NYPD Supports LGBT Pride and Orlando with Rainbow-Colored Patrol Car

NYPD Supports LGBT Pride and Orlando with Rainbow-Colored Patrol Car

NYPD

The New York Police Department has unveiled a special, rainbow-colored patrol vehicle just in time for Pride festivities this weekend, the NY Post reports:

The vehicle also has a heart sticker that reads “NYC Pride 2016” and the words “Pride Equality Peace” – both in rainbow colors. It carries the letters FSD, which stands for Fleet Services Division, on its side.

The NYPD has been working on its relationship with members of the city’s gay community since the June 12 attack that killed 49. Bratton was booed at a rally at the Stonewall Inn after the attack.

The vehicle will appear in the NYC Pride parade on Sunday.

The Orlando Police thanked the NYPD for the message of solidarity:

Some love from NYPD. Thank you All!. #OrlandoUnited pic.twitter.com/Agu8gyTkEi

— Orlando Police (@OrlandoPolice) June 22, 2016

The post NYPD Supports LGBT Pride and Orlando with Rainbow-Colored Patrol Car appeared first on Towleroad.



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Congress Responds to Blood Ban in Aftermath of Orlando

Congress Responds to Blood Ban in Aftermath of Orlando

In a matter of hours after the nation’s deadliest shooting in history, the death toll and sheer magnitude of the injuries became clear and the city of Orlando announced a severe blood shortage. Residents responded immediately, as Americans do in times of emergency, to donate blood.

The line of people at some centers stretched for more than a mile. They waited for hours to donate their own blood to save strangers that they had never met. But, in the wake of this terror, as the aftershocks were just beginning to be felt and understood by the LGBTQ community, gay and bisexual men seeking to help their partners, friends and neighbors were turned away. At blood bank after blood bank – they were told their selfless donations weren’t welcome, weren’t good enough. The message these men heard on Sunday was not one of empathy — and definitely not one of science.

The grief many in the Orlando LGBTQ community faced in the hours after the shooting was not ignored by Members of Congress. Representatives Mike Quigley (D-IL), Barbara Lee (D-CA), Jared Polis (D-CO), Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL), Diana DeGette (D-CO), Xavier Becerra (D-CA), and Sean Patrick Maloney (D-NY), joined by HRC Government Affairs Director David Stacy, spoke out in front of the House of Representatives to urge a change to the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) outdated,discriminatory blood donor deferral policy.

These stories of denial are not new. They reflect the terror of the early years of the AIDS epidemic when the absence of clear science caused the FDA to adopt a lifetime deferral policy. Since then, we have volumes of science about HIV/AIDS which led the FDA to take a small positive step last year to now only bar donations from men who have had sex with men within the past 12 months.

Unfortunately, this change continues to perpetuate a policy that has been characterized as medically and scientifically unwarranted by the American Red Cross, America’s BloodCenters, and the American Association of Blood Banks as far back as 2006. In practice, this policy continues to exclude any sexually active gay man and many bisexual men from giving blood regardless of their actual risk for contracting HIV.

Yesterday, the House members who gathered to ask the FDA to change the suboptimal donation policy joined over 100 of their colleagues on a bipartisan letter to FDA Commissioner Dr. Robert Califf requesting an update on the implementation of the current donor deferral policy. They also urged the FDA to actively work towards adopting a screening system that is based on individual risk factors rather than the current sexual orientation-based approach. Senators Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) spearheaded a similar bipartisan Senate letter that was signed by 22 of their colleagues.

Many of the gay and bisexual men turned away last week were not even born when FDA’s original policies were designed.  They were born and have come of age in a world where we can make policies based on knowledge, not fear.  In one of the darkest hours that our community has ever faced, gay and bisexual men struggling to find their own place in our shared healing were turned away after responding to a call for blood donors in the wake of a severe blood shortage.  We cannot afford to turn away anymore heroes who answer these calls.

www.hrc.org/blog/congress-responds-to-blood-ban-in-aftermath-of-orlando?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

CBS Diversity Sketch Comedy Showcase is looking for LGBT comedians!

CBS Diversity Sketch Comedy Showcase is looking for LGBT comedians!

Photo Credit: CBS

CBS will sponsor its 12th annual Diversity Sketch Comedy Showcase in January 2017 in Los Angeles, featuring a diverse group of talented actors, including LGBT performers.  Saturday Night Live out comedian Kate McKinnon is a showcase alumnus, as is her fellow Big Gay Sketch Show co-star Stephen Guarino.

Actors should possess extensive sketch comedy experience.  Each audition will require a one-minute original sketch comedy monologue consisting of unique characters.  Interested actors will need to search (CBS SHOWCASE) for audition details on Actors Access or Breakdown Express.  Participants wanting to apply as writers for the Showcase can simply send an email asking for the application to [email protected]

Auditions will be held in Los Angeles on the following dates:  July 6th, 8th, 11th, 13th and 15th.

CBS Sketch Comedy Showcase Flyer

Executive Producer and writer Rick Najera (Mad TV, Latinolouges and In Living Color) will again direct the showcase.  Fern Orenstein, CBS Senior Vice President, Casting, will again cast and serve as the executive producer.  “We have about four or five hundred casting directors, agents, managers and development executives attend the Showcase which provides the opportunity for actors to be seen in front of thousands of people; we truly change lives,” said Fern.

El Portal TheaterEach year, more than 4,000 talented and diverse actors audition for the showcase; and since its conception, 12 years ago, the CBS Diversity Sketch Comedy Showcase has developed into a hybrid comedy show with Broadway-worth live performances and original, creative writing.

In order to amplify the voices of LGBT people in the entertainment media, GLAAD partners with film studios and television networks that provide visibility and exposure to the range of talent within our diverse community.

June 22, 2016
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www.glaad.org/blog/cbs-diversity-sketch-comedy-showcase-looking-lgbt-comedians

PHOTOS: These Briefs Are Far From Basic

PHOTOS: These Briefs Are Far From Basic

BasicBrief1b

Love them or hate them, briefs are the definitive cut of men’s underwear. They’re classic, and they’re not going anywhere. This week’s style guide is a tribute to the brief – but not just any brief. The briefs below have something extra going for them. A refined design, an exotic cut. They are “basic” in name alone, and even then, it’s just vernacular. Gentlemen, this is how you rock brief underwear.

BasicBrief5b

BasicBrief6b

BasicBrief7b

For more information, visit The Underwear Expert.

Photo Credit: Jerrad Matthew

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