![kissing friend while he sleeps gay por. kissing friend while he sleeps gay por.](https://www.independent.ie/incoming/2a563/36969800.ece/AUTOCROP/w1240h700/ns.jpg)
Fortunately, Beals and her cohort will get a chance to set things gay again with The L Word: Generation Q, a reboot of the series that premieres December 8 on Showtime. Even creator Ilene Chaiken herself openly regrets the series’ conclusion. Though the The L Word was an incredible, game-changing look at girls in tight dresses who dragged with mustaches, it ultimately ended like a lot of Bette Porter’s sexual relationships: quite poorly.
Kissing friend while he sleeps gay por. movie#
Though Beals has nearly 90 TV and movie credits to her name, she cemented herself as a lesbian icon back in 2004, when she strutted onto Showtime’s The L Word and, over the course of six seasons, engaged in a dramatic psychosexual tango with her longtime partner Tina (Laurel Holloman), supported and aggressively judged her group of lesbian friends in equal measure, slept with multiple women who worked for her, grinded up against a jail-cell wall out of sexual frustration, had a baby, bought a gallery, and hosted a pool party that ended in suspected murder. If you’re queer, however, you’ll instantly picture Bette Porter, the self-sabotaging, power-suit-sporting, gallery-owning top who once brought Alice Piazecki to orgasm at the opera. If you’re incredibly straight or haven’t watched TV in 15 years, the name “Jennifer Beals” probably makes you think of Flashdance, her star-making role as a steel-mill-dwelling dancer with a perennially ripped sweatshirt.
![kissing friend while he sleeps gay por. kissing friend while he sleeps gay por.](https://tvline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/friends-phoebe-joey-kiss.jpg)
Bette Porter in her power suit and cuff links.