Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Billy Eichner Apologizes After Backlash For Calling LGBTQ+ Movies On Streaming 'Disposable'

Billy Eichner Apologizes After Backlash For Calling LGBTQ+ Movies On Streaming 'Disposable'
Gabe Ginsberg/WireImage/Getty Images

Comedian and actor Billy Eichner—best known as the star of the shows Billy on the Street and Difficult People—apologized following backlash for calling LGBTQ+ movies on streaming services "disposable."

Eichner made the remark while doing press for his movie Bros, an upcoming gay romantic comedy that is the first gay romantic comedy from a major studio featuring an almost entirely LGBTQ+ principal cast.


Reflecting on the success of the film—which he stars in, co-wrote, and executive produces, Eichner said the following during an interview with Variety:

“I told myself to look around and appreciate how rare and magical this moment is because you are making a movie that looks and feels like all the romantic comedies you grew up loving, but you’re doing it as a gay man.”
“And this is not an indie movie. This is not some streaming thing which feels disposable, or which is like one of a million Netflix shows."
"I needed to appreciate that ‘This is a historic moment, and somehow, you’re at the center of it. You helped create it.’”

Eichner's words were criticized after Variety shared a portion of them in a tweet that was later deleted.

Many took them as a slight against recent LGBTQ+ comedies that were a hit on streaming services, including Happiest Season, Fire Island, and Heartstopper.



Eichner later apologized, saying in a series of tweets that he was "reffering to the way that, historically, LGBTQ+ content has been considered niche and disregarded by Hollywood."

He added that he is proud that Bros "is one of many projects... where so many of us are finally getting to tell our own LGBTQ+ stories" and that he is "so sorry if I inadvertently offended or insulted anyone."


Eichner has been working overtime promoting the film and made waves last month after he called out “all the homophobes on the Supreme Court” during a speech at the Video Music Awards (VMAs).

Eichner took particular aim at Associate Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas.

Thomas wrote a solo concurring opinion in which he advocated overturning rulings like Obergefell v. Hodges—which made marriage equality for LGBTQ+ people the law of the land—in the ruling on Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization which struck down Roe v. Wade, the 1973 landmark decision that once protected a person's right to choose reproductive healthcare without excessive government restriction.

Eichner suggested not even the threat of seeing established LGBTQ+ rights overturned would stop him and other filmmakers from creating "gay love stories" for the screen.

More from News/lgbtq

Screenshot of man yelling and faceplanting
mollyploofskins/Bluesky

MAGA Fan Faceplants Hard On The Pavement After Hurling Anti-Gay Slurs At 'No Kings' Protesters

Social media users are cackling after a MAGA fan was filmed mocking and yelling slurs at "No Kings" protesters in Denver, Colorado, over the weekend before faceplanting hard on the street—twice.

The video opens with a group of silver-haired white men, including one at the center of the clip, shouting “Let’s go ICE," openly expressing their support for agents who've arrested citizens and noncitizens alike in pursuit of President Donald Trump's mass deportation agenda. The group follows with “God bless Trump,” as the man raises both middle fingers toward onlookers.

Keep ReadingShow less
Julia Fox and Marlon Wayans’ tense BAFTA interview for Jordan Peele’s Him.
BAFTA

Julia Fox interrupts Marlon Wayans

During a recent BAFTA promotional interview for Him, the Jordan Peele–produced supernatural sports horror film, things got uncomfortably tense between co-stars Marlon Wayans and Julia Fox.

In the film, Wayans plays a retired quarterback who mentors a star college player, portrayed by Tyriq Withers from I Know What You Did Last Summer, as he attempts to go pro after suffering a debilitating brain injury.

Keep ReadingShow less
Jennifer Lawrence; Robert Pattinson
@thegnshow/Tiktok; Swan Gallet/WWD via Getty Images

Jennifer Lawrence Stuns Fans By Revealing She Once Served Robert Pattinson Food Out Of Her Garbage

Proving once again that you should probably question the freshness of food you eat at friends' and coworkers' houses, actor Robert Pattison allegedly was given food to eat out of fellow actor Jennifer Lawrence's garbage.

According to Lawrence, who recounted this incident while on The Graham Norton Show recently, Pattinson had called after wrapping up a film nearby to where Lawrence was staying and having a slumber party with friends. The actor came over, and, per Lawrence, said that he was hungry and wondered if there was anything to eat.

Keep ReadingShow less
John Cusack; Donald Trump
Paul Natkin/Getty Images; Celal Gunes/Anadolu via Getty Images

John Cusack Has Fiery Message For Trump As He Tries To Turn Chicago Into A 'Fascist Hub'

A number of famous faces turned out to protest against the Trump administration on Saturday as millions across the United States—and across the globe—gathered for another day of "No Kings" demonstrations. Longtime Chicago, Illinois, resident John Cusack showed up in the Windy City to support his adopted hometown.

Cusack was born and raised in nearby Evanston, Illinois.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Mike Johnson; George Santos
Fox News; Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Mike Johnson Just Made A Surreal Admission About George Santos—And Yep, That Tracks

George Santos is out of prison and Mike Johnson is now facing significant criticism after telling Fox News correspondent Peter Doocy that he'd happily welcome the disgraced politician back to Congress.

Santos—who since arriving on the political scene faced allegations of fabricating his background, misusing campaign funds for luxury items and Botox, and leaving a trail of victims behind him as a known fraud and identity thief—received a seven-year sentence for crimes that the U.S. attorney for the eastern district of New York argued “made a mockery” of the electoral process.

Keep ReadingShow less