ReportWire

Tag: Gay

  • Support a good cause with t-shirts designed by SoCal artists

    ABC7 will donate its proceeds from sales at our online apparel shop to support local charities and non-profit organizations in our viewing area.

    You can help send SoCal kids some holiday joy! ABC7 has partnered with local muralists to design t-shirts to support support our Spark of Love toy drive, collecting toys and sports gear for children and teens in need later this year.

    Click here to check out great Spark of Love-inspired designs by Terrick Gutierrez, Mister Toledo, GoopMassta, Liseth Amaya, hero, Ernest Doty, Jason Ostro, AngelOnce, Su.plex, Vasco Del Rey, Jules Muck, Moncho 1929, Phobik and Septerhed.

    ABC7LA Spark of Love-Inspired Adult Short Sleeve T-Shirts

    Muralist WRDSMTH donates his time and talent to support this year’s Puppy Palooza pet adoption event.

    Shelter pets need our support. ABC7 has partnered with local muralists to design t-shirts supporting our bi-annual Puppy Palooza dog adoption event, supporting spcaLA.

    Click here to check out our exclusive Puppy Palooza-inspired designs by WRDSMTH and Teachr.

    ABC7LA Puppy Palooza T-shirt designed by WRDSMTH

    ABC7 has partnered with local muralist Phobik to pay tribute to the firefighters who risk their lives to protect ours.

    ABC7 partnered with local muralist Phobik to pay tribute to the firefighters who risk their lives to protect ours. ABC7’s proceeds from sales of the shirt go to the LAFD Foundation.

    ABC7LA SoCal Strong T-Shirt designed by Phobik

    Los Angeles-based muralist Coco Nella partnered up with ABC7 to design this year’s LA Pride shirt as a social responsibility to give back to the LGBTQ community.

    Celebrate Pride Month all year long with our ABC7 Pride t-shirts, tank top and fanny pack! Sales of the ABC7 Pride Collection will help raise funds for AIDS Walk Los Angeles and APLA Health.

    Click here to check out exclusive Pride-inspired designs by Coco Nella, Mike Habs, Ricky Sencion and Marisabel Bazan.

    The Burbank street artist hopes to help those in need.

    Millions depend on local food banks, especially right now. ABC7 has partnered with local muralists to design t-shirts supporting our annual Feed SoCal food drive, raising much needed funds for regional food banks.

    Click here to check out exclusive Feed SoCal-inspired designs by Sef, Cloe Hakakian, Eric Michael, Davia King, EZRA L.A., ZLA, Dezmundo, Menace Two & Resa Piece, Corie Mattie, Jeremy Novy, kar_part and Ruben Rojas.

    ABC7LA Feed SoCal-Inspired Adult Short Sleeve T-Shirts

    KABC

    Source link

  • The Special Test That Helps One Company Identify Gay Sheep

    Queer social networking platform, Grindr, recently debuted a tongue-in-cheek fashion show titled “I Wool Survive,” featuring a 37-piece knitwear collection made entirely from the wool of gay rams—as in homosexual male sheep.

    That’s right—as it turns out, 1 in 12 sheep are considered gay or “male-oriented.” And those sheep—and any rams that don’t fulfill their procreating duties within livestock operations—are often sent to the slaughterhouse and sold as meat products. 

    Sheep operations earn money from three main products: milk, fiber (wool) and meat; because meat drives the most revenue, non-breeding rams are typically routed into the meat supply chain, said Dr. Whit Stewart, associate professor and Extension Sheep Specialist at the University of Wyoming.

    Inspired by the doomed fate of non-breeding rams, Michael Stücke, a shepherd located in Germany, created the world’s first “gay sheep” flock and partnered with his friend Nadia Leytes, client strategy director at the German ad agency Serviceplan, to co-found Rainbow Wool. The German non-profit uses yarn from Stücke’s flock to produce fashion pieces, generating a creative revenue stream that supports the farm and LGBTQ charities worldwide. Customers can even sponsor their own “gay ram” through Rainbow Wool’s website.

    Originally starting with just three sheep, Stücke, a member of the Gayfarmer Association, now cares for more than 500 on his Löhne, Germany-based farm, including 35 “male-oriented” rams. As sponsorships have grown, so has the farm’s capacity to expand its flock, opening the door to even more creative possibilities for Rainbow Wool. 

    But identifying male-oriented rams is rarely done, Dr. Stewart said, because it requires behavioral observation that isn’t realistic in large commercial operations. 

    Rainbow Wool says its breeders employ a “pen test” to identify “male-oriented” rams: “If a ram repeatedly mounts other males, he’s moved into a pen with only females. If he shows interest in them, he’s sold as a regular breeding ram. If he ignores the females and continues to prefer males, he’s considered commercially ‘not useful’ and is often sent to slaughter,” a company representative said. 

    But Dr. Stewart noted that such behavior is “not exclusive to males with same-sex sexual preference, nor is it considered a reliable way to categorize rams.”  Mounting can also reflect social hierarchy, long term absence of ewes, or excitement during breeding season.

    In this case the “gay ram” label is being applied broadly as it may include sheep with low libido, infertility, or other reproductive issues rather than simply a same-sex preference—”a trait that is not straightforward to define scientifically.”

    While rams may produce slightly more fleece because of their body size, fiber quality depends on genetics, nutrition and environment. “There is no special or unique wool attribute associated with rams that would change what is already commercially available,” he said. 

    Since one ram can breed 30 to 100 ewes, keeping non-breeding males is economically impractical and can even create welfare issues as rams housed together can be aggressive and more difficult to manage. But in a larger industrial wool standpoint–”a small refuge population, regardless of the narrative around it, would not change global or regional wool markets,” he said. 

    “From a non-sensational, scientific perspective, it would be easy for substandard rams to be grouped into a marketing category like this. Dr. Stewart said. “In an era when so few people are directly connected to how their food and fiber are produced, creative marketing opportunities do exist. ”

    That’s what Grindr thought too. 

    In mid-2024, Leytes, the marketer from Germany, reached out to Grindr, which has over 15 million users worldwide, for its global footprint and visibility in the community. The collaboration sparked what  SJ Jenkins, Head of Creative Brand Initiatives at Grindr, called a “crazy and fantastic creative journey,”

    Grindr executives knew the collaboration had to be big, Jenkins said, leading them to enlist powerhouse fashion designer Michael Schmidt, known for his work with Chrome Hearts and queer icons like Cher and Tina Turner. Schmidt and Suss Cousins, author of Hollywood Knits, hand-knit each piece, inspired by 37 gay archetypes including firefighters, sailors, and the rockstar.

    After debuting in New York City, the fashion show quickly drew headlines and social-media attention, thrusting Rainbow Wool’s story into the spotlight.

    “It was powerful to celebrate a bit of gay history, celebrate what people are into, and to do it on such a profound global stage,” Jenkins said. 

    Tristan Pineiro, senior vice president for brand marketing and communications of Grindr, gave an impassioned speech that opened the show last week saying “The sheep are a metaphor for members of the gay community, really often misunderstood, discarded and thought of as not worth it. I think this stands for something so much bigger.”

    Grindr, under Pineiro’s direction, has been on a mission to shake off “dusty and outdated perceptions of Grindr as just a hook up app”, and Grindr x Rainbow Wool was the opportunity to make that statement, Jenkins said. 

    “Yes, we can hook you up with a connection, but we can also hook you up with healthcare and HIV testing kits, we can hook you up with a book club, we can hook you up with in-app content from Christina Aguilera that you can’t get anywhere else, and now we can hook you up with the opportunity to adopt a gay sheep in Germany,” Jenkins, who adopted her very own sheep named ‘Marvin Gay’ said. 

    Via a pop up prompt and Grindr grid takeover, users can sponsor a gay sheep at the Rainbow Wool farm. All transactions are via Rainbow Wool and status of sheep can be monitored via the Rainbow Wool website, this feature will be live in the app for one week.

    Grindr will be auctioning off the 37-piece collection with the proceeds benefitting global LGBTQ+ organizations, leading up to pride in 2026. 

    The final deadline for the 2026 Inc. Regionals Awards is Friday, December 12, at 11:59 p.m. PT. Apply now.

    Victoria Salves

    Source link

  • RHOSLC’s Heather Gay Drunkenly Claims She’s ‘F–ked Around’ with Below Deck’s Captain Jason Chambers

    When confronted with her comment by producers in a confessional, Heather didn’t even remember saying it — before exclaiming, “You can’t use that … delete. Delete!”

    Loose lips sink ships … or at least make them a little more interesting … as a tipsy Heather Gay made quite the claim while aboard a boat in Canouan with Captain Jason Chambers.

    On Tuesday’s new episode of The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City, the women chartered a yacht in the Caribbean in what was essentially a crossover event with Below Deck Down Under. It was Heather and Whitney Rose who organized the getaway, explaining they knew Chambers from a previous trip to Australia.

    Upon landing on the Grenadines island, the ladies were instantly smitten with the ship’s hunky crew, including the one and only Captain Jason. And while Britani Bateman, in particular, had her eyes set on the Aussie captain, it was Gay who revealed she may have already been there, done that.

    As the drinks were flowing on day one of the trip, Gay was seen playing in the water with Chambers, exclaiming at one point, “I’ll ride him like a f–king bronco!”

    That was followed by a chat between Heather and Britani, in which the latter expressed playful frustration Gay was “canoodling with Jason.”

    “But Jason and I are friends, we have a history, we’ve f–ked around before, there’s nothing there,” she said, shocking Bateman, who asked what she meant. “I’m saying we’re friends, so there’s latitude,” Gay added.

    In a confessional, Gay appeared shocked she made the bold claim, clearly not remembering it.

    Captain Jason Chambers Reveals What Really Went Down with Lala Kent and RHOM’s Adriana de Moura (Exclusive) – Click image for related story

    “I said that?! Serious faced?!” she exclaimed. “You can’t use that. I don’t know why I said that to her. Delete! Delete!”

    So far, Chambers hasn’t addressed Gay’s claims, but he did call the women “lovely, all of them,” while speaking with Us Magazine.

    “They’re really beautiful people. However, we know what they like when they’re together. You’ll see that. I’ve tried everything to try and break the ice. I brought some yoga and some Zen into it to try and stop it,” he added of the drama, which included a major blowup between Lisa Barlow and her costars. “But I don’t think there’s anything we could have done to calm it down.”

    The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City airs Tuesdays on Bravo, while some additional footage from the trip will also air on Below Deck Down Under next year.

    TMZ

    Every Bravolebrity Who Wanted a Piece of Below Deck’s Captain Jason Chambers at BravoCon (Exclusive Details) – Click image for related story

    Source link

  • SoCal Out100 honoree celebrates the LGBTQ+ community by sharing their coming out stories

    SILVER LAKE, LOS ANGELES (KABC) — Out Magazine has announced its 31st annual Out100.

    The list recognizes the most influential and pioneering LGBTQ+ people across entertainment, politics, activism, sports, and more.

    One of this year’s local honorees is the founder of Baby Gay and host of the Baby Gay podcast, PJ Brescia.

    Brescia stated, “If you told my younger self that you’re going to be a queer nonprofit starter or a queer rights activist, I would have said, ‘No way. You’re crazy. I’m straight.’ It just kind of unfolded.”

    Baby Gay is a nonprofit organization and a media platform celebrating people through the coming out process, through storytelling, advocacy, and togetherness, all while humanizing the queer experience.

    “When I hit 30 and I was kind of feeling very lost in my life, I went on this five-day writing experience,” added Brescia.

    “I started writing this web series. It was a fictional comedy based on my coming out story – someone coming out later in life.”

    “And what formed was the web series called ‘Baby Gay,’ because for me, it wasn’t until I saw someone else’s story that was already out, that I saw myself in, that it kind of unlocked something within me that said, ‘Oh, there. Okay, I’m going to be okay too.’”

    In April of 2025, Brescia launched the Baby Gay podcast to share coming out stories.

    “I love just talking to people and hearing their stories,” said Brescia. “The goal with this project is to kind of highlight that there is no one way to be queer.”

    Baby Gay has partnered with the historic Black Cat Tavern in Silver Lake, throwing National Coming Out Day celebrations since 2023.

    “I think that PJ has an intrinsic understanding of what hospitality means, which is not just that you have a story to tell, but you listen to other people’s stories,” said Lindsay Kennedy, co-owner of The Black Cat. “And that’s sort of what I think PJ’s super power is.”

    Kennedy continued, “My purpose of owning The Black Cat is to tell stories, and to tell queer stories because of the roots of this building.”

    “Joining with PJ to really celebrate National Coming Out Day this year for the third time, is probably one of the more important reasons I’m in this business. It’s really giving me purpose to participate with PJ and National Coming Out Day celebrations.”

    Abdullah Hall, a Baby Gay board member, added, “I saw this booth and I’m like, ‘What is Baby Gay?’ And so PJ Brescia was there and said, ‘Oh, this is Baby Gay,’ and told me it’s a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that assists in the coming out process.”

    “‘Would you like to leave a message to a new person that’s coming out?’ and I thought, that is brilliant. Yes, I would!”

    Hall added, “Because I remember coming out. If somebody had a little message for you and just said, ‘Everything’s going to be okay’ or ‘You’re amazing,’ that would have been great when I came out.”

    Brescia continued, “I see our events and our advocacy going beyond Los Angeles. I want to bring that to other cities and states throughout the country and throughout the world.”

    “I think we’re just at the beginning of this journey, and what’s been so incredible is that it’s just been unfolding, and I feel like I am being guided from above, and I’m this conduit, and I’m just honored to be a part of it.”

    Check out all of the 2025 Out100 at out.com and in Out Magazine, on newsstands October 28.

    Copyright © 2025 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved.

    KABC

    Source link

  • UnderU4 Men Founder Retiring, Store Changing Ownership & Location – KXL

    PORTLAND, Ore. —  The men’s LGBTQ undergarment store Under U4Men is undergoing a major makeover as founder Steve Lien is retiring.  But, the business is being bought by one of his longtime employees Wesley Bateman.

    Bateman plans to move the shop from its location since 2006 at SW Washington & SW Park to SW 10th & Morrison.  It is a smaller location but will remain downtown.  Bateman hopes to open the store in October.

    More about:

    Brett Reckamp

    Source link

  • NYC’s only designated shelter for queer adults is a ‘nightmare’ of misconduct and living conditions

    NYC’s only designated shelter for queer adults is a ‘nightmare’ of misconduct and living conditions

    For the last seven years, Jha’asryel-Akquil Bishop has called city shelters their home. 

    Bishop lost their housing just one month after they immigrated to the United States from Guyana in 2016. They were living in Brooklyn with their uncle until they began experiencing domestic violence, which they said “forced me to move out.” 

    Now 27, they’re living at Marsha’s House, the only queer-designated shelter for adults in the city that’s been the center of several lawsuits for abuse and neglect, and has been called a “nightmare” of misconduct and unsafe living conditions by ex-residents.

    Despite the huge need for queer-designated shelters, there are only a handful of them out of hundreds of city shelters. In New York City, LGBTQ+ people make up only 4.5% of the general population, but comprise nearly 40% of the city’s homeless adults, according to New York State’s Office of Children and Family Services—and the population is three times more likely to be physically threatened, abused, and carry emotional trauma than others who are homeless. Of the queer-designated shelters in the city, most are limited to services for youth under age 24. 

    Marsha’s House, however, is an exception: located in Belmont in the Bronx, the shelter has an age limit of 30. But the shelter also comes with a slew of concerns, like broken facilities that go unfixed (despite required annual inspections), a layout that can contribute to emotional distress, especially for those who have experienced trauma, and staff who may be unfamiliar with LGBTQ+ issues, according to state reports and incident reports filed by residents that Fortune obtained through Freedom of Information requests. 

    Queer homeless residents are often traumatized, and require different resources than others 

    LGBTQ+ homeless people are disproportionately affected by sexual or violent assaults, which in many cases lead to mental illnesses like post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, suicidality, and more. These risks can be greater for youth and young adults, like Bishop. 

    “I’m someone who’s experienced sexual violence and abuse, and so thinking about sharing a room with someone else who I don’t know and in a shelter setting, I did not sleep at night,” Bishop said. “I had chronic pain because I had trouble sleeping. I got placed on medication for sleep because I had trouble sleeping.” 

    Sunny Nagpaul

    A recent study found homeless queer youth had been sexually assaulted at three times the rate of non-LGBTQ+ homeless youth, and almost half of queer youth reported sexual abuse by an adult caretaker, compared to about 20% of non-LGBTQ+ youth.

    According to a national study that analyzed mental illness in more than 400 homeless youth, 41% of those who identify as queer reported depression, compared to 28% of non-queer youth, and were also much more likely to report suicidal ideation and attempted suicide.  

    Marsha’s House, an 81-bed shelter that opened in 2017, is currently the city’s only adult shelter designated for sexual minorities—but Bishop believes “if Marsha’s House had an improved facility, it could become more accessible” to a population with a big need, but few resources for support. 

    Those who are queer and homeless, they said, “oftentimes are also victims of sexual violence and do need the privacy of a single room.” 

    At Marsha’s House, Bishop said they’ve witnessed their peers having manic episodes, bouts of psychosis, and mental distress. They said there are six single-person rooms usually reserved for people who have gotten a transitional surgery or when another room or bed needs repair. 

    Bishop believes the rooms could offer a few days of mental peace to residents who may need them—but they’re hard to access. The city’s department of homeless services, rather than shelter staff, determines who can stay in them. “I think it is a very disadvantageous situation at the shelter,” Bishop said, adding, “when you’re recovering from discrimination and violence, oftentimes it’s hard to rest or sleep when there are other people around you. People may need those rooms to reset themselves, and that’s not an option available to them.” 

    Other structural elements of the shelter, which is five stories tall but does not have an elevator, also prevent those who have physical disabilities from living there. 

    The city’s Department of Homeless Services, or DHS, did not confirm Fortune’s inquiry on how many single-occupancy rooms are in the shelter or how residents can be eligible for them. A DHS spokesperson told Fortune the agency has been strengthening its trauma-informed support for LGBTQ+ populations for the last several years, including more training courses for staff since 2015. 

    Residents describe staff who are ‘nasty and rude and talks down to people’

    Another challenge at Marsha’s House, Bishop told Fortune, includes staff members speaking rudely or yelling at residents. Bishop described such interactions as “tense.” 

    “Folks have had issues with staff to their gender identity and feeling discriminated or feeling unsafe,” they said. 

    Between December 2019 to April 2020, and June to December 2022, residents filed at least 10 complaints against staff behavior, according to residents’ grievance reports Fortune obtained through Freedom of Information requests, and is the second most frequent complaint from residents, those reports show. 

    A chart showing resident complaints at Marsha's House

    The complainants, whose names have been redacted from the reports, said ‘‘the staff is very rude and need to be changed and trained,” are “nasty and rude and talks down to people,” and talk “negatively and disrespectfully” about residents.  

    Another complainant said staff have called residents derogatory names. When the resident spoke to the director, they wrote, they “felt dismissed and no disciplinary action was taken against the staff member.” 

    Such interactions, it seems, have now shaped the shelter’s reputation. Maddox Guerilla, a senior consultant at housing-advocacy group Point Source Youth, also used to be homeless and heard about staff troubles at the shelter. “I don’t think the staff at Marsha’s House are being trained in queer issues,” Guerilla told Fortune, “because I hear people all the time saying, ‘they don’t respect me by my name,’ or ‘they’re harassing me, misgendering me, they don’t treat trans people right.’”

    A DHS spokesperson told Fortune all shelter staff receive a full-day training course in LGBTQ+ specific issues, and any additional training each shelter provider may offer, and that staff are expected to lead with care and compassion when engaging with clients. The spokesperson also said the agency has robust accountability mechanisms in place to address inappropriate staff behavior, but did not elaborate on what those measures are. 

    To be sure, queer homeless residents often face discrimination at shelters, and find themselves in positions where they may be too vulnerable or unstable to speak up for themselves. One transgender woman, Mariah Lopez, however, has sued the city several times for discrimination against her. Her most recent lawsuit was against Marsha’s House, which she sued because she says she was denied entry to the shelter with her service dog, Chica, who helps her manage her post-traumatic stress and anxiety disorders.  

    Her lawsuit led to changes. Following her case, in 2021 the city’s department of homeless services pledged to create another shelter specifically for transgender and non gender-conforming clients, and to reserve 30 beds across Manhattan, the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Queens that will include single-stalled toilets, showers, and private bathrooms with doors that can lock, where possible.  The city, however, is behind on those plans

    Unsanitary conditions remain unfixed for years 

    Queer populations still face challenges that other homeless people face, like infestations, mold, and broken things.

    The outside of Marsha's House
    Marsha’s House, the only queer-designated shelter for adults in the city, has been the center of several lawsuits for abuse and neglect.

    Sunny Nagpaul

    At Marsha’s House, the most common complaints were about heat or hot water in the building, according to the residents’ reports, which reveal that showers have had issues with uncontrollable burning hot water since 2020. 

    The showers in the shelter, Bishop said, operate by pressing a button rather than a dial, and often the temperature of the water is so hot, they’ve developed rashes, dry skin, and even breathing problems. 

    “If the temperature of the water is too hot or the room gets too humid, I usually lose my breath or faint,” Bishop said.  

    According to the residents’ reports, the most hot-water complaints were filed in March and April of 2020. The complaints in the report said “the water literally burns people’s skin,” and cited “water which is extremely hot in the shower.” One client said he mentioned this to staff, “but nothing has been done.”

    Bishop was also recently diagnosed with an intestinal parasite, and the bathrooms are so dirty that they worry it will spread. “You go there and you see feces from the person that used it before,” they said. Last year, one resident reported “there is a person or persons leaving poop smear all over in a lot of the restrooms. Directors know about this, this is still happening.” Other complaints cited mold and bug infestations.

    A DHS spokesperson told Fortune that when the agency is made aware of conditions that adversely impact residents’ quality of life, it works closely with shelter operators and landlords to rectify the situation in a timely manner. 

    New York’s homeless crisis is growing

    More than 200,600 migrants have arrived in New York since the spring of 2022, and more than 65,600 people remain in the city’s care, according to city data. Up to 1,500 migrants live in temporary emergency shelters outside the city. 

    In 2016, the New York State Comptroller began a series of audit reports on shelter conditions, with new versions released every four years. The goal was to reveal the gaps in shelter regulations, which allow broken things to go unfixed for years. 

    The most recent 2020 report found over 60% of the city’s 80 shelters had significant health and safety risks. Peter Caroll, the lead author of the audit report, told Fortune the biggest issues include mold, vermin, and bug infestations, and that while his team was doing surveys, it was clear that “nobody really knew the scope of the population or the problem.” 

    Jha’asryel-Akquil Bishop looking pensive

    Sunny Nagpaul

    He described how the inspection process works: OTDA, the main regulating entity of shelters state-wide, inspects shelters annually, and then works with shelters or property owners to address violations. If a violation requires more than one month to fix, the shelter should submit a “corrective action plan” to OTDA. But according to the report, that’s one of the steps causing confusion. In five shelters where corrective action plans stated issues like bathtub mold and broken toilets were fixed, Caroll’s audit team returned to see the find the same broken conditions. 

    “We found that in most cases, the conditions didn’t get better, they got worse,” Carroll said.

    The most promising solution for broken facilities, he said, may be more money or at least awareness of financial support that is already siphoned off for shelters. In the state’s yearly budget, $1 million is available through grants to shelters and shelter providers through OTDA for emergency repairs. 

    “It could bring up to $150,000 per facility, each year,” Carroll said, adding that many shelters his team visited said there wasn’t enough money to address the health risks. “This grant would be a way to close that gap.”

    Sunny Nagpaul

    Source link

  • Putting the G in LGBTQ: Meet The ‘Mayor Of Montrose’

    Putting the G in LGBTQ: Meet The ‘Mayor Of Montrose’

    June is the anniversary of the Stonewall riots, often regarded as the tipping point in the modern gay rights movement and earning its recognition as Pride Month. Houston Press met with members of the LGBTQ community to learn more about their experiences belonging to this group. These are their stories.

    At 78 years young, openly gay Houstonian Dennis Beedon has been there, seen that and lived to tell the tale. The septuagenarian has been one of the key behind-the-scenes players with some of the most influential movers and shakers in Houston in an effort to benefit the LGBTQ community as well as Houstonians writ large.

    While he may not have been born in Texas, Beedon got here as soon as he could (after growing up in Chicago, serving a stint in the U.S. Army, and living in Puerto Rico and Florida), and he picked up the moniker as the “Mayor of Montrose” amongst his inner circle because of his status in the neighborhood – or “gayborhood,” as he might call it.

    How he earned that title is really where the story begins, and living his truth, especially when it comes to his sexuality, has been a tenet that he has never shied away from.

    “I was out to everybody, including my family and friends, since I was relatively young, give or take my military career,” he said. “I knew that I was gay during the military because I had a boyfriend when I was in the army, but I never never had any issues with anything LGBTQ during my time. My mind and openness really set in place when I moved to Houston, though, and that is because I lived in Montrose. I was exposed to everything and everybody during that period of time, both positive and negative in the sense of how Montrose was back in 1979 to 1981. I mean, it was pretty decadent.”

    Montrose — known nowadays for its eclectic cafes, coffee shops, bars, nightlife, restaurants and the rest — holds a rich history of being a safe haven for Houston’s LGBTQ community when the times were more or less as less pleasant for the queer community. It was also a place where the queer community felt free to live their life proudly, no matter how demure or flashy it might have appeared to outside eyes.

    The small in stature but mighty in voice Beedon followed suite. He did not let the fickle finger of popular opinion about the queer community sway him during his new beginnings in Houston. In fact, it’s where he found his passion for community involvement.

    That was also shortly before the outbreak of what is now known as HIV/AIDS, which galvanized Beedon’s determination to make a difference. He left his job in the insurance industry and answered the calling to community service.

    “I went to work for what was then still being put together, The Assistance Fund, [which consisted of] five gentlemen who were donating $500 a month each into a general fund,” Beedon said. “Because HIV was becoming so widely known as well as the issues created from it, those that were stricken with that illness were being fired from work. These five gentlemen were making $500 donations each month in into a general fund, and then they were paying for the COBRA insurance for those that were fired from their positions because of HIV just to keep their medical insurance covered.”

    Part of his passion for battling the spread and stigma of HIV/AIDS stemmed from his own personal experience. Beedon had witnessed the public shock of Rock Hudson’s death as well as the uproar over the game of musical chairs played by various funeral homes regarding Liberace’s body — both of whom passed away due to complications from the virus.

    However, over the course of his years, Beedon has seen healthcare progress to the point that an HIV diagnosis is no longer the death knell it formerly was. Instead, people are now living full and healthy lives thanks to breakthroughs in medication partnered with a healthy lifestyle.

    “It’s progressively gotten much, much, much better, in fact, to the point I was [in a relationship] with somebody for my first 21 years of living in Houston who was stricken with HIV.”

    Because of his involvement through various initiatives to promote awareness of and testing for HIV, which largely took place in the Montrose neighborhood, Beedon earned his now unforgettable nickname as the “Mayor of Montrose.”

    “In the clubs, I would run into people who would visit me at The Assistance Fund. Automatically, the connection was quite obvious of why they were at The Assistance Fund … it’s because they were looking for testing and for dollars to get medication. So they would approach me at the clubs and pull me to the side, and they would say, ‘I have a friend. Would you please talk to him or her, because they won’t go to a clinic to get tested.’” he said. “So, I would approach whomever they were talking about, counsel them and bring them into The Assistance Fund.”

    Because of his motherly nature, he earned the additional nickname “Mother of Montrose.” To examine the initials, it fittingly spells “mom.” But it’s also because he was well connected to local dignitaries.

    “They called me the Mayor of Montrose, or mom, because I was getting things done for them. I actually could go downtown and see the mayor of Houston, whoever that was at the time, and get some things done rather quickly,” he said.

    Since then, the name has stuck, as has his involvement in LGBTQ causes. One of his most recent endeavors is volunteering with the New Faces of Pride. The organization’s mission is to foster unity, inclusivity and empowerment within the diverse LGBTQ+ community of Houston through year-round events and fundraising initiatives.

    It’s signature event will be the New Faces of Pride Festival and Parade, with the festival running from noon to 6 p.m., Saturday followed by a parade at 7:30 p.m. at City Hall, 901 Bagby. Planet Pink!, the official after party, takes place at POST Houston, 401 Franklin until 2 a.m.

    The New Faces of Pride’s inaugural parade is the first of two pride-related parades this month, which has been a topic of conversation in the LGBTQ community, but Beedon says it is all good.

    “The New Faces of Pride has been very well received,” he said. “It’s a community thing, and that’s the focus.”

    As he slowly approaches 80, Beedon has no plans of slowing down anytime soon.

    “I’ve been able to do a few good things in people’s lives, and that makes me want to get up every day and keep going. I really am not going to retire, no matter what,” he said.

    The New Faces of Pride Festival runs from noon to 6 p.m., Saturday followed by a parade at 7:30 p.m. at City Hall, 901 Bagby. Planet Pink!, the official after party, takes place 9 p.m. – 2 a.m. at POST Houston, 401 Franklin. For information, visit newfacesofpride.org. The festival is free to $250 to attend. The parade is free. Planet Pink! is $25 – $60.

    Sam Byrd

    Source link

  • Was my favorite teacher gay? Maybe a belly dancer could find out

    Was my favorite teacher gay? Maybe a belly dancer could find out

    Dear Mr. H:

    Raphael Simon here — Rafi, as you may remember me.

    We last saw each other in 1982 at a magnet school in Los Angeles, where I was your student.

    You were a terrific teacher, Mr. H — smart, witty, occasionally tough, with a genuine enthusiasm for the subjects you taught. But I am not writing to thank you for what I learned in your class; this isn’t one of those letters. Nor am I writing to accuse you of anything; this isn’t one of those letters either.

    I am writing to apologize.

    Like most apologies, this one is purely performative. It changes nothing. Nonetheless, I feel compelled to confess.

    The belly dancer? My bad.

    I found her. I hired her. I was responsible for the whole thing, except the belly dancing itself.

    You do remember the belly dancer, don’t you? Let me back up.

    When I was in ninth grade, I took your hybrid history and English class called Research Writing, in which we learned such things as how to use card catalogs, document sources and format footnotes — once-vital skills now lost to time and ChatGPT.

    For my first paper, I chose to write about the Black Hole of Calcutta, only to discover that the name had nothing to do with astronomical black holes, much less the all-nude musical “Oh! Calcutta!” For my historical fiction project, I wrote a mystery story about Napoleon’s exile on Elba — a subject I picked mainly because Napoleons were a type of pastry I loved.

    To state the obvious, nothing we covered in your class justified having a half-naked woman dance around our desks.

    You were in your 30s. Slim, fair-skinned, wavy brown hair. Casually preppy.

    I was 14, pimply, bookish. A typical if slightly effeminate adolescent Jewish boy, California version. I was also, at the time, just beginning to suspect something about myself, or just beginning to begin to suspect.

    In any case, I liked you. All your students liked you. Research Writing was an honors class. We sat in a circle rather than in rows. Naturally, we wanted to celebrate your birthday. A birthday surprise — that was the pretext I sold my classmates on.

    Why a belly dancer and not, say, a birthday cake?

    For one thing, belly dancing played a larger role in my imagination than you might expect. This was mostly due to my grandmother Esther, who had an enduring fascination with belly dancers. She would describe the way they moved their tummies as if by magic with muscles unknown to the rest of us. A powerful female force, sexy and not subservient.

    I first saw live belly dancers at my favorite restaurant, Moun of Tunis, on Sunset, where diners sat on low banquettes and ate off brass tables. At hourly intervals, music would start to play and women in their sequins and silks would emerge from behind a curtain to shimmy and shake their way across the room — heaven.

    It was from Moun of Tunis that I got the name of your dancer. Funny to think what a difficult task that must have been. I would have had to consult the Yellow Pages, or more likely, call Information — something my parents frowned upon because of the toll. When I phoned the restaurant, I would have had to speak to a live human and explain what I wanted. All this before cold-calling a belly dancer.

    On your birthday, I remember being nervous, uncertain that she would come. I jumped up when I heard the knock on the door.

    Our classroom was in a bungalow, and she was standing on the stoop, dyed black hair, bright red lipstick, a trench coat covering her costume and a boombox under her arm.

    I’d been so excited; now, too late, I was overcome by doubt. I ushered her into the room. My classmates giggled. I pointed to you. “There’s the birthday boy.”

    Without a word, she put on her music, unbuttoned her coat and began to whirl.

    The dance is hazy in my mind, a blur of translucent black veils and long silvery scarves.

    She circled the room, then circled you, then the room again — sexy but never too sexy.

    While the rest of the class hooted and hollered, I watched your expressions. Your face paled, then reddened, then paled again. It showed a flash, but no more than a flash, of anger, and intense embarrassment, and eventually, polite patience and forced good humor.

    Of course, it was precisely to read your reactions that I’d arranged the surprise. And that’s the real reason for this apology.

    Your possible gayness had been a subject of debate among your students, not in a malicious way, more in a fun if gossipy way. Then a month or two before your birthday, you came close to speaking our speculations aloud.

    I don’t remember the context. Perhaps we were talking about Anita Bryant or some other anti-gay crusader. Or, closer to home, the Briggs Initiative, which had almost succeeded in banning gays and lesbians from teaching in California a few years earlier.

    I only remember the phrase you used at one point: “my gay friends and my straight friends.” As though they were equal categories. As though friends — anyone — might as easily be gay as straight.

    As though you, our teacher, might be.

    In 1982, the idea of an openly gay teacher was controversial in a way that is hard to fathom in California today — or in parts of California today. (The attempt to ban LGBTQ+ books and squelch LGBTQ+ speech has recently spread to such nearby locales as Glendale and Huntington Beach.) For you to suggest you might be gay, however ambiguously, must have taken tremendous courage.

    And I rewarded your courage by bullying you, with a belly dancer.

    A test, I’d called it, when I pitched the idea to my classmates. What was I expecting? Were you supposed to pant like a horny cartoon character if you were straight? And if you were gay, what then? Turn green?

    Whether or not the word “test” entered your mind, judging from your reactions, you sensed that your sexuality was being challenged. I am so sorry. The premise of the stunt was as offensive as it was absurd.

    I wasn’t brave enough to claim credit, but I suspect that you suspected. In my memory, a knowing look or two passed between us. Perhaps you understood what I did not: that in testing you for signs of homosexuality, I was trying to inoculate myself against the same condition.

    When the belly dancer finished dancing, you applauded, very much as if you’d enjoyed yourself. You thanked us for your birthday surprise, even though we all knew it had been more birthday prank than birthday present.

    So I guess this is a thank-you letter, after all. Thank you for being more forgiving than furious. Thank you for not interrogating too closely who hired the belly dancer, or why.

    And most of all, thank you for instilling in your students the idea that gay might be OK, even if it would take this gay student several more years to absorb that simple lesson.

    Sincerely, Rafi

    Raphael Simon is better known as children’s author Pseudonymous Bosch. He and his husband live in Pasadena with their two daughters. Mr. H, as it turns out, does remember the belly dancer. He and his husband just celebrated 30 years together.

    Raphael Simon

    Source link

  • Saucy Santana Talks Wearing Makeup, Dating, Homophobia And More On ‘Grindr Presents: Who’s The A**hole?’ Finale

    Saucy Santana Talks Wearing Makeup, Dating, Homophobia And More On ‘Grindr Presents: Who’s The A**hole?’ Finale

    One of the most audacious rappers in the music industry, Saucy Santana has been fighting for Queer representation in Hip-Hop since before he even began his career he reveals in a new podcast with drag icon Katya.

    Source: Courtesy / Grindr

    On the season finale of ‘Grindr Presents: Who’s The A**hole? with Katya’ Saucy opens up about homophobia in hip-hop, working with Madonna, his Florida high school experience and all the ins and outs of his dating life – including getting serious with an adult film star! He also addresses a few rumors.

    Speaking of homophobia, the episode kicks off with Katya asking Santana his thoughts about Khia’s anti-gay comments in recent years. Santana, who is a Floridian, talks about being a Khia fan at a young age and agrees that the behavior is bewildering to him, but notes that the rapper supposedly has her own gay friends/advisors.

    Saucy Santana also opens up in the episode about collaborating with the OG Material Girl, Madonna. He reveals that she requires her spaces to be scented with peppermint steamers. It turns out that he also ate sushi for the first time with Madonna — adding that she likes spicy tuna. (4:30)

    Near the end of the episode, Saucy points out how no one should be acting weird about queerness in this day and age: “Gay is so regular now. Reality shows is gay. Cartoons is gay. Everything is gay!”

    Listen to the full episode HERE.

    We were wildly entertained by this episode but there were definitely a few moments that tiptoed into a little too wild territory. At one point there were so many beeps we could hardly make out any words in between the curses. We did enjoy hearing Saucy reminisce about escaping a catfish though.

    Janeé Bolden

    Source link

  • Who Consumes More Weed, LGBTQ Or Straights

    Who Consumes More Weed, LGBTQ Or Straights

    Weed, alcohol, tobacco, all the vices in indulged in by people.  Tall, short, black, white, left or right handed – it has a mass appeal.  But sometimes certain groups are attracted to a vice more. Generally, men (16.7%) tend to use all tobacco products at higher rates than women (13.6%).  We know men are more likely to use weed over women. But who consumes more weed, LGBTQ or straights?

    While most cannabis studies that look into the consumption habits of people rely on self-reporting and aren’t held within a controlled setting, different studies suggest that LGBTQ people have a more positive attitude towards the drug. A study, published in the journal Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, found that gay men smoked approximately four times more than straight men. Lesbian women smoked six times more than heterosexual women.

    These findings are also replicated in younger demographics, with teens that belong to the LGBTQ community being more likely to consume cannabis, while also being more inclined to consume other substances, such as alcohol and nicotine. Young LGBTQ members face more stressors than their straight counterparts, resulting in higher rates of suicide, bullying, and more.

    RELATED: 3 Ways To Celebrate Pride Month This Year

    Photo by Stavrialena Gontzou via Unsplash

    There are many reasons why these results could be occurring, but experts believe it has something to do with the fact that people belonging to the queer community are more likely to suffer from anxiety and other mental health disorders.

    RELATED: Why A Big Win For The LGBT Community Matters To Marijuana Companies

    Maybe members of the queer community find refuge in cannabis, using it as a source of relief. It’s more likely for them to encounter the drug earlier on, and to be less prejudiced than others. There’s also the fact that gay people have kids later in life compared to their straight counterparts, giving them more time to explore and use the drug.

    More research is necessary to draw significant conclusions, but it’s interesting to wonder why the LGBTQ community seems to have such an affinity for the herb.

    Maria Loreto

    Source link

  • Claudine Gay Is Out and Katt Williams Goes In

    Claudine Gay Is Out and Katt Williams Goes In

    Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay react to the resignation of Harvard University’s president, Claudine Gay (7:58). They then discuss the competitive nature of comedy following Katt Williams’s appearance on Club Shay Shay (30:28) and Dave Chappelle’s latest Netflix special (45:38). Plus, unpacking the release of the Jeffrey Epstein documents (55:01).

    Hosts: Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay
    Producers: Donnie Beacham Jr. and Ashleigh Smith

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher

    Van Lathan

    Source link

  • Urfi Javed SLAMS Gadar 2 star Ameesha Patel for ‘OTT full of Gay-Lesbianism’ remark; ‘Public figures speaking without educating…’

    Urfi Javed SLAMS Gadar 2 star Ameesha Patel for ‘OTT full of Gay-Lesbianism’ remark; ‘Public figures speaking without educating…’

    Ameesha Patel has been making it to the headlines these days as she is busy promoting Gadar 2. Sunny Deol and Ameesha Patel have come together once again to bring back the story of Tara Singh and Shakeena. The actress has been busy giving interviews and talking about a lot of things. She recently shared her views on the content available on OTT. In a recent interview, Ameesha Patel said that the audience is looking for clean content and that OTT is full of ‘Gay-lesbianism’. To This, Urfi Javed has reacted. Also Read – Urfi Javed finally reveals the real reason behind her bold dressing; says ‘people don’t respect me’

    Urfi Javed is irked with Ameesha Patel

    Taking to her Insta stories, Urfi Javed shared the link of Ameesha Patel’s interview link and shared that she is irked with her statements. In the message she took a dig at Ameesha Patel using her film title ‘Kaho na Pyar Hai’ and asked whether it was only for straight people. She penned that public figures who speak about sensitive topics without educating themselves leave her angry. She even called Ameesha Patel a bitter person. Urfi Javed wrote, “What is actually gayism, lesbianism? Keep your children away from it? So when she said ‘kaho na Pyar hai’ she meant only straight people. Public figures speaking without educating themselves on such sensitive topics really irks me! Not getting work for 25 years has made her into a very bitter person (sic).” Also Read – Bigg Boss OTT 2: Urfi Javed SLAMS Manisha Rani for forcibly kissing Abdu Rozik; says, ‘This was so uncomfortable…’

    Check out Urfi Javed’s post below:

    Also Read – Bigg Boss OTT 2: Urfi Javed calls Abhishek Malhan aka Fukra Insaan a liar; here’s why

    In an interview with Bollywood Hungama, Ameesha Patel spoke about OTT content and said, “People are waiting for good, clean cinema. The era where you could make cinema that a grandchild could sit and watch with a grandparent is completely missing. OTT for sure doesn’t give you that. Because OTT is full of, homosexuality, gay-lesbianism… Scenes that you have to cover your kids’ eyes or actually put a child lock on your television so they can’t access those platforms.” This comment got reactions from many.

    Before this, Ameesha Patel hit headlines as she made shocking comments against Gadar 2 director Anil Sharma. She accused the makers of nonpayment of dues and mismanagement on sets of Sunny Deol‘s Gadar 2. She wrote about bills not being paid for accomodation, food, and more.

    Stay tuned to BollywoodLife for the latest scoops and updates from Bollywood, Hollywood, South, TV and Web-Series.
    Click to join us on Facebook, Twitter, Youtube and Instagram.
    Also follow us on Facebook Messenger for latest updates.
    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • Candyoni Maison Launches Line of Luxurious Lickable Oils

    Candyoni Maison Launches Line of Luxurious Lickable Oils

    Press Release


    Dec 22, 2022

    Candyoni Maison is bringing honesty, humor, and eroticism back to the boudoir with the launch of their Luxury Erotic Lickable Oils. 

    Just in time for the New Year, the straight-talking edible oïl company has created a massive, exciting range of lickable oils, with cheeky names like The Forbitten Pie™, Cinnamon Toast Lunch™, and 27 more. Described as Luxury Erotic Lickable Oils, each 30ml glass bottle is made in the US and filled with the finest natural ingredients and flavorings.

    Bringing a smile and a laugh back to the bedroom, Candyoni Maison describes their ‘Elixirs’ coquettishly as a range of vibrant flavors with baked-in nostalgia. Lucky Green Apple™ transports customers to the taste of candy apples at the fairground, while 50 Shades of Salted Caramel™ is reminiscent of hot summers. 

    Candyoni Maison’s mission is to encourage consenting adults to talk openly, laugh and enjoy their foreplay. The sexy startup company believes that in exploring sex – whether coupled or solo, edible oils designed with love and care to delight and please should be included.

    Here’s the science bit. All arousal originates in the brain where input from touch, vision and sound combines with taste to entice. Often understated, taste and smell are major factors that get the engine running. Both men and women experience different levels of stimulation based on the density and number of taste buds on their tongues. 

    With brands like The Swimwear Branding Agency, Candyoni Maison’s Luxury Erotic Lickable Oils is the second brainchild of Creative Director and CEO Stephanie Perry. Founded in early 2022, the process to create the perfect flavors has been a long, exciting, and enjoyable journey. Explaining a little about the process up to this point Perry said, “I love the feedback from our clients, and their stories. I love the happiness our oils bring.” But now the feedback is in, and the beta testing is done, she’s delighted to launch the final products. Unable to hide her delight she explained, “We’re thrilled to introduce our lickable oils to the world!”

    For Perry and the team at Candyoni Maison, sex, sexuality and empowerment should be talked about openly by women and men. Communication around sex is key to a healthy sex life. As a female-founded business Candyoni Maison understands the prevalence of internalized sexual hang-ups. But as a brand, they are keen to challenge both men and women everywhere to be bold.

    The ultimate multi-sensory experience is coming to a bedroom near you – New Year’s Day 2023. In-stock orders ship starting Jan. 9. Order today and you’ll be enraptured with anticipation. 

    Use code ‘Lick’ at www.Candyoni.Maison for 25% off your first order. Gift cards excluded.

    ENDS

    Editors notes: To learn more contact Candyoni Maison at press@Candyoni.Maison or visit www.Candyoni.Maison. 

    Follow the brand on Instagram: @Candyoni.Maison or Facebook: www.Facebook.com/CandyoniMaison.

    Grand Opening – New Year’s Day 2023. Limited Stock Available now with Pay later pre-orders available once sold out.

    Source: Candyoni Maison

    Source link

  • Sniffies Presents SXSW Panel on Tech and the New Fluidity of Male Sexuaity

    Sniffies Presents SXSW Panel on Tech and the New Fluidity of Male Sexuaity

    Sniffies’ “Tech and the New Fluidity of Male Sexuality” panel at SXSW 2022 will feature queer thought leaders and sex educators discussing our evolving sexual attitudes

    Press Release


    Mar 9, 2022

    Sniffies today announced their participation in SXSW 2022 with a panel titled “Tech and the New Fluidity of Male Sexuality.”

    The panel will take place on March 17, at 11:30 a.m. at the Austin Marriott Downtown in the Waller Ballroom DEF as part of SXSW’s Culture Track. The session will feature panelists Jacob Tobia, Zachary Zane, and Alexander Cheves, and will be moderated by Sniffies CMO and Creative Director Eli Martin. 

    The percentage of U.S. adults who identify as LGBTQ has doubled in the past decade, and 1 in 5 members of Generation Z identify within the LGBTQ spectrum. We’re seeing a record level of queer representation in media, and platforms like TikTok and YouTube have helped shine a spotlight on gender and sexual expressions traditionally thought of as “alternative.” It’s never been more clear: the rigid boundaries we’ve constructed around masculinity are shifting.

    Sniffies is proud to partner with SXSW for this groundbreaking, culture-shifting panel that will further the work Sniffies has done to build and promote a dialogue about male sexual expression and exploration. Sniffies has assembled leaders in the field of gender and sexual thought, and is looking forward to challenging and adding to existing discussions about male sexual expression. 

    “Traditional models of masculinity are fading into obsolescence,” Martin said, “and the time has come to discover how we will redefine masculinity in a world where younger generations are increasingly identifying outside of heteronormativity.”

    Jacob Tobia (they/them) is an actor, writer, producer, and author of the national bestselling memoir Sissy: A Coming-of-Gender Story. From running across the Brooklyn Bridge in high heels to giving Trevor Noah an on-air makeover on The Daily Show, Jacob helps others embrace the full complexity of their gender, even (and especially) when it’s messy as h***. 

    Zachary Zane (he/him) is a Brooklyn-based columnist, sex expert, and activist whose work focuses on sexuality, culture, and the LGBTQ community. His work has been published in The New York Times, Rolling Stone, The Washington Post, GQ, Playboy, Cosmo, and many others. 

    Alexander Cheves (he/him) has been writing about sexual health, queer relationships, and LGBTQ+ culture for a decade. Cheves is a recipient of a 2021 Excellence in Journalism award from the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association and, in 2021, was named to the Out 100. 

    Eli Martin (he/him) is the CMO and Creative Director at Sniffies. Martin has spent the last two years building Sniffies through content forward marketing, influencer and social advertising and ground-up initiatives activating queer communities throughout the U.S. Martin’s vision for Sniffies imagines a world free of sexual judgment, censorship and full of boundless inclusion and fluidity.

    For more information on the panel, click here.

    MEDIA CONTACT

    Sam Stone

    Sam@sniffies.com

    Source: Sniffies

    Source link

  • Margin Films Presents ‘Brash Boys Club,’ a One Night Stand of Gay Stand-Up Comedy

    Margin Films Presents ‘Brash Boys Club,’ a One Night Stand of Gay Stand-Up Comedy

    Feature Special to be live and taped on Thursday, Jan. 30, 2020, at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.

    Press Release



    updated: Jan 7, 2020

    ​Brash Boys Club is a one-night stand of gay comedy, daring to be the first gay, male stand-up comedy special and addressing the dearth of gay, male comics in the stand-up world. Come watch Brad Loekle, Owen Alabado and Dash Kwiatkowski record a 90-minute comedy special on Thursday, Jan. 30, 2020, at 7:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. at CSz LA (The Monroe Forum) at the El Portal Theatres in North Hollywood, 5269 Lankershim Boulevard, North Hollywood, CA 91601. Bridget McManus will be the show’s opening comedian.

    BRAD LOEKLE was a semi-finalist on season 9 of NBC’s Last Comic Standing, and TV audiences will recognize him from his eight seasons on the hit TruTV series, World’s Dumbest. Logo featured him in their 2016 Aspen Comedy Special. And Brad’s made guest appearances regularly on an assortment of shows on VH1, MTV, LOGO, E!, and many more. He was a writer for Fashion Police and has performed in over 70 countries around the globe.

    OWEN ALABADO is “The Straight Gay” Comic who has headlined at Flappers Comedy Club, The Icehouse, and The Michigan Gay and Lesbian Comedy Festival in Detroit. For the past two years, he has had an ongoing show at Flappers Comedy Club called “Owen and Friends”.  He recently performed in his hometown in Wisconsin to a sold-out, 300-seat theater. He has appeared in TV shows such as “This Is Us”, “Shameless” and the comedy “*Loosely Exactly Nicole”. He is also the writer/creator of the award-winning web series “Dudes”, a comedy based off of his comedy and personal life. “Dudes” has won eight awards, including “Best Web Series Pilot” for the Austin Indie Fest, “Best Webisode” for the Hollywood Boulevard Film Festival, and “Best Web Screenplay” for the Canadian Diversity Film Festival. He is also in the development of producing a new Filipino-based comedy series called the “Flipside”. Owen brings the funny, pulling from his life: from being a gay guy who hangs out with a bunch of straight guys, a half Filipino half Caucasian, as well as a singing-dancing trained martial artist who goes to about five to eight weddings a year!

    DASH KWIATKOWSKI (they/them) is a New York-based stand up and podcaster. They’re a non-binary Sadboi and a big ol’ queer. They play Dungeons and Dragons as part of a podcast called Lost in the Multiverse (dnd.cool), and they tour all over this terrible country telling jokes at strangers. They’ve performed in Limestone Comedy Fest, 208 Comedy, SF Sketchfest, and SF Comic-Con. They’re the leader of the Bummer Club and the Queen of Strong Style, and you didn’t hear this from me, but they might have a big crush on you.

    The show opener is BRIDGET McMANUS, a television host, screenwriter, producer, director and award-winning performer. She created and hosted two television shows for the Logo Network: the award-winning comedy talk show, Brunch with Bridget, and Bridget McManus Presents: That Time of The Month. McManus is one of the few female warm-up comedians in television, and her credits include the Emmy Award-winning The Real, Netflix’s Tiffany Haddish Presents: They Ready, Fox’s sitcom Patty’s Auto, The Teen Choice Awards, NBC’s The Wall and Last Comic Standing, etc.

    Please note that this is a live taping, so come early and be prepared to laugh. Beer and wine are available for purchase. Tickets link: http://brashboysclub.com

    Directed and produced by Quentin Lee, an acclaimed independent filmmaker who has directed seven features. Quentin has created Comedy InvAsian, the first Asian American stand up TV series premiered in 2018 as a Hulu Exclusive, and Brash Girls Club, the first all-female stand up limited TV series now streaming on Tubi TV (http://tubi.com). Besides Brash Boys Club, Quentin is producing Kim McVicar’s Please Notice Me and Ed Hill’s Candy and Smiley, two comedy specials for Comedy Dynamics.

    Download Publicity Images: http://marginfilms.com/bbccomedians.zip

    Source: Margin Films

    Source link

  • Blockchain With Pride: LGBT Foundation and OST Announce Partnership to Launch Global LGBT+ Ecosystem

    Blockchain With Pride: LGBT Foundation and OST Announce Partnership to Launch Global LGBT+ Ecosystem

    OST and the LGBT Foundation, backed by Hornet Networks, are pleased to announce a new partnership to launch an ecosystem powered by OST blockchain technology, to empower, connect and support LGBT+ people all over the world.

    The LGBT Foundation will launch the LGBT Token in cooperation with Hornet Networks, one of the largest social networks for gay men with more than 25 million members globally, and Revry, the LGBT answer to Netflix, reaching 70 million homes in more than 100 countries. These two and other launch partners already reach 100 million people worldwide.

    LGBT Token will activate the $4.6 trillion global LGBT+ economy, enabling members to assert and protect their LGBT+ identity, creating a new medium of exchange and loyalty for LGBT+ persons and businesses, and making a global social impact by allocating resources to projects that the LGBT+ community cares about, including tackling oppression, discrimination and inequality, education and healthcare.

    The LGBT Foundation chose to launch the LGBT Token on OST technology following several months exploring their own ICO, and publishing the LGBT Token “ Pink Paper ” and “ White Paper. ” It aims for the Token to be a method of payment and loyalty for physical and digital businesses, as well as a decentralized system for LGBT+ people to verify and protect their identities, especially in countries where they face repercussions.

    “We’re saving a ton of time, money and technical resources by teaming up with OST rather than pursuing our own ICO; allowing us to go to market faster, safer and fully compliant with financial regulations,” says Christof Wittig, President of the LGBT Foundation and CEO of Hornet Networks . “The fact that Jason has a stellar track record in tech, Blockchain and the LGBT+ community was something we definitely considered when looking for a partner to kickstart our project.”

    The OST utility token enables any website, app, or marketplace to easily launch a branded token and integrate it into their businesses and communities.

    “We’re thrilled to announce our support for LGBT Token during Pride Month 2018. We are humbled and excited to support the LGBT Foundation’s mission to make our world a better place for all members of the LGBT+ community. Blockchain technology is a perfect fit for the LGBT Foundation’s mission,” says Jason Goldberg, founder and CEO of OST and an advocate for equality himself. “The LGBT Token facilitates near-instant transactions between businesses, causes and members of the community; thus establishing a flourishing, Pink Economy. It also empowers people in countries where it’s illegal to be LGBT to safely and, if need be, anonymously connect with fellow LGBT people.”

    Goldberg will join the LGBT Foundation as an advisor to the project.

    Sean Howell, CEO of the LGBT Foundation, concludes: “ Partnering with OST is based on their state-of-the-art technology to launch and manage the LGBT Token rapidly, safely, and securely. Working with OST gives us the confidence and ability to go-to-market and to develop a blockchain-powered network of LGBT-friendly businesses, to activate a global, Pink Economy.” Howell continues: “We’ll be driving major, global adoption of the LGBT Token by making it available to the 100 million audience of our launch partners, incl. Hornet Networks and Revry.”

    About the LGBT Foundation

    The LGBT Foundation is an organization that aims to deliver equality for the global LGBT community through technology and non-profit uses of its tokens. By harnessing the power and potential of blockchain technology and other technological innovations, the Foundation aims to foster greater acceptance of the LGBT community, drive positive social change for the benefit of its members, and protect vulnerable community members. The aim is that the LGBT Foundation will evolve to become a self-governing body run by and for members of the LGBT community, and which directs its activities, resources and members to the benefit of the international LGBT-community. For more information, please visit: https://lgbt-token.org/

    About Hornet Networks

    Hornet is the world’s premier gay social network. Founded in 2011 with the mission to build the digital home for the gay community, Hornet has grown to 25 million total users by utilizing cutting-edge technology for its dating platform and producing original editorial content to connect a community around common interests. Hornet provides a superior user experience and is number one in the key markets of France, Russia, Brazil, Turkey and Taiwan, and is consistently expanding its sizable user base in the United States. For more information, please visit: https://hornet.com

    About OST

    OST is building the complete blockchain toolkit for business. The company strives to be the blockchain technology partner of choice for businesses of all sizes and levels of technical sophistication, enabling any business to create, launch, and manage their own branded digital token economy powered by OpenST protocols and OST blockchain management software. The OpenST protocol enables companies to launch branded token economies on highly scalable, open, cryptographically auditable side blockchains. OST has offices in Berlin, New York, Hong Kong, and Pune India. For more information, please visit: https://ost.com/

    Sean Howell for Hornet Networks and the LGBT Foundation

    sean@hornet.com

    Wouter Verhoog for OST

    wouter@ost.com / @wouterverhoog 

    Source: OST

    Source link

  • TransAkron Raises Awareness and Shares Stories of Akron Transgender Community

    TransAkron Raises Awareness and Shares Stories of Akron Transgender Community

    Press Release



    updated: May 31, 2018

    The Gay Community Endowment Fund (GCEF) of Akron Community Foundation has unveiled a new photojournalism series aimed at fighting stereotypes, increasing inclusion for the transgender community, and celebrating Pride Month.

    Created by award-winning photographer Shane Wynn and writer H.L. Comeriato, the TransAkron series shines a light on trans, nonbinary and gender-nonconforming people in Akron, Ohio. The project captures the lived realities of these individuals and tells the stories of their journeys while adding a data-driven narrative about the transgender community nationwide.

    The TransAkron project is part-narrative and part-resource, and at the Gay Community Endowment Fund, we are proud to be on the front lines of advocacy through storytelling.

    Phil Montgomery, Chair, Gay Community Endowment Fund of Akron Community Foundation

    The photos and stories can be viewed online at TransAkron.com.

    The TransAkron series features the stories of eight individuals, including U.S. veteran Giovonni Santiago, who opened the country’s first transgender-specific clinic in the Veterans Affairs system, and Rylee Jackson, who, after experiencing a dozen foster homes and four different high schools, found joy through her love of dance. 

    “The idea of TransAkron originated in early 2017 when I had a conversation with Shane Wynn — a local artist and advocate — about her photography and how we could use images to humanize people and advocate for the GCEF’s important work in the community,” said Phil Montgomery, advisory board chair of the Gay Community Endowment Fund of Akron Community Foundation. “The TransAkron project is part-narrative and part-resource, and at the GCEF, we are proud to be on the front lines of advocacy through storytelling.”

    TransAkron was made possible thanks to funding and support from the Gay Community Endowment Fund and several community partners, including ArtsNow (an innovative nonprofit that connects arts and culture through collaboration) and the EXL Center at The University of Akron. The series’ writer, H.L. Comeriato, is a former University of Akron student who was identified by faculty member Dr. Heather Braun.

    “People are often unaware that their friends, neighbors, civil servants, police officers, doctors, etc. identify as trans,” said Nicole Mullet, executive director of ArtsNow. “Breaking down that sense of ‘other’ helps us come together as a community. We are Akron – all of us.”

    Established in 2001, the Gay Community Endowment Fund accepts grant applications for programs and services that positively impact the LGBTQ+ community and Greater Akron as a whole. It also raises awareness about equality issues and rallies the LGBTQ+ community around a common philanthropic purpose. Since its founding, the GCEF has invested nearly $475,000 into local causes that change the lives of LGBTQ+ people in the Greater Akron community. Recent grants have advocated for countywide nondiscrimination protections, supported a mentoring program for LGBTQ+ college students, and raised awareness about domestic violence in the LGBTQ+ community, among other critical initiatives.

    To support the Gay Community Endowment Fund, please visit GayCommunityFund.org. Gifts of all sizes will make a permanent difference in the LGBTQ+ community. For instance, a gift of $600 could provide safe housing and basic living essentials for one homeless LGBTQ+ young adult, who is more likely to become a victim of violence, abuse and human trafficking than their heterosexual peers. Likewise, a gift of $100 could provide HIV testing and prevention education for five LGBTQ+ people in Akron. All gifts are fully tax-deductible and are invested and grown over time, so gifts made today will continue to multiply for generations to come.

    For more information about the TransAkron project, please visit TransAkron.com.

    CONTACT:

    Phil Montgomery
    Chair, Gay Community Endowment Fund of
    Akron Community Foundation

    330-714-8178
    ​monty.phil@gmail.com 

    Source: Gay Community Endowment Fund

    Source link

  • GayTravel.com Hires LGBT Dream Team

    GayTravel.com Hires LGBT Dream Team

    Press Release



    updated: May 8, 2018

    Gay Travel the world’s leading site dedicated to LGBT Travel announced the appointment of the Mossier Social Action and Innovation Center’s LGBT Travel experts Don Ofstedal, Charlie Rounds, and Nick Alm to lead Gay Travel’s editorial team.

    “ The team at Mossier truly understands who we are as a company but more importantly brings a new perspective as to what we all can achieve together,” said Steve Rohrlick, Gay Travel Founder, and Chief Visionary Officer. “Their mission and extensive network of trusted travel professionals and seasoned travelers will help Gay Travel bring consistent, authentic and timely information to our members and site visitors and also provide new ways for our community to make a difference in the lives of LGBT entrepreneurs around the globe”

    Our goal is to help Gay Travel members have a more meaningful travel experience – no matter where their destination may be.

    Charlie Rounds, Editor

    Charlie Rounds is the former co-owner of RSVP Vacations, co-founder of Brand g Vacations, and managed a $30 million-plus retail and business travel agency. Rounds wrote the business plan for the IGLTA Foundation and was the 2011 recipient of IGLTA’s Hanns Ebensten Hall of Fame Award.

    Don Ofstedal is also a former co-owner of RSVP Vacations. Before that Ofstedal was the President of the Travel Company of Minnesota where his 20-year career covered every aspect of the travel agency industry.

    Nick Alm is a recent graduate of the University of Minnesota Carlson School of Management. Alm completed his first international flight just two years ago for a 10-day business exchange in Cuba.  Since then he has become an avid traveler. Nick co-founded The Carlson School’s first undergraduate LGBT organization where he developed a deep passion for advancing conversations about LGBT issues within the travel industry.

    “We are very excited to share our 50-plus years’ experience in the travel industry with the Gay Travel community, said Rounds, Program Manager at Mossier. “The three of us have visited 74 countries, some of which did not even exist 30 years ago. Our goal is to help Gay Travel members have a more meaningful travel experience – no matter where their destination may be.”

    “Kevin Mossier was not only our boss, he was our mentor. He started three successful travel companies including RSVP Vacations and Sea Spirit Cruise Lines. We very much want to bring so much of the LGBT travel history we experienced to life,” added Don Ofstedal. Alm will lead efforts to connect with and offer unique options to younger travelers.

    Media Contact: Charlie Rounds
    charlie.rounds@gaytravel.com
    +1.800.429.8728 x 716

    About Gay Travel
    The GayTravel brand is widely considered the equivalent of the “Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval” among LGBT travelers and their allies. – a trust that has been forged over 20 years.  GayTravel provides their audience with valuable resources to help inspire, plan and book memorable travel experiences. For more information visit www.gaytravel.com or call 1-800-GAY-TRAVEL

    About Mossier

    The Mossier Social Action and Innovation Center is investing in LGBT entrepreneurs across generations and borders. We are dedicated to launching LGBT-owned businesses in countries where homosexuality is illegal. A list that includes over 70 countries. Mossier is driven by an intergenerational team of 15 individuals in Minnesota. With an age range between 18-69, and a roster comprised primarily of women and people of color, Mossier is committed to advancing the global LGBT movement by working across generations, identity, and geography to economically empower our community. For more information: mossier.org and follow us on Facebook and Twitter @MossierMN.

    Source: GayTravel.com

    Source link

  • ‘Masculinity is Our Future’ Sets Out to Revolutionize Masculine Virtues

    ‘Masculinity is Our Future’ Sets Out to Revolutionize Masculine Virtues

    Newly released book by gay author, Tim Patten, offers game-changing insights about understanding women, reducing domestic violence

    Press Release



    updated: Jan 8, 2018

    Tim Patten has released his sixth book on Jan. 4, 2018. “Masculinity Is Our Future” is an unapologetic and realistic understanding of what being masculine means and how those who possess its modern traits are lionized, celebrated and valued. The book is available at all worldwide Amazon online outlets (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B078SYS2SK).

    “After the women’s movement produced outstanding equity results for women and gays, it bankrupted its reputation by inventing false facts and institutionally disrespecting masculinity and natural male qualities,” stated Patten. “Modern women’s studies are indoctrinating young people into an untruthful caste system theory with one-sided facts such as patriarchy, declaring a male powered society is oppressive and not protective of women. This societal male-bashing has resulted in a mere 8 percent of support for feminism in the UK, it is killing the women’s movement.”

    Millions have already joined the throngs of rebels, armchair enthusiasts and a growing swelling of the public are coming together in a counterculture movement that values, respects and nurtures masculine virtues. Patten said, “Men have been reviled, withstood invalidation, and called toxic for more than four decades. However, Masculinity is Our Future represents an insurgency, a massive underground awareness that is transgressive, inclusive and determined to change old-school gender narratives.”

    Patten contends the pendulum has swung too far, paying attention to only women’s needs for the past four decades, ultimately ignoring men’s health issues, leaving boys and men lagging behind girls and women across the entire educational system and suffering from a suicide epidemic.

    About Tim Patten

    Tim Patten is a former roller derby athlete and team owner and is the author of six books. The most popular, “MGTOW Building Wealth and Power” was published in 2016. For more information, please visit: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B078SYS2SK

    Source: Tim Patten

    Source link

  • Mobilizing Our Brothers Initiative (MOBI) Brings MOBItalks to the Bronx to Empower Black Gay Men

    Mobilizing Our Brothers Initiative (MOBI) Brings MOBItalks to the Bronx to Empower Black Gay Men

    Press Release



    updated: Oct 2, 2017

    The second installment of Mobilizing Our Brothers Initiative’s MOBItalks will gather gay black men in the New York City area for personal and professional development sessions on Saturday, Oct. 7 at the Bronx Museum from 10 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.  

    Founded by award-winning advocate, DaShawn Usher and peer-led by a group of black queer men, the Bronx edition of MOBItalks will feature moving talks with DBQ Magazine founder, David Bridgeforth; writer and creator of RaceBaitR, Hari Ziyad; writer, Michael Arceneaux; and actor, Rico Pruitt.

    The Bronx edition of MOBItalks is the second in a three-part personal and professional development series taking place in the city. The first MOBItalks event took place in Brooklyn with Emil Wilbekin, Karamo Brown, and Richard Brookshire who spoke about self-care, personal identity, and sexuality.

    “As a black gay man, to be in a space where black queer people are having conversations about what’s affecting us and how we can support each other – sign me up every single time,” says Karamo Brown on his involvement with the platform. “I want to make people understand that who we are is our power.

    Mobilizing Our Brothers Initiative (MOBI) was created in response to the lack of spaces for black gay men. MOBI offers a platform for these men to speak authentically about issues that directly affect them and allow them to form connections.

    “Being able to connect black gay men across many different social classes, different education levels, across different ages, is the biggest thing I know that I can offer to the community,” says Usher.

    MOBI exists as a space to take the time to assess where you are in life and realize that there’s a community that’s growing and exists. Following the first MOBItalks, MOBI serves as a bridge to connect guests to other avenues and services that are available to the community.

    Attendees will be able to participate in personal and professional development sessions, stock up on essentials from Harry’s, take professional headshots by Steven Duarte and Welthē images, and screen for various services throughout the day including HIV, STIs, PrEP/PEP, health insurance, and primary care at each event.

    To learn more about MOBI, please follow “MOBINYC” on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter: @MOBI_NYC, and visit mobitalksbronx.eventbrite.com and www.mobi-nyc.com to register for events.

    ABOUT MOBILIZING OUR BROTHERS INITIATIVE (MOBI)

    MOBI is a series of curated social connectivity events for Black, gay and queer men to see their holistic self. The initiative seeks to cultivate the black, gay community through MOBItalks, a three-part personal and professional development series in Harlem, Brooklyn, and the Bronx. In celebration of Black queer excellence, MOBIfest is a four-day citywide festival set for May 2018 that gives voice to the convergence of interactive arts, film, fashion, and music in Black queer culture. The initiative is funded by the New York City Department of Health and aims to promote health and wellness amongst black gay men.

    For press inquiries, please contact:

    ​Kenneth Courtney
    ​Kenneth@mobi-nyc.com

    Source: Mobilizing Our Brothers Initiative

    Source link