Here’s one broadcast you won’t want to miss. Broadway Bares, the annual burlesque AIDS fundraiser, brought in $1.48 million—and you can watch the sizzling highlights in the video clip above.

Titled Broadway Bares: On Demand, this year’s show was built around a TV theme—think “Soaking Wet” weather reports, a “Bases Loaded” sports show, a “Sweet Treats” cooking segment and a “Crack of Dawn” morning show, plus loincloths and dragons for a “Throne Games” spectacular.

For two performances, 198 of the Great White Way’s most talented dancers and singers stripped down for the one-night-only event Sunday, June 19.

The annual fundraiser is produced by and benefits Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS (BC/EFA). Since its 1992 debut, Broadway Bares has raised $15.8 million for Broadway Cares, according to its press release.

Benjamin Ryan backstage at Broadway Bares.Courtesy of Benjamin Ryan

This year, POZ’s Benjamin Ryan raised an impressive $16,000, making him one of the show’s top five fundraisers. You can read more about this “nearly naked AIDS advocate” here.

In related news, BC/EFA donated a total of $150,000 in emergency grants to three groups assisting the families and victims of the shooting massacre at the Orlando club Pulse.

“Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS historically has moved quickly and responsibly on behalf of the New York theatre community to assist those affected by extraordinary, traumatic events,” said executive director Tom Viola in a BC/EFA press release. “We stand with our brothers and sisters in the LGBT community in Orlando and indeed with all who suffer from the violence that comes with inflamed rhetoric, toxic misconceptions of each other and subtle promotion of hatred. Let us respond with love and real resources.”

The groups receiving the grants are: Equality Florida, the GLBT Center of Central Florida and OneOrlando Fund.

The emergency grants were awarded in addition to the $218,500 BC/EFA donated last year to HIV/AIDS groups and family service organizations throughout Florida.

For more about BC/EFA, read the September 2012 POZ cover story “The Show Must Go On.”