Category Archives: NEWS

Kristen Stewart Doesn't Owe You a 'Coming Out' Speech

Kristen Stewart Doesn't Owe You a 'Coming Out' Speech
Kristen Stewart has issued a bold response to those intent on confirming exactly what sexual label to pin on her. In the latest issue of Nylon, in which the actress appears on the cover, she tells anyone interested in her sexuality: “Google me, I’m not hiding.” She added:

If you feel like you really want to define yourself, and you have the ability to articulate those parameters and that in itself defines you, then do it. But I am an actress, man. I live in the fucking ambiguity of this life and I love it. I don’t feel like it would be true for me to be like, ‘I’m coming out!’ No, I do a job. Until I decide that I’m starting a foundation or that I have some perspective or opinion that other people should be receiving… I don’t. I’m just a kid making movies.

It’s a fitting statement from Kristen Stewart, not only because she’s called fame “the worst thing in the world,” but also because she’s saying, essentially, that the focus on her personal life detracts from discussion of her work — or anything else about her. It’s a reminder that Stewart doesn’t owe the Internet an official “coming out” — and to presume she does is insulting and insensitive.

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Already, her sexuality has become part of the cultural conversation about Stewart — this article being no exception, I admit. Whereas Nylon simply went with “Riding Shotgun with Kristen Stewart” for a headline, countless reports about the interview have honed in on her comments about her sexuality, making it the focal point. Some, such as “Kristen Stewart plays coy over sexuality rumors,” made it seem as if she didn’t go far enough in her statement.

This is natural, I suppose, in a world where, as the Advocate explains, before a celebrity like Stewart has officially “come out, “media outlets create “a glossary of queer innuendo that is meant to signal to a reader that a person is gay or in a same-sex relationship, without actually stating it outright.” Their hilarious list of these ways of saying-it-without-saying-it — which includes “tomboy,” “gal pal,” and “sapphic circle” — highlight the absurdity of our need to make Stewart answer the question “What are you?” not for her satisfaction, but for ours.

By phrasing her comments as she did, Stewart turns the question back on the asker, pointedly making us collectively wonder, “Why do we care so much about who she’s sleeping with? What does it change about how we perceive her whether she’s dating a man or a woman?” Those questions, whether we’re talking about a famous movie star or the rest of us, are much harder to answer than a simple word can ever summarize.

In an interview with Beatrice in 1997, writer Jill Nagle said, “Sex is what academics would call oversignified. You can play tennis with a friend without worrying about ‘what it means,’ but you can’t do that with sex.” That quote has stayed with me, because even though in the intervening years, we’ve made a lot of progress in terms of being more knowledgeable and accepting of a variety of sexual orientations, sex acts, and genders, we still want a simple way of framing a topic that’s actually more complex, in many cases, than one word can summarize.

We still get so fixated on who people are screwing we practically salivate over every juicy detail — witness the media frenzy when an interview with Cate Blanchett was edited in a way that implied she’d had sexual relationships with women, followed by her clarification that she hadn’t, actually. Stewart does not want to be a poster child, and her comments, appearing two months after her mother was quoted in the UK’s Sunday Mirror confirming Stewart’s relationship with assistant Alicia Cargile, are a way of making it clear that she takes such fascination with her sexuality as intrusive.

Stewart is also making a larger point about the changing role of labels like gay, lesbian, and bisexual — namely, that for many people, they are beside the point. She went on to tell Nylon, “I think in three or four years, there are going to be a whole lot more people who don’t think it’s necessary to figure out if you’re gay or straight. It’s like, just do your thing.”

We’ve seen numerous similar sentiments in recent pop culture, from people who are proud, unashamed, and not hiding their same-sex attractions and relationships, but don’t want to be defined by them, from Miley Cyrus‘ pronouncements about being gender- and sexually fluid and Raven-Symone’s rejection of the label “gay” (“I want to be labeled a human who loves humans”) to Maria Bello’s embrace of the term “whatever” to describe her sexual orientation and Ilana on Broad City‘s declaration that “I have sex with people different from me.”

In their way, those rejecting sexual labels are offering up a very optimistic point of view, one that presumes that whatever your sexual orientation, you are entitled to explore it and define it for yourself, regardless of what anyone else thinks. This is, of course, true — though it’s vital to note that we haven’t yet reached the point where living either in the ambiguity Stewart praises or as an out gay, lesbian, or bisexual person means you’re free from discrimination.

Stewart’s right to find the questioning off-putting (if you don’t agree, ask yourself if you’d want your every date, kiss or act of holding hands, let alone what you do in bed, obsessively scrutinized). As Sarah Seltzer pointed out at Flavorwire, just as asking celebrities whether they’re feminists has led to an increasingly pointless PR spin cycle, so too does questioning them about their sexuality often come across futile and passé. Seltzer argues it’s in celebs’ best interest to remain as publicly ambiguous about their sexuality as possible, lest they be pigeonholed.

To some extent, I agree, but in Stewart’s case, specifically, her words don’t sound ambiguous. They sound like the opinions of someone who simply feels there are more important things in her public life than her personal relationships.

That’s not to say having out queer celebrities as role models isn’t important; rather, that those who want to take on that responsibility should be able to do so voluntarily, or else it’s pointless — a debate exemplified in the responses to Roxane Gay saying on Twitter that Stewart’s sexuality is not a big deal. Stewart clearly does not want her sex life to precede her acting in the public eye. She doesn’t want her sexuality to oversignified, or even, it seems, brought up at all.

The latter is unlikely to happen, but we can grant Stewart — and by extension, everyone else — the right to define or not define their sex lives as they see fit.

Rachel Kramer Bussel is a New York-based author, editor, blogger, and event organizer. Her work has been featured in the San Francisco Chronicle, the Village Voice, and Jezebel.

Photo via Gage Skidmore/Flickr (CC BY SA 2.0)

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Ashley Madison Hack Puts Gay Lives At Risk

Ashley Madison Hack Puts Gay Lives At Risk

ashley-madison-hackThe Independent reports that some gay users of the Ashley Madison website are now fearing for their lives, since the hack exposes the names and locations of users living in countries where homosexuality is illegal and, in some cases, punishable by death.

Ashley Madison owns gay domains like ManCrunch and We Know Down Low, and members of both clubs are among the 37 million account holders whose sexual preferences have now been made public by this week’s hack.

Related: Josh Duggar’s Ashley Madison Account Revealed, Meanwhile Parents Pitch Reality Show About Child Sex Abuse

Homosexuality is still illegal in roughly 75 countries, including several states in the Middle East, Africa, Southeast Asia, and most of the Caribbean. Placing sensitive information about the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people living in these regions therefore puts their lives at risk.

Over 50 accounts have been found from Qatar, where homosexual relations can land you five years in prison, and 1,500 accounts are from Turkey – where homosexuality can ban you from military service.

Dan Tracer

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Survey Finds a Third of Young Americans Say They’re Not Completely Straight

Survey Finds a Third of Young Americans Say They’re Not Completely Straight

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A new YouGov survey has found 31% of young Americans identify themselves as 100% straight. Respondents were asked to put themselves on a Kinsey scale where 0 is exclusively heterosexual and 6 was completely homosexual.

From the survey:

surveyOverall 78% of Americans say that they are completely heterosexual while 4% say that they are completely homosexual. 16% of American adults say that they fall somewhere in between. In this group the bulk (10%) say that they are more heterosexual than homosexual while 3% put themselves in the middle and another 3% say that they are predominantly homosexual.

Younger Americans are noticeably less likely than their elders to put themselves in a firm category. While 80% of all Americans say that they are completely heterosexual or homosexual only 66% of under-30s say the same. 29% of under-30s put themselves somewhere on the category of bisexuality.

A similar YouGov survey was conducted in Great Britain last week and found almost half of 18-24 year olds don’t identify as exclusively heterosexual.

More from the survey here.

The post Survey Finds a Third of Young Americans Say They’re Not Completely Straight appeared first on Towleroad.


Kyler Geoffroy

Survey Finds a Third of Young Americans Say They’re Not Completely Straight

Here's Why Bill Burr's Comments On Caitlyn Jenner Went Too Far

Here's Why Bill Burr's Comments On Caitlyn Jenner Went Too Far

Just a general note: When you’re in the middle of saying something and feel the need to add, “I’m not being a jerk,” you might want to not say anything at all.

During a visit to “Conan” on Thursday, Bill Burr revealed his thoughts on Caitlyn Jenner’s transition, and to say they’re controversial might be the understatement of the Internet. The comedian started by questioning the whole significance of the story:

This is what killed me when Bruce became Caitlyn. That was like a national news story like at a ridiculous level. There’s like baby seals washing up on the beach because there’s no fish left, and they’re talking to this, this — lady. You know? Like, “So, Bruce, you gonna go, can your Olympic back handle a D-cup or you gonna go with like something a little more perky?”

Burr continued poking fun at Jenner while misgendering her, with seemingly sarcastic comments like, “He should’ve told us. He should’ve given us a chance to say goodbye,” and later adding, “God bless him. God bless her! Sorry. They really freak out about the pronouns, too. You say God bless him, and they’re like, ‘Her!'” 

As Uproxx points out, the comments caused a ton of outrage on Twitter, and for those questioning why, GLAAD does a great job of explaining.

First, Caitlyn Jenner’s announcement that she is transgender and the subsequent Vanity Fair cover that followed were hugely significant moments for the transgender community. Trans people face challenges and prejudices daily most people couldn’t even fathom. These moments can’t be downplayed. As GLAAD President & CEO Sarah Kate Ellis put it:

By sharing her journey with the world, Caitlyn Jenner is accelerating acceptance of transgender people everywhere and reminds us all how important it is to live as your most authentic self.

As far as comments like “They really freak out about the pronouns,” you should probably remember “they” have a right to. As GLAAD explains, being associated with a birth name or gender that was misassigned at birth is often a “tremendous source of anxiety” for transgender individuals. The organization puts it simply: “You wouldn’t like your identity to be defined by others, so please allow others to define themselves.”

Bill Burr isn’t afraid of controversial comedy. He makes a living off of it. During previous visits to “Conan,” the comedian has done everything from call out charities in sports to explain how women ruin the NFL. (Yeah. He did that.) But how much is too much? 

Also on HuffPost:

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Five tips to get started on decluttering your home

Five tips to get started on decluttering your home

Moving house – or simply renovating – often goes hand in hand with a push to finally declutter all cupboards, wardrobes and drawers so the new home is off to a good start.

From personal experience (the writer moved six times, between four cities and two countries, in the past three years) we can say that yes, most of us have a lot more stuff than they need and getting rid of it is harder than it initially feels.

Diving into the decluttering head first, without planning at least a little ahead, often leads to disappointment rather than success – but since we’ve made our own experiences, here are a few tips on how to sort everything out and keep your new home clutter-free – or at least less cluttered. Nobody’s perfect, after all.

Start early

Don’t leave it to the last minute – stressing about reducing the amount of things you have often only goes one of two possible ways: either you chuck out too much and end up regretting it dearly or you’re so cautious about it that nearly everything follows you into the new home.

Starting early doesn’t just give you enough time to go over everything, it also means you’re covered in case anything suddenly takes up a lot of your time – and in case you finish early, there’s a deep satisfaction in that, too.

Don’t spend too much time at once

This may sound weird, but rather than tackling it all at once, take five or ten minutes out of your day to get stuck in some of your clutter.

One day, get rid of the things making one of your bookshelves look untidy; the next, take your desk (or half of your desk, in case it’s a bigger task), make sure that’s tidy and clutter free, and so on.

Sure, it won’t make much of a dent to start with, but keep at it and the mountain of clutter will diminish slowly but surely.

Don't leave decluttering until your desk looks like this (or worse) - it'll only make it harder.

Don’t leave decluttering until your desk looks like this (or worse) – it’ll only make it harder.

Get a grip on your paper

It’s everywhere, and there’s so much of it that trying to get rid of clutter doesn’t start with what you already have – it starts the moment new paper comes in, most often through your letterbox.

Don’t let the letters pile up: sort them the moment they reach you and don’t be afraid of chucking out the non-important stuff straight away.

When sorting through your papers, use a similarly strict sorting system: bank statements, insurance policies and co can all stay, but do you really need the receipt for your five-year old iPod?

Get to the back of your wardrobe

You probably won’t find a door to Narnia (if you do, please let us know), but it’s more than likely you’ll encounter what the Germans call Schrankleiche (‘cupboard corpse’) – the things you never wore, or only wore a few times, before banning them to the back of your wardrobe.

Get rid of them. No matter if you give them to charity or have a jumble sale, get them out of the house.

You’ve not worn these for years – maybe because they don’t fit, are out of style or just because – and the chance of you missing those things is fairly slim, so don’t let them take up precious space.

(This obviously doesn’t extend to pieces with an emotional value – wedding dresses/suits and other emotionally laden pieces don’t count as clutter.)

Overthink new purchases

Do you really need ten pairs of black jeans or the 15th pair of heels you’ll only wear once?

Saying no may be the hardest part – everything is so tempting, from going to an actual shop to browsing the internet and subsequently being spammed with ads showing you exactly that bag/pair of shoes/special edition of a book you just spent ten minutes longingly staring at.

That’s not to say don’t buy new things, but be conscious about it – especially if it’s something a bit more unusual or occasion wear – to make sure your freshly decluttered wardrobe stays that way.

The post Five tips to get started on decluttering your home appeared first on Gay Star News.

Stefanie Gerdes

www.gaystarnews.com/article/five-tips-to-get-started-on-decluttering-your-home/

Here’s A Gay Fairy Tale They Didn’t Teach You As A Kid

Here’s A Gay Fairy Tale They Didn’t Teach You As A Kid

Each week online comedian, voice actor and chest hair model Sam Kalidi creates a new meme for Queerty readers. This week, he’s helped by the imagination of gay Mexican artist José Rodolfo Loaiza Ontiveros, who puts a new spin on an old classic. Sam looks forward to all your hate mail. You can find him on TwitterFacebook, Instagram and at your local glory hole.

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Dan Tracer

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Bryan Fischer on Being an Anti-gay Bigot: ‘I Was Born this Way’ – VIDEO

Bryan Fischer on Being an Anti-gay Bigot: ‘I Was Born this Way’ – VIDEO

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Hoary old bigot Bryan Fischer has said that because he was born that way he is entitled to peddle anti-gay hysteria at will.

According to Right Wing Watch, B-grade homophobe Fischer said that because was “born a Christian” with an innate ability for hysterical hate-mongering he should be entitled to have his rights respected and protected by the government.

Replying to a caller on his radio program who moaned that he has “fewer rights” than LGBT people, Fischer said:

“I think, actually, that’s a good argument. The way I am, I was born this way. And you know, you think about it…who would choose, at this time in our nation’s history, to be a Christian?

“You’re ridiculed. You’re mocked. You’re made fun of. You get fired … I mean, who would choose a lifestyle where you are the unending subject of ridicule, mockery, and contempt by liberals in society, by elites, by professors, on the media, by politicians? Who’s going to choose that? So our defense is, hey, I was born that way.”

Continuing his well tested obsession with gay sex, he added:

“I think that most of us have an instinctive, I think revulsion is not too strong of  a word, to the act of homosexuality, what actually happens when homosexuals come together and engage in sexual congress. We look at that and there is just an inner revulsion to that.

“God has the same reaction that you and I do but that instinctive revulsion that we have when we think about homosexuality, I was born that way.”

Listen to the utterly bizarre discussion below.

The post Bryan Fischer on Being an Anti-gay Bigot: ‘I Was Born this Way’ – VIDEO appeared first on Towleroad.


Michael Fitzgerald

Bryan Fischer on Being an Anti-gay Bigot: ‘I Was Born this Way’ – VIDEO

Meet The First Openly Gay Baseball Player

Meet The First Openly Gay Baseball Player

Each week HuffPost Gay Voices and HuffPost Live takes a look back at some of the biggest queer news stories from the past week. Check back every Friday for your queer news round-up in this regular feature titled “QueerView.”

Introducing David Denson: The First Openly Gay Baseball Player
Pro baseball now has its first ever openly gay player.

The White House Hires Its First Transgender Staffer
On Tuesday, the White House’s first openly transgender woman of color started her first day on the job.

Violence Against Trans Women At An All Time High
Saturday will be the second anniversary of the death of Islan Nettles.

Looking For A Femme? There’s An App For That
Megan Evans and Whitney Bacon discuss their app, Find Femmes.

An Open Letter To My Future In-Laws Who Won’t Be At My Wedding
James Yeager discusses his blog post “An Open Letter To My Future Parents In-Law Who Won’t Attend Our Wedding.”

Our #UnicornOfTheWeek Is Rugby Player Keegan Hirst
Rugby player Keegan Hirst is our #UnicornOfTheWeek. Josh Zepps explains why.

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