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pantybulge69
06-06-2018, 04:38 AM
http://www.fxnetworks.com/shows/pose

Has anyone been watching new Transgender TV series on FX channel called "POSE"

i'm hearing no TV series has as many transgender performers cast, and these supposedly real TS girls.
i'm not sure if some have heard of it or seen it advertised , if so what do you think of it ?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Us-yvjTUepA

dakota87
06-06-2018, 05:22 AM
Will check it out. Thanks for sharing

fred41
06-06-2018, 06:55 PM
Good so far. It shows some of the history of the Ballroom culture. If you like that , you may also choose to follow this show: https://www.viceland.com/en_us/show/my-house
It shows what's going on in the present.

alcoolsrimbood
06-06-2018, 06:57 PM
I watched it the other night...pretty good...yeah its that ballroom bitch stuff but still pretty good...the ts character with the cross eyes kinda makes me laugh..

josehip
06-06-2018, 08:35 PM
The show is a hit!
(I'm just apprehensive because I know the chasers will watch the show because they want to see a trans woman as a piece of meat, not as a human being.)

I'm watching. Very solid show. And very, very VERY important. I was reading the piece Janet Mock did about the show (she is one of the producers (along Murphy and Steven Canals), and she directed an episode!


Her words:

"[...] he assembled a team of culturally specific collaborators from the ball community, including Dominique Jackson who plays one of “Pose’s” leading ladies, as well as Leiomy Maldonado and Danielle Polanco, who serve as choreographers, and our braintrust of consultants, Freddie Pendavis, Hector Xtravaganza, Jack Mizrahi, Michael Roberson, Skylar King, Sol Williams and Twiggy Pucci Garçon.

Murphy’s source material for “Pose” originated from a script written by Steven Canals, a queer Afro-Latinx from the Bronx who earned his MFA in screenwriting from UCLA. Canals’ writing, which came across Murphy’s desk in 2016, centered on Damon, an aspiring dancer who finds himself homeless in New York City after being kicked out of his home for being gay. He is given refuge by Blanca, a trans woman who’s a mother in the ball scene.

The notion of a trans woman saving a young boy’s life moved me. It was a radical departure from what I had seen on screens. I grew up the middle of five kids raised by a working single mother. The television served as a babysitter, of sorts. I devoured shows as a young viewer, from re-runs of classics like “I Love Lucy” and “Designing Women” and soaps like “General Hospital” and “90210” to ’90s sitcoms like “Living Single” and “Family Matters.” I was thoroughly entertained by these shows, but as a black and Native Hawaiian trans girl, I never felt fully reflected.

When girls like us flitted onto my screen, we were seen through the narrowest lens — either as points of trauma, treated as freaks, or mere punchlines. Rarely were we given a chance to be the center of the story, to be the protagonists, the antagonists and the damn villains. And I knew with “Pose,” I would hold the pen, writing narratives that would show the totality of what it meant to be brown and black, to be trans and poor and femme in an era in New York City dictated by a series of ills, from HIV and gentrification to crack and greed.

"I joined the writer’s room of “Pose” in August, and my hiring was historic. I am the first trans woman of color to be hired as a writer on a television series (previous staffings include white trans women writers, including Our Lady J for “Transparent,” Imogen Binnie for CBS’s “Doubt,” and Lana and Lilly Wachowski for “Sense 8”). Murphy then promoted me to producer within weeks of my hiring, and pushed me, despite my own trepidation, to direct episode six of our first season.

Though the series lives under Murphy’s production banner, he has taken a back seat with “Pose,” using the series as an opportunity to champion the communities our show represents. Not only is he donating all of his profits from “Pose” to organizations that directly serve trans and gender-nonconforming people (including the Audre Lorde Project, Fierce, House Lives Matter, and the Sylvia Rivera Law Project), he’s empowered Canals and me, giving us unprecedented control of the narrative and direction of the show, urging us to cast nearly every part to ensure the show truly represents the characters onscreen. We’ve casted and employed more than 100 trans people. This is extraordinary especially when trans people are an overwhelmingly underemployed demographic and have watched with gritted teeth as non-trans actors have embodied our realities onscreen.

“Pose” has also made history for hiring five trans actresses – all of color – as series regulars. But our leading ladies cannot be defined solely by their trans-ness. They are, like all of us, whole beings. Their trans-ness may not the sole focus of our story, but it’s also not sidelined. They grapple with their gender, just as they grapple with their bodies, their loves, their families and their dreams. Their narratives are not limited by their transitions and rarely do we meditate on their origin stories. Instead we center on what it is like living, struggling and striving in a world not built for them to thrive.

Our characters are the center of their own stories rather than plot devices, serving as martyrs who teach non-trans protagonists a lesson about authenticity and self-assuredness. No, in the world I am writing, these women are the heroines I have always been waiting for. They are tethered to one another. They support and challenge one another. They love on and dance and laugh and yes, shade one another. This is what sisterhood, family and resilience looks like, especially in an era where black and Latina trans women are being hunted down for merely existing.

the full piece https://variety.com/2018/tv/columns/pose-writer-janet-mock-ryan-murphy-column-1202803368/

josehip
06-06-2018, 08:37 PM
I watched it the other night...pretty good...yeah its that ballroom bitch stuff but still pretty good...the ts character with the cross eyes kinda makes me laugh..

why she makes you laugh?

josehip
06-06-2018, 08:41 PM
oh yeah, plus, the photography and the dialogue are pretty pretty pretty good.10787051078706

josehip
06-06-2018, 08:47 PM
I watched it the other night...pretty good...yeah its that ballroom bitch stuff but still pretty good...the ts character with the cross eyes kinda makes me laugh..

that's funny, RIGHT?
The woman is humiliated, beaten and kicked out the house from home by her parents, then contracts HIV, then find a gay young man in the streets who went through the same situation. And then she welcomes him, gives him a home, hopes, strives for him to run after his dreams. He gets a scholarship at a famous dance school because she supported him. And then she does all that monologue saying: I AM HIS MOTHER.

but you have specifically chosen to focus on her appearance? OKAY.

cali8989
06-06-2018, 09:29 PM
Indya Moore, Dominique Jackson, Dominique Jackson (Abundance Mother), Hailie Sahar, and of course Angelica Ross are all trans.

MrFanti
06-07-2018, 12:20 AM
Tks for posting...I'll check it out~

pantybulge69
06-08-2018, 01:21 AM
interesting to read that one of the ladies on the cast named Hailie Sahar used to be a floor dancer for Womens National Basketball Association (WNBA) i wonder if the directors who hired her on, knew about her background and were open Ok with it.

https://www.imdb.com/name/nm8417376/

youngblood61
06-08-2018, 01:37 AM
Will give it a look.

kaientai
06-08-2018, 06:24 AM
I think its pretty good

giovanni_hotel
06-08-2018, 07:02 AM
interesting to read that one of the ladies on the cast named Hailie Sahar used to be a floor dancer for Womens National Basketball Association (WNBA) i wonder if the directors who hired her on, knew about her background and were open Ok with it.

https://www.imdb.com/name/nm8417376/



Why wouldn't they be???

pantybulge69
06-09-2018, 01:26 AM
Why wouldn't they be???

the society we still live in. Some corporates and sponsors may not be as open.

Fitzcarraldo
06-09-2018, 05:16 AM
the society we still live in. Some corporates and sponsors may not be as open.

For a show about transwomen???

giovanni_hotel
06-09-2018, 09:57 AM
the society we still live in. Some corporates and sponsors may not be as open.

Not be open to the fact that Hailie used to be a floor dancer for the WNBA???lol
Of course they already knew she was trans.

pantybulge69
07-04-2018, 04:04 AM
i've been really impressed with this show thus far, i love the old school music tracks in theshow. (donna summers,sheena easton, evelyn champagne king, gloria estefan, mary jane girls, chaka khan, inner city, etc.)

and its also focusing on many issues in the transgender community, AIDS, screening- prevention, discrimination against transgender in the community.. even among family members. SRS talk, silicon butt-breast injection and dangers of them, infidelity, TS-curious men and how they became infatuated with "shemales" . i'm enjoying every episode and i really hope it gets a green light go for a 2nd season.

pantybulge69
06-11-2019, 02:59 AM
https://www.oprahmag.com/entertainment/tv-movies/a27091955/pose-season-2-fx/

POSE season 2 premieres Tuesday June 11th

i just read where Pose show is likely to be nominated for a 2019 Golden Globe Award.

Lorca81
06-11-2019, 04:58 AM
I'm a fan for a number of reasons. First, showing the daily lives and struggles of compelling characters who are trans on a network TV show can humanize transfolk to mainstream society. (I don't think that's overstating the impact at all because shows like Will & Grace, Ellen, Queer As Folk, the L Word, etc. did that for the G and L communities years ago.) Second, on a personal level, I find the show affirming because it has scenes I can relate to. For example, the love scene where "Angel" and "Stan" sleep together is the first time I've ever seen a film portrayal of trans-cis sexuality that was tasteful, romantic, sweet, beautiful, and in no way done to be shocking, comical, or provocative. Finally, it's just a good, enjoyable show.

njjohn
06-11-2019, 04:12 PM
Yes love the show. I started out in NYC in the mid 80's so it's a blast from the past, same goes for HBO's The Deuce". I worked a few doors down from Manny's Music on 48th street and shared a floor with a peep show.

tao1kiku
06-15-2019, 04:33 AM
A beautifully done series, tasteful, and addresses issues both in the past and issue that continue to this day

smalltownguy
06-19-2019, 10:32 AM
POSE is a must watch kinda series

pantybulge69
07-13-2019, 01:40 AM
https://ew.com/tv/2019/06/17/pose-renewed-season-3-fx/

FX renews POSE for Season 3

:party:

Nikka
07-13-2019, 06:40 PM
yes I do is amazing!

sd123223
06-18-2020, 09:42 AM
Im late to the party very much enjoying it can really relate to the Evan Peters character too.