Category Archives: NEWS

Korea’s first gay married couple launches first challenge to marriage law

Korea’s first gay married couple launches first challenge to marriage law

Korea’s first gay married couple Monday (6 July) has filed a suit against the registry office that refused to register their union – the first legal challenge of its kind in the conservative country.

Film director Kim Jho Gwang-soo, 50, and producer Dave Kim, 31, wed in Seoul in September 2013 at at public ceremony attended by 2,000 people.

They tried to register their marriage at their local registry office in December that year but were told civil law did not recognize same-sex unions. They appealed in May 2014 but their application was rejected again.

Kim Jho is now taking their case to court, accusing the office of denying them their constitutional rights to equal treatment.

‘Today might be an important giant step for not just me and Kim but all LGBTs in the nation,’ he wrote on Facebook.

‘I hope the court proves today the first clause of Article 11 in the constitution – which states that all citizens are equal under the law – is effective and not limited to the constitutional meaning.’

An estimated 20,000 people marched in Seoul Pride last week, which was protested by hundreds of hate-filled Christians, some of whom tried to lie in the street to disrupt proceedings.

‘The US Supreme Court decision was the result of a battle that’s been going on since the 1960s,’ Kim Jho told the revelers.

‘I believe it will not take South Korea as long as the US to legalize same-sex marriage.’

The post Korea’s first gay married couple launches first challenge to marriage law appeared first on Gay Star News.

Darren Wee

www.gaystarnews.com/article/koreas-first-gay-married-couple-launches-first-challenge-to-marriage-law/

Five Reasons Marriage May Not Be Easy In Small-Town America Despite Your New Legal Equality

Five Reasons Marriage May Not Be Easy In Small-Town America Despite Your New Legal Equality

Small TownThe Supreme Court ruling on marriage equality remains cause for celebration, but as the resistance that quickly sprung up shows, not everyplace is going to embrace it. That’s likely to be a particular problem in small town America.

Even in the deep south, major cities have large LGBT communities, with all the political connections that implies. Small town America is another question altogether, despite the stereotype that small-town America values–mom, pop, and a couple of kids–would seem to lend itself to marriage. In fact, it will be much easier in the fast-lane urban environments where family values are a bit more complicated.

While marriage is legal there, here are five reasons why it may not necessarily be easy.

1. You could get fired. This is the most real threat that couples could face. In the majority of states, you have no legal protection in the workplace. If you’re boss finds out you are gay because you got married, you could be fired faster than it takes to say “I do.” (You just know that Catholic dioceses across the nation have ordered someone to scan wedding announcements so that they can identify the next teacher to dismiss.) States that don’t have protections won’t be adding them, as opponents of marriage equality will make a point of stopping anything remotely pro-gay in its tracks. And forget about federal protections. The Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) is going nowhere as long as conservative Republicans control the House.

2. You could lose your home. This is a corollary of getting fired. In many communities you don’t have housing protection either. If you’re landlord wants to throw you out because he can’t stand the idea of your being married, he can do so. You might have a case that you were discriminated against on the basis of marital status. But you’ll still have to find a new home in the meantime.

3. You’re on the front line of the religious liberty war. Every holier-than-thou county clerk, baker and wedding photographer is aching to make a statement about their personal beliefs. They won’t be making those statements in Chelsea or West Hollywood, because they are much more likely to be living in small towns, especially in the South. Moreover, it won’t just be wedding vendors. For example, accountants may not want to prepare your joint tax return. (Thank God for Turbo Tax.) Religious liberty is the next big fight, and there is an army of pro bono lawyers ready to defend the right of wingnuts everywhere to discriminate against you.

4. Marriage is much more public than you imagine. Thought that you’d just have a quiet little ceremony? Your marriage certificate is a matter of public record. Small town papers still often publish the names of everyone who has taken out a marriage license. It takes some looking to find the information, but it’s out there. And at least in the early days, you can count on some self-appointed defenders of the faith to be looking really hard for the first signs that their community is going to hell in a pink handbasket.

5. Harsh words lead to harsh deeds. This is potentially the most troubling consequence of the marriage ruling. It’s easy to laugh off the bloviating of Bobby Jindal and Mike Huckabee, to say nothing of the apocalyptic rantings of religious right leaders. But look at how high they have raised the stakes with their rhetoric by describing the Supreme Court decision as illegal, a threat to Christians and destructive to democracy. Those are dangerous arguments to throw around because they can take root in unstable personalities. While antigay attacks can happen even in the most accepting cities, the attitudes in small towns may make them more fertile ground.

It’s a testament to the bravery and resilience of the LGBT community in small-town America that it has been front and center in celebrating the Supreme Court ruling. Ultimately, nothing will stop couples from expressing their love for one another. But as we move ahead in the coming weeks and months, let’s not forget that for some of us, that expression is going to carry more risk than it will in big cities.

But every risk has a reward. By showing their communities what love can look like, small-town couples will change attitudes that must be changed. It’s all about coming out.

And for many of us the biggest coming out of all may be getting married.

Photo credit: faungg’s photos

JohnGallagher

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Revealed: White House hosted secret gay wedding without Obama knowing

Revealed: White House hosted secret gay wedding without Obama knowing

Former presidential speech writer Jon Lovett reveals he used his White House access to sneak two gay friends into the Rose Garden where they were married in a secret ceremony

Former speech writer for President Barack Obama turned Hollywood screenwriter Jon Lovett has revealed that he helped two gay friends get married on the grounds of the White Hose without the president’s knowledge.

Lovett made the claim at the Aspen Ideas festival in an interview with The Moth Radio Hour podcast which is yet to be released online.

In the podcast Lovett recounts sneaking friends ‘Justin’ and ‘Steve’ into the White House under the guise of giving them a tour of the building.

But when they got to the Rose Garden he performed their wedding, filing their paperwork with the address 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue – the famous street address of the President of the United States’ official residence.

‘We were very nervous,’ Lovett reportedly told the Moth Radio Hour.

‘They were nervous because they were getting married. I was nervous because I snuck into my boss’ house to perform a wedding against his wishes in his backyard.’

‘You can say what you will about the first same-sex marriage at the White House, at the very least, it was quite rude.’

Lovett said that Justin and Steve ‘kissed modestly’ after the ceremony.

Lovett left the Obama Administration towards the end of 2011 – before Barack Obama publicly ‘evolved’ his view on same-sex marriage so it is likely that the wedding took place while the president was still publicly opposed to gay marriage.

Lovett was a writer and producer on the television shows The Newsroom and 1600 Penn and wrote many of the jokes in President Obama’s White House Correspondents’ Dinner addresses during his time working for the administration.

The post Revealed: White House hosted secret gay wedding without Obama knowing appeared first on Gay Star News.

Andrew Potts

www.gaystarnews.com/article/revealed-white-house-hosted-secret-gay-wedding-without-obama-knowing/

Malaysia has ‘no need’ for gay parade, says PM

Malaysia has ‘no need’ for gay parade, says PM

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak has said the Southeast Asian country has ‘no need’ for a gay Pride parade.

Razak said Malaysia’s ‘moderate’ form of Islam was incompatible with extremes, be they conservative or liberal, during a breaking-of-the-fast event in Kuala Lumpur last week.

‘Islam is a religion that promotes peace. Islam does not promote violence and teaches us moderation. It is not extreme nor it is too open,’ he said.

‘There is no need for events like a gay parade because it is too open.’

Najib added that deviant cultures were slowly ‘creeping into’ Malaysian society, but did not elaborate on what these were.

Gay sex is illegal in the country and punishable by fines, whippings or up to 20 years imprisonment.

Last month, A Sharia court in the northeastern state of Kelantan sentenced nine transgender women to fines, and two to one-month jail terms, under an anti-crossdressing law.

The post Malaysia has ‘no need’ for gay parade, says PM appeared first on Gay Star News.

Darren Wee

www.gaystarnews.com/article/malaysia-has-no-need-for-gay-parade-says-pm/

First Came Love, Then — With the Law on Our Side — Came Marriage

First Came Love, Then — With the Law on Our Side — Came Marriage
Reposted from Cognoscenti.

When my partner, Mal, and I moved in together, my grandmother knit us an afghan. No doubt she’d worked on it for months — the perfect square stitches and intricate floral pattern were the work of an artisan, not a crafty grandma. But the gift itself felt like an afterthought. I was standing in the hallway at my cousin’s house after a family dinner, when my mom handed me the afghan in a plain cardboard box.

My sister got her afghan at her bridal shower. Friends put down their cake plates to run their hands across the perfect stitches. My grandmother blushed a little at the compliments.

It was 2001 when I got my afghan. I imagine my grandmother assumed there would be no further milestones. I would never marry a man or be the guest of honor at a bridal shower. But my same-sex partner was big-hearted and funny and appeared not to be going anywhere. That tough, resilient purple blanket was a gesture of acceptance. But without the structure and ceremony of a wedding, that gesture became an afterthought, lost in the chaos of clearing the table and loading the dishwasher.

When Mal and I started dating, my mom and grandmother could barely look at her. They would come to Boston to visit my sisters in college, and Mal and I would push through our dread to meet them for dinner.

“You grew up in Boston,” my mom once said to Mal. “So you must be a bad driver.”

But Mal learned my grandmother’s cookie recipes and helped her grate potatoes at Thanksgiving. She fed me ice cream when I had my wisdom teeth pulled and did my laundry six months later when I had mono. She joined our raucous holiday celebrations and added her voice to our off-key show tune sing-alongs. Mal would never be a son-in-law, but she was something. 

Then, in 2003, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled that same-sex couples couldn’t be denied the right to marry. The first call I got the morning of the court decision was from my mother. Mal and I had just told our families we planned to have a commitment ceremony, and my mom was overjoyed that our wedding would be, in her words, real.

It didn’t matter that the months leading up to our wedding were spent rallying at the State House instead of choosing cake toppers. I was a woman getting married. For the first time in my adult life, I was doing something my family understood.

May 17, 2004, was the first day cities and towns could accept marriage license applications from same-sex couples. While most municipalities waited until the morning, Cambridge began right at midnight. City Hall opened the night of May 16, and the lawn outside was as packed as Times Square on New Year’s Eve.

My mom and grandmother were with us as we walked past the cheering crowds and into City Hall. We kept noticing that people were cheering louder for us than the couples around us. I couldn’t understand why, until someone leaned over and congratulated my mom and grandmother on their marriage.

We gathered in the City Council chamber with couples in tuxes, couples in matching sweatshirts, two men wearing angel wings. The city clerk and a dozen municipal employees worked through the night to process our applications. At 3:15 that morning, Mal and I became the 147th same-sex couple to apply for a marriage license in Massachusetts.

Mal and I got married that October in an outdoor ceremony at an Audubon Society nature preserve. In her wedding toast, my grandmother told the story of being mistaken for a couple at City Hall. When our guests’ laughter died down, she raised her glass and gave us her blessing: “May you be together,” she said, “as long as me and your mother.”

My grandmother went into hospice the day the Supreme Court heard arguments in Obergefell v. Hodges. She died the next day, surrounded by people she loved, wrapped in an afghan she’d made for herself. I don’t know if last week’s Supreme Court ruling legalizing same-sex marriage would have mattered to her. In her mind, we were married in 2004, and all the civil rights victories that followed didn’t seem to phase her.

But I can’t help thinking about the grandmothers in Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee. I wonder if the right to marry will make their grandchildren’s loved ones easier to embrace. I wonder what it means that recognition from my state’s government made Mal’s and my relationship more “real” in the eyes of my family.

The last time I saw my grandmother, she was sitting in a wheelchair, looking out the window to the courtyard of her nursing home. Mal and I tried to coax her into conversation, but the effort of discussing the flowers in the garden outside seemed like too much. Her eyes were glassy. She was barely holding up her head.

I asked if she wanted to listen to music.

“Frank Sinatra,” she said.

I found an old recording of “Luck Be A Lady” on YouTube. Mal and I took her hands and danced around her wheelchair. She smiled and swayed a little. At the end of the song she asked for help getting back into bed. As we said goodbye, I couldn’t imagine Mal not being with me. The time when my family treated her with anything less then un-ambivalent acceptance feels as remote as the Ice Age.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

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‘An Open Secret’ Documents Rampant Sexual Abuse of Child Actors in Hollywood: VIDEO

‘An Open Secret’ Documents Rampant Sexual Abuse of Child Actors in Hollywood: VIDEO

An Open Secret

That shady and skeezy happenings exist in Hollywood should come as a surprise to approximately no one, and that some of those happenings victimize child actors is (sadly) almost as unsurprising. Rather than leave such things to unsubstantiated rumor and suspicion, Oscar-nominated filmmaker Amy Berg has chosen to create a documentary, titled An Open Secret, that exposes the reprehensible trend of abusing child actors, such as the activities of convicted pedophile Marc Collins-Rector.

You’ll need to keep a close eye on the release schedule of the film as it’s following the unusual plan of traveling a 20-city circuit for as long as there’s a demand, with an unspecified timeframe for a digital release sometime later this year. The film has already shown in Denver and New York, but the biggest splash is expected when the film shows in Los Angeles on July 17 at the Laemmle Music Hall in Beverly Hills.

This will no doubt be a gut-wrenching film to watch, particularly given how recent some of the footage is – one clip is of a young Ben Savage, now 34, star of the 90s family sitcom Boy Meets World – but anything that gives the victims a voice and a chance to speak out about their abuse will be something to help stop it from happening in the future. You can watch the trailer for the film below:

The post ‘An Open Secret’ Documents Rampant Sexual Abuse of Child Actors in Hollywood: VIDEO appeared first on Towleroad.


Christian Walters

‘An Open Secret’ Documents Rampant Sexual Abuse of Child Actors in Hollywood: VIDEO

Caitlyn Jenner Shares Inspirational 4th Of July Message On Instagram

Caitlyn Jenner Shares Inspirational 4th Of July Message On Instagram
Caitlyn Jenner not only celebrated her country’s freedom on the Fourth of July, but also reflected on her own.

The former Olympian took to Instagram on America’s birthday to wish her followers a happy holiday and share a powerful message. Jenner posted a photo of a framed American flag and wrote in the caption, “Happy 4th of July! Proud to be an American … where at least I am free to be me.”

Happy 4th of July! Proud to be an American … where at least I am free to be me.

A photo posted by Caitlyn Jenner (@caitlynjenner) on Jul 4, 2015 at 11:30am PDT

In case you weren’t keeping up with the other Jenner and Kardashian news, Kim Kardashian also got very patriotic over the holiday. The reality star shared a photo decked out in all red, white and blue sparkly gear. Her sister Kourtney Kardashian also shared some patriotic photos of herself with daughter Penelope over the holiday.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/07/05/caitlyn-jenner-4th-july_n_7731698.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices