Boy Scouts Leader Accused Of Coercing Teens Into Late Night, Boozed-Fueled Threesome

Boy Scouts Leader Accused Of Coercing Teens Into Late Night, Boozed-Fueled Threesome

11869476-largeThree men gave graphic testimony in a Morristown, New Jersey Court on Monday, alleging they were sexually abused by former Morris County Boy Scout leader, Stephen Corcoran (pictured), when they were teenagers.

The first alleged victim testified that his abuse began in the 1990s when he was just 10. One day, Corcoran invited him over to his house. When he got there, the Scout leader offered him a beer then showed him pornography on his computer.

“This is what kids do in Europe,” Corcoran allegedly said. “It’s okay.”

The alleged victim told the court that the abuse continued for seven more years, often late at night during overnight camping trips. Corcoran would lead him to dark, secluded locations — including the woods along the banks of the Delaware River, on top of a boat at West Point, and in a hotel room whilst on a ski trip to Vermont — then offer him alcohol and engage in sex acts with the boy.

A second alleged victim testified that his abuse began when he was 13. He was invited over to Corcoran’s house to work on a merit badge. While there, the Scout leader showed him pornography. The first time, the man said, Corcoran didn’t touch him. But the second time, he performed oral sex on him. The man testified that he never told anybody about the abuse because he was afraid “They’d think I was gay or stupid for masturbating with a Scout leader.”

A third alleged victim told the court his sexual activities with Corcoran began in 1999 when he was 17. One day he asked Corcoran to help fix his computer. Corcoran noticed that he had gay porn stored on it.

“Nobody knew I was gay yet,” the man testified. “He reassured me it was okay. He said ‘it’s okay if you’re bisexual. I’m bisexual too.’ ”

Then, he said, Corcoran unzipped his pants and began pleasuring himself.

A few months later, Corcoran invited him over to his house for “a few drinks” and a threesome with another boy.

“That freaked me out,” he said.

The man described the experience as “frightening,” and “very naughty,” but admitted that he also kind of enjoyed it.

After he turned 18, the alleged victim testified, he continued having sex with Corcoran and even invited him to several of his birthday parties until well into his late 20s. He said he agreed to testify against him because he believes this sort of things happens much more often than is reported within the Boy Scouts of America organization.

“It’s clear that this is a widespread thing that’s happening,” the man said.

Corcoran now faces four counts of aggravated sexual assault and five counts of sexual assault, along with 11 counts of child endangerment.

Related stories:

Boy Scouts Plan To Kick Out Gay Teen On His Birthday, But Keep His Straight Twin

Teacher Convicted Of Hooking Up With 14-Year-Old Schoolboy

Boy Scouts Vote To Lift Ban On Gay Scouts

Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/PAJKc8e5jgs/boy-scouts-leader-accused-of-coercing-teens-into-late-night-boozed-fueled-threesome-20140916

Lady Gaga and Tony Bennett Release New Cover of 'Nature Boy' – LISTEN

Lady Gaga and Tony Bennett Release New Cover of 'Nature Boy' – LISTEN

Duet

Off of their upcoming jazz duets album comes Gaga and Bennett’s cover of the song, “Nature Boy.” Gaga paid tribute to the late musician Paul Horn, whose flute solo is featured on the song. Gaga took to Twitter to share the story behind the song and Horn’s contributions:

Nature Boy was composed in 1941 by eden ahbez, a wandering man from Brooklyn with long hair. It was recorded first by Nat King Cole in 1947…

You will recognize it also famously as used in ‘Moulin Rouge,’ but our rendition with the now late multi-reedist Paul Horn is spectacular…

Horn was meant to join Tony & me for the PBS special but sadly passed just weeks before, a New Age Jazz pioneer, lets celebrate him 2day…

You will hear his genius in the flute solo of our “NATURE BOY” a solo that will echo through the world today. And forever. #TheGreatPaulHorn

Listen to the new track, AFTER THE JUMP…


Sean Mandell

www.towleroad.com/2014/09/lady-gaga-and-tony-bennett-release-new-cover-of-nature-boy-listen.html

Misogyny and Homphobia in the NFL: Is America's Crisis of Masculinity Playing Out in Its Favorite Sport?

Misogyny and Homphobia in the NFL: Is America's Crisis of Masculinity Playing Out in Its Favorite Sport?
The Ray Rice scandal has lifted the lid off the NFL like never before. And it raises a very important question: Is it a coincidence that the NFL is more popular than ever, with the Super Bowl as the ultimate national event, at the same time that many American men are in the midst of a masculinity crisis — and that now we’re seeing that crisis playing out literally within the NFL itself?

Women are asserting themselves, roles are changing for men and women, and the gay and transgender movements are challenging sexuality and gender as well as challenging the definition, and even the idea, of masculinity. Is it really any wonder that many more straight men — as well as many women, judging by the statistics of who the newest fans are — may be confused and threatened about these changing roles, flocking to an institution that is a citadel of well-defined, old-fashioned masculinity, where the men are real men and women stand behind them, cheering them on? If masculinity were a religion, after all, the NFL would be its Wahhabism or Christian Dominionism.

Two weeks ago I pointed to the virulent homophobia of the NFL, where Coach Mike Priefer of the Vikings was given a mere two-game suspension — now back in the game — for saying gays should be rounded up and put “on an island, and nuke it until it glows,” while the first (and only) openly gay player was drafted much later than predicted in the rounds and then passed over for a roster, only picked up for a practice squad. And while Ray Rice was suspended indefinitely — only after a video surfaced showing more graphically what we knew before about his pummeling of his then-fiancée in an elevator — there are many other cases of domestic abuse of women and now child abuse, in which players see few if any ramifications from the NFL.

Let’s be honest: Professional football, perhaps more than any other male team sport, is based on misogyny and homophobia, built on it from the ground up. Entire generations of American men have been raised on the idea that if they don’t participate in male team sports, they’re maybe a little faggy, and football, as surely the most aggressive of male team sports, is the holy grail if you want to prove you’re not. Entire generations have grown up — and, in many cases, still grow up — with it being routine for high-school and college football coaches to demean the players during training by calling them “girls” or “ladies” if they don’t perform well, or even going further with “pussies” and “pansies.” And what are these terms really all about? The idea that women are less than men, and that being less than a real man, and being a like a woman, is being like a homo, which is the worst thing you can possibly be.

Women and LGBT people are challenging this demeaning behavior and have even successfully stopped it in many places. Masculine identity as defined for generations, however, is so culturally powerful that it cuts across class and race boundaries — bonding men of all kinds together — and seems to be only becoming stronger as the American crisis in masculinity escalates. I’ll never forget when I went on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in the ’90s for the first time — back when their was a trading “floor,” before most trading became electronic. Everything crystalized for me when I looked down at this largely straight male world: blue-blood WASPS running the show mixed with the traders on the floor, the working-class guys from Staten Island and Brooklyn scrambling back and forth, all bonding on winning and making money.

And isn’t that what professional football is all about for many who run the game: winning and making money, no matter what racial or class background you come from? Is it any wonder, then, that NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, who earned $105 million in five years, connects with and tacitly if not not publicly defends the players who, even if they went a little too far (in his mind), are simply protecting those boundaries of masculinity for all men, punching back against the onslaught of women and homosexuals demanding equality?

Before you say, “Hey, wait, I love football, and I’m not a monster!” let me be clear that I’m not making a generalization regarding all the fans. It’s a broad and interesting game that attracts a diverse audience, many for healthy and productive reasons. Indeed, many gay men and a great many lesbians are fans — although Rachel Maddow acknowledged the other night that, though she’s long been an NFL fan, she can no longer watch the game after the recent response to Rice’s domestic assault. Like any national phenomenon, I think there are different ways that people participate and connect. It’s sort of like the way I might watch the brilliant phenomenon of The Sopranos or Martin Scorsese’s Goodfellas and the way a would-be gangster from my old neighborhood might watch them.

But now something’s become too real and raw, hence Maddow’s response. The only way to change professional football is at its foundation, transforming the culture in our schools and what defines masculinity — and what defines being a girl or a woman or gay or transgender — and, most importantly, that needs to happen within sports programs, not separate from them. That’s likely to take a long time and may be utopian, since it could actually forever change, or even end, the game of football as we know it.

www.huffingtonpost.com/michelangelo-signorile/nfl-misogyny-homophobia_b_5828874.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

The Des Moines Register’s Editorial Board Stands Up for Marriage Equality

The Des Moines Register’s Editorial Board Stands Up for Marriage Equality

On Friday, The Des Moines Register’s editorial board reaffirmed its support for the nationwide movement for marriage equality, recommending that the Supreme Court should hear the issue.
HRC.org

www.hrc.org/blog/entry/the-des-moines-registers-editorial-board-stands-up-for-marriage-equality?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Girl Group Xelle, Sans Founding Member Mimi Imfurst, Debuts Fitness-Inspired Song

Girl Group Xelle, Sans Founding Member Mimi Imfurst, Debuts Fitness-Inspired Song

xelle-bikePop duo Xelle have released their second single and music video since parting ways with the group’s original creator, drag personality and former Drag Race contestant Mimi Imfurst.

Described by Xelle as the undisputed “end-of-summer power anthem,” the new single “Sweat” combines “megapop” and physical fitness for a psychedelic drag-infused dance party at the gym.

The video primarily features “curvy women” feeling “sexy and confident,” save drag queen Marti Gould Cummings with a “hysterical” gay twist at the video’s end.

(Spoiler alert: the “hysterical twist” is the gym instructor being gay.)

“[Sweat] is what’s playing in your mind when you see that hot guy or girl across the bar and you know it’s time to make a move,” says Xelle’s Rony G.

The group is probably best known for the amazing unauthorized dance party it threw on the NYC subway in 2011 for their debut single “Party Girl”. Relive its legendary glory in full below [after you watch Sweat, of course]:

Queerty Editor

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/xxiM0RKr0_0/girl-group-xelle-sans-founding-member-mimi-imfurst-debuts-fitness-inspired-song-20140916

Colin Kaepernick Bares His Abs For Bruce Weber In 'VMAN' – PHOTOS

Colin Kaepernick Bares His Abs For Bruce Weber In 'VMAN' – PHOTOS

V1

The San Francisco 49ers quarterback who recently signed a $126 million contract covers the current issue of VMAN looking unsurprisingly sporty. 

Earlier this year, Kaepernick spoke out about the prospect of Michael Sam joining the NFL, remarking that he would be welcomed into the league:

“I think when he steps into that locker room, everyone’s going to know that he’s there to help us win games. And that’s why you’re in the NFL, to help us win games. No one cares if you’re black, white, straight, gay, Christian, Jewish, whatever it may be. When you step on that field you’re a member of in my case, the 49ers. Or the Carolina Panthers. That’s your job. That’s your occupation.”

Check out Kaepernick’s chiseled abs, photographed by ab aficionado Bruce Weber, along with one more shot from VMAN, AFTER THE JUMP…

V2

V3


Sean Mandell

www.towleroad.com/2014/09/colin-kaepernick-bares-his-abs-for-bruce-weber-in-vman-photos.html

Mormons Embrace Social Media To Push Back Against Conservative Church Teachings

Mormons Embrace Social Media To Push Back Against Conservative Church Teachings
BERKELEY, Calif. (RNS) It was a gathering that would have been unthinkable just five years ago.

On a cool summer evening, in a borrowed classroom overlooking San Francisco Bay, about 150 men and women gathered to screen a short documentary about a Mormon family whose 13-year-old son came out as gay.

The Oviatts, who accepted their son and his news, were ostracized by church members, some of whom refused to accept Communion distributed by the young man in church. Like many conservative Christian denominations, the 15 million-member Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints bans homosexual activity and considers it grounds for exclusion from Mormon rites, rituals and even the afterlife.

But those in the room — mostly Mormons ranging from babes in arms to the elderly with canes — thought differently. They wanted to learn how to support their lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender brethren in their local wards, or congregations.

“The phrase ‘gay Mormon’ was not part of our vocabulary prior to 2011,” said the evening’s organizer, Mitch Mayne, before the event. “And if we did say it, it was fringe and full of stereotypes, like we were all hiding in the closet and full of self-loathing or we were out of the church entirely and putting on body glitter and Speedos.”

That has since changed — as demonstrated by the standing-room-only crowd that included more than a half-dozen local Mormon officials. Today, many people who identify as both Mormon and LGBT are gaining acceptance within the wider LDS church and culture.

Many credit Mayne, 43, with fostering this change when he became the first publicly gay Mormon executive secretary – a leadership position in service of a bishop – in 2011, a post he held for more than two years in a church that has an all-volunteer, all-male clergy.

The first tool in Mayne’s arsenal? Social media — Facebook, Twitter and the popular blog he started when he became a bishop to chronicle his experience as both gay and Mormon.

“Social media has enabled us to coalesce and create informed allies inside the Mormon faith and build the recognition that how we respond to LGBT individuals is everyone’s concern,” Mayne said after the event. “I have great faith in Mormons. They really want this change.”

LGBT Mormons are not the only minority group to harness social media and the Internet. Several other factions have taken to Facebook, Twitter and the blogosphere to push back against church norms and a culture they consider unfair, outdated, and, at times, hateful:

* In late-August, Ordain Women organized a Twitter campaign with the hashtag #equalinfaith. People posted pictures or messages supporting gender equality in the church, including opening the priesthood to women.
* When Kate Kelly was excommunicated from the LDS church earlier this year for her feminist activism, supporters organized a Facebook campaign asking people to wear black ribbons to church as a sign of dissent.
* In 2012, more than 1,500 Mormon women participated in the first “Wear Pants to Church Day,” organized via Facebook. Men were encouraged to wear purple in support. This year’s event is poised to be even larger, organizers say.

These campaigns seem to be prompting responses from the church, if not outright change. In August, the church surveyed about 1,000 randomly selected members to assess their views on a number of subjects, including “the roles, responsibilities or therapy of females in the church.” Two years ago, stung by the backlash from its support of California’s Proposition 8 that banned gay marriage, the church launched a new website exploring the relationship between its LGBT members and the broader church.

“We are starting to see a significant disconnect between what the church is telling people to believe about same-sex marriage and homosexuality and what people actually believe and accept,” said John Gustav-Wrathall, a senior vice president of Affirmation, an independent organization that supports LGBT Mormons and their families.

“I think the Internet has a lot to do with that. LDS people are putting their stories out there, and that is influencing people’s perception.”

Mayne agrees.

“For (church leaders) to put up the website is phenomenal,” he said. “Yes, it has some problems, but the fact that we are even addressing the issue and using the term ‘gay,’ I cannot stress how impactful that is. If you look at the web there is gay Mormon stuff everywhere, and five years ago that wasn’t the case.”

Church officials say their doctrine is guided only by revelation and Scripture, not by popular opinion. “There has been no change whatever in the Church belief that homosexual sex is sinful,” LDS spokesman Eric Hawkins wrote in response to emailed questions. “What has changed — with Church encouragement — is how to respond to those who struggle to stay in the Church and at the same time maintain that doctrinal position.”

Mormons attitudes toward social media are certainly in flux. Last year, Elder M. Russell Ballard, a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, the church’s second-highest presiding body, warned church members of the persuasive powers of the Internet.

Yet in August, Elder David A. Bednar, also a member of the Quorum, suggested Mormons take to social media “to sweep the Earth as with a flood.”

Feminist Mormons have been among the most active on social media. Nancy Ross, head of Ordain Women’s social media team, said there are at least a dozen multi-author blogs written by and for feminist Mormons and at least as many Facebook groups. Facebook, she said, is where the seeds of change get planted at the local, one-on-one level.

“That is one of the huge things we do on Facebook, is offer a variety of counterarguments when someone says something offensive about women in the church,” she said. “Within two hours, someone is going to have 30 or 40 responses on how to counter that.”

As a moderator of the Facebook page for Feminist Mormon Housewives, the oldest and most popular blog written by feminist Mormons, Jerilyn Hassell Pool has seen the effectiveness of social media firsthand.

A cradle Mormon, Pool has had moments where she’s considered leaving the church. But being able to voice her opinions online and connect with those who share them has kept her in the fold.

“I feel if I stay and continue to raise awareness and raise my voice, I am making my church a better place,” she said. “I am raising the collective conscience of other people on social media, and that makes me feel less implicit in perpetuating these gender stereotypes.”

At the Berkeley meeting, people seemed to be looking for a way to do the same thing with regards to LGBT Mormons. One man, a baby on his lap for most of the evening, asked how he could show LGBT Mormons in his ward that he, a straight man, was supportive. A young woman asked what she could do to reach out to LGBT Mormons who might be in the closet.

Part of the answer to both was “get online.” “The Internet has broken the bonds of silence,” Mayne told the crowd. “Those people and their families are no longer adrift.”

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/09/16/mormon-social-media_n_5829374.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices