Gay and Lesbian Critics Group Announces Award Nominations
See the contenders in a variety of film and TV categories, including both the typical and the unusual, such as Campy Flick of the Year.
Trudy Ring
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Gay and Lesbian Critics Group Announces Award Nominations
See the contenders in a variety of film and TV categories, including both the typical and the unusual, such as Campy Flick of the Year.
Trudy Ring
Why There Should Have Been No Stay in Today's South Dakota Marriage Ruling
As Towleroad reported, we can put South Dakota in the marriage equality win column. The decision, which you can read here, reads like many of the other pro-equality orders from district courts over the last two years:
First, marriage is a fundamental right;
Second, the Supreme Court has said so many times;
Third, that fundamental right has been denied to same-sex couples;
Fourth, the state has no compelling reason to override such a basic and important right in our democracy.
Therefore, the state’s ban on same-sex marriage is unconstitutional.
Q.E.D.
Whether U.S. District Judge Karen Schreier (pictured) took the fundamental rights approach above or the equal protection approach some other courts have chosen — gay marriage bans treat same-sex couples differently from opposite-sex couples for no good reason and are, therefore, a violation of the guarantee of equal rights — the result is the same.
The result in the South Dakota case also resembled many of the other district court cases from almost every other state in that implementation of the order was stayed pending appeal.
This used to be standard practice. Judges have been staying their marriage equality rulings since Judge Walker decided that Proposition 8 was unconstitutional back in August, 2010. Back then, it seemed like the safe way to go. We were, after all, breaching new ground.
It no longer makes any sense, not after the Supreme Court refused to grant a stay in Florida pending appeal. As I argued previously, the Court’s refusal to extend the stay beyond January 5, 2015 was special because it was the first time the Court let stand a pro-marriage equality decision in a jurisdiction where the appellate court (11th Circuit, in this case) had not yet spoken. Everywhere else, in South Carolina, for example, or in Idaho, the Court let marriage equality go into effect because the Fourth and Ninth Circuits, respectively, had spoken.
South Dakota is in the Eighth Circuit, which has not had occasion to decide a marriage equality case in the post-Windsor world. Therefore, with respect to the stay, South Dakota is just like Florida: a state with a pro-equality federal district court decision that should not be stayed even though the superior circuit court has not yet spoken.
It is a shame the stay was put into effect. The judge was probably just being cautious. But her caution extends the hours of discrimination and second-class citizenship for thousands of gay men and women.
***
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Ari Ezra Waldman is a professor of law and the Director of the Institute for Information Law and Policy at New York Law School and is concurrently getting his PhD at Columbia University in New York City. He is a 2002 graduate of Harvard College and a 2005 graduate of Harvard Law School. Ari writes weekly posts on law and various LGBT issues.
Ari Ezra Waldman
www.towleroad.com/2015/01/why-there-should-have-been-no-stay-in-south-dakota.html
Sobre sites fundamentalistas anti-LGBT
Sobre o IBOPE que eles querem com toda essa parafernália neurótica, homofóbica e transfóbica e sobre o melhor a fazer diante disso.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8CpRHdT-NA&feature=youtube_gdata

Pride, Transparent and The Imitation Game get multiple nods from Gay and Lesbian Critics Assn
Matt Bomer, Neil Patrick Harris, Jodie Foster also get Dorian Award nods – George Takei to get ‘Timeless’ award
gregh
What To Watch This Week on TV: Kathy Griffin Makes Her 'Fashion Police' Debut
Check out our weekly guide to make sure you’re catching the big premieres, crucial episodes and the stuff you won’t admit you watch when no one’s looking.
— Kathy Griffin takes the hot seat left vacant by the late Joan Rivers when she brings her own brand of celeb skewering to Fashion Police on E!. Former panelists Kelly Osbourne and Giuliana Rancic remain, and they are joined by newbie Brad Goreski. They take their first shots at the Golden Globes red carpet looks tonight at 9 p.m. Eastern.
Catch Bravo’s latest reality series, two comedy season premieres and one diva-licious biopic, AFTER THE JUMP …
— Bravo’s latest reality experient pairs pals hoping to take their relationship to the next level. Among the couples highlighted, Friends To Lovers features gay buddies Charley and Darion as they explore transitioning their friendship to romance. Find out if they click and how the other couples fare when the series premieres tonight at 10 p.m. Eastern.
— It’s the final season of Parks and Recreation on NBC. So much more than your average workplace comedy, Parks has brought some of the best political satire to network TV without ever losing the sweet optimism that’s become the show’s trademark. Check in with the hilarious ensemble as they embark on the year 2017, Tuesday at 8 p.m. Eastern.
— Two of the freshest faces in comedy are back in the Amy Poehler-produced Broad City. Funnyladies Abbi Jacobson and Ilana Glazer return in their stoner comedy that tackles everything from life in Brooklyn, dating and shopping at Bed, Bath and Beyond. The highly-anticipated second season starts Wednesday at 10:30 p.m. Eastern on Comedy Central.
— Actress Angela Bassett adds director to her resume with the Lifetime original biopic, Whitney. Former America’s Next Top Model contestant Yaya DaCosta portrays Whitney Houston in the TV film, Saturday at 8 p.m. Eastern.
What are you watching this week?
Bobby Hankinson
Dünya Tersine Dönse lgbt kısa film Kerem Chanel Fratello 1
Hayatın hangi anını tersine çevirmek isterdin? Hiçbir şey için geç değil. Kanalıma üye olun: w. herkez biz eşcinsel leri kötüleyip dışlıyor hatta katlediyor peki ya herşey…
www.youtube.com/watch?v=reJJTGA4yQ0&feature=youtube_gdata

WATCH: Out Cincinnati Councilman Delivers Passionate Speech to the Leelahs of the World
Chris Seelbach wants LGBT youth know that they’re all exactly who they’re meant to be — and he wants more adults to say the same.
Mitch Kellaway
Gay Irish Priest Comes Out To Parishioners — And Gets A Surprising Response
After serving a Roman Catholic parish in Ireland for 15 years, the Rev. Martin Dolan told congregants the truth about his sexual orientation over the weekend.
Dolan was standing at the pulpit during a Saturday mass at Dublin’s Church of St. Nicholas of Myra when he began encouraging parishioners to support legalizing same-sex marriage, according to The Irish Sun. Then, he made the unexpected announcement: “I’m gay myself.”
The priest reportedly received a standing ovation.
A community youth worker in Dublin told The Irish Sun, “We are all very proud of Father Martin. Because he has admitted that he is gay doesn’t change the person that he was before it.”
Two Irish LGBT rights groups confirmed the priest’s remarks to the HuffPost in emails.
Andrew Hyland, director of Marriage Equality, said that he lives on the same street as the church and that his father is one of Dolan’s parishioners.
“Fr. Dolan’s acknowledgement from the pulpit that he is gay and supports marriage equality has been warmly welcomed in Ireland,” Hyland wrote. “The parishioners of Francis Street have expressed a deep loyalty towards him since his brave announcement.”
Tiernan Brady, policy director for the Gay and Lesbian Equality Network, said Dolan’s coming out is “first and foremost a wonderful personal story.”
“It takes a lot of courage to do what Fr Dolan did and he must have experiences some trepidation before he said it,” Brady wrote. “The wonderful reaction of his congregation giving him a standing ovation after he spoke is a powerful endorsement of his brave decision.”
Neither Dolan nor Dublin’s archdiocese responded to requests for comment.
The church doesn’t formally ban gays from the priesthood, but requires all clergy to take a vow of celibacy. Pope Francis famously addressed the question of homosexuality in the priesthood in 2013, saying in Italian: “Who am I to judge a gay person of goodwill who seeks the Lord? You can’t marginalize these people.”
Ireland is preparing to hold a referendum on legalizing gay marriage in May. According to a 2011 census, Catholics made up 84.2 percent of Ireland’s population. Although the Catholic Church does not favor same-sex marriage, an Irish Times/Ipsos MRBI poll found that 71 percent of the electorate was willing to vote to approve marriage equality this spring.
“Fr. Dolan’s support will undoubtedly give a boost to a positive outcome in the referendum,” Hyland said. “It signals to people that despite what the hierarchy of the Church wills, regular Church goers can vote yes and know they join thousands of others in good conscience in doing so.
“Fr. Dolan’s move reminds people that many LGBT people have a deep faith and are an equal part of the Church and should be valued as such,” Hyland added.
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