June is Gay Pride Month, and throughout the entire month Turner Classic Movies is showcasing several movies with various depictions and stereotypes of gays and the gay lifestyle. The focus isn't necessarily movies with a gay theme, but movies with gay characters, or movies with gay actors, writers and directors. Some of the movies include The Maltese Falcon, Designing Woman, and The Picture of Dorian Gray.
I would also include at least two Hitchcock films in this line-up: Psycho and Strangers on a Train, which allude to certain characters being gay during a time when blatant depictions were much less common.
The films will be shown every Monday and Wednesday night at 8:00 p.m. in June, and will be hosted by Robert Osbourne and Richard Barrios, along with guests Tab Hunter, Alan Cumming, Michael Musto, Ron Nyswaner and Charles Busch.

Fran Drescher either has superior
genes or a great plastic surgeon, because, at 48, she looks like she could pass for 35. I mean, this is a woman who was
in
Saturday Night Fever, for Christ's sake. But the former star of
The Nanny seems to be aging very,
very slowly, to the point where you have to wonder if she's got a got
a photo of her aging self stored away in her basement
somewhere.
You can tell she knows she's lucky; she's taking any advantage she can to show herself off.
Not only does she like to go to parties in outfits that don't leave a lot to the imagination (see the picture with this
post), but she has no compunction about stripping down to her bra and panties on stage, as she's doing right now in the
Off-Broadway play
Some Girl(s), which is written by Neil LaBute. In this
New York Observer
profile, Drescher talks about the play, her non-dating life, her former relationship with a younger man, and the
chances that her current sitcom,
Living with Fran, is coming back (she doesn't think it is, and doesn't seem
to mind).