In this comedy series, a team of five brave men faces a different path of their lives. They are trying to make more laughter and live with different situations, while Emmy award-winning Queer Eye has returned. This TV show tries to present everything new in our daily situations in a different way.
The nicest, kindest critique of toxic masculinity imaginable. The makeovers aren't only about new clothes and a haircut: they're about men waking up to a new sense of self, and a new participation in their own lives.
It's a tasty reality TV smoothie: part food show, part real estate show, part makeover show, part matchmaking show, part therapy, and sweet throughout.
Maybe it's because things have changed significantly since the original 2003 debut, in cultural outlook, as well as in the finesse of reality-show editing, but the new version feels much more relaxed, less a novelty, and emotionally richer.
The Queer Eye reboot is even better than it should have been. These Georgia boys are more than just makeover consultants: They are healers and sages for our time...
It might sound crazy, but Queer Eye is a reminder that reality television, even within something as vapid as the makeover subgenre, is capable of changing a little corner of the world.
The new Fab Five prove dependably charming and charismatic, and rule over the show's familiar bailiwicks -- though they do so, it must be said, with a bit more wet-eyed sincerity than the O.G. crew.