Must-See LGBT TV: 'Survivor's Remorse' wraps season as 'Younger,' 'Code Black' return

Must-See LGBT TV: 'Survivor's Remorse' wraps season as 'Younger,' 'Code Black' return

Photo Credit: Starz

Grab the remote, set your DVR or queue up your streaming service of choice! GLAAD is bringing you the highlights in LGBT on TV this week. Check back every Sunday for up-to-date coverage in LGBT-inclusive programming on TV.

Survivor’s Remorse wraps its third season this week. In the episode, Reggie’s father makes a sudden appearance in Atlanta which will have an effect on all members of the family. Meanwhile, Cassie meets Chen’s parents for the first time. Survivor’s Remorse: Sunday, 10pm on Starz.

Medical drama Code Black returns for season two. In the premiere, a new doctor joins the team at Angels Memorial and is tasked with teaching the staff new techniques used on the combat field to save lives. Code Black: Wednesday, 10pm on CBS.

Younger kicks off season three this week! In the first episode, Liza sends her daughter Caitlin off to college and in her personal life struggles to balance her feelings for Josh and Charles. Younger: 10pm, Wednesday on TV Land.

Sunday September 25: Power (9pm, Starz); Fear the Walking Dead (9pm, AMC); Quantico (10pm, ABC); Survivor’s Remorse (10pm, Starz)

Monday: Mary + Jane (10pm, MTV); Loosely Exactly Nicole (10:30pm, MTV)

Tuesday: Brooklyn Nine-Nine (8pm, FOX); Strut (9pm, Oxygen)

Wednesday: Hollywood Medium (8pm, E!); Modern Family (9pm, ABC); Empire (9pm, FOX); Code Black (10pm, CBS); Younger (10pm, TV Land); Queen Sugar (10pm, OWN); Impastor (10:30pm, TV Land); Gaycation (10:30pm, Viceland)

Thursday: Superstore (8pm, NBC); Grey’s Anatomy (8pm, ABC); Rosewood (8pm, FOX); How to Get Away with Murder (10pm, ABC)

September 25, 2016
Issues: 

www.glaad.org/blog/must-see-lgbt-tv-survivors-remorse-wraps-season-younger-code-black-return

Secrets Of Online Relationships Revealed

Secrets Of Online Relationships Revealed

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You may have thought online relationships were the exclusive territory of lustful teenagers clawing at adulthood, but plenty of folks get swept away by a virtual Romeo and find themselves in a precarious situation.

Is it best to keep the fling relegated to the interwebs and live out the romance novel in your head, or follow through and take things offline?

Can online ever be enough?

Below, guys vent their frustrations via Whisper:

I wish I could tell everyone about my online gay relationship and not be hated on or judged. We

No one knows I

How is it possible that I

I love my online boyfriend so much but no one even knows we

I

I promised I wouldn

I

Being in a (happy) long distance relationship with a guy from the Internet is not something I want to explain to my homophobic family

I used to think I was meant to be alone forever, until I started a relationship with another gay guy I met online. He completes me

I

The gay scene in my city is not for me so I turned to online dating. I met a great guy and I

I am too scared of getting into another relationship where I have to see someone everyday. I started talking to a new guy I met on the Internet and I

I used to think it was embarrassing to say "we met online" but I met my boyfriend that way and I don

Being in an online relationship is hard. I

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