If The View had a baby with The Shade Room and raised it on queer TikTok, you’d get The Queer Agenda — the unapologetically bold, hilarious, and occasionally chaotic show hosted by DJ Xcel, Boss Britt the Most Lit, and Baddy Galore (aka Scoops Galore). In their latest biweekly episode, the trio doesn’t just recap the latest LGBTQ celebrity drama — they dissect it with the finesse of a gossip surgeon and the comedic timing of your funniest group chat.
This isn’t a sterile news recap. It’s a cultural pulse check, laced with laughter, side-eye, and a raw honesty that could only come from people who live the life they’re talking about.

Lesbian Drama and Public Relationships — the New Internet Soap Opera
The hosts kick off with the lesbian celebrity saga that has queer TikTok in a chokehold: singer KWN’s relationship with R&B star Kehlani. What could’ve been a sweet love reveal spirals into a masterclass on boundaries, social media, and parasocial chaos. The hosts call out the absurdity of fans feeling betrayed when celebrities go public, break up, or—heaven forbid—delete their couple posts.
But they don’t stop there. They unpack the darker side of visibility: how queer women of color like Kehlani get vilified online no matter what they do. One moment fans demand transparency; the next, they’re accusing her of “dating the same type.” The Queer Agenda crew calls it what it is — jealousy disguised as moral outrage. Their analysis cuts through the noise with something rare in digital discourse: empathy, humor, and accountability, all in one breath.

The Court & Lex Throuple: Queer TikTok’s Plot Twist of the Year
Then comes the segment everyone’s been waiting for — the Court and Lex saga, where the once-beloved lesbian power couple shocked their followers by introducing a boyfriend into their marriage. The way The Queer Agenda handles it? Chef’s kiss.
Instead of pearl-clutching, the hosts serve nuance. They talk branding, authenticity, and the blurred line between identity and influencer economics. Were Court and Lex misleading their audience by leaning into lesbian representation while being sexually fluid? Or were fans simply too invested in a fantasy?
The conversation gets deep — and funny — fast. DJ Xcel cracks jokes about “throuple tattoos,” Baddy Galore questions whether anyone soft-launched this man, and Britt reminds everyone that, yes, representation matters, especially when Black queer couples are few and far between. Beneath the laughter, there’s a real question about what visibility means in the age of content monetization.

When Clout Goes Wrong: The Substitute Teacher Scandal
Just when the vibes settle, the show pivots from chaos to critique. The trio discusses the viral case of a stud substitute teacher who was fired after posting inappropriate TikTok videos featuring her students — and defending herself online with an unfortunate mix of excuses and denial.
Here, the humor dims, replaced by thoughtful reflection. The hosts talk professionalism, boundaries, and how social media is blurring the line between personal expression and accountability. DJ Xcel likens it to watching professionalism crumble in real time, while Baddy Galore points out how the culture of virality is breeding a new kind of recklessness.
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