Tue. Mar 3rd, 2026
Streaming Rage: That Scene Hit Too Hard

Streaming rage is real, y’all. Not the mad kind, but the kind where something pops off on screen and you’re just sitting there, heart thumping, like: “Hold up. Did they just read my diary?” I had that moment last night, halfway through my third bowl of cereal (don’t judge), watching this character just… exist. Not perform. Not explain. Just be.

It was this one scene where the queer Black character—let’s call him Andre—walked into a room full of people and did the tiniest sigh before he smiled. That’s it. Just a sigh. Nobody else in the room noticed, but I felt it. That little pause, the breath you take because you know you’re about to put on the “safe” version of yourself. I have done that sigh in a thousand rooms, some with family, some with strangers, some with those “well-meaning” coworkers who always want to know if I’ve seen Pose.

I sat there, spoon midair, thinking about all the times I’ve worn my queerness soft, kept my voice careful, adjusted my posture. Andre’s sigh hit me harder than any dramatic speech ever could. It was so small, but it said: I see you. I know. And for a second, I felt less alone in my living room, surrounded by my houseplants and questionable snack choices.

Representation isn’t always in the big, bold moments. Sometimes it’s in the way someone exhales before they tuck away a piece of themselves. That’s a kind of queer magic too. I’m grateful for those quiet seconds on screen, the ones that remind me I’m not the only one who’s ever had to take a breath and step into the room.

So yeah, that scene hit too hard. And honestly, I needed it. Sometimes the softest things on screen are the ones that make you feel the most seen.

By Kabal Briar

Kabal Briar is a queer Black storyteller, educator, and creator reshaping what it means to take up space with truth and tenderness. Through poetry, essays, and lived experience, he explores identity, joy, body acceptance, and the many ways we learn to love ourselves out loud. His work blends softness with strength, humor with heart, and personal history with universal feeling. Kabal’s mission is simple: to help people feel seen, valued, and brave enough to live in their own TRUTH.

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