Lance Bass And Michael Turchin Officially Tie The Knot

Lance Bass And Michael Turchin Officially Tie The Knot
Lance Bass and Michael Turchin are officially married!

Turchin and the former NSYNC member tied the knot Saturday night at the Park Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles, according to E! Online. The ceremony was officiated by actresses Jamie-Lynn Sigler and JoAnna Garcia Swisher, and Bass’ close friends and former bandmates Joey Fatone, Chris Kirkpatrick and JC Chasez were all in attendance.

“The whole wedding itself is very classy, you know. We wanted to plan something that could last for 100 years,” Bass told E! “When we show our grandchildren this amazing tape of our wedding, the best wedding video ever, I want them to be able to look at this and be like, ‘Wow, that stood the test of time.’ So we’re using a lot of elements in the wedding that are classy, and one of those is definitely our first dance. The song we chose is a song that lasts forever, something that is very special to us.”

The couple has been dating since December 2011. Bass proposed to Turchin, a painter and actor, last August in New Orleans.

“New Orleans is my favorite city in the world,” Bass explained earlier this year in a special edition of his SiriusXM radio show, “Dirty Pop with Lance Bass.” “I’ve been coming here my whole life. I was born just across the border here [in Laurel, Mississippi] … and Turkey also has roots here.”

“I got down on one knee and I proposed,” Bass went on, “right in front of Jackson Square, my favorite place.”

Watch Bass and Turchin get hitched in the 90-minute special “Lance Loves Michael: The Lance Bass Wedding” on Thursday, Feb. 5 on E!

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/21/lance-bass-michael-turchin_n_6362494.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

This Holiday Underwear Party Showcases Packages With Talent. Double Win.

This Holiday Underwear Party Showcases Packages With Talent. Double Win.

Screen Shot 2014-12-19 at 4.11.59 PMColby Melvin kicks off the CheapUndies holiday video by explaining that instead of sending out Christmas cards, he decided to invite some friends over to make a “holiday card, come to life.” In underwear, obviously.

It quickly becomes a showcase of Colby’s friends performing a variety of acts. Also in their underwear, obviously.

Quinn Jaxon starts the show with an impressive ballet number and Shawn Stolz follows him with a dance version of “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.” Montana Volby plays the trombone, Roger DuPlease sings, and Broadway star Brian Austin Crum shows off his impressive pipes by closing the show.

We sincerely hope that there was central heating in the house they filmed at.

Check out the ho, ho, hos here:

Dan Tracer

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/SQVAVSrU3bg/this-holiday-underwear-party-showcases-packages-with-talent-double-win-20141221

Duck Dynasty Star Isn't Quite Sure If You Choose To Be Gay, But He's Trying to Figure it Out: VIDEO

Duck Dynasty Star Isn't Quite Sure If You Choose To Be Gay, But He's Trying to Figure it Out: VIDEO

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Duck Dynasty star Willie Robertson is studying the Bible in a quest to figure out if being gay is a choice.

Willie’s dad Phil got into some serious hot water a year ago when he attacked gay “sinners” who are going to hell. In an interview with GQ, Robertson senior also oddly said “we never, ever judge someone on who’s going to heaven, hell.” Phil later defended his views but claimed that although he’s a homophobe, gay people “need to know that I love them”.

Speaking with Larry King, junior Robertson said that he doesn’t agree with everything his old man said in the interview because “we love everybody.” Her also helpfully pointed out that there are many, many gay people in the entertainment world.

Asked if he believes that being gay is a choice, young Willie said:

“Larry, I’m trying to figure that out right now. I really am since the controversy and since I know all these people — and if the thought is ‘I’m born this way.’

“I don’t know. I’m trying to figure out myself through the passages, because I always have to look to the scriptures to see what’s there and then I put it up against people — put my time in, so I’ve spent time with people.

“I’m not the judge. God’s going to be the judge, so it’s not my job to convince people to change their lives — it’s really through Jesus. If I just introduce them to Jesus, he’ll do that.”

Willie didn’t elaborate on when he made the decision to be heterosexual.

Watch the interview, AFTER THE JUMP


Jim Redmond

www.towleroad.com/2014/12/duck-dynasty-star-isnt-quite-sure-if-you-chose-to-be-gay-video.html

Elton John and David Furnish Are Married!

Elton John and David Furnish Are Married!

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As expected, Elton John and David Furnish celebrated 21 years together with an intimate wedding ceremony at the couple’s Windsor home on Sunday. 

Wrote Elton on the caption to the above photo: “That’s the legal bit done. Now on to the ceremony! 
#ShareTheLove @DavidFurnish

The 67-year-old singer set up an Instagram account for fans to share in the special day’s celebration. Sons Zachary and Elijah were the ring bearers.

Check out more photos, AFTER THE JUMP

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“It’s beginning!! The Registrar welcomes our guests.#ShareTheLove”

 

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“Zachary grabs David’s iPhone and takes a photo of his brother while we exchange our vows. #ShareTheLove”

 

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“The tables look stunning! We had red roses at our Civil Partnership 9 years ago and they brought us so much luck. #ShareTheLove”

 

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“Today’s menu! #ShareTheLove”

Photos via Instagram


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2014/12/elton-john-and-david-furnish-are-married.html

'Words Of Hope' Campaign Provides Support For LGBT Survivors Of Prison Rape Through Letter Writing

'Words Of Hope' Campaign Provides Support For LGBT Survivors Of Prison Rape Through Letter Writing
“Words of Hope” is a campaign spearheaded by Just Detention International that aims to remind survivors of prison rape that they are not alone or forgotten.

Contributing to “Words of Hope” is easy — and completely virtual.

The Huffington Post chatted with Just Detention International Communication Director Jesse Lerner-Kinglake about “Words of Hope” this week about why this project is so crucial during the holiday season.

The Huffington Post: Why is this campaign important?
Jesse Lerner-Kinglake: “Words of Hope” brings comfort to some of the most marginalized people in the U.S. — survivors of rape in prison. Since the campaign began in 2010, many survivors have told Just Detention International that the holiday messages have been transformative, showing them that people on the outside really do care.

I know that writing a holiday card may seem like small gesture, but the impact is huge for incarcerated survivors — who are often completely cut off from friends and family, who may be forced to see their perpetrator every single day and who may not have received any mail for months — or even years. It’s hard for those of us on the outside to imagine it, but this is the reality for survivors of rape in prison.

What is the reality of life in prison for many LGBT people?
In many prisons, homophobia is deeply entrenched among staff and inmates alike. These toxic attitudes allow sexual abuse and harassment towards LGBT people to flourish. The numbers are simply staggering: one recent Bureau of Justice Statistics report found that roughly 39 percent of gay male inmates reported being assaulted by other prisoners. Simply put, stopping prisoner rape is a gay rights issue.

What makes this campaign as relevant as ever during the holidays?
For survivors, the holidays can be a time when the loneliness of being locked up, away from loved ones, is especially acute. The Words of Hope messages help cut through that isolation. One measure of the campaign’s impact is how survivors consistently ask us during the year whether we’re going to do the campaign again. The answer, of course, is always yes!

To give you a bit of an idea of what the campaign means, here’s what one survivor, Sarah Jo, told JDI: “This was my fifth consecutive Christmas in solitary confinement, and with the help of people who care I was able to feel at ease. I made a little tree out of a high-end fashion magazine and set up my cards around it to remind me that I am not forgotten.”

What do you hope this campaign evolves into in the future?
We think that the campaign is already having a major impact — we just want it to grow even bigger! My sense is that there are lots of people who are looking for simple ways to help, without giving a dime. We sent over 10,000 cards last year — but imagine if we doubled or tripled that number? It’d be phenomenal if everyone who believes, as JDI does, that rape is never okay dedicated a few minutes of their day to send a card to a survivor. And it would mean everything to survivors behind bars.

Interested in contributing to “Words of Hope”? Head here.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/21/words-of-hope-campaign_n_6350850.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

These People Came Out in 2014 – Who Will We Hear From Next Year?

These People Came Out in 2014 – Who Will We Hear From Next Year?

Another year, another list of newly out celebrities to compile. Not that we’re complaining. In fact, the notion that lists of out and proud notables get longer every year gives us a warm and tingly feeling where it counts. But wouldn’t it be nice to get to a point where celebrities telling the world they’re LGBT wasn’t newsworthy?

Sadly, we’re not there yet. But thanks to the following people, the world has become a gayer — and therefore, better — place to be. And while we regret to report that this doesn’t include everyone on our 2014 coming-out wish list, here are some of this year’s noteworthy new openly gay cardholders.

Shall we start placing bets for whose names we’ll see here next year?

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Tim Cook

In October, the 53-year-old Apple CEO came out in a Businessweek essay, saying “I’m proud to be gay, and I consider being gay among the greatest gifts God has given me.”

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Derrick Gordon

Inspired by the positive reaction to Jason Collins‘ coming out, Gordon made news by becoming the first openly gay male NCAA Division 1 basketball player. “That was so important to me,” he said, referring to a standing ovation of acceptance that Collins received upon entering the court, “knowing that sexuality didn’t matter, that the NBA was OK with it.”

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Eric Radford

Last week, the Canadian figure skater who won a silver medal at the Sochi Olympic Games in February and is aiming for gold in 2018, became the only elite figure skater in the world to publicly come out in the prime of his competitive career. But as Radford told Outsports, he isn’t worried. “If you believe in yourself and focus on your dream and you work hard and surround yourself with a good team who will support you, you can achieve anything you want.”

Edgars-Rinkevics

Edgars Rinkevics

“I proudly announce I’am [sic] gay … Good luck all of you,” Latvia’s Foreign Minister announced via Twitter in November in a surprising move, given his country’s history with antigay politics. Prior to the announcement, Rinkevics tweeted that Latvia “has created a legal framework for all types of partnerships [and] will fight for it. I know there will be immediate mega-hysteria, but #Proudtobegay.”

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Ellen Page

“I’m here today because I am gay,” the Juno actress declared onstage in February at the Human Right Campaign’s “Time To Thrive” conference for LGBT youth in Las Vegas, ending what had long been an open secret in Hollywood. “Maybe I can make a difference. To help others have an easier and more hopeful time. Regardless, for me, I feel a personal obligation and a social responsibility.”

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Charlie King

The British reality babe and star of The Only Way Is Essex announced in a live television interview that he is gay, adding that he wants to be a “positive person” and let others who are struggling with their sexuality know they’re not alone.

Jim-Ferlo

Jim Ferlo

In September while speaking at a rally in support of updating the state’s hate crime law, the Pennsylvania senator casually announced what he said hundreds of people already knew: “I’m gay,” he said. “Get over it. I love it. It’s a great life.”

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Kristian Nairn

When asked during a fan site interview if he was aware of his bear following in the gay community, the Game of Thrones actor finally got the opportunity he’d been waiting for. “When you talk about ‘the gay community,’ you are talking about my community,” Nairn said. “I’ve never hidden my sexuality from anyone, my whole life in fact, and I’ve been waiting for someone to ask about it in an interview, ’cause it’s not something you just blurt out. I’ve tried to lead the questions a few times, to no avail!”

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Michael Sam

In February, the All-American defensive lineman and then-NFL hopeful came out in interviews with both The New York Times and ESPN. “I just want to make sure I could tell my story the way I want to tell it,” he said. “I just want to own my truth.” Sam went on to become the first ever openly gay player to be drafted in the NFL — and then, sadly, the first ever openly gay player to be cut from an NFL team.

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Dale Scott

In yet another sports first, Scott became Major League Baseball’s first openly gay umpire, which was quietly revealed in October in a Referee magazine profile. When the editor asked for an off-the-field photo for the article, Scott sent one of him and his partner of 28 years. “I think Major League Baseball has proven that it certainly isn’t an issue with them,” Scott told Outsports. “I’ve worked three World Series, I’ve worked the playoffs consistently, I’ve been a crew chief for 12 years.”

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Ty Herndon

In an interview last month with Entertainment Tonight, the country star announced to the world that he’s gay and in a committed relationship, but called the revelation simply “an addendum. I’m a gay man, and I’m looking forward to living the rest of my life authentically and happy.”

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Billy Gilman

Later that day, in a move that evoked memories of Michael Jackson trumping the death of Farrah Fawcett, fellow country star Gilman, 26, posted a video online in which he acknowledged he, too, is a gay man with a partner.

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Pat Patterson

In June, the 73-year-old wrestling legend, who was the WWE’s first intercontinental champion, revealed on a reality TV show that after 50 years in the closet — and the death of his partner of 40 years — he was ready to live his life openly.

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Djuan Trent

In resonse to a federal judge’s decision to recognize out-of-state same-sex marriages in Kentucky, the former Miss Kentucky took to her blog in March, announcing that she is queer. “Thank you for giving me the courage to change my ‘they’ to ‘we’, ‘them’ to ‘us’, and ‘their’ to ‘our’,” she wrote. “You have given me the courage to speak up and speak out when I forget my ‘QUEER’ stamp in the mornings. And I can only hope, that I might inspire someone else in that same way.”

ian thorpe

Ian Thorpe

After sixteen years of speculation from the media, the Australian Olympic gold medalist finally revealed in July that he is “not straight.” As for the countless — and emphatic — denials, the Thorpedo remarked, “I’m a little bit ashamed that I didn’t come out earlier, that I didn’t have the strength to do it, I didn’t have the courage to do it, to break that lie.”

Winston Gieseke

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/bKW9pklVpEc/these-people-came-out-in-2014-who-will-we-hear-from-next-year-20141221

Bobby Jindal Defends AFA Prayer Rally At LSU As Anti-Gay Hate Group Plans Similar Events In Other States: VIDEO

Bobby Jindal Defends AFA Prayer Rally At LSU As Anti-Gay Hate Group Plans Similar Events In Other States: VIDEO

Jindal

Last week we reported that LSU students are organizing protests and other events in response to “The Response,” a prayer rally to be hosted by the American Family Association — an anti-LGBT hate group — on the university’s campus January 24. 

Since then, the LSU Faculty Senate has issued a strongly worded condemnation of “The Response,” which will be headlined by Republican Gov. Bobby Jindal (above) as he prepares to kick off his 2016 presidential campaign. The Faculty Senate said although it doesn’t appear the university can legally deny the rental of space to the AFA, the rally is “inconsistent with the goals and aspirations of a great university”:

The Faculty Senate has made use of its extensive media resources to focus public attention on this matter. … In all of these interview opportunities, Faculty Senate representatives have stressed that the “Response” event both damages the University and conflicts with its values, whether by associating intolerance with University venues or interfering with the goal of disseminating the best in science. … 

The story of “The Response” is far from over, but I do want to assure the LSU and the statewide higher education community that the LSU Faculty Senate is working vigorously to assist the administration not only in repairing the damage resulting from this event but also in using it as an educational, formative opportunity.

Despite widespread opposition from students and faculty at LSU, Jindal continues to defend holding “The Response” at LSU. This week, he insisted the rally is “not a political event, it’s a religious event”:

“Christians have the right to rent, to pay for a hall at a public university so they can come together and pray,” Jindal told reporters at an economic development announcement in New Orleans.

Asked if he agreed with the American Family Association’s agenda, Jindal sidestepped that question and said, “The left likes to try to divide and attack Christians.”

Jindal said the protesters themselves should consider joining the prayer rally. He said they “might benefit from prayer.”

Meanwhile, in addressing criticism of the event, AFA spokesman Bryan Fischer continues to suggest that gays are to blame for natural disasters. The website for “The Response” initially included a prayer guide blaming gays, abortion and pornography for Hurricane Katrina, but it was quickly removed. However, Fischer told The Times-Picayune this week:  

Fischer“We do know that natural disasters can be a form of God’s judgement on an unrepentant nation. It’s fitting that a part of the country that is obviously at risk for natural disasters would lead the nation in modeling repentance.”

The AFA’s David Lane told The Times-Picayune that “The Response” is the first in a series of similar events the group is planning next year, and he hinted that other possible headliners include perennial GOP presidential candidate Rick Santorum. 

Republican Texas Gov. Rick Perry headlined an AFA prayer rally in Houston in 2011 to kick off his presidential campaign, so we assume Perry and GOP Texas Sen. Ted Cruz will be fighting over the Lone Star State’s AFA hatefest next year. 

Ultimately, though, these events may only backfire by galvanizing progressive opposition in places where they’re held, such as in Baton Rouge. A reader poll on The Times-Picayune website shows that 66 percent of respondents believe “The Response” should be held at a private building or church. 

Watch Jindal’s invitation to “The Response,” AFTER THE JUMP


John Wright

www.towleroad.com/2014/12/bobby-jindal-defends-anti-gay-hatefest-at-lsu-says-protesters-might-benefit-from-prayer.html