Lena Waithe Darren Star Usa city Paris Entertainment neil patrick harris Showtime Patrick Lena Waithe Darren Star Usa city Paris

Good news for fans of Neil Patrick Harris’ show ‘Uncoupled’

Reading now: 195
www.queerty.com

Uncoupled were dismayed to hear last month that Netflix was not commissioning a second season.However, it appears the comedy-drama has found a new home with Showtime.Uncoupled was created by Darren Star (Sex In The City, Emily In Paris) and Jeffrey Richman.

The first season debuted last summer. It starred Neil Patrick Harris as a 40-something gay man who is dumped by his long-term partner (Tuc Watkins).Harris’s character, Michael, then had to navigate dealing with the grief of his relationship ending, and dating again on the NYC gay scene.Deadline reports big changes at Showtime, soon to be renamed ‘Paramount + with Showtime’, led to the good news.New Showtime boss Chris McCarthy recently outlined three main content streams.

One of these is “Metro Cultures” which covers “culturally diverse takes” like The L Word and Lena Waithe’s The Chi. Both shows have loyal followings, and Showtime wants more LGBTQ+ content to ensure those viewers stick around for the rest of the year.

Uncoupled will fall under this umbrella.Showtime’s other content streams will cover ‘Complex Characters’ (i.e. Dexter and Yellowjackets), and ‘Powerful Worlds (such as the show Billions).Although Showtime is picking up Uncoupled, its evolution under parent company Paramount also resulted in several cancellations.

Read more on queerty.com
The website meaws.com is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

12.03 / 17:31
lgbt Gay Indian PM Narendra Modi's government resists recognition for same-sex marriage - court papers
Which other countries have legalised same-sex marriage?Same-sex marriage is not recognised as widely in Asia as it is in the West.Taiwan was the first in the region to recognise such matrimony, while other countries like Malaysia still criminalise same-sex acts.Singapore last year ended a ban on gay sex but took steps to bar same-sex marriages.Japan is the only country among the Group of Seven (G7) nations that does not legally recognise same-sex unions, although the public broadly favours recognition.In India, the issue has fuelled tensions in the media and in parliament, where a member of Modi's ruling Hindu nationalist party in December asked the government to strongly oppose the petitions filed in the top court.LGBTQ+ activists argue that while the 2018 ruling affirmed their constitutional rights, it is unjust that they still miss out on legal backing for their marriages - a basic right enjoyed by heterosexual married couples."We can't do so many things in the process of living together and building a life together," one of the litigants in the current case, businessman Uday Raj Anand, told Reuters in December.In Sunday's filing, the government argued the 2018 ruling cannot mean recognising a fundamental legal right to same-sex marriage under the laws of the country.The intent behind the current legal system on marriage "was limited to the recognition of a legal relationship of marriage between a man and a woman, represented as a husband and wife".The government has argued that changes to the legal structure should fall to the elected parliament, rather than the court.The cases are due to be heard in the Supreme Court on Monday.If India were to approve same-sex marriage, it would become the 33rd country to do so,
DMCA