272 episodes

Back in the day, a major sitcom doing a gay episode was a big deal. A proper gay episode would get headlines, but it would get the attention of two young guys who were still figuring things out — sexuality-wise and culture-wise. Gayest Episode Ever has screenwriter Glen Lakin and stay-at-home journalist Drew Mackie going through the great and not-so-great gay episodes of sitcoms past.

Gayest Episode Ever Gayest Episode Ever Pro

    • TV & Film
    • 4.9 • 496 Ratings

Listen on Apple Podcasts
Requires subscription and macOS 11.4 or higher

Back in the day, a major sitcom doing a gay episode was a big deal. A proper gay episode would get headlines, but it would get the attention of two young guys who were still figuring things out — sexuality-wise and culture-wise. Gayest Episode Ever has screenwriter Glen Lakin and stay-at-home journalist Drew Mackie going through the great and not-so-great gay episodes of sitcoms past.

Listen on Apple Podcasts
Requires subscription and macOS 11.4 or higher

    Facts of Life Does a Covert Gay Episode With Cousin Geri

    Facts of Life Does a Covert Gay Episode With Cousin Geri

    “Cousin Geri” (December 24, 1980)
    Fun game for listeners: Take a shot every time Drew mentions the phrase “gigantic bitch” in connection with Lisa Welchel’s Blair, who is in rare form this episode as she shuns her disabled cousin Geri for reasons that aren’t the ones you’re probably assuming. In this discussion, we bring up why Geri Jewell is a trailblazer as far as being queer and also one other thing and also why “actress recurring on Deadwood” is lowkey code for lesbian.
    Erin Fletcher, we want you back for that Saved by the Bell episode.
    Follow: GEE on Facebook • GEE’s Facebook Group • GEE on Twitter • GEE on Instagram • Drew on Twitter • Glen on Twitter
    Listen: Apple Podcasts • Spotify • Google Podcasts • Himalaya • TuneIn
    And yes, we do have an official website! We even have episode transcripts courtesy of Sarah Neal. Our logo was designed by Rob Wilson. This episode’s art was designed by Ian O’Phelan.
    This is a TableCakes podcast.

    • 1 hr 43 min
    The Cartoons That Made Us Gay: Saint Seiya

    The Cartoons That Made Us Gay: Saint Seiya

    Have you ever heard of DEATH QUEEN ISLAND?

    Saint Seiya is one of the most popular, most long-running anime series that American viewers haven’t heard of. Despite immense popularity in Europe, South America and the parts of North America that aren’t the U.S. or Canada, the series took forever to get to English-speaking territories, as Knights of the Zodiac, and it just never took off the way it should have. That’s too bad, because Saint Seiya is very good and very gay. In this episode, we’re diving deep on one of the strangest sibling relationships ever depicted in mainstream anime: that of effeminate, beautiful Andromeda Shun and his hunky “brother,” Phoenix Ikki.

    These are the episodes we’re coving:
    S1E5, “Miraculous Revival WIth Cosmic Friendship”
    S1E6, “Phoenix: The Warrior Who’s Come Back From Hell”
    S1E7, “Gold Cloth Gets Stolen”
    S1E8, “Defeat the Shadow Army: Black Saints”
    S1E15, “The Mystery of Ikki Is Now Unveiled”

    Drawn Together Forces Xandir Out of the Closet

    Drawn Together Forces Xandir Out of the Closet

    “Gay Bash” (November 10, 2004)
    For better or worse, Drawn Together represents a very real trend in mid-2000s humor. It specifically sought out to tell the most offensive jokes it could get on air, but that’s what makes it surprising that the episode where Xandir admits he’s gay isn’t the parade of easy jokes you might expect. The B plot sucks rancid balls, to the point that we don’t even use clips from it in this discussion, but you might be surprised how this animated reality show makes its token gay a sympathetic guy.
    Check out Bradley Smith’s YouTube interview with series creators Dave Jesser and Matt Silvertsein, from which we grabbed a few anecdotes about the development of Drawn Together.
    Listen to our Cartoons That Made Us Gay episode about the Legend of Zelda cartoon.
    Listen to the Best Movies Never Made podcast, hosted by Golan the Insatiable creator Josh Miller.
    Go shop at our TeePublic store!
    Follow: GEE on Facebook • GEE’s Facebook Group • GEE on Twitter • GEE on Instagram • Drew on Twitter • Glen on Twitter
    Listen: Apple Podcasts • Spotify • Google Podcasts • Himalaya • TuneIn
    And yes, we do have an official website! We even have episode transcripts courtesy of Sarah Neal. Our logo was designed by Rob Wilson. This episode’s art was designed by Ian O’Phelan.

    • 1 hr 51 min
    Daria Should Have Kissed Jane Instead of Tom

    Daria Should Have Kissed Jane Instead of Tom

    “Dye! Dye! My Darling!” (August 2, 2000)
    Spend a little time in a Daria fan community and you’ll find folks who ship the title character with her best friend, Jane. The show actually never does a gay episode and only gets the slightest bit queer in the first movie, Is It Fall Yet?, which has Jane affirming her heterosexuality despite how very queer she might seem. In this episode, we’re discussing the nonetheless existent lesbian vibes between Daria and Jane — and who better to offer input on this than Talking Simpsons cohost Bob Mackey? Sure, he’s straight, but it turns out that straight men can relate to female characters too. (We were shocked!)
    As it turns out, Bob and Henry’s What a Cartoon podcast covers not only the Daria episode that immediately precedes this one, “Fire!” and also “The Misery Chick,” which as we discuss is a crucial turning point in the development of Daria Morgandorfer.
    This week, Glen and Drew are guests on Talking Simpsons, discussing "Three Gays of the Condo" and why it's not great! If you need more of our voices in your life, have a listen here.
    Go shop at our TeePublic store!
    Follow: GEE on Facebook • GEE’s Facebook Group • GEE on Twitter • GEE on Instagram • Drew on Twitter • Glen on Twitter
    Listen: Apple Podcasts • Spotify • Google Podcasts • Himalaya • TuneIn
    And yes, we do have an official website! We even have episode transcripts courtesy of Sarah Neal. Our logo was designed by Rob Wilson. This episode’s art was designed by Ian O’Phelan.

    • 2 hr 28 min
    Lucy Meets a Drag Queen

    Lucy Meets a Drag Queen

    “Lucy and Jim Bailey” (November 6, 1972)
    Basically, Lucille Ball did a solid for one gay performer, but in doing this, she also helped make gays a little less scary for America. Jim Bailey was a female impersonator who who had already made appearances on late night TV for this uncanny ability to turn himself into female celebs. Lucy, however, gave him a showcase on her popular prime time sitcom, showing her viewers that not only were drag queens not scary, but in fact they can be a lot of fun.
    Watch the episode of The Lucy Show where Lucy almost drowned on Tubi. And read the book that details both versions of the story on Archive.org.
    What the episode of the Desilu-produced game show You Don’t Say.
    Go shop at our TeePublic store!
    Follow: GEE on Facebook • GEE’s Facebook Group • GEE on Twitter • GEE on Instagram • Drew on Twitter • Glen on Twitter
    Listen: Apple Podcasts • Spotify • Google Podcasts • Himalaya • TuneIn
    And yes, we do have an official website! We even have episode transcripts courtesy of Sarah Neal. Our logo was designed by Rob Wilson. This episode’s art was designed by Ian O’Phelan.

    • 1 hr 37 min
    A Queer History of SNL, Part Four: The Lost Years

    A Queer History of SNL, Part Four: The Lost Years

    People use the term “the lost years” differently when speaking of Saturday Night Live, but this podcast is using it specifically from the time Lorne Michaels left the show after season five up until season eleven. Aside from Eddie Murphy’s presence on the show, these are the sketches that are less remembered today because they weren’t rerun on Comedy Central in the 2000s as much and they’re largely absent from the cache of episodes preserved online today. And that’s too bad, because this is when the show boasted some legends in the cast — Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Billy Crystal, Joan Cusack, Robert Downey Jr., Martin Short and Damon Wayans among them, as well as queer cast members Terry Sweeney, Denny Dillon and Danitra Vance.
    The sketches (and click here if you want to watch them):
    “SoHo Lesbians” (S6E10: Debbie Harry) “Little Richard Simmons” (S7E1: No host) “James Coburn Is a Homosexual” (S7E11: James Coburn) “Focus on Film: Making Love” (S7E12: Bruce Dern) “Penny Lane” (S10E11: Roy Scheider) “Pinklisting” (S11E1: Madonna) “Mr. Monopoly” (S11E12: Griffin Dunne) Monologue (S11E16: Catherine Oxenberg) “Lesbian Pick-Ups” (S11E18: Anjelica Huston) Go shop at our TeePublic store!
    Follow: GEE on Facebook • GEE’s Facebook Group • GEE on Twitter • GEE on Instagram • Drew on Twitter • Glen on Twitter
    Listen: Apple Podcasts • Spotify • Google Podcasts • Himalaya • TuneIn
    And yes, we do have an official website! We even have episode transcripts courtesy of Sarah Neal. Our logo was designed by Rob Wilson. This episode’s art was designed by Ian O’Phelan.

    • 1 hr 49 min

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5
496 Ratings

496 Ratings

OpenMoose ,

Five stars

This is a five star review.

3 Chomping Teeth ,

Love this podcast!

I have been listening for awhile and it’s always, for me, a great trip back to my gay youth watching tv and getting lost in the great world of sitcoms and pop culture. The hosts, even though they are slightly younger then myself, and sometimes don’t have the same fondness for certain shows or genres I grew up loving, I always enjoy their great banter and how they incorporate theme songs into every podcast. I’m a fan for life!

Quasipox ,

My Happy Place (As a Podcast)

I found this show thanks to Matt Baume's Youtube videos, and after listening to a few episodes, I fell in love with it. I also came out as bisexual around the same time; so coincidence? You decide.

Honestly, I really do love the show and appreciate the effort Drew and Glen put to giving the backstory behind a piece of cultural canon, while still being extremely entertaining. I always look forward to the new episodes (and highly recommend the Patreon series as well) and can't say enough about it. I've discovered some shows (finally went back and watched all of Frasier) and have appreciated the shows I already knew even more.

Thank you both for being so awesome.

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