Clean Bandit’s New Music Video ‘Tears’ Is Fire – WATCH

Clean Bandit’s New Music Video ‘Tears’ Is Fire – WATCH

clean bandit tears

Clean Bandit’s new music video has everything: rain, a hunky ballet dancer, colored clouds of smoke, instruments on fire, and even the owl that played Hedwig in the Harry Potter movies. No, seriously.

The latest video effort from the band who brought you 2014’s infectious hit “Rather Be”, is once again contending for song of the summer with their track, “Tears” featuring Louisa Johnson.

Band member Jack Patterson directed the music video for the song. “We always make our own videos, and this one has been an amazing experience,” Patterson said. “There are zero special effects and we did everything in front of the camera. As you’ll see, there’s a lot of water and fire and even a special guest cameo from the Harry Potter owl, Hedwig! The video conveys the fire you need to find within yourself in order to part from a person you love.”

PREVIOUSLY – Clean Bandit & Jess Glynne Celebrate ‘Real Love’ In Stunning New Music Video: WATCH

Clean Bandit violinist Neil Amin-Smith (aka Neil Milan) is openly gay and was in a high-profile relationship with Years & Years frontman Olly Alexander that ended late last year.

Watch “Tears”, below.



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Transgender women talk love, life, & HIV in new 'Greater Than AIDS' campaign

Transgender women talk love, life, & HIV in new 'Greater Than AIDS' campaign

Photo credit: Greater Than AIDS

Today, Greater Than AIDS launched a new campaign Empowered: Trans Women & HIV, a video series giving a diverse group of transgender women, some living with HIV and others not, a platform to share their experiences in an intimate and inspiring dialogue.

Transgender women are among those at highest risk for HIV today. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that more than 1 in 4 transgender women, more than half of whom are Black transgender women, are living with HIV. Globally, transgender women are nearly 50 times more likely to be living with HIV compared to other populations. 

By sharing their common and unique experiences, the women featured in this compaign confront the social stigma associated with HIV while promoting ways for people to be proactive and take action to improve their health and well-being. 

In this powerful 20-minute group conversation and in shorter individual profile videos, the women featured in this campaign share honest stories of love, life, and HIV while empowering themselves, each other, and all of us. 

Join the #TransEmpowered movement by watching the full series

July 7, 2016

www.glaad.org/blog/transgender-women-talk-love-life-hiv-new-greater-aids-campaign

Obama Releases Statement on Shootings of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile

Obama Releases Statement on Shootings of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile

President Obama released a statement this afternoon on the deeply disturbing police shootings of the last few days: Alton Sterling, who was fatally shot while pinned to the ground in Baton Rouge, and Philando Castile, who was fatally shot while on a traffic stop.

President Obama rips GOP candidatesSaid Obama:

All Americans should be deeply troubled by the fatal shootings of Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge, Louisiana and Philando Castile in Falcon Heights, Minnesota. We’ve seen such tragedies far too many times, and our hearts go out to the families and communities who’ve suffered such a painful loss.

Although I am constrained in commenting on the particular facts of these cases, I am encouraged that the U.S. Department of Justice has opened a civil rights investigation in Baton Rouge, and I have full confidence in their professionalism and their ability to conduct a thoughtful, thorough, and fair inquiry.

But regardless of the outcome of such investigations, what’s clear is that these fatal shootings are not isolated incidents. They are symptomatic of the broader challenges within our criminal justice system, the racial disparities that appear across the system year after year, and the resulting lack of trust that exists between law enforcement and too many of the communities they serve.

To admit we’ve got a serious problem in no way contradicts our respect and appreciation for the vast majority of police officers who put their lives on the line to protect us every single day. It is to say that, as a nation, we can and must do better to institute the best practices that reduce the appearance or reality of racial bias in law enforcement.

That’s why, two years ago, I set up a Task Force on 21st Century Policing that convened police officers, community leaders, and activists. Together, they came up with detailed recommendations on how to improve community policing. So even as officials continue to look into this week’s tragic shootings, we also need communities to address the underlying fissures that lead to these incidents, and to implement those ideas that can make a difference. That’s how we’ll keep our communities safe. And that’s how we can start restoring confidence that all people in this great nation are equal before the law.

In the meantime, all Americans should recognize the anger, frustration, and grief that so many Americans are feeling — feelings that are being expressed in peaceful protests and vigils. Michelle and I share those feelings. Rather than fall into a predictable pattern of division and political posturing, let’s reflect on what we can do better. Let’s come together as a nation, and keep faith with one another, in order to ensure a future where all of our children know that their lives matter.



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Transphobic Radio Caller Attacks Jazz Jennings: ‘You May As Well Kill Yourself’ – VIDEO

Transphobic Radio Caller Attacks Jazz Jennings: ‘You May As Well Kill Yourself’ – VIDEO

Screen Shot 2016-07-07 at 11.05.42 AM

Transgender teen, activist, and reality star Jazz Jennings was attacked by a radio caller who described her as “unnatural” and told her she might as well ‘kill herself.’

Jennings (15) endured the transphobic abuse during a radio show appearance she made while filming her TLC show I Am Jazz.

TLC released a clip of the attack which begins with Jazz talking about her dating life. She tells the radio host,

“I still don’t talk to boys. I don’t know. I know that one day I will find a boy who does want to be my friend and does want to talk to me and maybe even go further than that of course.”

The host assures Jennings that she doesn’t need to worry about dating until she’s 21, to which her mom replies, “Sounds good to me.” And then the segment goes off the rails when a caller named Alex goes off on Jazz. Via People:

“I’m just trying to wrap my head around this,” he begins. “How do you even approach dating?”

Before letting Jennings answer, he continues to say “because honestly you may as well kill yourself back where I’m from … trying to date in school in your condition.”

He goes on to harass her saying, “Even if you could find some [explicit] – you have a penis right? So, what happens on the third date?”

Watch a clip of the moment, below.



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Trump’s Coded Anti-Semitism is Nothing New for the Republican Party

Trump’s Coded Anti-Semitism is Nothing New for the Republican Party

Donald Trump Star

Donald Trump recently tweeted out a picture of Hillary Clinton next to a 6-pointed star over a pile of money with the words, “Most Corrupt Candidate Ever.” The image, wherever its origin, is a tasteless nod to anti-Semitic stereotypes of Jews as money hungry, miserly, and corrupt. The Trump campaign has since replaced the star with a crudely drawn circle — you can even still see the points of the star sticking out — and Mr. Trump has deputized his Jewish son-in-law, Jared Kushner, to vouch for how much his father-in-law “loves the Jews.”

Mr. Trump is defending the use of the star. It’s a sheriff’s badge, or it’s just like the star on the box for the doll from Frozen, or whatever nonsense he comes up with next. This defense, of course, ignores context: 6 pointed stars are not, in and of themselves anti-Semitic. When you place them on top of dollar bills and call someone “corrupt,” it’s a sharp dog whistle to the undercurrent of conservative America that hates Jews. Trevor Noah said it even better: crosses are not racist, but they are when you light them on fire and place them on a black person’s lawn.

Mr. Kushner’s response was a magician’s misdirection, essentially saying, “He can’t be an anti-Semite. He has a Jewish son-in-law.” That response, of course, is just like saying, “I can’t be racist. I have one black friend,” and ignores the fact, as researchers have shown over and over again, that many racists and anti-Semites exhibit tolerant, even kind, behavior to individual members of minority groups while holding the minority identity in contempt. “You’re a good kind of Jew” or “You’re not like the other gays” are two phrases I’ve heard quite a bit in my life.

But what’s more remarkable than this umpteenth piece of evidence that Trump is a hateful bigot — add Jews to women, Hispanics, persons of color, gays, foreigners, Muslims, women, Mexicans, women, Asians, the disabled, and women as identities Trump thinks it’s okay to harass, ridicule, and put down — is that Republicans have been sending out anti-Semitic and racist dog whistles for years.

Here’s a short list that took me 7 minutes to put together:

When debating Donald Trump, Ted Cruz sneered about “New York values” focusing on money and media.

Sarah Palin, who referred to “New York liberals” more than a few times during her 2008 vice presidential campaign, used the term “blood libel” to refer to the media’s treatment of her. Ms. Palin is a pro at dog whistle racism, in general, calling President Obama “lackadaisical” in his pursuit of Edward Snowden.

Ms. Palin also gave a now infamous speech in which she referred to the “real America” — the heartland, the south, the mountain west — and denigrated parts of the country that do not share “American values,” i.e., New York, Boston, San Francisco, and Los Angeles.

Mr. Trump became a political factor during President Obama’s first presidential election, dog whistling the entire time through his birther rubbish.

Richard Nixon, who perfected the Republican Party’s Southern Strategy of appealing to racist whites, often referred to “Eastern establishment liberals” (both to Henry Kissinger’s face and behind his back).

Mitt Romney spent much of 2012 talking about how America is divided between “takers and makers.”

I could go on. Trump’s rhetoric may be racist, but members of the Republican Party — even those who now claim the mantle of being “mainstream” when compared to Trump — have been playing to the worst hatreds of white America for decades. No wonder so few of them are actually standing up to Trump. He’s just like them: underneath the bluster and orange tint are the same dog whistles to the arch conservative right.



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