Senior entertainment writer named Adam Vary described D.E.B.S as "the gay spy movie" in his article "The New New Queer Cinema".
[6] Writer Katrin Horn remarked that D.E.B.S is a groundbreaking movie as the film works to desexualize femme identity previously centered in lesbian chic cinema.
Robinson's use of narrative and stylistic techniques in D.E.B.S offered a new lenses into lesbian representations and the structure of heteronormative romantic comedies.
The film is a lesbian musical drama about two rock and roll musicians named Daisy and Tyler during a night out in the LGBTQ+ subculture of Los Angeles.
Marston's received help from his wife Elizabeth and Olive Byrne, a research assistant, in his creation of the super heroine.
[12] The film's inclusion of a lesbian relationship between Elizabeth Marston and Olive Byrne after William's death was criticized and strongly denounced by Christie Marston, daughter of William’s son Moulton, saying she was "blindsided" by the narrative since nobody from the film ever reached out to her or her family.
For her part, Robinson admitted in an interview with Abraham Riesman at Vulture that she made no effort to contact the family.
"[13] In 2017, Robinson worked with cartoonist Terry Moore on a graphic novel adaptation of Strangers in Paradise for a feature film.
Chambers argues that the L Word's importance is that the show brought a lot of visibility to a range of lesbian and bisexual identities in its character plot lines.
[17] True Blood is an American fantasy drama about Sookie Stackhouse, a telepathic waitress, who lives in a rural town in Louisiana.
In March 2012, it was announced that Robinson would write a supernatural teen thriller with Dawn Olmstead (of Prison Break) and Marti Noxon (of Mad Men) attached as producers.