Celebrate Pride on Netflix With These Movies and Shows | The Little Binger

Celebrate Pride on Netflix With These Movies and Shows

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Happy Pride, Bingers! Every June, we celebrate Pride Month worldwide. This is the perfect time to recognize, acknowledge, and flaunt our colors! Traditionally, I attend the Pride March in the Philippines. But given the COVID situation, all gatherings were cancelled and so is the Pride March. But that’s not a problem, I have curated series and movies on Netflix that celebrate and tell diverse, inclusive, and authentic stories of the LGBTQIA+ community where I proudly belong. So, ready to expand your binge list? Let’s go!

  1. RuPaul’s Drag Race: All Stars 5
    Ohhhh gurl, she done already done had herses! Get ready to werk the runway in your fiercest looks with a new season of All Stars! In this new season, the franchise’s most notable queens will return to the werk room to prove to Mama Ru why they deserve the crown and a coveted spot in the “Drag Race Hall of Fame.”  Who are you rooting so far? Me? #TeamShea

    RuPauls Drag Race All Stars 5 | The Little Binger
    RuPauls Drag Race All Stars 5 | The Little Binger
  2. Queer Eye (Season 5)
    Yas, henny! The Fab Five are back for another season filled with tears, witty catchphrases, and lots of self-love. In Season 5, the Fab Five head to historic Philadelphia to make over a new cast of everyday heroes, from a hardworking DJ to a struggling dog groomer.

    Queer Eye Season 5 | The Little Binger | Credit: Netflix
    Queer Eye Season 5 | The Little Binger | Credit: Netflix
  3. The Politician (Season 2) 
    Ryan Murphy’s juicy world of high-school politics returns, this time with bigger stakes than ever before. Double crosses, a three-way relationship and a single-issue candidate add up to a mud-slinging race for State Senate that Payton (Ben Platt) will do anything to win.

    The Politician Season 2 | The Little Binger | Credit: Netflix
    The Politician Season 2 | The Little Binger | Credit: Netflix
  4. The Half of It
    This heartwarming drama tells the story of Ellie, a shy, straight-A student who helps sweet jock Paul woo his crush. But their unlikely friendship grows complicated when Ellie falls for the same girl.
  5. Feel Good
    This deeply personal dramedy stars comedian Mae Martin as Mae, a rising talent on the stand-up circuit and recovering addict whose addictive behaviors and intense romanticism dominate every single part of her life. When she meets pragmatic but so far heterosexual George (Charlotte Ritchie), she’s instantly smitten. They embark on an intoxicating romance as Mae juggles relationships with her parents, fellow addicts in a drugs support group, her colleagues at the local stand up club, and most importantly tries to transform her relationship with George from an addictive one to a healthy one. But the real question is, can Mae replace a toxic addiction to love with love itself?
  6. Circus of Books
    For 35-plus years, the gay porn shop Circus of Books gave Los Angeles’ LGBT+ community a space to socialize and celebrate themselves without judgement. Unbeknownst to many customers, the store was cultivated by owners Karen and Barry Mason, a straight, mainstream couple with three children who went to religious school and were unaware of their parents’ business. While maintaining the secret, they witnessed the dawn of the HIV/AIDS epidemic firsthand, losing a generation of treasured employees. Still, during that time, they never identified as activists — just everyday entrepreneurs catering to a market, until the Internet destroyed it. Executive produced by Ryan Murphy, Circus of Books is the debut documentary from artist Rachel Mason, who finally asks the least radical people she knows — her parents — how they became America’s biggest distributors of gay porn, and why Karen reacted so negatively when her own son came out of the closet.
  7. Hannah Gadsby: Douglas
    Emmy- and Peabody Award-winning comedian Hannah Gadsby stopped the comedy world in its tracks with her genre bending show, Nanette. Having given herself her very own tough act to follow, she named her difficult second album after her eldest dog and took it for a walk across the planet, finishing up in Los Angeles and recording her second Netflix comedy special, Hannah Gadbsy: Douglas. You can expect your expectations to be set and met by Douglas: a tour from the dog park to the renaissance and back guided by one of comedy’s most sparkling and surprising minds.
  8. Secret Love
    This film tells an incredible love story between Terry Donahue and Pat Henschel, whose relationship spans nearly seven decades. Terry played in the women’s professional baseball league, inspiring the hit movie, A League of Their Own. But the film did not tell the real-life story of the women who remained closeted for most of their lives. This documentary follows Terry and Pat back to when they met for the first time, through their professional lives in Chicago, coming out to their conservative families and grappling with whether or not to get married. Facing the hardships of aging and illness, their love proves resilient as they enter the home stretch.
  9. Disclosure
    Disclosure is an unprecedented, eye-opening look at transgender depictions in film and television, revealing how Hollywood simultaneously reflects and manufactures our deepest anxieties about gender. Leading trans thinkers and creatives, including Laverne Cox, Lilly Wachowski, Yance Ford, Mj Rodriguez, Jamie Clayton, and Chaz Bono, share their reactions and resistance to some of Hollywood’s most beloved moments.

So, have you missed your favorite LGBTQIA+ content on Netflix? Sound off in the comment! Also, here’s a tip: Visit Netfilx.com/Pride for a variety of collections of LGBTQIA+ series, movies and documentaries.


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