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“Queer As Folk” Is Rebooted As A Classic Once Again
In its third iteration, <i>Queer as Folk</i> lets its queerness shine brighter than ever.

“Queer As Folk” Is Rebooted As A Classic Once Again

Queer as Folk returns with a bang

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The massacre that becomes a focal point of this series is complicated, as the show quickly establishes that it has a strong moral stance on profiting off queer tragedy, yet frequently uses it to propel its plot and characters forward in a way that doesn’t always appear genuine. The show is quick to say what is right and wrong, but then exhibit some problematic behavior.

In the first episode, Brodie meets Mingus, Fin Argus’s high schooler trying to enter their first drag show, when they have a sexual encounter in the bathroom before the shooting. It is soon revealed that Mingus is a minor, and Brodie is not, and almost everyone in the show brushes it off. Sure, the character turns 18 during the first season, but do we really need another show with a minor having sex with an adult?

This murky area of consent is explored more with Brodie and Julian, when he hires a sex worker to help his brother with cerebral palsy get laid. Julian, understandably, gets upset when he finds out he only had sex with the super hot man he met in the bar because he was paid to do so. However, not a single conversation about the consent of it all is ever really had, and the very iffy situation is kind of forgotten about.

When Noah, played by Johnny Sibilly, is shown to have a meth problem early on that is exacerbated by the shooting and death of his boyfriend, it simply goes away after he confesses his usage, not addressing the serious party-and-play problem in the queer community and brushing over what seemed to be a serious addiction based in trauma.

The best parts of the show happen when it gets to be alive

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The queer characters at the heart of QAF make this show worthwhile and worth watching. Despite its messy stances and somewhat preachy moments, the queerness at the center of this show is truly spectacular, showing LGBTQ+ people in ways that have never been seen before on television.

From its depiction of queer sex to the trials of queer and trans parenting and positive representation of LGBTQ+ people with disabilities, this show instantly has become a revolutionary and necessary addition to the queer canon. 

Like its predecessors, its sex scenes are amazing and much needed in a world dominated by watered-down depictions of queer life onscreen. Ryan O’Connell and Eric Graise wonderfully show the unique worlds that queer people with disabilities inhabit, with the love that fills those worlds being some of the shows best moments.

However, the mass shooting that incites the first season really just didn’t need to be there, because its cast could make the most mundane of stories soar.

Jesse James Keitel is a star who needs to rule the world

Peacock / Alyssa Moran/Peacock

The first noticeable joy of QAF is easily Jesse James Keitel, who plays Ruthie, the trans bestie of our main character, Brodie, who mark my words will one day rule the world. The entire cast is stellar from start to finish, but it soon becomes clear that this is Keitel’s world, and we are all just ugly little guests in it.

As Ruthie, Keitel inhabits the complicated grounds of becoming a trans mother and trying to figure out their place as a parent and life partner, while also trying to deal with an insanely difficult trauma that bubbles throughout the show. Most of Ruthie’s storyline revolves around Brodie, whose very messy life often conflicts with hers and her partner’s, the also amazing “zaddy” Shar, played by CG, who often fills the role of “bad cop” while following Ruthie and Brodie’s trail of chaos.

Keitel absolutely dominates every scene she’s in, with her depiction of trans sex and her fears of becoming a terrible parent, and the everyday struggles of queerness quickly establish her as a dynamic and engrossing character. While her talent clearly helps portray Ruthie, there is a daringness to her that is rare to find.

A messy, yet necessary work of LGBTQ+ art

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While Queer as Folk is a flawed show, it is an essential one that hopefully will continue on for many years. 

The problems at the television show’s core are not death warrants, with the potential of its writing and cast easily talented enough to propel this show to one of the greatest shows of all time, if it can get out of its own way. 

The show shines its brightest when its characters get to laugh, cry, and fight over the little everyday things that most of its LGBTQ+ audience at home deals with too, and hopefully the show will continue to show the much need

Looking for more ways to get involved? Check out all of BuzzFeed’s posts celebrating Pride 2022.

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My Fake Boyfriend, a new LGBTQ rom-com from BuzzFeed Studios starring Keiynan Lonsdale, Dylan Sprouse, and Sarah Hyland, is out June 17 in the US — just in time for Pride! Sign up for Prime Video now so you’re ready to watch.

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Not in the US? My Fake Boyfriend is coming to Prime Video in the UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, LatAm, and Brazil on June 10, and all other territories on June 24.