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Notes. ^ The Cornered Mouse Dreams of Cheese is a josei manga series, [22] but has since been considered yaoi by industry professionals and marketing. [23] ^ Sakura-Gari was serialized in Rinka, a spin-off of the josei manga magazine Monthly Flowers, but it was marketed as a boys' love ( yaoi) series.
TharnType: The Series is 2019 Thai BL television series starring Suppasit Jongcheveevat (Mew) and Kanawut Traipipattanapong (Gulf). It is an adaptation of popular web novel TharnType Story เกลียดนักมาเป็นที่รักกันซะดีๆ (eng. TharnType's Story: Hate You, Love You More) by MAME (Orawan Vichayawannakul).
A Man Who Defies the World of BL. A Man Who Defies the World of BL ( Japanese: 絶対BLになる世界VS絶対BLになりたくない男, Hepburn: Zettai BL ni Naru Sekai VS Zettai BL ni Naritakunai Otoko, lit. "A World That Definitely Becomes BL VS A Man Who Definitely Doesn't Want to Be in BL") is a Japanese manga series by Konkichi. Zettai ...
Leading Japanese broadcaster TV Tokyo and Taiwan-based LGBT streaming platform GagaOOLala will this month release “At 25.00 in Akasaka,” a live-action drama series in the popular Boys Love (BL ...
Bad Buddy ( Thai: แค่เพื่อนครับเพื่อน; RTGS : Khae Phuean Khrap Phuean, lit. "Just a Friend, Friend") is a 2021 Thai romantic BL comedy-drama television series starring Korapat Kirdpan (Nanon) and Pawat Chittsawangdee (Ohm). Based from the novel Behind The Scenes by Afterday and -West-, it tells the story ...
The series is the first BL to achieve a major success in South Korea, where it became a social phenomenon and introduced the BL genre to the mainstream South Korean audience, resulting in a rising production of South Korean BL dramas. The series was included on Teen Vogue's best BL dramas of 2022 list.
T. Taiwanese boys' love television series (2 P) Thai boys' love television series (37 P)
The genre originated in the 1970s as a subgenre of shōjo manga, or comics for girls. Several terms were used for the new genre, including shōnen-ai (少年愛, lit. "boy love"), tanbi (耽美, lit. "aesthete" or "aesthetic"), and June (ジュネ, [dʑɯne]). The term yaoi emerged in the late 1970s and early 1980s in the context of dōjinshi ...