Sam Smith Talks Coming Out, Gay Spokesperson Remarks With Ellen DeGeneres

Sam Smith Talks Coming Out, Gay Spokesperson Remarks With Ellen DeGeneres
Sam Smith spoke about his decision to come out ahead of the release of his smash album, “In The Lonely Hour,” in a new interview with Ellen DeGeneres.

“It didn’t feel like a coming out … I came out when I was, like, four years old,” Smith, who recently nabbed two American Music Awards for New Artist of the Year and Favorite Male Artist, said. “My mom said she knew when I was, like, three, so I didn’t have to actually properly come out.”

He went on to note, “I kind of felt like I just had to mention it before I released my record … If I did it afterwards, people probably would’ve thought I was lying just to sell records, which wasn’t the case.”

The singer, 22, also clarified headline-making remarks he made his role within the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community earlier this year, noting, “Of course I do [want to be a spokesperson for the gay community], but I want to be a spokesperson for everyone, you know?”

It’s been quite a year for Smith, whose hit singles “Stay With Me” and “I’m Not The Only One” have been dominating airwaves all throughout 2014. Earlier this fall, he was named Breakout of the Year as part of Out Magazine’s annual OUT 100 list.

H/T Towleroad

Be sure to check out Smith’s performance of “I’m Not The Only One” from his Ellen appearance below:

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/02/sam-smith-ellen-degeneres_n_6254928.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Minnesota Newspapers Publish Misleading, Transphobic Ads From Anti-LGBT Hate Group

Minnesota Newspapers Publish Misleading, Transphobic Ads From Anti-LGBT Hate Group

STad

Minnesota’s largest daily newspaper is doubling down on its decision to publish misleading, fear-mongering, transphobic ads opposing a policy that would allow high school students to participate in athletics according to their gender identity.

But The Star-Tribune of Minneapolis isn’t alone. Also publishing the latest ad from the anti-LGBT Minnesota Child Protection League on Sunday were The St. Cloud Times and The Duluth News Tribune, according to Media Matters

The ad states:

“THE END OF GIRLS’ SPORTS? Her dreams of a scholarship shattered, your 14-year-old daughter just lost her position on an all-girl team to a male … and now she may have to shower with him. Are you willing to let that happen?”

The ad calls on people to contact Minnesota State High School League board members, who are set to consider the policy Thursday. 

Back in September, LGBT advocates slammed The Star Tribune for publishing a similar ad from the Minnesota Child Protection League opposing the policy, which was originally set to be voted on in October: 

Stad2

According to the LGBT Sports Coalition, 15 states have adopted policies similar to the one proposed in Minnesota, with no reported problems related to trans athletic participation:  

“By running the ad again, the Star Tribune has once again contributed to a negative stereotype at the same time as it has potentially put trans youth in danger by fostering a demonstrably untrue accusation. Editorial decisions matter. Research has shown that LGBT teens and young adults are at greater risk for depression and bullying, and that bullying is a contributing factor in many suicides. By accepting and publishing this kind of advertisement, the Star Tribune has empowered the untrue expectation that one minority group — transgender children, no less — are a threat to their classmates.

“Worse yet, the Star Tribune already knew that the content of the ad was deliberately misinformative about trans youth while advocating discrimination, because editors at the Star Tribune have already discussed the first ad (run by the same local hate group in September) with local and national LGBT organizations after they ran the first ad in September. The Star Tribune already knew that the content of the new ad also misrepresented trans lives and endangered trans youth — and elected to run it again anyway.”

The Star Tribune is also taking heat on Twitter, including from NBC Sports writer Aaron Gleeman: 

Sub in basically any other group of humans for transgendered people and try to imagine a newspaper accepting the ad. pic.twitter.com/WE0iqXBEQY

— Aaron Gleeman (@AaronGleeman) November 30, 2014

Representatives from The Star Tribune, which editorialized in favor of the trans-inclusive policy in October, haven’t commented on the latest ad. In September, the newspaper’s vice president of marketing and public relations told Minneapolis City Pages: “The ad in question met all the requirements of our ad policy. Not much I can tell you about it beyond that.”

But it appears that for many, that explanation isn’t cutting it. While the advertising director of The Duluth News Tribune told Media Matters it’s a question of free speech, some are calling on subscribers to make their own statement: 

Honestly if you haven’t canceled your @StarTribune subscriptions already, I will lose respect for you. t.co/2OBoTXXrRz

— Nachiket Karnik (@lockstockspock) December 1, 2014


John Wright

www.towleroad.com/2014/12/misleading-transphobic-ads-in-minnesota-newspapers-spark-outrage.html

Black, Gay And Shot Dead In His Own Car: This Is Another Missouri Killing We Should Talk About

Black, Gay And Shot Dead In His Own Car: This Is Another Missouri Killing We Should Talk About
Can you hate part of yourself so much that you want to kill people like you? And is that a hate crime?

Those are the questions being whispered at gay bars, asked behind tears in family living rooms, andt maybe even being answered by the police force here – on the other side of Missouri from Ferguson – after the shocking and complicated death of 22-year-old Dionte Greene, who was shot and killed on the morning of Halloween in his still-running car, possibly by a “straight” man who may have agreed to meet him for sex.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/02/dionte-greene-hate-crime_n_6254618.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Frat Boy Dishes On What It’s Like To Be Gay And Greek

Frat Boy Dishes On What It’s Like To Be Gay And Greek

388f445“People assume that gay individuals would be completely disinterested in the prospect of joining a fraternity,” Kohlman Harshbarger (pictured) writes in a new op-ed published by The Odyssey. “This isn’t exactly a warped perspective, but it certainly isn’t one of crystalline clarity either.”

Harshbarger is a Marketing and Graphic design major at the University of Minnesota. He is also the current social chair for his fraternity.

He acknowledges the “hyper-masculine, weight-lifting, polo-wearing, country music-listening” reputations that many frat houses and their occupants have.

“They like their beer and their women equally. Both a lot,” he says. “Nowhere in this list do you find Beyoncé or skinny jeans.”

But, he says, there still plenty of gay guys amidst all the rampant heterosexuality.

“[Gay people] join fraternities for the same reason that straight people do,” Harshbarger writes. “For me, an out-of-state student (1,406 miles out of state to be exact), my fraternity is like my family away from home. It’s a support system of 107 best friends that are just as ready to shotgun a brew with me at 8 a.m. on gameday as they are to sit and listen to me lament about how shitty my day was. Surprisingly, brotherhood isn’t contingent upon sexual orientation!”

Maybe not in Harshbarger’s case. But there have been plenty of stories about fraternities rejecting pledges for being gay.

In October, the Lambda Phi Epsilon fraternity at the University of Texas was suspended after being accused of withholding membership from a rushee simply because he was gay. And last year, the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity at Morgan State University in Baltimore, Maryland was put on probation for rejecting an applicant on the basis of his sexual orientation.

Lucky for Harshbarger, that wasn’t the case for him. He says being gay has never been an issue in his frat house.

“I can tell you first hand that nobody cares,” he writes.” When my pledge class found out from our pledge educator that there was a gay pledge in their class, they pegged another pledge brother as the culprit (but never suspected me).”

He continues: “I didn’t have a ‘gay’ voice and seemed like I’d ‘pull’ hard. I didn’t wear ‘gay’ clothes (although I did dress a bit better than everyone else). … Once the news was out (pun intended), the summative reaction was… well… there wasn’t one. No one cared. And they shouldn’t.”

Thought Harshbarger says he’s never personally suffered any sort of discrimination for being gay, he has witnessed it happen to others.

“There are still those in our community that hold opinions contrary to mine,” he writes. “I’ve seen Yik Yaks that continually target and degrade members of our Greek community because of their sexuality; thus far they’ve been kept anonymous. And that’s probably a smart move.”

“Although I might feel like delivering a swift throat chop or throwin’ some Judo on you if you called me a fag, I wouldn’t,” he concludes. “But I can’t say as much for the 107 other guys you’d also need to deal with.”

Ah, brotherhood.

Related stories:

SMU Fratboy Admits To Forcing Male Student To Have Sex

Gay Porn Stars Draw On “Real Life Experiences” To Recreate Frat Hazing Rituals

MI Frat Boys Suspended For Naked But Patriotic Party Invitations

Graham Gremore is a columnist and contributor for Queerty and Life of the Law. Follow him on Facebook and Twitter.

 

Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/3chU0oyvM30/frat-boy-dishes-on-what-its-like-to-be-gay-and-greek-20141202

Bruce Springsteen, Chris Martin Step in for Bono at U2 'World AIDS Day' Concert in Times Square: FULL VIDEO

Bruce Springsteen, Chris Martin Step in for Bono at U2 'World AIDS Day' Concert in Times Square: FULL VIDEO

Springsteen

U2 played a surprise World AIDS Day concert for (RED) last night in Times Square but had some last minute substitutions.

Because Bono is still recovering from a November 16 bicycle accident in Central Park, the band announced via its Facebook page at 3 pm yesterday that Adam Clayton, The Edge and Larry Mullen Jr. would be joined by Chris Martin and Bruce Springsteen, who donated their time and talents.

Martin wore a t-shirt that read ‘SUBSTITU2’.

Carrie Underwood and Kanye West performed as well. Former President Bill Clinton introduced the band.

Watch the full concert, AFTER THE JUMP

Martin

Individual clips of the U2 performances:


Andy Towle

www.towleroad.com/2014/12/u2red.html