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It is a series of comedic and realistic events that we live through the third season, where a group of exuberant sisters built a business on a braised grill - and a secret sauce. Now these diligent sisters finally get the rest they deserve after the fatigue lasted a while. On the other hand, the groom, who criticizes himself, learns to love himself before he is ready to walk at that stage just before his wedding.
Queer Eye season 3 offers more of what matters to its fans-frothy fun and fantasy punctuated by cathartic realness-but with less emotional labor than its first two seasons.
I never rolled my eyes during the first two seasons of Queer Eye, but there are moments this season that make my eyeballs itchy to do a little backflip.
So much of "Queer Eye" is about the battle against inertia, one of the greatest enemies of major life changes... And when "Queer Eye" is at its best, it inspires the spark to do better.
The show has never been better, the Fab Five have never been more human and the entire premise continues to feel like a breath of fresh air for what makeover TV can be.
Unlike the original series, which did not venture too far from New York, the new shows take place in the great state of Georgia, a far more interesting setting.
It is kind and warm, and it is the most feelgood of feelgood TV, and it manages to entertain by crossing, for a time at least, boundaries of class, of race and of sexuality.