TV
The Harlem Season Two Trailer Is Here & Serving Lesbian Chaos
The Harlem Season Two Trailer Is Here & Serving Lesbian Chaos
Courtesy of Prime Video
By continuing to use our site, you agree to our Private Policy and Terms of Use.
The Harlem Season Two Trailer Is Here & Serving Lesbian Chaos
The trailer for season two of Prime Video’s series Harlem is here, and if you’ve been craving messy lesbian chaos (we definitely have) it is serving!
The series comes from the mind of Tracy Oliver (Girls Trip) and according to the official logline, “in Season Two, after blowing up her career and disrupting her love life, Camille (Meagan Good) has to figure out how to put the pieces back together; Tye (Jerrie Johnson) considers her future; Quinn (Grace Byers) goes on a journey of self-discovery; and Angie’s (Shoniqua Shandai) career takes a promising turn.”
In the trailer, the women are ready to embark on some new adventures, personally, professionally, and, yes, sexually. Camille is caught in a very sexy love triangle, Quinn has a sexy new romance with someone who knows how to... umm... make her feel amazing, Angie’s career is taking off with a new role (though the microaggressions she faces are not so micro), and Tye is getting called out for her womanizing ways. In other words, this season is about to be everything.
The trailer closes with a promise that things are "hotter in Harlem" — and if this trailer is an indication, that’s 100 percent factual.
Rachel Shatto, Editor in Chief of PRIDE.com, is an SF Bay Area-based writer, podcaster, and former editor of Curve magazine, where she honed her passion for writing about social justice and sex (and their frequent intersection). Her work has appeared on Dread Central, Elite Daily, Tecca, and Joystiq. She's a GALECA member and she podcasts regularly about horror on the Zombie Grrlz Horror Podcast Network. She can’t live without cats, vintage style, video games, drag queens, or the Oxford comma.
Rachel Shatto, Editor in Chief of PRIDE.com, is an SF Bay Area-based writer, podcaster, and former editor of Curve magazine, where she honed her passion for writing about social justice and sex (and their frequent intersection). Her work has appeared on Dread Central, Elite Daily, Tecca, and Joystiq. She's a GALECA member and she podcasts regularly about horror on the Zombie Grrlz Horror Podcast Network. She can’t live without cats, vintage style, video games, drag queens, or the Oxford comma.