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S.Kharchenko posted a photo:

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Police detains thin opponents of Kyiv Pride. About 2 thousand representatives of LGBT community of Ukraine and its supporters guarded by thousand of policemen walk with Kyiv Pride March of equality downtown Kyiv, Ukraine, June 18, 2017.

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Must See LGBTQ TV: ‘More Than T’ documentary, Logo Trailblazer Honors, and more!

Must See LGBTQ TV: ‘More Than T’ documentary, Logo Trailblazer Honors, and more!

Courtesy of Freeform

Grab the remote, set your DVR or queue up your streaming service of choice! GLAAD is bringing you the highlights in LGBTQ on TV this week. Check back every Sunday for up-to-date coverage in LGBTQ-inclusive programming on TV.

Ahead of schedule, Freeform is airing their new series The Bold Type, following three friends who work at a fictional women’s magazine. The show explores their friendship, relationships, feminism, and being in their 20s. The pilot includes a story with one the core three Kat (Aisha Dee), as she tries to get Adena (Nikhol Boohsheri), a lesbian Muslim artist, to let the magazine run her story. The two of them develop a connection in the pilot that will be explored within the first season. The Bold Type: Tuesday, 9pm on Freeform.

NBC’s delightfully fun Hollywood Game Night is back for its fifth season on Thursday. Emmy award winning out actress Jane Lynch hosts this show inside her apartment, where teams of celebrities face off against each other in classic party games. The premiere features members of the Veep cast versus those from The Walking Dead. Hollywood Game Night: Thursday, 8pm on NBC.

From acclaimed and out transgender filmmaker Silas Howard, comes a new hour documentary special More Than T on Showtime. The documentary follows seven different transgender and gender nonconforming individuals, and tells their stories. Said Howard about the documentary, “We really need these stories to recover our humanity these days and to connect us, especially with what’s going on in the world.” More than T: 4:30 & 10:35pm on Showtime

On Friday night, Logo is airing their 4th annual Trailblazer Honors, an award show for pioneers who have fought for the LGBTQ community. The special honorees this year include award winning singer and philanthropist Cyndi Lauper; famed AIDS and LGBTQ activist Cleve Jones; the late dancer, choreographer and activist Alvin Ailey; and the creators of Will and Grace, Max Mutchnick and David Kohan. There will also be special guests and speakers. Logo Trailblazer Honors: Friday 9pm on Logo.

 

Sunday, June 18th: Fear the Walking Dead (9pm, AMC); American Gods (9pm, Starz); Veep (10:30pm, HBO)

Monday: Shadowhunters (8pm, Freeform); Stitchers (9pm, Freeform)

Tuesday: The Bold Type (9pm, Freeform); Animal Kingdom (9pm, TNT) Queen Sugar (10pm, OWN) Wrecked (10pm, TBS)

Wednesday: Kingdom (8pm, Audience Network); Queen Sugar (10pm, Own); Lopez (10:32pm, TVLand)

Thursday: Hollywood Game Night (8pm, NBC); Nashville (9pm, CMT) The Night Shift (10pm, NBC)

Friday: More Than T (4pm & 10:35pm, Showtime); The Originals (8pm, The CW); Logo Trailblazer Honors (Logo, 9pm); Wynonna Earp (10pm, SyFy)

Saturday: Doctor Who (9pm, BBC America); Orphan Black (10pm, BBC America)

 

June 16, 2017

www.glaad.org/blog/must-see-lgbtq-tv-more-t-documentary-logo-trailblazer-honors-and-more

The dead stripper from “Rough Night” exposed; new music from The Carry Nation; look who’s twerking

The dead stripper from “Rough Night” exposed; new music from The Carry Nation; look who’s twerking
It’s Pop Brownies: our at-a-glance roundup of the week’s best queer culture.

www.queerty.com/dead-stripper-rough-night-exposed-new-music-carry-nation-look-whos-twerking-20170618?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Celebrating and Supporting Our Fathers: It’s Time for Paid Leave

Celebrating and Supporting Our Fathers: It’s Time for Paid Leave

Across the country, people are celebrating fatherhood and the significance of fathers in their lives. For some, this means celebrating the person who gave you your amazing smile. For many others, today will be a celebration of someone other than a biological father. And for many children of gay and transgender fathers, today might be about celebrating a father who has cared for them but may not be seen as a parent in the eyes of the law.

As our notion of family continues to expand in the United States so has the notion of fatherhood. Fathers in past generations were expected to work outside the home to support their families. It is not uncommon today, however, for fathers to be the primary caregivers for their families. Since 1965, fathers in the U.S. have nearly tripled the time they spend caring for children and are now just as likely as working mothers to say they find it at least somewhat difficult to manage work and family responsibilities. Recent trends suggest these numbers will continue to increase, particularly in the LGBTQ community. However, our country’s policies on paid leave for fathers have remained behind-the-times, undermining all of our families.

The United States is the only industrialized nation that provides no paid family leave, maternity or parental, to working adults. Of the states that require paid leave, only four states (NY, NJ, CA, RI) and DC require employers to grant paid leave for workers who need to care for a child that they are parenting regardless of their legal or biological relationship. Thus, LGBTQ parents are not always given the same rights as other caretakers. In fact, seven-in-ten LGBTQ Americans live in states that lack a leave law or have a law that only allows leave for workers who have a biological or legal relationship with the child.

The lack of paid leave impacts the economic security of LGBTQ families. With the growing number of LGBTQ fathers, there is a growing need for our laws to recognize their status as parents as these state leave laws disproportionally affect LGBTQ parents because of their economic vulnerability. LGBTQ couples raising children are twice as likely to have household incomes near the poverty line compared to their non-LGBTQ peers. This economic disparity is partially due to (1) the lack of explicit federal laws protecting LGBTQ workers from being fired simply because of who they are and (2) the lack of leave laws protecting LGBTQ workings from losing their jobs for taking leave due to family or medical responsibilities. These lack of protections put LGBTQ people at risk of being pushed into the ranks of the long-term poor and unemployed. Inclusive paid leave would improve economic stability for LGBTQ fathers.

Studies have also found that paid family leave is significant for a child’s development. Inclusive leave laws allow fathers to have greater involvement with their children which promotes both a child’s educational success and emotional stability. For example, one study by the University of Oslo found that children perform higher in secondary school when fathers take paternity leave. Studies have also shown that a father’s participation in household and childcare duties increased 250 percent after leave and they are more involved in child care nine months later compared with those who do not take leave. Thus, all family members benefit when parents are able to take leave without fear of being fired or struggling financially.

Honoring fathers is more than about celebrating them today; it’s about supporting fatherhood, in all its forms, through laws and policies that allow all families to thrive. With the growing number of LGBTQ families, we need laws to provide these families with necessary protections. 

www.hrc.org/blog/celebrating-and-supporting-our-fathers-its-time-for-paid-leave?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed