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Jason Collins Signs on As NBA and NCAA Analyst for Yahoo Sports

Jason Collins Signs on As NBA and NCAA Analyst for Yahoo Sports

Collins

Out former NBA player Jason Collins has signed with Yahoo Sports as an NBA and NCAA analyst, Outsports reports.

Said Yahoo in a statement:

At Yahoo Sports, we’re always look to guide our readers to the best, most relevant, original content we can. And today I’m happy to welcome the latest addition to our lineup, former NBA player Jason Collins. Jason will provide original video programming for the Yahoo Sports studio including basketball analysis for both the upcoming men’s NCAA basketball tournament and the NBA.

Collins will debut on Yahoo Sports “Tourney Bracket Live” show March 15.


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2015/03/jason-collins-signs-on-as-nba-and-ncaa-analyst-for-yahoo-sports.html

China Celebrates International Women's Day By Arresting Women's Rights Activists

China Celebrates International Women's Day By Arresting Women's Rights Activists
BEIJING — Chinese authorities rang in Sunday’s International Women’s Day with a contradiction: celebrating the country’s first draft law on domestic violence while simultaneously arresting feminist activists who have campaigned for these legal protections.

Fellow activists and lawyers representing the women say that an initial police sweep across multiple cities on March 6 netted 10 activists, five of whom were released after short detentions. But as of Monday evening, five women remain in custody, one of their lawyers said: Li Tingting, Wei Tingting, Zheng Churan, Wu Rongrong and Wang Man.

china women
The five activists who are still detained in China.

Some activists from women’s rights groups, many of whom also work on LGBT issues, have gone into hiding after hearing that police came to their homes or offices. Beijing police declined to answer questions over the phone and did not respond to faxed questions about the detentions.

According to activists who worked closely with the detained women, the arrests were made just a day before several small-scale actions were planned. Women in different Chinese cities planned to highlight sexual harassment on public transportation by putting stickers on buses saying “Catch sexual harassers: come get’em, police!”

But the police appear to have come for the activists instead.

Although the protests were timed to coincide with International Women’s Day on March 8, the women may have been detained for another reason: China is currently in the midst of the annual National People’s Congress, a multi-week political bonanza during which Chinese activists must tread particularly carefully or risk detention.

npc photoA military conductor leads a band during the opening session of the National People’s Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

“We took into account how sensitive things are during these sessions, and we couldn’t have been any more ‘gentle’ with our choice of actions,” said one fellow activist, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to fear of arrest. “That’s why we were so surprised, so shocked.”

Several of those who were arrested are leaders in a wave young feminist and LGBT activists, who have garnered national attention with creative forms of protest. Li Tingting, who often goes by the pseudonym Li Maizi, first became known for organizing the “Occupy the Men’s Bathroom” movement in 2012, a protest that drew attention to gender equality issues, in particular the need for more women’s public toilets to alleviate long waits.

Li and activist Wei Tingting also took part in “Bloody Brides” protests, walking around central Beijing dressed in wedding gowns splattered with fake blood to raise awareness about domestic violence.

Those efforts combined with two high-profile domestic abuse cases to raise support for China’s first-ever national law on domestic violence, which is currently before China’s National People’s Congress.

subwayTwo women in Shanghai protest comments blaming the revealing clothes women wear for sexual harassment on the subway.

But that legislative endorsement of the activists’ work provided no shelter from capricious crackdowns on unauthorized public demonstrations. Since coming into power in 2012, President and Communist Party General Secretary Xi Jinping has overseen a sweeping anti-corruption campaign, as well as a crackdown on civil society groups ranging from human rights lawyers to NGOs building libraries in rural China. Feminist and LGBT activists say their events are frequently monitored or shut down by local police.

Lawyers for some of the detained activists said they have not been able to speak with their clients since their detentions on Friday and Saturday. According to accounts from fellow activists, the women were mostly arrested at their homes, with police sometimes arriving in the middle of the night and searching cell phones and computers.

Although the police have not communicated the charges to the women’s lawyers, fellow activists told The WorldPost that during one of the arrests, police cited the notoriously nebulous crime of “picking quarrels and provoking troubles,” a catchall crime often used to detain activists or dissidents.

Fellow activists say that the women’s real crime was to gain a substantial following, particularly in China’s buzzing microblog services. The women’s supporters made their voices heard following this year’s Chinese New Year’s Gala, an annual broadcast that attracts nearly 700 million viewers. After the program contained multiple skits mocking unmarried or unattractive women, Chinese feminists circulated online petitions demanding an apology from China’s state broadcaster, a call that was partially echoed even in Chinese state media.

“People here are finally listening to the voice of China’s feminists,” said one activist who spoke on condition of anonymity. “Just a few years ago we were really marginal and weak, but because of the hard work of the last few years the authorities now see our ability to influence and rally people.”

But much of that influence emanates out from a very small core group of activists, five of whom remain in detention.

“At this point we’re still quite weak,” the activist lamented. “If they want to snuff us out they could do it.”

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/03/09/china-arrests-womens-activists_n_6832630.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

News: Apple Watch, Bill Cosby, Black Madonna, HBO, Aaron Schock

News: Apple Watch, Bill Cosby, Black Madonna, HBO, Aaron Schock

Road Pricing, release date and everything else you might want to know about the Apple Watch.

WatchRoad The New York Times dives into a new study highlighting the different bodies and brains that develop in identical twins who share the same sports and physical activities as children but different exercise habits as adults. 

Road An intimate look at one Vietnam gay couple’s private, symbolic marriage ceremony at the Amiana Resort in Nha Trang. 

Road Mo’Nique talks to The Wrap about her upcoming gay-themed film Blackbird

Road Bill Cosby declares he’s “far from finished” in his first video message since his multiple sexual assault allegations surfaced. 

Road Secular and humanist organizations file brief with the Supreme Court asking it to overturn bans on same-sex marriage

Road Irish Catholic Bishop Kevin Doran likens homosexuality to Down Syndrome, says gay parents “are not parents.”

Road The Atlantic looks at whether Joe Biden will run for president in 2016

VogueRoad London police have launched an investigation after a man died hours after collapsing at a gay sauna in the city’s Waterloo district. 

Road Finding a public restroom just got a lot easier for transgender people. 

Road John Mayer calls himself a “recovered ego addict” in new MSNBC interview. 

Road Vogue editor in hot water after posting Instagram photo of a homeless man reading Vogue in Paris.

Road NOM cofounder Robert George says the Republican Party should treat a pro-equality ruling from the Supreme Court like Dred Scott v Sanford

Road The Chicago Sun-Times looks into Rep. Aaron Schock’s $10,053 taxpayer-funded trip to New York with staffers. 

Road Wisconsin governor and 2016 GOP hopeful Scott Walker slams Hillary Clinton’s “audacity” at using her private email account as Secretary of State. 

 Road Australian Football League star Barry Hall says the league is ready for an openly gay player

Road Florida Gov. Rick Scott has banned the state’s Department of Environmental Protection from using the terms “climate change” and “global warming” in any official capacity. 

JordanRoad Male model Monday: Jordan Ver Hoeve.

Road A look inside the country’s first government-run marijuana store.  

Road Madonna calls Kanye West the “black Madonna.” 

Road HBO’s long-awaited standalone subscription service HBO Now was announced at Apple’s event today. The service will become available on April 12, the same day that the new season of Game of Thrones premieres. 

Road Lena Dunham reiterates she won’t get married until gay couple can tie the knot

Road U.S. Rep. Donna Edwards (D-MD) is expected to announce tomorrow her plans to run for Barbara Mikulski’s Senate seat.


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2015/03/news-3.html