American Horror Story Season 10 is already poised to be a must-watch event, given that Ryan Murphy has stated that he’s going to be bringing back several fan-favorite actors for the 2020 season — including Sarah Paulson, Evan Peters, and Lily Rabe. As of now, we have no clue whether the returning cast members are
Ryan Murphy
This story is part of a series, “I See You Man,” about depictions of manhood and masculinity running through the month of November, which is Men’s Health Awareness month. Billy Porter has had a hell of a year. He wore an instantly iconic tuxedo gown to the Oscars in February, floated onto the red carpet
Want to know the most surprising thing about the American Horror Story: 1984 finale? It has a happy ending. I know how ridiculous that is to write since, yes, in this finale the Ghosts band together and shove Margaret Booth (Leslie Grossman) through a woodchipper and her ground-up human body meat is sprayed all over
By the end of “Red Dawn,” the sun has risen at Camp Redwood and AHS:1984 has blown up its entire premise. Or is beginning to reveal its actual premise, depending on how you look at it. Either way, by the end of the hour pretty much everyone is dead — Chet (Gus Kenworthy), Xavier (Cody
Oh, American Horror Story. The only show where a guy almost gets cooked in an oven, there’s a midnight aerobics class that ends in a disembowelment, and a serial-killer-on-serial-killer fight and none of those things are the biggest developments to come out of the episode. We’ve long suspected overly-devoted camp owner Margaret Booth (Leslie Grossman)
“What the hell kind of camp is this?” is right, Chet (Gus Kenworthy). We already had an inkling that nothing at Camp Redwood is as it seems (thank you, ghost counselor), but Wednesday’s American Horror Story, titled “Slashdance,” really drives home the point. Sort of like a giant pit full of stakes just waiting to
[Caution: this post contains mild spoilers about The Politician; read at your own risk.] By now, people who watch Ryan Murphy dramas know to expect some hallmarks: heightened reality, visual decadence, poignant commentary, juicy drama, juicy melodrama, sick humor, and wicked fun. To describe shows from Murphy and his gang of cool-kid producers — Alexis
Welcome to the 80s, kids! Which, if you’re basing your knowledge of the decade solely on American Horror Story: 1984, was full of synth-pop, spandex, just, like, so much hairspray, and ah, yes, groups of hot co-eds being terrorized at a summer camp. What a time! When I first heard AHS was going full slasher
We’re only a few weeks away from the premiere of American Horror Story: 1984, which means there’s less than a month to brush up on our slasher flick knowledge so that we can catch all the clever clues and meta references Ryan Murphy is sure to include in the killer new season. Based on what
[embedded content] [Warning: The following contains spoilers for the Season 2 finale episode of Pose, “In My Heels.” Read at your own risk!] Pose concluded Season 2 not with a fingernail-biting cliffhanger, but with a sweet resolution for its characters, who walked through fire in a sophomore season that explored the early days of the
[Warning: The following contains spoilers for the latest episode of Pose. Read at your own risk!] The Pose family is fractured. With just two episodes left in a second season that turned Pray Tell (Billy Porter), Angel (Indya Moore), Blanca (Mj Rodriguez), and Elektra (Dominique Jackson) into bona fide LGBTQ heroes, Pose delivered some serious