Check Out This BASE Jumper's Insane Parachute Plunge Into a Rooftop Pool Party: VIDEO

Check Out This BASE Jumper's Insane Parachute Plunge Into a Rooftop Pool Party: VIDEO

Base

Base jumper John Van Horne decided to “drop in” quite literally onto a rooftop party in the Malaysian capital by jumping off the 1,200 foot Kuala Lumpur Tower and parachuting into the 34th story pool. 

Check out the insane footage, AFTER THE JUMP

 


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2014/10/check-out-this-base-jumpers-insane-parachute-plunge-into-a-rooftop-pool-party-video.html

Watch Nick Jonas Get Into His New (Probably Gay) Character While Busting Out Of This Too-Tight T-Shirt

Watch Nick Jonas Get Into His New (Probably Gay) Character While Busting Out Of This Too-Tight T-Shirt

Screen Shot 2014-10-11 at 12.40.34 PMWe know you’re dying to get deeper inside Nick Jonas’ character in the new DirecTV drama Kingdom, so here’s a special behind-the-scenes feature in which Nick talks about prepping for his debut lead acting role (because we’re not counting Camp Rock).

In Kingdom, Nick plays a young up-and-coming MMA fighter. He’s previously teased the character as being potentially gay, definitely nude, and having some sort of sexual identity crisis, a process that will more than likely involve some steamy gay sex scenes.

Meet Nick’s latest character, Kingdom‘s Nate Kulina, below:

Queerty Editor

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Gay Iconography: Falling For Frank Ocean

Gay Iconography: Falling For Frank Ocean

Oceansnl

There are always new icons in the making. Earlier this year, users of gay app Jack’d voted to select their top gay icons of 2014. Near the top of the list was R&B singer Frank Ocean (second only to Michael Sam).

Ocean made waves (pun wholly intended) in 2012 when he made headlines for posting a lengthy coming out on his tumblr. In what was originally intended to be the liner notes for his album Channel Orange, Ocean wrote: “4 summers ago, I met somebody. I was 19 years old. He was too.” With that one pronoun, Ocean became one of the most prominent faces in hip-hop to acknowledge a same-sex attraction.

As writer Gerrick D. Kennedy asserted in The Los Angeles Times, “The straightforward letter … is undoubtedly the glass ceiling moment for music. Especially black music, which has long been in desperate need of a voice like Ocean’s to break the layers of homophobia.”

Following the letter’s publication, many members of the hip-hop community responded with their support. Jay-Z posted a thank you letter. Beyoncé wrote a poem. Def Jam records co-founder Russell Simmons wrote: “Today is a big day for hip-hop. It is a day that will define who we really are. How compassionate will we be? How loving can we be? How inclusive are we?”

Unfortunately, not everyone was as compassionate or inclusive as Simmons may have hoped. Rapper T-Pain told VladTV, “I think the radio is getting more gay friendly, I don’t think urban music or anything is getting more gay friendly. If that was the case Frank Ocean would be on a lot more songs … I know n—gers that will not do a song with Frank Ocean just because he’s gay.”

But Ocean didn’t do it to change the world. Though not intentionally political, his decision was deeply personal. His letter said “Before writing this I’d told some people my story. I’m sure these people kept me alive, kept me safe.. sincerely. These are the folks I wanna thank from the floor of my heart. Everyone of you knows who you are.. great humans. Probably Angels. I don’t know what happens now, and that’s alrite [sic]. I don’t have any secrets I need kept anymore.”

All of this wouldn’t have had nearly the impact it did if Channel Orange wasn’t such a remarkably brilliant album. Check out some of our favorite Ocean performances, AFTER THE JUMP

 

Ocean began songwriting for the likes of Brandy, Justin Bieber and John Legend. He’s also written for Beyoncé and guested on her track “Superpower“, above. While working as a songwriter in Los Angeles, Ocean began working with the hip-hop collective Odd Future.

 

Prior to Ocean’s coming out, the gender pronouns in his lyrics had journalists speculating about his sexuality. His song “Bad Religion”, which you can see him perform in the clip above, features lines like “I could never make him love me, Never make him love me.” In 2012, he described to GQ how that pressure pushed him to come out: “I had Skyped into a listening session that Def Jam was hosting for Channel Orange, and one of the journalists, very harmlessly … wrote a piece and mentioned that. I was just like, ‘F— it. Talk about it, don’t talk about it—talk about this.’ No more mystery. Through with that.”

 

Ocean has a unique style that blends rap, soul and R&B. With electronic flourishes and nontraditional song structures, his largely mid-tempo catalog carries echoes of Prince, Stevie Wonder and Erykah Badu. Above all, he’s a skilled storyteller whose work expertly explores themes of love, loneliness, nostalgia and maturity.

 

Channel Orange received heaps of critical praise. It was nominated for four Grammy awards, winning one (Best Urban Contemporary Album), at the 55th Grammy Awards. (He also was nominated for his work with Kanye West & Jay-Z on “No Church In the Wild.”) See Ocean perform a stand-out track from Channel Orange, “Thinkin Bout You,” above.

 

His coming out has already inspired so many, and not just the younger generation. Clive Davis, who came out in 2013, lauded Ocean for his bravery in an interview with MTV News.

What’s your favorite Frank Ocean track?


Bobby Hankinson

www.towleroad.com/2014/10/gay-iconography-falling-for-frank-ocean.html

New Clinton Papers Reveal Just How Bad The Discussions Leading Up To DADT Were. (Hint: Gay = Nazi)

New Clinton Papers Reveal Just How Bad The Discussions Leading Up To DADT Were. (Hint: Gay = Nazi)

rotc_dadt-360x248A new batch of White House documents from the Clinton presidency have just been released, and they confirm what was long suspected: the discussions that ultimately resulted in the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy were rife with homophobia.

As his first act in the White House, Clinton promised to lift the military’s ban on gay service personnel. Instead, he ran into a military buzzsaw. In a meeting held in the White House just five days after Clinton moved in, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, led then by Gen. Colin Powell, rejected Clinton’s decision out of hand.

“Homo[sexuality] is a problem for us,” Powell said, according to the notes taken at the meeting. He also recited all the same bogus fears that led to DADT, including the old predator canard; the notes say Powell was “concerned about forced association and immaturity of 18-year-old.”

The most offensive remarks came from Marine Commandant Carl Mundy, who 16 years later was still urging the president (now Obama) not to repeal DADT.  According to the notes, Mundy said that the statement “I’m gay” was the “same as I’m KKK, Nazi, rapist.” Coming out “fractures teamwork” and tells the world “I commit [an] act Amer[ica] doesn’t accept.”

Mundy wasn’t moved by the experience of other nations either. “It doesn’t matter what the Dutch have done,” he said. “We’re the best.”

Clinton was prone to stereotypes as well. “People I would like to keep [in the military] wouldn’t show up at a Queer Nation parade,” the president said, referring to the activist group.

The person who comes across best in the meeting is then-Vice President Al Gore. Gore challenges Powell directly when Powell insists that race is just one of several “benign characteristics” while “sex[uality] is different.” (Powell did come around, supporting the repeal of DADT in 2010 and the legalization of marriage equality in 2012.)

Gore objected. “Assuming you have a soldier born w/ [a] predisp[osition] + patriotic…if that person sep[arates] due to status then that person in a way is discriminated against in a way similar to black[s.]”

After the meeting, Gore also told Clinton, Secretary of Defense Les Aspin and the other White House attendees that Mundy was “borderline” in his remarks, taking particularly offense at the Nazi comparison. No one else was as pointed in their criticism–at least not in the notes.

Just one more reminder of how the first decade of the century might have been different if Gore had become President.

JohnGallagher

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Celebrate National Coming Out Day With These Inspiring Video Tributes: WATCH

Celebrate National Coming Out Day With These Inspiring Video Tributes: WATCH

Comingout

Today marks the 26th anniversary of National Coming Out Day – a day of celebration and self-acceptance for the LGBT community and its allies. To mark the special occasion, check out these videos highlighting some of the celebrities and everyday people who have stood up, spoken out, and joined the “out” ranks. 

Watch, AFTER THE JUMP

Daley

 

 


Kyler Geoffroy

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