EPISODE
SEASON
SCHEDULE
The L Word: Generation Q - Season 1
Jennifer Bells, Kate Monig and Lisha Healey are back in a series of different challenges through their original roles. In this series, these characters start with greater challenges alongside a new group of distinguished LGBTQIA characters. Over time, these characters experience love, trauma, and other encounters such as sex, setbacks, and success in Los Angeles, but they stand to live a different life.
23 May 1971, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA
July 23, 1977 in Pennsylvania, USA
1986
9 October 1972, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
24 April 1970, Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA
21 July 1981, Draffenville, Kentucky, USA
30 April 1978, Berkeley, California, USA
2 August 1945, Haddonfield, New Jersey, USA
9 January 1968, Little Rock, Arkansas, USA
11 July 1971, Okinawa, Japan
November 25, 2019
The L Word: Generation Q spends equal time catching up and introducing new characters as it does developing storylines that will leave you waiting for episode two.
December 06, 2019
Despite the hesitations and qualms, Generation Q is definitely an appealing sequel and it's far better than many expected. It only falters when it looks to its past instead of marching forward.
November 26, 2019
Generation Q is careful to balance fan service with the original characters against the new possibilities of its younger, hungrier batch of characters -- but in terms of compelling stories, Generation Q often wins out.
December 06, 2019
The L Word: Generation Q... is a rare welcome mix of the old and the new.
December 06, 2019
A glossy, bighearted show that's less soapy than the original series but delivers enough secrets, sex, and secret sex to keep the stakes high.
December 05, 2019
Sometimes, you want to get a drink, or watch a show, where you know your people will be. You want that sure thing. Generation Q provides that.
November 27, 2019
It's playful and endearing without trying too hard. It's familiar without being overly nostalgic. It's damn loving.
December 05, 2019
The best aspect of the revival is the fun and whimsy it conveys. As in the original series, plenty of hard topics are broached, but there is a generally sunny and playful tone that is only partially derived from its setting.
December 05, 2019
Gen Q's New executive producer Marja-Lewis Ryan dispenses with nostalgia here, instead allowing her new characters to organically blend in with the show's mainstay cast. The writing is tart, though maybe not as tart as Alice's citrusy blazers.

