Ellen Gives “Magic Mike XXL” Dancer Stephen Boss A Full Body Wax

Ellen Gives “Magic Mike XXL” Dancer Stephen Boss A Full Body Wax

Screen Shot 2014-10-10 at 11.38.46 AMTo follow four wonderful appearances from Ellen’s shirtless gardener “Nick” last month, Ellen’s guest DJ Stephen “tWitch” Boss stripped down to his underwear Wednesday to get a full body wax on camera, thus continuing the great new weekly tradition of objectifying Ellen’s male friends.

The 32-year-old dancer/actor and So You Think You Can Dance alum revealed he’s been cast in the upcoming Magic Mike XXL sequel. He says he enjoys showing off his body but isn’t excited to get “waxed from neck to toe,” a requirement for the job.

“I’m really nervous about that,” he said. “I didn’t know that’s what I was signing up for.”

Check it out below, and prepare yourself to see him in even tinier underwear when Magic Mike XXL comes out next August:

Matthew Tharrett

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/EtCAeZi__og/ellen-gives-magic-mike-xxl-dancer-stephen-boss-a-full-body-wax-20141010

The Economist Looks At the Rapidly Changing American Attitudes Towards Gay Marriage: VIDEO

The Economist Looks At the Rapidly Changing American Attitudes Towards Gay Marriage: VIDEO

Marriage

With the Supreme Court bringing gay marriage to a number of new states this week, The Economist looks back at how (and why) the U.S. public has warmed to the idea of two people of the same gender falling in love, marrying, and creating a family. 

From Lawrence v. Texas to the growing tide of gay marriage support among Millennials, the video examines some of the many interlocking pieces that have come together to bring us where we are today in the fight for LGBT equality. 

Check it out, AFTER THE JUMP

 


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2014/10/the-economist-looks-at-the-rapidly-changing-american-attitudes-towards-gay-marriage-video.html

'Everyone Is Happier If They Have Sex': Tove Lo Is The Pop Star 2014 Needed

'Everyone Is Happier If They Have Sex': Tove Lo Is The Pop Star 2014 Needed
It’s safe to say artists try to write the catchiest lyrics possible. They want their hooks filled with pretty, metaphorical and, purposely or not, sometimes meaningless lines that could eventually become a future tattoo or Twitter bio. And then there are artists like Tove Ebba Elsa Nilsson, better known as Tove Lo, who shears away all varnishes, resulting in lyrics like this: “If you love me right, we fuck for life, on and on and on.”

“Even though I know there is some value to keeping it hidden — there’s an art to that too – I’m just really into the raw bluntness of telling it how it is,” Nilsson told HuffPost Entertainment. “I think that pop music in general sometimes like to keep things a bit more hidden, and, you know, you censor and you polish to make it fit more people or to not be too vulgar or make sure of ‘Can this really play on the radio?’ And I like not doing that.”

Nilsson’s major label debut, “Queen of the Clouds,” is the latest to prove that Sweden is a pop hot-bed. Just in the past few years, an astounding number of Swedish female artists have topped charts and blogs in the United States: Icona Pop, Lykke Li, Little Dragon, First Aid Kit, NoNoNo, Say Lou Lou and Elliphant, to name a few. “I’ve been trying to figure it out myself,” Nilsson responded with a laugh when asked about the country’s musical success. “I think it’s the combination of liking something that’s simple and clear, minimalistic, and our limit in the English language have helped.”

While there are plenty of theories and too many answers for that, “Queen of the Clouds” makes it abundantly clear that Tove Lo stands beside Banks as one of the two best new faces in pop. It’s dark, it’s multidimensional, it’s fun and it’s honest. Growing up, Nilsson immersed herself in the grunge movement, taking lessons from groups like Nirvana and Silverchair, channeling the rawness that helped set those acts apart into her own work. “Your weak sides, your flaws, your bad sides, I think they should be part of it too,” Nilsson said.

The album is structured into three parts: The Sex, The Love and The Pain. While Nilsson would prefer for listeners to digest it all in one sitting, she does have a weekend listening plan: The Sex should be played on Friday night during the pre-party. The Love should be played on Saturday morning (read: the time you wake up) when you and your friends are talking about the drama, intrigue or fun from the previous evening. The Pain takes Sunday afternoon, when you are ruined by the weekend and feeling down and existential.

Labeling herself as “dirty pop,” Nilsson’s songwriting is exceptional. On top of the continually addictive “Habits (Stay High)” and “Not On Drugs,” both reappearing from her “Truth Serum” EP, “Timebomb” is as explosive as its title suggests, “Thousand Miles” is utterly emptying and the phrasing in “Got Love” is mesmerizing. But the album’s golden thread is its unabashed sexuality.

“Everything that has to do with sex is somehow … it’s the best thing in the world and it’s still the one thing people don’t want you to talk about,” Nilsson said. “Someone said to me, ‘Why do you have to promote sex and drugs and violence?’ I don’t promote drugs, I don’t promote violence, I definitely will promote sex because everyone is happier if they have sex.”

Nilsson explains how songs like Lykke Li’s “Get Some” helped fuel her sex-positive attitude, wielding the line “I’m your prostitute, you gon’ get some.” It’s about women being sexual “without being the victim,” where it’s okay for them to be in charge. While some will accuse Nilsson on instilling “crude” ideas into the minds of young women, she knows that they are already there and that attempting to suffocate them isn’t an acceptable reaction.

“Whatever we feel like we want to say we should just be able to say it,” Nilsson said. “It shouldn’t be keeping this wholesome kind of … like, the terms she’s a ‘good girl’ or she’s a ‘bad girl,’ why does a good girl mean that you’re a prude? Why does that make you better than a girl who’s a sexual free spirit? I think that’s being a ‘good girl.’ Have sex with whoever you want.”

“Queen of the Clouds” is now available for purchase.

before the beat drops

Before The Beat Drops is an artist introduction series dedicated to bringing you the rising acts before they make their break. Our unlimited access to music of all kinds is both amazing and overwhelming. Keeping your playlists fresh, we’ll be doing the leg work to help you discover your next favorite artist.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/10/10/tove-lo-queen-of-the-clouds_n_5961222.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Watch What Happens When Some Guy on an Airplane Jokes About Having Ebola: VIDEO

Watch What Happens When Some Guy on an Airplane Jokes About Having Ebola: VIDEO

Ebola_flight

BY TIMOTHY MCGRATH / GlobalPost

Not funny.

Fear about Ebola — warranted or not — is definitely ramping up.

The overall death toll stands around 3,865. Nearly all of the deaths have taken place in West Africa, which is several months into the worst Ebola outbreak in history. Two recent deaths in the United States and Spain have raised concerns that — despite repeated assurances by public health authorities — the outbreak could spread overseas.

Much of the anxiety has come since the death of Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian man flew to Dallas on Sept. 20 while infected with Ebola. He had no symptoms but had been in direct contact with an infected woman back in Liberia. He died on Oct. 8.

Since Duncan’s case came to light, airports in the United States have announced new screening measures. But that’s not reassuring everyone. At LaGuardia International Airport, workers who clean airplane cabins have gone on strike, afraid that they could come into contact without bodily fluids carrying the disease.

And it’s in this climate of anxiety, misinformation, and human error that the above video appears. It was filmed on an Oct. 8 flight from Philadelphia, Penn. to Punta Cana, Dominican Republic. While in flight, an American passenger apparently sneezed or coughed and then joked about having recently been in Africa.

Of course, the guy hadn’t been in Africa and didn’t have Ebola. Here, in shaky smartphone video form, are the incredible repercussions of it all.

Watch, AFTER THE JUMP


GlobalPost

www.towleroad.com/2014/10/ebola.html