interesting look at how police are able and sometimes unable to intervene with homophobia keeps a parent from seeing their child.

Listen to 2023-03-22 00:01:35 +0000 UTC View Post

LUCY!

The episode running on the free feed this week is the I Love Lucy installment of WEE, and here's the art Ian did of Lucy being Lucy. This is all I have for now! But I am feeling less gross! So that's something!

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Miss Piggy Is a Gay Icon

“First Show” (May 14, 1989)

Better known by the segment title, Miss Piggy’s Hollywood, this mostly forgotten bit of TV history aired on NBC in 1989 and more or less works out to be the thing Drew and Glen dreamed into existence: The Comeback but with Miss Piggy. In this half-hour, you see Miss Piggy repeatedly try to assert herself in Hollywood, only to be knocked down every time. Gee, is there a reason gay men are drawn to this character who’s seeking acceptance from a society ...

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New episode Wednesday / Patreon billing paused / tanuki

Hi all. I think I'm finally back on track. The next regular GEE will be on the Patreon feed this Wednesday. Also, I've paused billing for the next month, just because it's been slow on here. You essentially get a free month.

Also, during the downtime when audio editing and recording was just next to impossible to do, I finished a research / writing project about how SMB3 maybe changed pop culture's understanding of tanuki. It's LOOOONG (7,000-ish words), but if you like my style of pop ...

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The nightmare version of Rudy Huxtable

The solution for the main feed this week was to put the Weirdest Episode Ever about the Muppets on The Cosby Show on the main feed. Still not clear when we're recording next, but since it went on the feed, Ian did art of Rudy dressed up as the mean nurse. Now this is a thing that exists.

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And... No Episode This Week, Either

Whelp, as if this week wasn't enough, I also tested positive for covid this morning. Glen is testing negative for now, and so for obvious reasons we will not be recording in the immediate future. 

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Why There Wasn’t an Episode This Week

Hi. This is something I haven’t told most people, but to a degree I have a contract with you patrons, so here’s a quick explanation of why our schedule was disrupted this week and might be in the near future. I found out last week that Thurman has liver cancer, and the process of determining what can and should be done about that has taken up a lot of my time. On top of that, I also developed a weird skin rash all over the right side of my body that is painful and also super gross. It’s...

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No Episode This Week :(

Hi. We have to take an unplanned bye this week. We will be back next week with a new GEE about Miss Piggy. It won't suck, I swear. If you're seeing this in your feed and you subscribe beneath the $5 level, you can now listen to the tenth and final installment of Weirdest Episode Ever here. That counts for something, right?

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Weirdest Episode Ever: The Cosby Show Has a Nightmare — This Time With Muppets!

“Cliff’s Nightmare” (January 11, 1990)

How do you follow up an mpreg fantasy that also functions as a subconscious exploration of Bill Cosby’s alleged misdeeds? How about an aborted crossover intended to promote Jim Henson’s strangest TV experiment? We couldn’t get to the bottom of exactly how this Cosby Show episode came to be and then came to air, but we can safely say that we understand why Digit and Leon didn’t crossover into the larger Muppet universe.

This mini...

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Night Court Did a Trans Episode, But Let’s Talk About This Episode Instead

“Bull Gets a Kid” (November 8, 1984)

For our second look at Night Court, we opted not for the so-so trans episode “Best of Friends,” which doesn’t really improve on the “my buddy is in town and it turns out is trans” plotline done so well by The Jeffersons. Instead, we are looking at a non-gay, non-trans episode guest starring Bobby Hill herself, Pamela Adlon, as a young girl who pretends to be a boy. There’s actually a lot going on here about gender norms that makes for...

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The Perils of Brandon, Punky Brewster's Dog

Here's the supercut I made of The Perils of Punky showing where poor Brandon was reacting in earnest to loud noises, screaming children and a giant spider. You can't explain to a dog that you're doing a horror this week and that it all isn't real. 

RIP, Brandon.

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Weirdest Episode Ever: Punky Brewster and Cave of Horrors

“The Perils of Punky” (October 20, 1985)

This might be the most famous weird episode of any TV show ever, and with good reason: it is utterly inexplicable how this parade of horrors came to be. It would be weird for any sitcom to deliberately scare its viewers, much less a show that catered specifically to kids. Wait, is the shared trauma of this Punky Brewster the reason why millennials can’t stop talking about old TV? No, really — is this why???

Most of the quotes used i...

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Before Balki, Bronson Pinchot Played Gay on Sara

“You Can’t Win ’Em All” (February 27, 1985)

Sara is a one-season sitcom that first came to our attention via a gag on The Simpsons, the context being that it wasn’t a show worth remembering. The Simpsons was wrong, however, and this Geena Davis vehicle does a lot of what we think ’80s sitcoms don’t do. Namely, it has an out gay character who is allowed to have a sex drive. He’s also more than a set of stereotypical mannerisms but he still reads as gay. And Bronson Pincho...

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Weirdest Episode Ever: Two Guys, a Girl and a Post-Scream Slasher Halloween

“Two Guys, a Girl and a Psycho Halloween” (October 28, 1998)

It didn’t want to be Friends. It really tried to give the cast real jobs, at the very least. But in the end, Two Guys, a Girl and a Pizza Place lost the workplace setting and added three more characters, essentially becoming another Friends wannabe. Along the way, however, it had some genuinely funny episodes and even did a non-canonical Halloween special that killed off the entire cast in the style of Scream-inspired 90...

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Roger or ______?

Thought I'd share the non-cropped version of the American Dad art that Ian drew for us. I really dig it. It's a riff on the poster for the 1953 movie Glen or Glenda, and I really love the details Ian brought in from the original.


Follow Ian's SFW IG here. There's also a NSFW one...

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