USA Insider Exclusive

Create a free profile to get unlimited access to exclusive show news, updates, and more!

Sign Up For Free to View
Peacock Blog Movies

Celebrate Pride Month With Peacock 2025

Kick off the June festivities with these 15 handpicked LGBTQIA+ titles streaming now. 

By CK Dolan & Madeline Nagler
Queer as Folk Key Art

Content availability may vary over time. 

To kick off Pride Month, here’s a roundup of standout movies, shows, and specials on Peacock that celebrate queer lives in all their forms – falling in love, finding community, singing pop songs no one else can hear, and yes, even wrangling livestock in heels. From Carol to G.B.F. to Punky Brewster, these stories offer laughter, heart, and plenty of sparkle.

1. Carol

Amid the snow-dusted glamour of 1950s Manhattan, aspiring photographer Therese (Rooney Mara) catches a glimpse of Carol (Cate Blanchett) — poised, mysterious, and utterly magnetic — across a department store floor. What begins as a chance encounter over a forgotten glove blooms into a slow-burning, forbidden romance that simmers with longing and restraint. As their connection deepens, so do the risks, in a world where love between women is a secret too dangerous to speak aloud.  

Stream Carol.

2. Queer as Folk

Set against the gritty charm of working-class Pittsburgh, the groundbreaking Peacock revival follows a tight-knit group of gay friends as they navigate love, sex, ambition, and identity with unflinching honesty. It's raw and real, capturing the highs and heartbreaks of chosen family in a world that doesn't always understand them. Bold for its time and still resonant today, the series balances steamy romance with emotional depth — offering a vivid, unapologetic look at queer life, friendship, and the fight to live authentically. 

Stream Queer as Folk.

3. Punky Brewster

Punky (Soleil Moon Frye) may be the heart of the story, but it’s her best friend Cherie (Cherie Johnson) who quietly steals scenes — and hearts. Now all grown up, Cherie is thriving, with a successful career and a loving relationship with her girlfriend, Lauren (Jasika Nicole). Their bond brings a refreshing and joyful queer love story to the forefront — one rooted in mutual respect, warmth, and years of shared history. As Punky rebuilds her life and makes room for new beginnings, Cherie and Lauren’s relationship serves as a steady anchor and a reminder that family isn’t just who you’re born to — it’s who shows up, loves you fully, and stays. 

Stream Punky Brewster.

4. Her Story

In sprawling, sun-soaked Los Angeles, a jaded lesbian and a fiercely ambitious transgender woman form an unlikely duo as they stumble, swipe, and sass their way through the city’s dating scene. Between awkward hookups, career curveballs, and late-night heart-to-hearts, they navigate love, identity, and what it means to show up for yourself truly — and each other. Sharp, funny, and refreshingly real, this story is as much about friendship as it is about romance, with queer joy and messiness at its unapologetic core. 

Stream Her Story.

5. Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist

After a freak event scrambles her brainwaves, sharp-witted coder Zoey Clarke (Jane Levy) wakes up with an unbelievable new ability: she can hear people’s deepest thoughts and emotions, expressed through full-blown musical numbers. From co-workers to total strangers, everyone’s heart is suddenly singing, and only Zoey can hear the soundtrack. As she struggles to make sense of this chaotic new reality, she finds her greatest ally in Mo, her genderfluid, glam-loving neighbor (Alex Newell). With powerhouse vocals, razor-sharp wit, and soulful wisdom, Mo becomes Zoey’s guide, confidante, and emotional compass. Their friendship grounds the show’s dazzling premise, proving that sometimes the truest connection comes from listening between the lines. 

Stream Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist.

6. White Rabbit

White Rabbit is a severely underrated film about a Korean-American performance artist (played by Vivian Bang) struggling to stay afloat in Los Angeles as she bounces from one humiliating job to the next. Her public monologues take her from the notorious Silver Lake grocery store to Echo Park Lake, where she meets a critic and love interest named Victoria, who finally makes her feel seen.   

Stream White Rabbit

7. Women Who Kill

Playing off the recent popularity of the true crime genre, Women Who Kill centers on Morgan and Jean, ex-girlfriends and co-hosts of a famous podcast about female murderers. After suspicions arise that Morgan’s new flame could be a local serial killer, chaos ensues. It’s a hilarious and paranoid commentary on America’s obsession with (and monetization of) tragic true crime cases.   

Stream Women Who Kill

8. Queer Planet

Narrated by Andrew Rannells of The Book of Mormon, Peacock’s documentary Queer Planet examines scientific evidence of “gay penguins,” “bisexual lions,” “sex-changing clownfish,” and many more instances of flora and fauna upending traditional ideas about sexuality and gender. Queerness is natural, and multi-gendered mushrooms prove it! 

Stream Queer Planet.

9. G.B.F.

A closeted gay teen (Paul Iacono) dreams of ditching high school invisibility by infiltrating the most fabulous clique in school — but his plan spins wildly out of control when his sharp-witted best friend (Michael J. Willett) is accidentally outed instead. What follows is a candy-colored high school comedy with a bite: beneath the glitter and gossip lies a story about friendship, self-discovery, and the awkward, painful process of growing into who you really are. It's snarky, sweet, and surprisingly heartfelt — the kind of film that wears lip gloss and emotional depth in equal measure. 

Stream G.B.F. 

10. Olly Alexander: Growing Up Gay

The lead singer of Years & Years, Olly Alexander, steps out from behind the synths to confront something far more personal than pop: the mental health crisis within the LGBTQ+ community. With disarming honesty and quiet strength, he opens up about his own struggles with depression, using his story to shine a light on the stigma, silence, and systemic issues queer people often face. It’s an intimate, eye-opening documentary — both tender and unflinching — that finds power in vulnerability and hope in the act of speaking out. 

Stream Olly Alexander: Growing Up Gay.

11. Queen of the Capital

By day, she’s navigating the buttoned-up world of Washington D.C. bureaucracy — but by night, Muffy Blake Stephyns transforms into a vision of glam, grit, and glitter. This documentary follows the fearless drag queen as she rallies a troupe of bold, big-hearted performers to take their show — and their message — to the streets. It’s part political campaign, part cabaret, and all heart: a joyful, defiant celebration of queer artistry and activism, led by a queen who knows that real change sometimes starts in six-inch heels. 

Stream Queen of the Capital.

12. To Decadence with Love, Thanks for Everything! 

In the sultry, electric buildup to Southern Decadence — New Orleans’ loudest, proudest celebration of LGBTQ joy — two drag queens ready their wigs, war paint, and wildest looks. But beneath the sequins and sass lies a deeper story of resilience, chosen family, and what it means to take up space in a world that doesn’t always make room. Equal parts glitter and grit, this documentary is a love letter to queer Southern culture, where the stakes are high, the lashes higher, and pride means showing up exactly as you are. 

Stream To Decadence with Love, Thanks for Everything!

13. Summer Qamp 

Tucked away in the quiet beauty of rural Alberta, a group of queer, non-binary, and trans teens finally get to do something radical: just be kids. At this summer camp, joy takes center stage — bolstered by counselors who see them, hear them, and understand them. It's a tender, quietly powerful portrait of chosen family, self-discovery, and the healing that happens when young people are given space to exist simply, unapologetically. Amidst the crafts, campfires, and candid conversations, what shines brightest is the simple magic of feeling safe. 

Stream Summer Qamp.

14. P.S. Burn This Letter Please

When a long-hidden box of letters resurfaces after nearly six decades, it sparks a five-year journey into a forgotten corner of LGBTQ+ history — one that’s intimate, urgent, and deeply human. Each handwritten note is a lifeline, a confession, a connection across time, revealing a secret world of love, longing, and resistance. What unfolds is part detective story, part love story, and wholly a reclamation of queer voices lost to silence. Quietly revolutionary, this film reminds us that sometimes the most powerful histories are the ones kept in the margins — until now. 

Stream P.S. Burn This Letter Please.

15. Strike A Pose

In 1990, seven young male dancers stepped into the global spotlight as part of Madonna’s provocative Blonde Ambition tour — and into a cultural moment far bigger than they’d imagined. Fierce, fearless, and fabulously unapologetic onstage, they became overnight icons in the gay community, even as they privately wrestled with identity, fame, and the weight of representation. This documentary peels back the layers of latex and choreography to reveal a powerful story of brotherhood, vulnerability, and the price of visibility during the height of the AIDS crisis. It’s bold, moving, and — like the tour itself — decades ahead of its time. 

Stream Strike A Pose.

Find all LGBTQ+ Movies and TV Shows on Peacock!

Read more about: