Amazon does not have a great track record on LGBTQ rights. I still buy books from them, but when Amazon Prime recommended a new comedy series called
It's Not Like That, I was skeptical, and did some research. Sure enough, it was produced by the Wonder Project, a new studio that plans on delivering fundamentalist, faith-based, family-friendly, protest Pride, take back God's rainbow content.. I'm going to have a lot of fun moving into enemy territory to look for gay subtexts produced by accident, and describing the hotness of men who would be horrified to discover that they are an object of male desire.
Premise: Pastor Malcom (Scott Foley), dealing with grief over his wife's death (of course), starts dating her recently divorced best friend, Lori.
Pastor Malcolm has three children, a boy (Justin) and two girls (Flora and Penelope), all traumatized by the death of their mother. Wait...Flora? What year is this?
Lori has an ex husband and two children, a boy (Merritt) and a girl (Casey), both traumatized by the divorce.
I'm actually going to review/find gay subtexts in Episode 3, because it features an imam (Ahmad Ghafouri, left) and a rabbi (Rachel Leah Cohen).
Wait -- a female rabbi? She must be Reform, which is pro gay, even permitting gay rabbis. I doubt that the writers know this fact, or will have the backbone to mention it.
Scene 1: Pastor Malcolm, getting dressed, notices his dead wife's clothes hanging in the closet, and flashes back to when she was wearing one of the dresses in front of the church: Grace Community Church, with a sign saying "Where all are welcome." Presumably it means all heterosexuals.
She's planning a rummage sale, and suggests partnering with some of the other religious groups in town, like the Temple and the Islamic Center. "We could make it an interfaith rummage sale." These people are super liberal. When I was a Nazarene, we weren't even allowed to hang out with Baptists.
Back in the present, Pastor Malcolm is overcome by grief, but thinks "That wasn't a bad idea."
Cut to Pastor Malcolm asking his daughters to go through Mom's stuff and find things to sell. They resist: "You want to pretend that she never existed! I'll never forget her, even though you have!"
"Why don't you throw out all of our stuff, too, since our lives mean nothing to you!"
"This is so unfair!"
Scene 2: At Lori's house, amid some disasters, Surly Son Merrit (Caleb Baumann) is on the phone: Dad David is trying to convince him that his new apartment is cool. Nope, he's not staying there. Lori lays down the law: Dad gets you on the weekends, so you have no choice.
Merrit and Shy Daughter Casey resist. "You're the one who got the divorce. Why should we suffer?"
"Why don't you just sell the house, and throw out all our memories, since our lives mean nothing to you?
"This is so unfair!"
The parallels are cleverly constructed.
Cut to Pastor Malcolm and Lori at the coffee shop, commiserating on how hard it is to be a parent after a major trauma, like death or divorce. But they stand firm: "It's the right thing to do. It will be hard for them, but I'm ready."
Scene 3: At school, Merritt joins Pastor Malcolm's daughter Flora for lunch. She's looking for a writing project, so he suggests one: "It's about us." Flora is shocked. But he actually means their parents' hookup, har har. Queer code #1: He's not romantically interested in her.
Flora has not heard this before, and doesn't believe him. "Dad's not ready to forget about my mom yet." You accused him of that like five minutes ago.
Meanwhile, in the restroom, a girl asks Shy Daughter Casey, "Are you doing anything this weekend?" Queer Code #2: Asking her for a date. Casey is surprised because she bullied her before, but: "That's just what we do. I really like you."
"Ok, but this weekend, we have to go stay with my newly divorced Dad." The Girl tells us that her dad left when she was six, so she's an expert on divorce. She offers to teach Casey the tricks of the trade. First lesson: how to cash in on their guilt. Hey, no fair to ask her out wihtout a follow-up.
Scene 4: Lori is at work, spying on her kids' text messages and being depressed, when her friend Gail comes in to ask about her date last night. She had a good time, but refused to kiss him, and now he is ghosting her. At Nazarene summer camp, the preacher said that you shouldn't kiss before marriage, but it was just a recommendation, not one of the rules in the Manual.
"So scroll on to the next one."
Next up, Dad David (JR Ramirez, n*de on RG Beefcake and Boyfriends) drops in to discuss their shared client. Apparently they manage Country-Western singers. Lori breaks the news that the kids don't want to spend the weekend at his new place.
"Tough, they gotta."
"But we want them to have autonomy."
He gets angry. "I'm trying everything, and nothing is getting through to them!"
Lori thinks that Shy Daughter Casey's wrestling has something to do with it. All her gear is at home, and there are matches on the weekend, so... Queer Code #3: Wrestling is a masculine-coded activity.
They compromise. David will stay at the house with the kids, and Lori will stay...um, somewhere else. You going to shack up with the hunky preacher?
Cut to everyone setting up for the Interfaith Rummage Sale. Daughter Flora confronts Pastor Malcolm: "Are you trying to erase Mom's memory because you moved on to Lori?"
"It's not like that." The title of the series, har har. "All we did was kiss, but we decided that we weren't ready for a relationship, so we're staying Just Friends."
On RG Beefcake and Boyfriends: When I searched for Scott Foley n*de, I got Peter Kendall n*de in The Girls on the Bus
More after the break