LGBTQ Series Q-Force

Netflix has announced its LGBTQ+ cartoon animated adult comedy series Q-Force a few months back, and it features the queerest lineup of spies determined to save the world in the most flamboyant way possible.

The LGBTQ+ community is not only spies, but they also have different types of sexual preferences.

Netflix gets a massive backlash after introducing the new LGBTQ+ cartoon animated adult comedy series. The first trailer for Q-Force looks cringeworthy, focusing on stereotypes and unfunny one-liners.

The stereotypical characters in the official teaser video for the upcoming series were more than enough to make people angry—that disgusted thousands of people who viewed it on the official YouTube of Netflix.

The viewers showed their emotions and wrote:

“Have you ever been so woke that you circled back to being blatantly offensive to the people you’re pandering to?”

other added:

“I hate the fact that every attempt at a joke also has an inherently sexual meaning. Like, I’m surprised their superhero suits aren’t black leatherware or latex,”

The viewers regularly criticized and made their negative comments for the upcoming series, and we can easily expect that the series has met with a huge backfire. The LGBTQ+ community has explained the series as anti-LGBT propaganda.

When Is LGBTQ Series Q-Force Release Date?

Netflix has announced the LGBTQ Series Q-Force in April 2019, that they have revealed it had ordered 10 episodes of the Q-Force series.

After more than two years of the long wait, Netflix announced the released date of LGBTQ Series Q-Force on 23 June 2021. So, as per their official news, the Q-Force series will be released on 2 September 2021.

Cast And Characters Of The LGBTQ Series Q-Force

The Q-Force TV show tells the story of a team of LGBTQ superspy who decides to assemble his own team of LGBTQ+ spies after their leader is fired from his previous job for coming out as gay.

The animated Netflix TV series is created by Pen15 and Broad City veteran Gabe Liedman. The first season of the show will follow Steve Mayweather's Agent Mary, a one-time star agent of the American intelligence Agency who was spurned by his employer after he identified as gay.

After being recognized for being gay, he's the leader of Q-Force, making his own team of LGBTQ+ individuals who had been undervalued as well.

They waited for almost a year for the team to be given their first mission. Steve decided to go rogue on finding and solving a case with his team.

As per deadline.com, after finding their own case and solving it on their own terms, they get the approval of the AIA and are upgraded to Active Secret Agents in the field. They approved a new member of the squad in the straight-guy Agent Buck (David Harbour).

Let's explore the cast and characters of the LGBTQ Series Q-Force shortly,

Gary Cole will portray the role of Director Dirk Chunley, the head of the AIA, while Stranger Things star David Harbour voices Agent Rick Buck.

Patti Harrison as Stat is a skilled hacker who is harboring a secret where Gabe Liedman is characterized as Benji, the love interest of Agent Mary.

Additionally, Laurie Metcalf is V, the AIA's Deputy Director and highest-ranking woman having a badass with a soft spot for Agent Mary.

Matt Roger is Twink, who is a master of disguise and drag queen.

Likewise, Wanda Sykes portrays the role of Deb, a gifted mechanic and the team's go-to person for gadgets.

Other executive producers include Todd Milliner, David Miner, Michael Schur, Gabe Liedman, and others.

Sound quality is the most vital thing to make things perfect, so the sound department is handled by James Lucero and Tristan Warren in the LGBTQ Series Q-Force.

LGBTQ Comedy-Themed Series, Q-Force Trailer Details

Netflix just released the first teaser trailer for Q-Force, its LGBTQ-themed animated comedy series.

Netflix released an official trailer on their official YouTube channel on 23 June 2021 for the anticipated series Q-Force, which centers around LGBTQ superspies.

As soon as the trailer was uploaded, the reaction was swift, vocal, and was not good as expected. The video has been viewed by more than 841k times so far and gained almost 8.4k likes, but the trailer received more than 106k disliked by the audience.

Most of the viewers are not satisfied with the trailer and shared their opinion on social media platforms.

"Me leaving the LGBT community after the q force trailer dropped"

other added:

"I just saw the qforce trailer and I can say with full confidence that id rather be called a slur than sit through a second of that shit"

Few of the fans and viewers came into support for the upcoming series, on Netflix saying, do not judge a series based on a 1-minute trailer.

Due to the extreme backlash of the show on social media, the official personality who worked on the show came to the show's defense, who actually agreed that the trailer was awful.