Hope My Boyfriend Don't Mind It: Tamara (Jeremy Haft, 2005)

Us girls, we are so magical.

Hope My Boyfriend Don't Mind It: Tamara (Jeremy Haft, 2005)
For some reason, when you Google the movie, this is like the only still that comes up.

Before you luxuriate in the toxic sexual ooze of the 2000s, book announcements:

Be Not Afraid #2, the second issue of my horror comic series with Lisandro Estherren, comes out on July 17. If you're on the fence, you can see a preview of it here and read some reviews of the first issue, which people actually liked for some reason.

Also: My non-fiction book DILF: Did I Leave Feminism is due out October 14. You can pre-order that anywhere you get books. The best way to support your local bookshop is to use Bookshop.org.


It’s important for you to know, up front, that I do not have any sort of endorsement deals or brand partnerships for this newsletter. The reason it’s important for you to know this is that, lately, this has been less of a “newsletter” than it has been a long-form advertisement for the streaming platform Tubi. 

Here’s the deal: I have seen a lot of movies in my lifetime. I have subscriptions to multiple streaming platforms, each with their own array of content that is both (a) recent and (b) usually okay. Every night, when I get up on the treadmill or down on the couch, I ask myself what do I want to watch tonight? And every night, without fail, I skip all of the options made available to me by all of those streaming platforms, and I watch one of the several thousand long-forgotten direct-to-video horror flops available for free on Tubi. 

There is a vast archive of low-budget and nigh-unwatchable horror content on this platform — every decade, every style, every country of origin — with the one constant being that all of it somehow stars Eliza Dushku. Even on the rare occasion that a movie doesn’t star Eliza Dushku, you feel as if she were present, or at least involved. She hovers over all of it, the patron Goddess of the direct-to-video arts. 

So it is with the necessary offerings and propitiations to the genius loci of Tubi dot com, the great and powerful spirit of Eliza Dushku, that I present to you this, the Pride edition of Things Jude Found On Tubi: Tamara, a movie in which a Wiccan nerd punishes her bullies by making them have hot gay sex. 

Surely there must be more to Tamara than this, you say, and to this I answer: Not really! But it’s going to be a short newsletter unless I expand on it, so let’s try. 

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