Nick Jonas Finally Reveals His Character Is Gay On Kingdom

Nick Jonas Finally Reveals His Character Is Gay On Kingdom

Kingdon-Trailer-Released-starring-Nick-Jonas-VIDEOIs anyone out there watching DirecTV’s Kingdom? No? Anyone?

Well it might be worth a visit now that Nick Jonas‘ character has finally revealed that he’s gay in the season one finale.

It’s (reportedly) been hinted at all season — his mixed-martial artist character has previously had a freak-out upon discovering his physical therapist was gay, and froze up when he met a gay guy at the mall.

Nick also noted before the show aired that his character’s sexuality would be a major theme of the show.

So how did it happen in the show?

Well, first he gets ejected from a gay bar, and then he accepts an alley-way blowjob from a stranger.

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“Byron [Balasco, Kingdom creator] told me before shooting began,” Jonas told BuzzFeed. “Everyone at Kingdom was really transparent about the character and some of the things the character would go through. And in my prep work, I wanted to be aware so I could properly tell this story.”

But just because he’s come out to Kingdom’s audience doesn’t mean any of the other characters know yet. Expect to see much more of Nick progressively coming out in season two.

Dan Tracer

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/-_XF6r5X9Io/nick-jonas-finally-reveals-his-character-is-gay-on-kingdom-20141211

News: Rick Perry, YouTube, Liam Hemsworth, NSYNC, Ocean Pollution

News: Rick Perry, YouTube, Liam Hemsworth, NSYNC, Ocean Pollution

Road Rick Perry sounds off on a potential 2016 bid for the White House: “Running for the presidency’s not an IQ test”.

HemsworthRoad Liam Hemsworth shows off his lumbersexuality on the cover of Men’s Fitness

Road One gay man’s personal story of why LGBTQ scholarships are so crucial. “When I reflect back to my high school ethics class debate, I still wonder if the people who argued against LGBTQ scholarships did not understand that the LGBTQ community needs assistance in building up strong, educated leaders. Could they not recognize that every community deserves to be healthy, vibrant and able to take pride in who they are?”

Road YouTube has just released it’s top 10 most watched videos of 2014.

Road Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James, the top official in the US Air Force, has spoken out in support of allowing trans* servicemembers to openly serve.

Road Leaked Sony emails reveal Aaron Sorkin’s private thoughts about Michael Fassbender’s private parts: “‘He just makes you feel bad to have normal-sized genitalia’

Texas monthlyRoad Texas Monthly crowns Wendy Davis as its “Bum Steer of the Year”. 

Road Outgoing Arkansas Governor Mike Beebe has reiterated his opposition to gay marriage but hey, at least he says he’s eased his opposition to allowing civil unions. 

Road Grassroots Conservatives in the UK are concerned David Cameron won’t win a majority in 2015 due to his push for gay marriage.

Road Angelina Jolie is having a bad week

Road National Examiner claims Harry Styles had a gay affair with President Obama. 

Road South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson has filed notice that he will appeal a second gay marriage lawsuit to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. Wilson remains the only AG in the 4th Circuit to continue fighting to uphold a state-level ban on same-sex marriage. 

Road Nick Denton has stepped down as Gawker president.

  LgbtRoad Thought-provoking photos of the LGBT community. 

Road HRC has named JoDee Winterhof as its new Vice President for Policy and Political Affairs.  

Road Diva-in-training Ariana Grande reportedly demands her staff to carry her around like a baby because she doesn’t like walking. 

Road Find out which *NSync-er won’t be able to attend Lance Bass’s upcoming wedding to Michael Turchin. 

Road Bad news: More than 5 trillion pieces of plastic are polluting the oceans.


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2014/12/news-5.html

Study Might Explain How To Change Minds On Same-Sex Marriage

Study Might Explain How To Change Minds On Same-Sex Marriage
It’s common knowledge that Americans are changing their views on same-sex marriage and gay rights at a breakneck pace. What has remained something of a mystery is how exactly this change occurs. A new study published Thursday in the peer-reviewed journal Science may have uncovered a clue.

Some anti-gay voters in California changed their minds five time faster than their neighbors on gay rights, according to the new study. The secret? Openly gay activists went door to door, engaging these conservative opponents in “heartfelt, reciprocal and vulnerable conversations” about what marriage meant to them, according to a press release about the study. The activists didn’t just push gay marriage, they made a point of listening to their opponents’ concerns and experiences, the release said.

“In an era where the constant talk is of implacable differences and polarization, what’s interesting here is that you have an honest, open, two-way conversation, and opinions do change,” said Columbia University professor Donald P Green, a co-author on the study.

Green has researched and written about public opinion and prejudice for more than two decades. He had reached a fairly bleak conclusion about voters, he told The Huffington Post this week. “I used to think that attitudes were stable,” he said. In 2009, he published an exhaustive review of the existing studies on reducing prejudice and found that most methods, including TV ads, mail, phone calls and even door-to-door canvassing have minimal effect, and what slight change in attitude may occur typically disappears within a few days.

The groundbreaking news in Thursday’s study, “When Contact Changes Minds: An Experiment on Transmission of Support for Gay Equality,” is that the change in attitude these California voters experienced after talking about gay rights with an openly gay person persisted steadily throughout the year that the study was conducted.

“The findings always seemed to be that you could produce short-term change in, say a controlled environment, but when people go back to their normal social milieu the change dissipates,” Green said. “Now I think part of the reason our attitudes are so steady over time is that we almost never have a conversation akin to the conversations” activists had in this study.

The study examined the work of a group of gay and straight canvassers from the Los Angeles LGBT Center. In the wake of the passage of California’s gay marriage ban in 2008, the activists had more than 12,000 one-on-one conversations in Los Angeles neighborhoods that overwhelmingly supported the ban.

Michael J. LaCour, a Ph.D. candidate in political science at the University of California Los Angeles who co-authored the Science paper with Green, said he became interested in these canvassers because of the purity of their mission: They weren’t collecting signatures, asking for money or trying to turn out the vote. Rather, the sole purpose of their conversations was changing minds on gay rights.

In 2013, LaCour and Green began the year-long scientific assessment of the LGBT center’s work, comparing the successes of the gay canvassers with their straight counterparts, along with a placebo group consisting of openly gay canvassers who talked about the value of recycling instead of gay marriage. The conservative voters answered questions in online surveys before and periodically after the canvassing. (The voters did not know the surveys were related to the canvassing, and the canvassers did not know the voters were taking the online surveys.)

Initially, gay and straight canvassers had a similar effect on voters, the study found. But those who spoke with the straight canvassers seemed to snap back to their original opinion after a couple of weeks, and those who spoke with gay canvassers maintained their new view throughout a year of surveys. Perhaps even more intriguing, those who lived in the same household as the voters who spoke with gay canvassers also reported changing views on gay rights — not so with the households of those who spoke with straight canvassers.

“It’s a subtle hint that what’s going on here has to do with conversations in the household and maybe even the mental images that are conjured,” Green said. “Perhaps the conversation was something like, ‘Honey I met a gay man and he was nothing like the gay man I thought I would meet.”

The study’s findings line up with polling that shows that Americans who know someone who is gay are more likely to support gay rights. Over the past few decades, the number of people who are openly gay has skyrocketed. Naturally, so has the number of Americans who say they know someone who is gay.

LaCour is now conducting a similar study involving reproductive rights, and expects to find similar results. He paraphrased Harvey Milk: “It’s harder to deny people rights if those people have names and faces.”

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/11/same-sex-marriage_n_6309374.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Show Me the Money: Williams Institute Explores Economic Impact of Marriage Equality

Show Me the Money: Williams Institute Explores Economic Impact of Marriage Equality

Marriage equality is not only good policy, it means big money for state economies and the nation, according to a new interactive economic report  the Williams Institute of UCLA School of Law released this week.
HRC.org

www.hrc.org/blog/entry/show-me-the-money-williams-institute-explores-economic-impact-of-marriage-e?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed