Pose
Why Does Basically Everyone Do This V-Finger Peace Thing in Photos?
What does it even stand for? Peace? Victory? Vagina? We did our research.
The Stars of 'Pose' On Why the Show's Greatest Gift Is Its Happy Endings
Billy Porter, MJ Rodriguez, and Janet Mock reflect on the second season's joy, glamour, and radical hope in an interview with VICE.
Five Coming-of-Age Trans Movies That Changed My life
These movies, new and old, offensive and not, tell perspective-altering stories about growing up transgender.
Janet Mock's Netflix Partnership Is a Big Deal
Mock is reportedly developing a slate of projects centering on trans characters.
A Myanmar Doctor’s Medical License Was Revoked Over 'Sexy' Facebook Photos
The Myanmar Medical Council felt the doctor-turned-model went against the "Burmese tradition" by posting pictures in bikinis and tight dresses.
'Pose' Incites a Queer Revolution in Its Second Season
'Pose' is getting much more political—and its stars are becoming leaders in real world activism.
'Pose' Season 1 Is On Netflix, So Clear Your Weekend Schedule
The FX show breaks ground, and will break your heart. Here's why you need to binge.
Come Thru: Billy Porter's Elegant Oscar Dress Was Political Art
"This look was interesting because it’s not drag. I’m not a drag queen, I’m a man in a dress."
Angel-Ho Makes Genuinely Radical Electronic Music
Ahead of debut album, 'Death Becomes Her', we're premiering the Cape Town artist's new Gaika- and Bon-produced track and video, “Pose”.
The Best Thing on TV This Year Was: 'Pose'
The pilot episode of FX's groundbreaking series took us to 80s New York's ball scene and gave us the best dance audition since 'Flashdance.'
meet the ballroom legends of atlanta's underground voguing scene
Leikeli47 and Cakes da Killa headline an extravagant vogue ball in Atlanta — where one of the last great American subcultures has been quietly thriving for decades.
meet the ballroom legends of atlanta's underground voguing scene
Leikeli47 and Cakes da Killa headline an extravagant vogue ball in Atlanta — where one of the last great American subcultures has been quietly thriving for decades.