Must-See LGBTQ: ‘The Fosters’ reunion on ‘Good Trouble’ Christmas special, and new episode of ‘Work in Progress’

Must-See LGBTQ: ‘The Fosters’ reunion on ‘Good Trouble’ Christmas special, and new episode of ‘Work in Progress’

Photo Credit: Showtime

Grab the remote, set your DVR or queue up your streaming service of choice! GLAAD is bringing you the highlights LGBTQ on TV this week. Check back every Sunday for up-to-date coverage in LGBTQ-inclusive programming on TV.

This Sunday a new episode of Showtime series Work in Progress airs. The show follows Abby, a middle-aged queer woman, who vows to make changes in her life, including dating a young trans man, Chris. In this week’s episode, Chris takes Abby to a hip, sex-positive, ‘queer wonderland’ for their second date. Work in Progress: Sunday, 11pm on Showtime.

On Monday, The Fosters family reunites on the Good Trouble Christmas special. The two-hour special sees moms Stef and Lena spending Christmas at the Coterie. Also in the episode, Alice is hiding a secret from the Coterie, the Fosters and the Hunters help out with the impromptu volunteer Christmas event, while Gael and Jazmine deal with a painful family decision. Good Trouble: Monday, 9pm on Freeform.

Sunday, December 15: Shameless (9pm, Showtime); Star Wars: Resistance (10pm, Disney Channel); The L Word: Generation Q (10pm, Showtime); Mr. Robot (10pm, USA); Work in Progress (11pm, Showtime)

Monday: Good Trouble (9pm, Freeform); All Rise (9pm, CBS)

Tuesday: Empire (9pm, Fox); Ambitions (9pm, OWN); NCIS: New Orleans (10pm, CBS);

Thursday: Project Runway (9:30pm, Bravo)

Friday: Van Helsing (10pm, Syfy)

December 13, 2019

www.glaad.org/blog/must-see-lgbtq-fosters-reunion-good-trouble-christmas-special-and-new-episode-work-progress

HRC Suspending Hallmark’s Score on the Corporate Equality Index

HRC Suspending Hallmark’s Score on the Corporate Equality Index

Today, HRC announced that it was taking the rare step of suspending Hallmark Cards Inc.’s Corporate Equality Index (CEI) score in response to its subsidiary The Hallmark Channel caving to pressure from anti-LGBTQ groups and pulling an ad featuring a same-sex wedding ceremony with two brides. At press time, nearly 60,000 people have joined HRC’s letter-writing campaign condemning Hallmark’s anti-LGBTQ decision.

“By backing down on visibility and representation, Hallmark has failed the LGBTQ community and all of their customers. Given Hallmark’s actions and failure to correct it, the Human Rights Campaign is suspending their Corporate Equality Index score,” said HRC President Alphonso David. “Hallmark still has time to do the right thing here–apologize and reinstate the ad. The only thing controversial about this ad is Hallmark’s actions in response to a handful of extremists, and we cannot accept this shameful erasure of LGBTQ love and community.”

The Human Rights Campaign Foundation’s Corporate Equality Index is the national benchmarking tool on corporate policies and practices pertinent to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer employees. In 2019, 571 businesses earned the CEI’s top score of 100, including Hallmark, meeting new and higher benchmarks — including a record number offering transgender-inclusive health care policies — in the most comprehensive assessment of workplace LGBTQ inclusion in the 17-year history of the report.

HRC has notified Hallmark that their score is suspended and encourages them to work swiftly towards a positive resolution of this situation.

www.hrc.org/blog/hrc-suspending-hallmarks-score-on-the-corporate-equality-index?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed