Rapper Wale: Frank Ocean Has ‘Advantage’ in Music Industry, Won Grammy Because He’s Gay

Rapper Wale: Frank Ocean Has ‘Advantage’ in Music Industry, Won Grammy Because He’s Gay

Wale

Statements made by rapper Wale in an interview with The Breakfast Club Power 105.1 this week are making headlines. The DC-based rapper suggested that even though Frank Ocean is a “dope” artist, it’s because he’s gay that he won Grammys and similar awards from the music industry.

“If a dude was gay, man, he’d get a Grammy. They’re going to make fun of them, they’re gonna throw their Twitter jokes…but in the next three years there’s probably gonna be a dude who’s not even gay that’s just like ‘Man, this is my last resort’ …But nah, I would sign a gay rapper if he was dope. ‘Go ahead man, go do that thing, go do them Versace fashion shows.’

“But the point I’m trying to make is it’s definitely – and people are probably going to go bad on me for saying this – but it’s an advantage to be gay in this country right now. That’s just the fact of the matter. Frank Ocean is very dope. Very very dope artist. He got pushed to the moon when he dropped his album though. He got the Grammy and everything. There’s about 30 artists in the country that sold about how much he did or more – they didn’t get any of that.”

The remarks are similar to those made recently by Kanye West, who suggested that he was discriminated against in the fashion industry for not being gay.

Watch Wale’s full interview:

RELATED: Kanye West: The Fashion Industry Discriminated Against Me for Not Being Gay

The post Rapper Wale: Frank Ocean Has ‘Advantage’ in Music Industry, Won Grammy Because He’s Gay appeared first on Towleroad.


Anthony Costello

Rapper Wale: Frank Ocean Has ‘Advantage’ in Music Industry, Won Grammy Because He’s Gay

Pope Francis Sees Some Bishops With 'Closed Hearts'

Pope Francis Sees Some Bishops With 'Closed Hearts'

The Catholic Church ended its synod on the family on Saturday without clear progress on inclusiveness of gays and lesbians, or divorced parishioners, and Pope Francis says it exposed those with “closed hearts.”

The pope will take the recommendations of the bishops into account when drafting his own teaching on the family, and The New York Times reports that liberals say the final document succeeds at not tying his hands in too many areas. One exception: the bishops are quite clear they will not accept same-sex marriage, not that the pope was aiming that far anyway.

It was the lack of progress on whether divorced Catholics can receive communion, on whether to welcome gays and lesbians, that triggered a critical closing address from the pope. 

Pope Francis said the synod had succeeded in “laying bare the closed hearts which frequently hide even behind the church’s teachings or good intentions.” While the pope said the church had proved it is not afraid of “lively and frank discussions about the family,” he also said some bishops took part “in order to sit in the chair of Moses and judge, sometimes with superiority and superficiality, difficult cases and wounded families.”

The bishops use the three-week gathering to outline how they believe the church should move forward on family issues, with the pope taking their recommendations to later draft his own teaching. The 270 bishops vote on each paragraph of the document, requiring a two-thirds approval.  

“Certainly, the Synod was not about settling all the issues having to do with the family,” said Pope Francis, according to a translation by Vatican Radio, of his expectations heading into the conference. “Surely it was not about finding exhaustive solutions for all the difficulties and uncertainties which challenge and threaten the family, but rather about seeing these difficulties and uncertainties in the light of the faith, carefully studying them and confronting them fearlessly, without burying our heads in the sand.”

The LGBT Catholic group in the United States, New Ways Ministry, reacted to the report from the Vatican Synod by highlighting what it says is still possible. 

Francis DeBernado, the group’s executive director, said in a statement that “a great deal has changed” at “the highest levels of the church.”

“Even though this synod did not achieve a stronger statement of LGBT acceptance, the movement for a more inclusive and equal Church for LGBT members can take hope from this meeting because the discussion has moved forward,” said Bernardo, “and we’ve heard that a large number of bishops see the need for this discussion to continue into the future.”

DeBernado expressed greatest disappointment that the bishops repeatedly cast transgender people as victims of “gender ideology,” and that they said adopted children should be raised by a mother and a father. 

“The remarks show that the bishops do not understand the transgender experience or how people experience their gender identity, which is often received as a spiritual, life-giving revelation,” said DeBernado, who called for more education of the bishops. 

When Pope Francis does sit down to write his teaching on the family, he’ll face the question of how to find common ground among bishops from different continents, with vastly different cultures. The bishops from Africa are more ardently opposed to acceptance of gays and lesbians than those from North America. 

“We have also seen that what seems normal for a bishop on one continent, is considered strange and almost scandalous for a bishop from another,” the pope said. “What is considered a violation of a right in one society is an evident and inviolable rule in another. What for some is freedom of conscience is for others simply confusion. Cultures are in fact quite diverse, and each general principle needs to be inculturated, if it is to be respected and applied.”

Ultimately, the pope left room for further changes.

“The Synod experience also made us better realize,” he said, “that the true defenders of doctrine are not those who uphold its letter, but its spirit.”

Lucas Grindley

www.advocate.com/religion/2015/10/25/pope-francis-sees-some-bishops-closed-hearts

Open Question: I'm confused about my sexuality! Help?

Open Question: I'm confused about my sexuality! Help?
I’m 15 years old girl and a junior in highschool. I’ve always been attracted to guys. I’m not really attracted to guys at my school because they are immature, but I’m mostly attracted to men. I’ve recently been talking to this girl who is lesbian and she has a girlfriend but we sit next to each other and we make each other laugh a lot and I’ve recently have had feelings for her. When ever I see her I get nervous and just wish she liked me. I also have crushes on guys but does this mean I’m bisexual? Both girls and boys turn me on. And please no hate comments. I’m Christian and I have no problems with lgbt community it’s just I’m confused. Help?

answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20151025121946AARiEYO

NAACP Houston Branch & Urban League Intensify Campaign for Equal Rights Ordinance

NAACP Houston Branch & Urban League Intensify Campaign for Equal Rights Ordinance

This weekend, the NAAP Houston Branch and Houston Area Urban League announced that they are intensifying their work in favor of the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance (HERO).
HRC.org

www.hrc.org/blog/entry/naacp-houston-branch-urban-league-intensify-campaign-for-equal-rights-ordin?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Weekend News Brief: Ricky Martin, Gay Rugby, Alcoholic Comet, Chris Christie, Baldness Cure

Weekend News Brief: Ricky Martin, Gay Rugby, Alcoholic Comet, Chris Christie, Baldness Cure

christie> Chris Christie got kicked out of Amtrak’s Quiet Car for yelling.

> As Synod ends, Catholic door remains firmly shut for same-sex marriage.

> Puerto Vallarta escaped relatively unscathed from Hurricane Patricia: “Mexico’s Tourism Secretary Enrique de la Madrid says major resorts like Puerto Vallarta had had “extraordinary luck” in avoiding damage from the once immensely powerful storm. He says mountains around the city ‘served as a barrier.’”

> This is what it’s like to be an LGBT Syrian fleeing for your life.

> Brooklyn gay bar Excelsior reopens.

> Ricky Martin is not opposed to the occasional shirtless selfie:

Instagram Photo

> Former Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer endorses Martin O’Malley for President: “I’m endorsing Martin for President today because I believe he is the candidate that best represents the future of our Party,” Schweitzer said in a statement released by the campaign. “Martin and I don’t agree on every issue, but he is the only candidate with a proven record of getting things done, and I believe he is the best candidate to take on Republicans in November 2016.”

christianomice> Progress reported on drug to regrow hair.

> Identical strangers stunned after meeting one another in Germany.

> Comet Lovejoy is releasing as much alcohol as 500 bottles of wine every second: “The discovery marks the first time ethyl alcohol – the same type that you might find in a Martini – has been seen in a comet. It adds to evidence that comets could have been a source of the complex molecules necessary for the emergence of life on Earth.”

> British transgender teen says he was refused a haircut by a barber because of ‘different’ hair: “The 16-year-old says staff turned him away and said they were not insured to cut women’s hair. But Barber Barber, the store in Liverpool, denies the incident took place and insisted their ‘no women’ policy is intended to be taken lightly. Gould’s mother Ruth said staff told her “we don’t do trans people” when they inquired about getting a cut.”

> World’s first gay rugby club turns 20.

> Experimental device projects moving images onto clouds:

The post Weekend News Brief: Ricky Martin, Gay Rugby, Alcoholic Comet, Chris Christie, Baldness Cure appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Weekend News Brief: Ricky Martin, Gay Rugby, Alcoholic Comet, Chris Christie, Baldness Cure