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Jared Leto Grabs It Again, Channing Tatum Wants You In Magic Mike XXL And Joe Manganiello Pumps Up To Take It Off

Jared Leto Grabs It Again, Channing Tatum Wants You In Magic Mike XXL And Joe Manganiello Pumps Up To Take It Off

Jared Leto can’t keep his hands off that monster in his pants. If you need help with it, JL, give us a call.

jl

 

Oscar-winner Matthew McConaughey won’t return for Magic Mike XXL (love the title!), but Joe Manganiello will be and hopefully with a larger role this time. J.Man tweeted a pic of himself pumping iron to get in stripping shape.

I am getting @JoeManganiello ready for #magicmike2, 2 weeks until he starts dancing. How do you think he is looking? pic.twitter.com/Ox33mKxA7V

— Ron Mathews (@Ron_MathewsLAB) September 16, 2014

The actor also accepted the Ally for Equality Award from the Human Rights Campaign last weekend and inspired the crowd by declaring “‘I choose to fight for a world where equality is a reality, not just a dream.”

 

But back to Magic Mike XXL, if you want to get a lap dance from Joe, Matt Bomer and the others, Channing Tatum tells you how to make that wet dream a reality. P.S. to Channing, maybe you should invite Jared Leto to join the cast. 

Madonna drag queens took over Fire Island and made history in the process.

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No wonder Barbra Streisand is often referred to as “the greatest star.” She’s about to make music history by scoring a number one album in each of the past six decades. Here’s more about her fantastic career achievements.

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While on the subject of Barbra, remember that time she made a porno called Cycle Sluts? Actually, it was the hooker character she portrayed in the 1970 comedy The Owl and the Pussycat who dabbled in adult films, but let’s be happy the singing career worked out for her.

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Maybe this time she’ll be lucky. Liza Minnelli is the latest superstar entertainer to be honored with her own comic book.

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Tragic news from the Deep South: Honey Boo Boo’s Mama June and stepdad Sugar Bear have called it quits after a cheating scandal. The former twosome exchanged vows during a commitment ceremony in May, but were never officially married.

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Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/m1tr0QaoBlc/jared-leto-grabs-it-again-channing-tatum-wants-you-in-magic-mike-xxl-and-joe-manganiello-pumps-up-to-take-it-off-20140919

Double Duchess and Kelly Osbourne in 'Good Girl Freak Out': VIDEO

Double Duchess and Kelly Osbourne in 'Good Girl Freak Out': VIDEO

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Kelly Osbourne plays a character inspired by Jem of Jem and the Holograms in the music video from queer electro duo Double Duchess (davO and Krylon Superstar) featuring Future People for their new “future twerk” track “Good Girl Freak Out”.

The dancing in the clip, which director JB Ghuman says was inspired by strange dreams he was having, tells the tale of a couple hooking up, breaking up, and reuniting. Osborne plays their spiritual guide.

Whether or not you pick all that up from what you see, perhaps the message of Double Duchess will shine through. Says the pair in a press release: “Through our music, we ask everyone to be and tell your truth regardless of sexuality, gender, race. We don’t want any beautiful faces hidden from the world.”

Check it out, AFTER THE JUMP

Osborne


Andy Towle

www.towleroad.com/2014/09/ggfo.html

Johnny Weir and Tara Lipinksi Take Over NBC's Figure Skating Commentary

Johnny Weir and Tara Lipinksi Take Over NBC's Figure Skating Commentary

The fashionable darlings of the figure skating world are back on NBC, possibly bumping longtime commentators Tom Hammond, Scott Hamilton, and Sandra Bezic from the anchor’s desk.

read more

Annie Hollenbeck

www.advocate.com/sports/2014/09/19/johnny-weir-and-tara-lipinksi-take-over-nbcs-figure-skating-commentary

How to Collect the Information We Need From LGBT Patients

How to Collect the Information We Need From LGBT Patients
The maxim that you cannot manage what you cannot measure has become a cliché. But when it comes to managing―and ending―the disparities in health experienced by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people, the need for standardized collection of data is critical.

In a 2011 report, the Institute of Medicine notes that the routine collection of data on sexual orientation and gender identity in health care settings―and including this data in Electronic Health Records―would be a potent tool in eliminating the health disparities experienced by LGBT people. There has been little movement on this three-year-old recommendation, which is echoed by the Joint Commission (an independent nonprofit that provides accreditation to health care facilities), because there has been no consensus on how, exactly, to collect this data.

Until now.

A study published this month in PLOS ONE Journal evaluated a set of standardized questions about sexual orientation and gender identity and showed that a diverse group of patients are willing to answer questions about sexual orientation and gender identity in clinical settings, and that they understood the importance of answering these questions during the patient registration process.

The survey was implemented at four health care centers: Fenway Health, in Boston, MA; Beaufort Jasper Hampton Comprehensive Health Services in rural South Carolina; Chase Brexton Health Center in Baltimore and Columbia, Maryland; and Howard Brown Health Center in Chicago, IL. More than half of the respondents were heterosexual and the pool of respondents were racially diverse with 44 percent reporting that they were White; 41 percent Black; and eight percent Hispanic.

They were asked whether they thought of themselves as “lesbian, gay or homosexual”; “straight or heterosexual”; “bisexual”; “something else, please describe; or “don’t know.” They were then asked for their current gender identity and which sex they were assigned at birth on their original birth certificate. An overwhelming majority of respondents agreed that asking about sexual orientation and gender identity on registration forms is important. There were no statistically significant differences in responses to questions based on race or geographic location, although respondents over age 65 were more likely to answer that they did not understand the choices to the gender identity question.

We know that LGBT people experience disparities in health ranging from higher rates of HIV and mental health issues among transgender women and gay and bisexual men to lower rates of routine health screenings among lesbians. We also know that LGBT patients routinely report that they experience discrimination in health care settings related to their sexual orientation or gender identity.

Routine collection of data about patient sexual orientation and gender identity would give health care providers, public health officials and researchers the data they need to more accurately evaluate the quality of health care that LGBT people receive, and help them devise population-wide strategies to reduce these health care disparities. Collecting data about sexual orientation and gender identity can also help foster discussion in the exam room that will result in more accurate assessments of patient health risks.

Put simply, without this information, LGBT people are otherwise invisible in health care, and we will never be able to properly manage the health of the LGBT population without first being able to measure the LGBT population.

We have long understood the value of collecting race and ethnicity data in health care settings in order to measure which populations are accessing health care services, and how often; the health status of various populations; and the effectiveness of public health interventions. Including questions about sexual orientation and gender identity in the standard demographic section of electronic health records is a critical step forward in ending disparities in health experienced by LGBT people.

www.huffingtonpost.com/sean-cahill/how-to-collect-the-inform_b_5850182.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Ugandan Gay Rights Activist Recommended For Asylum In The U.S. – VIDEO

Ugandan Gay Rights Activist Recommended For Asylum In The U.S. – VIDEO

John Abdallah Wambere

Immigration officials are recommending that the U.S. grant asylum to John Abdallah Wambere, a prominent gay rights activist in Uganda who lives in fear of death threats and repression at home, reports The Boston Globe.

Wambere arrived from Uganda on February 21 on a temporary visa, three days before Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni signed off on his country’s new law punishing gay sex and the “promotion of homosexuality” with life imprisonment.

US Citizenship and Immigration Services issued a letter on September 11th recommending Wambere for asylum, although final approval is still pending a mandatory background check.

Wambere said he has been evicted, arrested three times, beaten unconscious and has received anonymous death threats, including in 2011, after gay rights leader David Kato was bludgeoned to death.

Although Uganda’s constitutional court in August overturned the country’s anti-gay laws on technical grounds, some lawmakers have vowed to refile the overturned bill.

According to Allison Wright, one of Wambere’s lawyers at GLAAD:

“The antigay sentiment has just been rising and rising over the years. Just because the act is gone doesn’t mean that hostility is not there. That hostility is very much still alive.”

In an interview earlier this week, Wambere hailed the decision and vowed to continue advocating for gay rights in Uganda from abroad.

“I’m so excited; I’m overwhelmed. I felt like standing on the streets and shouting out to the whole world.”

On adjusting to life in Massachusetts, he said he had been shocked at the sight of a gay couple openly holding hands on Boston Common:

“To me, it was amazing. Nobody cared about it. Even they themselves were not even freaking out.”

Watch an interview with Wambere and a report on the asylum case, AFTER THE JUMP


Jim Redmond

www.towleroad.com/2014/09/ugandan-gay-rights-activist-recommended-for-asylum-in-the-us-video.html

Embracing the Reproductive Rights of HIV-affected Couples: It's Time

Embracing the Reproductive Rights of HIV-affected Couples: It's Time
Pinned to the bulletin board over my desk is a birth announcement with stunning photos and the quote, “I prayed for this child and the Lord has granted me what I asked of him – 1 Samuel 1:27.” Next to it is a card with a photo of a couple embracing and the words, “Thank you for believing in us.” Then a black and white photograph my teen daughter took at a first birthday party, chubby baby arms grabbing at the birthday cake on the highchair tray. These mementos give me goose bumps. Witnessing someone’s dream come true is a gift. I once joined a couple and their baby. As the parents ate their salad amongst the bustle of San Francisco’s financial district lunch crowd and took turns holding the baby, I looked around wishing everyone could perceive this great love. I wondered what it is like to be this child — to grow up having been so wanted, so planned for, so desired.

While condoms have been the gold-standard HIV prevention method, when HIV-affected couples want to have a baby, they must necessarily consider other options, weighing the risk of possible HIV transmission with their natural desires to have a child. Assisted reproductive technologies, such as sperm washing combined with intrauterine insemination or in vitro-fertilization, have been offered to HIV-affected couples through some fertility clinics, but many couples are unable to access these services due to cost or location.

Assisted reproductive technologies are not always necessary. Data from recent clinical trials now offer additional options to reduce sexual HIV transmission, expanding the safer conception methods available for HIV-affected couples.

First, HIV-positive individuals who take antiretroviral medications and have their virus fully suppressed reduce their risk of transmitting HIV to a partner by 96%, a strategy known as treatment as prevention. Second, data from pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) trials demonstrate HIV-negative individuals adherent to taking antiretroviral medication dramatically reduce their risk of acquiring HIV. In fact, there were zero HIV transmissions to PrEP research participants who took four or more doses per week. Based on these data, timed intercourse with or without PrEP provides effective, lower cost choices for HIV-positive male/HIV-negative female couples to conceive. When engaged in care with a knowledgeable provider, HIV-affected couples can plan for a pregnancy where the woman, and thereby the infant, remains HIV-negative.

Even with this tremendous news, HIV-affected couples experience stigma related to their fertility desires from friends, family and medical providers. Many HIV-positive men in our Bay Area Perinatal AIDS Center‘s PRO Men (Positive Reproductive Outcomes for HIV-positive Men) initiative, based at San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center’s Ward 86 HIV Clinic, report a desire to have a child. But they also say they’ve never been asked by their providers whether they want to have a child. In nearly every support group, one theme emerges: I just wish people understood. I wish people knew I can be like Magic Johnson. I wish people knew about an undectable viral load and the possibilities for having a family.

The truth is the story has changed from one of risk reduction and permission giving to one of possibility and hope. It’s time our collective knowledge and attitudes caught up with the science. We’ve arrived at new point in the HIV epidemic — a compelling opportunity to harness the available behavioral and biomedical interventions toward the elimination of sexual HIV transmission. HIV-affected couples can have healthy sex lives and families.

The photos of the families on the bulletin board above my desk are living proof.

www.huffingtonpost.com/shannon-weber/embracing-the-reproductive-rights-of-hiv-affected-couples_b_5774512.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Clay Aiken Casts Shade Upon Your Naked Selfies: They “Deserve” To Be Leaked

Clay Aiken Casts Shade Upon Your Naked Selfies: They “Deserve” To Be Leaked

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Clay Aiken/Facebook

Clay Aiken, the former American Idol runner-up now running for Congress in North Carolina, says celebrities victimized by the recent nude photo hacking scandal and “anybody who takes inappropriate pictures of themselves deserve exactly what they get.”

The 35-year-old single father made the comment to a Washington Post reporter yesterday in a move that will likely (not likely) please the progressive young Democrats he’s currently attempting to woo in his home state.

Like a true politician, Aiken also conveniently forgot to mention that he was the victim in a similar situation back in 2007, when he was publicly outed after a former butt buddy provided the press with some super sexxxy photos. “I’ve got a mirror if I want to check something out,” he said.

So as not to come off as totally heartless, he added that “of course whoever [stole and released the photos] should be hogtied,” and that “it’s unfortunate that we don’t have Internet security right now or the laws in place to protect people from pirating that stuff.”

Ok! Thanks, Clay!

Matthew Tharrett

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/9yAKjMjkDdc/clay-aiken-casts-shade-upon-your-naked-selfies-they-deserve-to-be-leaked-20140919