Hungry girl!
ameliamariecd posted a photo:
Shepard Smith: Trump Created Fake News With Sharpie
The out anchor denounces the president’s doctored hurricane map.
www.advocate.com/media/2019/9/06/shepard-smith-trump-created-fake-news-sharpie
People are taking a moment to appreciate the hotness of Stanley Tucci
Stanley Tucci is one of Hollywood’s most respected stars. The 58-year-old has appeared in movies as diverse as The Lovely Bones, The Hunger Games, Julie and Julia, The Devil Wears Prada, and Spotlight, along with TV shows like Feud: Bette and Joan.
He’s also had admirers for his handsomeness, and a tweet reminding people of this has gone viral.
just in case you need a little boost today, here’s Stanley Tucci in a Levi’s commercial from 1985 pic.twitter.com/TsT5JAdzDE
— Collin (@collinsapera) September 4, 2019
Yes, these stills are taken from a 1985 Levi’s commercial which the then 25-year-old actor shot before he got his first major break on TV.
You can enjoy the full commercial below.
The tweet has had over 13k likes and prompted hundreds of gifs, memes and compliments (“Studley Tucci”; “Stanley Touch Me”; “Staddy Tucci”; “Manly Tucci”).
When i was 15 I would put this on REPEAT every day and then clear my history ?
— girl emily (@isweatbeauty) September 5, 2019
As a teenager at this time it was a very…inspiring ad.
— Erik Anderson (@awards_watch) September 5, 2019
It’s even prompted a response from Tucci’s own sister, Christine, who tweeted in response: “hahahaha As his sister, I find this highly amusing. Love that you found this blast from the past. :)”
hahahaha As his sister, I find this highly amusing. Love that you found this blast from the past.
— Christine Tucci (@MrsTucciAngell) September 4, 2019
Related: “This deleted “The Devil Wears Prada” scene would have changed absolutely everything”
Fans have been arguing over the movies in which Tucci has been at his hottest (“Go watch The Pelican Brief. Hottest assassin ever.”), or reminding people that the actor, and occasional cookbook writer, is still very attractive today.
Hot then, still hot today ?
— Caneta Bic
(@paulissima_) September 4, 2019
Perfect. Also he’s aged like wine.
— Melinda Harden (@melindamharden) September 5, 2019
Or just … erm, complimenting him on his ability to encompass diverse roles.
Grindr profile meets reality. pic.twitter.com/fKpllgS1CA
— Tony Jenson (@tonyjenson) September 5, 2019
Pete Buttigieg Launches First TV Ad: WATCH
Pete Buttigieg launched a statewide TV ad blitz in Iowa on Friday with a 30-second ad on television and digital.
Politico reports: “The campaign said the ad is backed by a ‘significant’ buy. Advertising Analytics has tracked over $210,000 in Iowa TV ad reservations by Buttigieg so far over the next week and a half, a number that could go up as the campaign starts its major advertising effort. This week, Buttigieg crisscrossed Iowa to open 20 new field offices, and he has added another 30 on-the-ground staffers, bringing him to more than 100 organizers in the state. The campaign also opened 12 new field offices in New Hampshire this week.”
Says Buttigieg in the ad: “As a veteran, and as a mayor, I’ve seen what we can achieve when we have each other’s backs. But in today’s divided America, we’re at each other’s throats. Our rivers and oceans are rising. Health care costs are soaring, and our kids are learning active shooter drills before they learn to read. To meet these challenges and to defeat this president, we need real solutions, not more polarization.”
The post Pete Buttigieg Launches First TV Ad: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.
The Highwomen, queerness, and the stories women tell in country music
I grew up surrounded by country music. As a little gay jewish girl in Northern California, I may not have been the target audience of country musicians, but nonetheless, I felt it understood me more than any other genre. My dad had a beautifully curated CD collection filled with the finest country-pop from the early ‘90s to mid 00’s that soundtracked our house, our car, and even the walkman my sister and I shared. The radio showcased more of the best: Shania Twain, Faith Hill, and my forever number one, The Dixie Chicks. In country music, much like in my life, it was only the women I fell in love with.
One day, as a teenager, on a long drive with my dad accompanied by the Dixie Chicks’ “Fly”–which is perhaps a perfect album–I bemoaned the lack of all-women country groups. I asked my dad, “Why aren’t there more groups like this?”
“Country radio is sexist,” my dad responded. He wasn’t wrong.
In the decade prior, country radio stations had become more and more male-centric. Hence, pop music became the soundtrack to our family car rides because these stations actually played music by women.
As country and pop rising star Maren Morris told Rolling Stone, “If you look at the country radio charts, and there is one woman every three weeks in the Top 20, what’s going to encourage women to try to make music in that direction?”
Morris is a member of the new country group The Highwomen, whose debut album released today. The group’s name repurposes and pays homage to The Highwaymen, a well-known country supergroup of the ‘80s and ‘90s composed of four great (male) country musicians. The Highwomen are also made up of four great country performers: Morris, Amanda Shires, Natalie Hemby, and Brandi Carlile. Carlile, notably, is also an out lesbian.
While a freshman in college, I discovered country music independently of my dad for the first time. My friend Sara, a Kansas native, fellow lesbian and wonderful person, introduced me to the stylings of now multiple Grammy Award winner, Kacey Musgraves. Sara and I listened together, feeling Musgraves’ music strike a familiar nostalgia within us for different reasons, but fixating on one specific lyric for very much the same reasons.
In the chorus of her first big hit “Follow Your Arrow,” Musgraves sings, “Make lots of noise / and kiss lots of boys / or kiss lots of girls if that’s something you’re into.”
“Follow Your Arrow” was something revolutionary in country music. Though Musgraves herself is straight, the song was co-written by queer country artists Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally. It felt fresh and celebratory, yet still unmistakably country. It felt like acceptance. I was very consious of the fact that we needed more women in modern country music, but I never fully realized that those women could be queer too. Now, two lesbians were sitting in a dorm room listening to a song that was a full celebration of women, giving us the freedom to enjoy whatever we did or didn’t do. And for once, that included queer women like us. All with a fiddle.
This joyful expression of feminism can also be found in “Redesigning Women,” the first single from The Highwomen, where the four celebrate the joys of being women. The music video puts this energy on display, and includes a group of women burning a large metaphor for gendered expectations. Carlile’s wife, Catherine Shepherd, also makes an appearance. A spouse appearing in a video may seem like a small, sweet little gesture, but it doesn’t feel small to me.
What has always struck me from a young age about country music is how one four-minute long song can tell a full story. The Dixie Chicks’ “Goodbye Earl” has a more satisfying revenge arc than the entire series of “Big Little Lies.” Sara Evans’ “Suds in a Bucket” captures the feeling of escaping a small town for love. And there is nothing like the enticing romp of Dolly Parton’s “Two Doors Down.” These songs, just like other forms of media, told stories that barely ever touched on queerness. There could and should be more queer stories in this genre that thrive through storytelling. It took me a long time to realize that wanting more women in country music and wanting queerness in country music were not mutually exclusive desires.
One of the songs on The Highwomen’s album is entitled “If She Ever Leaves,” a love song that Carlile sings about another woman. There, matter-of-factly, in the debut album of a group of women challenging the status quo of women in country music, is this queer love song. It feels like the whole world is opening up, in the way queerness naturally fits into the album’s fabric and into a movement that could affect more than just the radio.
The Highwomen are not silent when it comes to inequality in country music. They are intent on making sure women’s voices are heard and make waves. Even more revolutionary is how one of the women spearheading this movement is an out lesbian who sings love songs for women, features her wife in music videos, and is commited to change country music for the better. The Highwomen may very well be the next big thing in country music, and they will do this being women, and they will do this being queer.
The Highwomen are by no means the first group of women to make a big splash in the country music industry. Carlile is not the first lesbian to make profoundly queer country music. But the fact that these are not first women to do this means that their presence is more than a blip on the radar in country music. This is a movement. There will be young women and young queer people who hear The Highwomen on the radio and who will be inspired to make music themselves. There will be little gay girls in cars hearing love stories through the radio with the paticular emotion that only a country song can carry.
It took me a long time to come to terms with the facts that the music I loved from my childhood didn’t include people like me. I’d like to imagine a world not too far into the future where no one will have to come to that realization and that young queer people can hear themselves in country music all across the radio.
The Highwomen is out today, wherever music is sold.
Raina Deerwater serves as the Entertainment Research and Analysis Associate for GLAAD Media Institute. In this capacity, she provides research and assists in writing GLAAD’s Where We Are On TV and Studio Responsibility Index, our two annual reports examining the quality and quantity of LGBTQ representation in television and Hollywood film. In addition, Raina authors regular posts for GLAAD’s website.
www.glaad.org/amp/highwomen-queerness-and-stories-women-tell-country-music
Mayor Pete Wasn’t ‘Briefed’ on the Popeyes Chicken Sandwich
The gay presidential candidate was caught unaware about the gay-friendly fast-food choice in an interview with The Breakfast Club.
www.advocate.com/election/2019/9/06/mayor-pete-wasnt-briefed-popeyes-chicken-sandwich
Jaboukie Young-White has a brilliant solution for ending gun violence in America
Our favorite Daily Show correspondent Jaboukie Young-White just shared his brilliant solution for ending gun violence in America: make guns gay!
This week, Young-White used that recent study about how straight dudes don’t like to recycle because they think it makes them seem gay, then argued the same toxic masculinity could potentially sway would-be mass shooters into not massacring people.
“How do you decrease gun ownership without gun control laws?” host Trevor Noah asked.
To which, Young-White responded, “Easy. We just need to make guns gay.”
He went on to say this couldn’t be difficult since guns are already a little bit gay by nature, “Right off the bat, guns are what? Long, hard, [and] the best ones are black.”
“And where do people keep their guns, Trevor? In the closet.”
Makes sense to us!
“I get what you’re trying to do,” Noah replied, “but for Americans who own firearms, guns aren’t just like guns. They’re a community of masculine hunters and freedom fighters.”
“Yeah, and we need to point out how gay that sounds,” Young-White countered. “Like, the right to bear arms? I love bare arms, too … Even the names of gun laws sound gay. Concealed carry? That’s like every username on Grindr. The law might as well be called, ‘Assbreaker37.’ And Stand Your Ground? That sounds like a Kelly Clarkson gay anthem.”
Point taken.
“You’re going to make guns gay,” Noah said. “So then straight men won’t want them anymore, so they’re going to give the guns to gay people, and gay people are going to hand them over to the government.”
“No, no, no,” Young-White replied. “Gay people keep the guns, and then we run the country. You know what I’m saying?”
Watch.
WH Official: Trump Doctored the Hurricane Chart Himself
Donald Trump’s raging lies about the path of Hurricane Dorian and its path, which culminated this week in an Oval Office update in which he displayed a chart doctored with a Sharpie, entered a fifth day of obsessive, insane litigation.
….This nonsense has never happened to another President. Four days of corrupt reporting, still without an apology. But there are many things that the Fake News Media has not apologized to me for, like the Witch Hunt, or SpyGate! The LameStream Media and their Democrat…..
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) September 6, 2019
….partner should start playing it straight. It would be so much better for our Country!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) September 6, 2019
1) The NWS, not the media, refuted Trump
2) If a family member fixated like this on spending days trying to prove an obvious falsehood wrong, you’d be genuinely concerned about their state of mind t.co/fQWNFKUARz
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) September 5, 2019
The Washington Post reports that yes, it was Trump himself, who doctored the map: ‘It was Trump who used a black Sharpie to mark up an official National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration map, which he displayed during an Oval Office briefing on Wednesday, according to a White House official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. “No one else writes like that on a map with a black Sharpie,” the official said of the map, which added Alabama into the hurricane’s potential pathway inside the loop of the marker.’
The post WH Official: Trump Doctored the Hurricane Chart Himself appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.
Congratulations to Rebecca and Paul from Australia!
It’s funny how love often helps put your life into perspective. It helped Rebecca see the big picture. She writes: “After some long conversations on the phone, Paul and I had a nervous day waiting to meet each other. Things went well right away and we both fell head over heels for each other! We
The post Congratulations to Rebecca and Paul from Australia! appeared first on Zoosk.
about.zoosk.com/en/blog/success-stories/congratulations-rebecca-paul-australia/
Drew Brees Continues to Not See Problem With His Hate Group Video
New Orleans Saint quarterback claims ignorance on Focus On The Family’s history, blames LGBTQ media for blowing up story.
www.advocate.com/sports/2019/9/06/drew-brees-continues-not-see-problem-his-hate-group-video
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