'What’s wonderful about 'Bros' is how un-different it is. The bewilderment of early love, the insecurities, the confusion over what sex 'means,' or doesn’t—all of that is universal, which is exactly the point,' writes Stephanie Zacharek (szacharek)
is what you’d call, in relationship parlance, a handful. Bobby Leiber is a high-strung smart-aleck who, at 40, has never been in love—he admits as much on his podcast, where he covers gay history for an audience of young people who weren’t even tadpoles when the AIDS crisis erupted. Bobby also has a great job, as part of a team charged with designing and opening a new museum dedicated to LGBTQ+ history in New York. He’s serious about his work, and overly serious about everything else.
As with the best romantic comedies, there are serious underpinnings here. In a new relationship, we’re always asking, “Who am I? Whom do I want to be? Am I trying to change myself to fit what I think is this new person’s ideal?” To watch Bobby run through those questions for himself is amusing, but it’s also a little heartrending. Eichner is famous for his long-running comedy serieswhich began as a Funny Or Die experiment and eventually landed on Netflix.
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