NEW MUSIC: Kristofer Åström, Joan Shelley, Petite Noir, Suede

NEW MUSIC: Kristofer Åström, Joan Shelley, Petite Noir, Suede

Kristofer_Åström_9_Photo_Kristoffer_Hedberg

New Music is brought to you by Deadly Music! which covers mostly indie, alternative, electro pop, post rock and ambient music, with a bit of everything else deadly thrown in for good measure.


 

Kristofer Åström – “One More Drink” / “Poor Young Man’s Heart”

Swedish singer-songwriter Kristofer Åström is an old hand at this point having spent close to 20 years on the scene.

As fans await his forthcoming 10th studio album, Åström has recently been releasing a series of live recordings with the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra.

The latest of those is “One More Drink,” a track that in the hands of a bedroom wannabe would likely have been an embarrassing mess.

Åström however brings his experience and greatly underrated talent to the table on a series of tracks that put him top of the pile in the heartbroken three chords and the truth sad boys.

If Damien Rice is your thing but you too found his recent third album a disappointment, you could do worse by exploring Åström’s back catalog.

Watch the original version of Poor Young Man’s Heart below.


 

Joan Shelley – Over and Even

Joan ShelleyContinuing in the singer songwriter genre we have Kentucky’s Joan Shelley with her fourth release, the mini-album Over and Even.

With an eye on the past, the four tracks on the EP eschew theatrics in favor of simple folk songs.

Like a less chatty Laura Marling on this year’s brilliant Short Movie, Shelley is to Sandy Denny what the English singer-songwriter is to Joni Mitchell.


 

Petite Noir – “MDR”

Petite-NoirPetite Noir – aka South African native Yannick Ilunga – is gearing up for the release of his debut album Life Is Beautiful with a series of genre hopping singles.

His latest track “MDR” is a Grease-referencing soul-pop effort with African percussion that comes off like something from the lost Prince album between Around The World In A Day and Parade.

Just as well because reviews suggest new Prince album HitNRun Phase One is less than brilliant.


 

Suede – Dog Man Star 20th Anniversary Live – Royal Albert Hall

suede-2013-paris-festival-lesinrocksWith their seventh studio album Night Thoughts due for release early next year, Suede – a band central to the hysteria around 1990s Britpop – have just dropped a 2014 live recording of their second album Dog Man Star.

With anniversary performances quite the thing at the moment, the nostalgia trip can be a kind of sad desperate money grab (stand up Stone Roses).

Suede however have avoided the pitfalls of many such efforts and in front of a clearly rapturous, likely middle-aged audience this album highlights what made Dog Man Star one of the best albums of the 1990s.

 

The post NEW MUSIC: Kristofer Åström, Joan Shelley, Petite Noir, Suede appeared first on Towleroad.


Michael Fitzgerald

NEW MUSIC: Kristofer Åström, Joan Shelley, Petite Noir, Suede

Goodnight Manhattan

Goodnight Manhattan

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When you hit that great brick wall that hopefully breaks through to heaven, where will you be? My dear friend and mentor, novelist and linguist Ursule Molinaro, had her “brick wall” all planned out. A “graduate” of the Nazi-run prison of Fresnes in France for hiding a Jewish couple, she decided forever after to escape all institutions. Hospitals were at the top of that list. Making her future departure foolproof and pill-enabled didn’t prevent her from conjecturing endings that could happen before her well-planned exit. Once I flagged down a New York taxi for the two of us. To the dangerous swerves of the clumsy cabbie she conjured the following: What would happen to us if we left this level together in the company of this whistling, gap-toothed Haitian chatting on a cell phone and his coconut-oil-infused cab? Would it somehow entangle our afterlives with his? I don’t know. What I do know is that it matters where you die because that’s also where you’ve been living.

Such conjectures never concerned me until July 2 of my 40th summer in Manhattan. That was the day in 2014 when a substance-fueled boyfriend with whom I had foolishly assumed I would spend the rest of my life peremptorily dumped me. Gazing back upon decades of sexual encounters numbering in the thousands, including 11 failed “love affairs,” I asked that Peggy Lee question: “Is that all there is?”

I was sitting in my spacious East Village apartment when I faced that issue, among mostly midcentury furnishings and original art by friends. I gazed at the several books I’d published that had all finally found their way to the remainder table. My eye strayed to the oversize flat screen and my hard-drive collections of over 2,000 films. I studied the walls cleverly painted in an array of Technicolor hues inspired by my favorite films.

No, I did not want to die here.

I was born and raised in the do-you-really-call-it-a-city of Syracuse, a land-bound enclave so median that it had become a national center for market research product testing as I grew up. So brutal were the winters that snow in May was no occasion for comment. So conservative was our upper-middle-class Republican neighborhood that children barely set foot on its manicured front lawns. Sidewalks were few that knew the footprints of anyone but the mailman. When the sun fell and the tastefully retro streetlamps blinked on, the empty lanes looked like footpaths in the tonier sections of Forest Lawn Cemetery.

I suppose I should admit that I’m even old enough to have graduated from my segregated high school before busing changed it in 1969. Our white-kid dress code was rigid. The principal stood in the hallways with a ruler to measure hemlines and sent any girl whose skirt was more than one inch above the knee home to change. First to don an olive army jacket, round-framed glasses, and a “Jewfro,” I’d made a vow by junior year to escape my origins and dump my provincial upstate accent. By 1974, after a four-year hippie hiatus in San Francisco, I became a confirmed New Yorker.

In 2001, my brother and I inherited the family house after my mother’s death at 98. I couldn’t wait to turn it into cash. Bro bought me out, and I used the money to get more notches on my belt of promiscuity throughout four countries in Western Europe. Then I came back to New York for another 13 years. When 2014 hit and the brooding boyfriend coldly split, I suddenly realized how old I was. I also realized I had used up all that the city had to offer. Was that why I found myself hoisting a giant Victorinox suitcase onto the racks of an unreliable Amtrak headed for Syracuse on Oct. 14, 2014? Why was I bringing so much with me?

To say I stayed a long time is an understatement. It is now August 2015, and I’m still upstate. Roughing out one of the worst winters in history without a car, I figured the supermarket was a mere five-mile round-trip walk through snowdrifts and howling winds. I had a lot else to keep me busy, too. Six months previous, I’d been hired at a discount rate to translate an award-winning French biography of director Jean Renoir. The thing is 1,000 pages, for gawd’s sake, and the type is small. After a couple of months of tackling it and cleaning out a 10-year collection of take-home hospital inhalers and those weird yellow circular hospital wash basins my parents had come home with in the last years of their lives, I set up a couple of old TVs from childhood with signal converters and rabbit ears. Then I settled into my routine of translating, punctuated by twice-daily viewings of Perry Mason over the air on MeTV. I rose early, and mornings were never wasted. The first hour, over a Keurig cup of coffee, I spent bawling and cursing my ex. (Still doing it, too.)

Benderson BruceatPHOTOX400

At right: Bruce Benderson at age 19 with his girlfriend in upstate New York.

Only now have I fully realized what kept me in the town I’d made every effort to escape. In the first place, every street in big bad New York City still reminds me of the pitiless person who has destroyed my chances for love. I can’t pass a McDonald’s without remembering the sweltering day in June I waited two hours in front of its Delancey Street location for him to come from Brooklyn and “discuss our relationship.” Turns out he’d gotten arrested that day for having an open can of beer on the street. I frantically called every hospital, as he was calling his best friend instead of me.

Knowing I wasn’t at the top of the list even in Central Booking set the tone for that summer. It included the temporary loss of that parade of 20-something, attractive, gay would-be writers who I’d thought were enthusiastically connecting me to the younger generation. They laughed at my jokes. However, the youth connection stopped abruptly all last summer as they flocked to shares on Fire Island. Apparently there wasn’t room for me. My only consolation was being saved from having to appear in front of them in a bathing suit. I think you call what they are “fair-weather friends.” My only companion that entire summer was Turner Classic Movies and my broken heart. TCM was comforting because of the childhood era it projected. Kind of like having Mommy and Daddy dug up and placed handily in the corner.

I could go on about the many things that disappoint aging gay men in the context of city life. Instead I’d like to list some of the benefits of the provincial lifestyle. One trustworthy long-term friend whom I’d taken to the senior prom is still in Syracuse. In getting to know her again, I rediscovered something very exotic for a New Yorker. In friendships with the people of small cities, there is no complicated subtext. They actually mean what they say and do what they say they will. When my friend agrees to spend an evening together, there isn’t the slightest chance in the world of getting a text saying she decided to go to a gallery opening instead. As for the rare friendly overtures from those I have met up here, I can be fairly certain they haven’t researched me on Google first and aren’t hoping I can connect them with a dealer or publisher.

The best aspect of all of provincial life, however, only showed itself with the spring thaw. It’s the land, and the rich earth of which it is composed. One spring day, while sipping my Keurig and surveying my mother’s sad, weed-overgrown rose-of-Sharon-and-daffodil garden, a strange power overtook me. It sent me to the dust-laden garage in search of a hoe that hadn’t been touched for more than a decade. As I dug into the moist earth, checking arms and ankles for signs of deer ticks periodically, a wonderful sense of reconnection to the world was born. The results of this revelation climaxed in July, with a burst of zinnias grown from seed, a newly planted Japanese maple, a hydrangea, and an indigo plant. Not in a million years could I have imagined wisecracking, snarky, story-crafting, international me finding gentle ecstasy in working in a garden. But the best thing of all is that even if the care and love you lavish on the kingdom of flora does not reach its goal and the plants all disappoint you, they don’t expect you to take it personally.

A complete collection of Bruce Benderson’s stories, Urban Gothic, will be published this winter by ITNA Press.

Bruce Benderson

www.advocate.com/current-issue/2015/9/09/goodnight-manhattan

This Is Why We Love Grandparents

This Is Why We Love Grandparents

National Grandparents Day is coming up on Sunday, Sept. 13, so Huff/Post 50 decided to take a moment to celebrate the incredible contributions grandparents have made to our lives.

We asked you to tell us about your own grandparents — and your own grandchildren. We were inundated with inspiring stories. Featured below are just 25 of those amazing grandparents. On Friday, Sept. 11, we’ll publish stories from grandparents gushing about their grandkids. From what we’ve seen, grandparents aren’t ready for the sidelines. They want to be — and are — active, engaged, involved and appreciated.

Happy Grandparents Day everyone!

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.



feeds.huffingtonpost.com/c/35496/f/677065/s/49b260f1/sc/14/l/0L0Shuffingtonpost0N0C20A150C0A90C0A30Cand0Ethis0Eis0Ewhy0Ewe0Elove0Eour0Egrandparents0In0I810A92740Bhtml0Dutm0Ihp0Iref0Fgay0Evoices0Gir0FGay0KVoices/story01.htm

Gay rugby player Sam Stanley pays touching tribute to boyfriend

Gay rugby player Sam Stanley pays touching tribute to boyfriend

Sam Stanley, the professional British Rugby Union player who publicly came out as gay two weeks ago, has posted a touching message on his Instagram feed concerning the support he has received from his partner, Laurence Hicks.

Last week we revealed that although Stanley, aged 23, has only recently made a declaration concerning his sexuality, he has frequently posted images on his Instagram of him and Hicks.

The couple’s age gap has prompted much comment – positive and negative – on social media.

In a posting on Sunday, Stanley said: ‘It’s funny how you can go through so much with someone but feel you have to hide it due to it not being deemed ‘normal’….even in today’s society!

‘My guy @lorenzo_uk ❤️ has played a huge part in my life and as grateful as I am for all the support shown by people worldwide….. Nothing beats the support he has shown me and I couldn’t be without him. Finding that someone who you would do anything for and who also makes life worthwhile is so incredibly satisfying!

‘I really hope people still in the situation I was in not long ago, can find the strength to be themselves and live an honest and open life. You owe it to yourself to #betrue

‘Perceptions need to change and my wish is that one day, in our world, being gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender or whatever isn’t an issue at all!’

It’s funny how you can go through so much with someone but feel you have to hide it due to it not being deemed ‘normal’….even in today’s society! My guy @lorenzo_uk ❤️ has played a huge part in my life and as grateful as I am for all the support shown by people worldwide….. Nothing beats the support he has shown me and I couldn’t be without him. Finding that someone who you would do anything for and who also makes life worthwhile is so incredibly satisfying! I really hope people still in the situation I was in not long ago, can find the strength to be themselves and live an honest and open life. You owe it to yourself to #betrue Perceptions need to change and my wish is that one day, in our world, being gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender or whatever isn’t an issue at all! #family #lovewins #betruetoyourself #gay #straight #lesbian #bisexual #transgender

A photo posted by Sam Stanley (@samstannerz) on

The message was greeted by his followers with many comments of support.

One, nick_o_pedia, identified with Stanley overt his choice of partner, saying: ‘I am currently with an older man. He is 21 years older. He came into my life at a time when I was struggling to find myself and navigating the waters of being gay alone and afraid. It was love at first sight!

He’s helped me be me and to find my footing. He’s been patient and kind, much like your boyfriend. So I wanted to say, thank you! Thank you for showing the world that age is a number and that love conquers all’

 Another, carloslynchoviedo, simply said: ‘Big hugs to both of you! You are such a great example and role model for relationships with age gap.’

Stanley followed it up Monday with a short video clip of himself, topless, playing guitar and singing Brian McNight’s ‘One Last Cry’. Perhaps if Stanley tires of rugby, a career in entertainment beckons!

The post Gay rugby player Sam Stanley pays touching tribute to boyfriend appeared first on Gay Star News.

David Hudson

www.gaystarnews.com/article/gay-rugby-player-sam-stanley-pays-touching-tribute-to-boyfriend/

Out Author-Filmmaker Chris Johnson Is Spreading The Word About Atheism

Out Author-Filmmaker Chris Johnson Is Spreading The Word About Atheism

Alex_Honnold_Chris_Johnson_promoNew York-based author Chris Johnson insists he never had any issue with being an atheist nor a gay man. But when he saw the impact religious orthodoxy was having on his queer friends, he became inspired to create a book of photographs of and interviews with various prominent atheists.

The result, A Better Life, has been drawing attention and enthusiastic reviews since its release last year. Johnson, a film-school graduate and theatre enthusiast, followed up with a documentary film of the same name, in which he talks to a cross-section of atheists about their philosophy and how being godless has left them no less fulfilled or intact as people. Interview subjects include musician and actor Adam Pascal (Rent), celebrity rock climber Alex Honnold and actor, comedian and SNL alumnus Julia Sweeney. The result is a moving meditation on what life means if we step away from the conventional answers offered by the world’s religions, both big and small. Johnson recently chatted with Queerty about the book and film A Better Life.

Alex_Honnold_ABLQueerty: America is still a very religious place. How much resistance and criticism have you had with this book and movie?

Chris Johnson: Due to the fact that my book and film have a fundamentally positive angle, I get less open criticism from religious people. If I had made a film called Fuck You God, the pushback would have been a lot greater. I think many religious people are taken aback by such a positive message, and don’t know how to react. However, the ideas presented in the film and book are pretty controversial. In the United States, many people think that without God, you have no moral compass, or that you must be missing something important in your life. Often, we are seen as grumpy, curmudgeonly people, and I wanted to challenge that stereotype and show atheists discussing the big questions in life and living a beautiful life — free from the constraints of religion and theism. If you think this is the only life you have, it affects how you view your life and the world around you. If there is no God up there pulling the strings, or influencing the world, it’s up to us to make the positive changes we want to see and improve the lives of others.

Shelley_Segal_Chris_Johnson_promoDo you feel there’s a connection between your sexual orientation and your atheism?

I was lucky — I was never religious and never had much of a struggle accepting my sexual orientation. However, many of my friends in the LGBT community who grew up in religious environments faced enormous struggles accepting their sexual orientation or gender identity. The constant obsession with controlling peoples’ sexuality through religion always baffled me. It’s amazing to me how much people seem to care about the consensual sexual practices of others. It’s really sad how religion can make people care about the wrong things. We have a country right now where people are spending millions of dollars, enormous resources, time and energy trying to stop consenting adults from getting married just because a religious book tells them it’s wrong. What a complete waste of time. If only we could use all those resources to actually do something good in the world.

Julia_Sweeney_and_Chris_JohnsonWas there an odd lesson you learned from any of the many people you interviewed in your travels?

Probably the thing that stuck with me the most was something Julia Sweeney talks about in the film. She mentions reflecting on the happiest moments in your life and how, at the end of the day, these memories are all we have to look back on. That really stayed with me throughout this journey. I’ve tried to be in the moment more when traveling and savoring the moments along the way. It can be difficult to not get lost in the day-to-day rat race of life, but it’s important to take a step back sometimes and savor the moments you’re living. As John Lennon once said, “Life is what happens when you’re busy making other plans.”

Why do you think there’s still such a passionate anger with atheism?

Well, I think there’s a good reason to be angry. Religious influence still has an enormous negative effect on this country and people around the world. LGBT people are committing suicide, people are being killed, rights being trampled on — all in the name of religion, and those are things we need to stand up against and try to change. I think that anger can be an effective tool in creating change and is completely understandable given the situation we are in. However, one of the reasons I started this project in the first place was to add to that conversation, a piece that I felt was missing — that was the positive side of atheism. We can talk about how the others get it wrong until we’re blue in the face, but if we don’t talk about how we get it right, we’re missing a huge part of the conversation, and that’s what I’m trying to show with this film.

Do you ever think of getting a T-shirt made that reads “GODLESS QUEER”?

[Laughs] No, but I should! I wonder where I would get the most amount of flack for that?

What’s the strangest question you have ever got at a question-and-answer session after a film screening?

Most of the questions at the Q&As have been really great. The film has really resonated with people around the world, and I’ve been struck at how people from various background have been moved by the themes and messages of it. In terms of the strangest question, at one screening, a woman noticed that I was wearing glasses at the screening but did not wear glasses in the film and asked me if that was a deliberate choice. I said yes. [Laughs] It was just easier that way.

For more information on Johnson, his book, film and dates for screenings and speaking engagements, go here.

Watch the film’s trailer below.

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/XpqabDzrGN0/out-author-filmmaker-chris-johnson-is-spreading-the-word-about-atheism-20150909

Find out what happened when International Mr. Leather 2015 visited Uganda

Find out what happened when International Mr. Leather 2015 visited Uganda

Let’s call him a superhero for the modern age.

 

Patrick Smith, the winner of International Mr. Leather 2015 and Senior Manager of Business Development for Marvel Studios, has just returned from an LGBTI outreach project in Uganda.

The married muscleman met with 2014 Nobel Peace Prize nominee and LGBTI activist Dr. Frank Mugisha during his trip, as well as Rev. Mark Kitimba, leader of the Unitarian Universalist Church.

‘My experience in Uganda was life-changing,’ Smith says. ‘I look forward to returning to the US and telling the story of LGBT people in Africa, so that we can raise awareness and help their cause from abroad.’

He added: ‘I always said that as International Mr. Leather, I would go to places in the world not just with established leather communities, but to places where LGBT people still exist on the fringes of society.’

Smith, who is Canadian but now lives in LA, has said he takes ‘inspiration from the many superheros clad in their tight leather gear’ through his work at Marvel.

He continued: ‘It’s important to raise awareness of the persecution of gays and lesbians in other parts of the world. We may have it pretty good in the US, but the situation is so bleak in so many other places.

He won the coveted award at a ceremony in Chicago in May, and is also Mr. Los Angeles Leather 2015.

We think we’re in love.

Join me at the GayDays Anaheim pool party! Tickets: bit.ly/1HX6Jgs

A photo posted by Patrick Smith (@patrickjonsmith) on

The post Find out what happened when International Mr. Leather 2015 visited Uganda appeared first on Gay Star News.

Jamie Tabberer

www.gaystarnews.com/article/find-out-what-happened-when-international-mr-leather-2015-visited-uganda/

European man on trial for homosexuality in Dubai after reporting robbery

European man on trial for homosexuality in Dubai after reporting robbery

An unnamed European man is facing sodomy charges in Dubai after he reported being robbed by two Pakistani men that he allegedly met through a gay website.

According to a report by Emirates 24/7 the 34-year-old connected online with one of his robbers six months ago and maintained an online acquaintance with him.

Earlier this month the man, who’s nationality has not been released to the media, invited his Pakistani friend and another man to come to his apartment.

However on arrival the two Pakistanis stripped and assaulted the European man before carrying him to the bedroom where they tied him to the bed, stuffing a ball in his mouth to keep him quiet.

The pair then allegedly took three laptop computers, two mobile phones, two cameras, seven watches and a digital headset before fleeing the apartment,

The victim reported the robbery to officers from the Dubai Police Force.

However when the suspects were apprehended one of them allegedly admitted meeting the European through the gay website and an investigation was opened into the victim as well.

The European man could potentially be jailed for up to 10 years if charges of consensual sodomy can be proved against him.

However most foreigners that have been convicted in Dubai for having consensual gay sex in recent year have been given prison sentences from a month to a year and been deported from the United Arab Emirates on release from prison.

The two Pakistanis face charges of unlawful detention of a person, robbery and assault while one of them has also been charged for possessing a fake passport.

Only 10-15% of the population of Dubai are citizens, with the rest being foreign guest workers or resident expats, with most of those coming from India or Pakistan.

The post European man on trial for homosexuality in Dubai after reporting robbery appeared first on Gay Star News.

Andrew Potts

www.gaystarnews.com/article/european-man-on-trial-for-homosexuality-in-dubai-after-reporting-robbery/

Watch what happens when a gay couple hold hands at a soccer match in Portugal

Watch what happens when a gay couple hold hands at a soccer match in Portugal

After a video of a gay couple holding hands in Lisbon became the most watched LGBTI YouTube video in Portugal, Lorenzo and Pedro decided to repeat in the social experiment ‘homophobic’ north of the country.

The couple were warned that reactions would be very different in ‘homophobic’ Oporto  and they could even be killed.

Lorenzo and Pedro immediately accepted the challenge.

‘The goal was to see how people react in this areas of the country when they see a gay couple holding hands and exchanging some affections‘ they told Gay Star News.

‘We were two days in various areas of Oporto: from the iconic tourist areas, through the most “dangerous” places of the city.

‘We even went to the Dragon Stadium in a day of a soccer game, which is known to be not acceptive of gay couples.’

During their two days in Oporto, they kissed at an outdoor restaurant sat on each other’s lap on a bench, but amazingly they did not receive a single negative response.

‘Contrary to popular opinion, we felt not only comfortable and safe in Oporto, but accepted as we did Lisbon,’ they say in the video.

‘Once again, we got loads of looks. Sometimes, people look will, comment or even laugh a little at when seeing something new and different. And this is completely normal in the early days of acceptance.’

They added: ‘Our hope is that videos like this will lose their and walk with pride  one knowing that they’re safe and accepted.’

Similar experiments in Moscow, Kiev and Jerusalem, however, have had less happy results. The couples in those cities were bombarded with anti-gay slurs and one ended in a Neo-Nazi attack.

Watch the video below:

The post Watch what happens when a gay couple hold hands at a soccer match in Portugal appeared first on Gay Star News.

Darren Wee

www.gaystarnews.com/article/watch-what-happens-when-a-gay-couple-hold-hands-at-a-soccer-match-in-portugal/

Survivor ‘outraged’ Eye of the Tiger was played at Kim Davis rally, may sue

Survivor ‘outraged’ Eye of the Tiger was played at Kim Davis rally, may sue

Survivor guitarist Frankie Sullivan is ‘outraged’ his song Eye of the Tiger was played at a rally for Kim Davis and has said he may sue.

The Kentucky clerk was released Tuesday (8 September) after spending five nights in jail for refusing to issue gay marriage licenses, despite a Supreme Court ruling against her.

A sobbing Davis, arm-in-arm with Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, walked onstage to address the thousands of supporters who gathered outside Carter County Detention Center in Grayson – while Eye of the Tiger roared through loud speakers.

Survivor’s representative told TMZ they are ‘determined to protect the integrity of their music’ and were considering legal action.

‘NO! We did not grant Kim Davis any rights to use “My Tune -The Eye Of The Tiger.” I would not grant her the rights…’ Sullivan wrote on the band’s official Facebook page.

‘I would not grant her the rights to use Charmin!’

He added: ‘See Ya really SoooooooonnnnnnN!!!!!!’

NO! We did not grant Kim Davis any rights to use “My Tune -The Eye Of The Tiger.” I would not grant her the rights…

Posted by Survivor Music (Official FB Page) on Tuesday, 8 September 2015

Watch Kim Davis address her supporters below:

#KimDavis is freed from jail and walks on stage to “Eye of the Tiger” before breaking her silence.More: on.msnbc.com/1LhOUuD

Posted by MSNBC on Tuesday, 8 September 2015

The post Survivor ‘outraged’ Eye of the Tiger was played at Kim Davis rally, may sue appeared first on Gay Star News.

Darren Wee

www.gaystarnews.com/article/survivor-outraged-eye-of-the-tiger-was-played-at-kim-davis-rally-may-sue/