Gibson’s poetry about queerness and mortality taught thousands of people how to reject apathy and embrace life
Lindsay Lee Wallace
Lindsay Lee Wallace (she/her) is an English-speaking freelance writer and overthinker focused on culture, digital spaces, and health care inequity. Her work can also be found in TIME, Slate, SELF, and Bitch. She is based in New York City.
What does an assault story look like in 2025?
“Sorry, Baby,” “John Proctor Is the Villain” and “Trauma Plot” are changing the narrative about rape stories by reflecting how it hasn’t changed
‘Cora Bora’ is a coming-of-age movie for people in their thirties
Meg Stalter, Jojo T. Gibbs and Ayden Mayeri talk about creating a endearing, messy, realistic Sapphic love triangle
‘Sue Bird: In the Clutch’ is a love letter to a basketball legend, and to women’s sports
The documentary, which recaps and celebrates Bird’s gilded career, is now available to stream online
Thriller ‘Love Lies Bleeding’ has its head in the clouds and its foot in its mouth
The film is genuinely fun, freaky and frightening—but the lack of consistency can leave viewers feeling lost
How Heather María Ács is queering intimacy coordination
The field of intimacy coordination is young—which means there’s still time to help it expand beyond heteronormative standards
