Decades-long chronicle of the risky, volatile and steamy relationship between the charismatic and ambitious Hawk and the pious and idealistic Tim, two political staffers who fall in love at ... Read allDecades-long chronicle of the risky, volatile and steamy relationship between the charismatic and ambitious Hawk and the pious and idealistic Tim, two political staffers who fall in love at the height of the 1950s Lavender Scare.Decades-long chronicle of the risky, volatile and steamy relationship between the charismatic and ambitious Hawk and the pious and idealistic Tim, two political staffers who fall in love at the height of the 1950s Lavender Scare.
- Nominated for 3 Primetime Emmys
- 12 wins & 34 nominations total
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10cr-14040
At 81 years old (born 1942) I'm younger than the characters portrayed (a WW II vet in 1950's to '80's) - but can relate. In 1954, with the Army-McCarthy hearings being broadcast on all 3 networks (that's all we had in those days) at 12 yrs. Old, the young question is - "why are we fighting amongst ourselves " and why can't we get regular programming? (and "why are they after me ?"- even then I knew I wasn't attracted to the opposite sex). So - many years later -having survived, thru those years that you could be arrested for being gay - until now - and having Matt Bomer and Jonathan Bailey bring to life those years - well - that's extraordinary. Thank you! You can quibble about production values, acting (all great), factual accuracy (and I did), but overall - it was great. I've seen all episodes - some good, some great (2nd to last) - wow. Thanks Matt Bomer (always loved you since "Chuck" and especially "White Collar") - but I also have a new love - Jonathan Bailey. Let's have some wine.
The "Lavender Scare" was a very real, despicable period in American political history that deserves to be widely-understood and known. "Fellow Travelers" is an engaging, informative vehicle for recounting the events; while the fictionalization entertains, the subject matter truth stays appropriately prominent throughout the show.
As a gay man & longtime DC-area resident, with a 30-year successful career in federal government defense contract work, the story is a close-hitting view of past discrimination faced by the LGBTQ community. Much progress has been made, with much more needed. "FT" tells the oft-ignored story of the time period, to remove the "blight" of homosexuals from our government - with great actors, beautiful period sets and costumes - and remind us that the fight is NOT over, especially for trans individuals in the present.
Federal government-employed LGBTQ people were hunted by McCarthy & his acolytes (he was the root of the "Red Scare") and when/if discovered, many had their lives utterly destroyed by the subsequent "outings" and criminal prosecutions. Many targeted individuals lost careers, families and hopes for the future, and too many lost lives to suicide. The fights to expunge criminal records and clear names continues TODAY by the families of their now-deceased loved ones who were targeted, persecuted AND prosecuted.
Matt Bomer and Jonathan Bailey are great in their roles. There is perhaps a little too-graphic representation of sex at times, but it's not un-real or overly-done. Supporting characters are faithful to their roles and vary in acting quality, though all are solidly good. I adore Alison Williams, and she is credible and generally wonderful as the wife of "Hawk." I like that actors of color, along with *actually queer* actors, are present throughout the plot lines. The inclusion of the AIDS crisis, which was largely ignored by political leaders in its early days, is another sad/tragic part of queer history deserving of the spotlight, too.
To me, the only drawback is the use of flashbacks to change the period of time being addressed. It happens very quickly in Ep1, without much setup, so it took me a beat or two to follow the context and characters through the transitions; once I understood what was occurring, it was not an issue. I saw negative reviews that focused on cigarette smoking (really??) and other minor elements, and while I respect differing views, to give a lowest rating for such things both diminishes the important overall message, AND misses the forest for the trees by a wide margin.
Overall, "Fellow Travelers" is a warmly engaging, well acted and accurately depicted account of an important facet of queer history in the United States. It deserves the attention and positive reviews it is receiving, and I recommend it to others, without reservations. -v/r, FEGIII.
As a gay man & longtime DC-area resident, with a 30-year successful career in federal government defense contract work, the story is a close-hitting view of past discrimination faced by the LGBTQ community. Much progress has been made, with much more needed. "FT" tells the oft-ignored story of the time period, to remove the "blight" of homosexuals from our government - with great actors, beautiful period sets and costumes - and remind us that the fight is NOT over, especially for trans individuals in the present.
Federal government-employed LGBTQ people were hunted by McCarthy & his acolytes (he was the root of the "Red Scare") and when/if discovered, many had their lives utterly destroyed by the subsequent "outings" and criminal prosecutions. Many targeted individuals lost careers, families and hopes for the future, and too many lost lives to suicide. The fights to expunge criminal records and clear names continues TODAY by the families of their now-deceased loved ones who were targeted, persecuted AND prosecuted.
Matt Bomer and Jonathan Bailey are great in their roles. There is perhaps a little too-graphic representation of sex at times, but it's not un-real or overly-done. Supporting characters are faithful to their roles and vary in acting quality, though all are solidly good. I adore Alison Williams, and she is credible and generally wonderful as the wife of "Hawk." I like that actors of color, along with *actually queer* actors, are present throughout the plot lines. The inclusion of the AIDS crisis, which was largely ignored by political leaders in its early days, is another sad/tragic part of queer history deserving of the spotlight, too.
To me, the only drawback is the use of flashbacks to change the period of time being addressed. It happens very quickly in Ep1, without much setup, so it took me a beat or two to follow the context and characters through the transitions; once I understood what was occurring, it was not an issue. I saw negative reviews that focused on cigarette smoking (really??) and other minor elements, and while I respect differing views, to give a lowest rating for such things both diminishes the important overall message, AND misses the forest for the trees by a wide margin.
Overall, "Fellow Travelers" is a warmly engaging, well acted and accurately depicted account of an important facet of queer history in the United States. It deserves the attention and positive reviews it is receiving, and I recommend it to others, without reservations. -v/r, FEGIII.
10pebsdad
This show is getting ratings bombed, clearly, like many controversial shows tend to be lately. Somewhere there must be a post about poorly reviewing the show to bring down the ratings. 100% on Rotten Tomatoes and a 6 here...
The show is based on a book about 2 men who meet during the McCarthy hearings era and fall for each other. Both work in Washington and have to keep their relationship a secret. It jumps back and forth between the 50's and the 80's, after both men have moved on. Not a groundbreaking story line but the period production work is impeccable.
This is a limited series that has actual M/M passion and doesn't hold back. It's the type of sex and passion usually only seen in heterosexual shows. I wish we had all episodes at once.
The show is based on a book about 2 men who meet during the McCarthy hearings era and fall for each other. Both work in Washington and have to keep their relationship a secret. It jumps back and forth between the 50's and the 80's, after both men have moved on. Not a groundbreaking story line but the period production work is impeccable.
This is a limited series that has actual M/M passion and doesn't hold back. It's the type of sex and passion usually only seen in heterosexual shows. I wish we had all episodes at once.
A classic and unbeatable formula: an ardent (to say the least) but forbidden romantic entanglement against the background of thirty years of dramatic social and political upheavals. A sort of The Way We Were but with Bomer and Bailey (both perfectly cast) instead of Streisand and Redford. The McCarthy era episodes are strikingly well done with the good period detail (one carping point: the '50s seem to be in vogue at the moment and every actor is dressed so perfectly in period style that no-one ever seems stepped out of an upmarket clothing store with nary a worn or patched garment to be seen).and fine performances from the troupe of Washington politicians and their cohorts. One glaringly obvious misstep where, because everything else is so well done I indulgently suspend my disbelief, is the almost total lack of effort taken to age the characters. After 30 years Hawk is supposed to have grandchildren yet he appears to have discovered the secret of eternal youth; the secret seems to have been shared with Marcus, who, apart from longer hair and a beard is similarly untouched by time.
I'm a straight female who resides in an area with a very small LBGQ population. I do not have much exposure to gay culture, but I do believe in to each their own. I have always been a fan of Matt Bomer so I tuned in for him. I did not expect to become so invested and overwhelmed with their love story. The story was very compellingly and extremely well acted. I didn't particular like Hawk or Marcus as people, but they were brilliantly portrayed. Tim (Skippy) absolutely broke my heart. I have to say, I was initially a little shocked by the explicit sex scenes, but it wasn't anything worse than what I've seen between heterosexual couples on series like Sparticus, GOT, etc. This is definetly one of the most impactful series I've seen in awhile.
Did you know
- TriviaJonathan Bailey was shooting Bridgerton and Wicked at the same time as Fellow Travelers. In one interview, he stated he once left filming Fellow Travelers and was in a Regency Era costume four hours later. Matt Bomer also said one day, he came to the trailer they shared to see it was shaking. Bomer asked Bailey what he was doing and he was practicing his choreography for Wicked.
- How many seasons does Fellow Travelers have?Powered by Alexa
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