Category Archives: NEWS

DVD: “Before You Know It,” “Folsom Forever,” “Boys In Brazil,” & More!

DVD: “Before You Know It,” “Folsom Forever,” “Boys In Brazil,” & More!

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To commemorate the pride weekend and Supreme Court marriage equality victory, we have an all-LGBT home entertainment line-up for this week including documentaries about aging and San Francisco’s Folsom Street, Brazilian gay boy comedies (Boys In Brazil, above), and a drama about a transgender parent and daughter.

Let’s dive in!

 

Before You Know It

($24.99 DVD; Passion River)

The lives of gay senior citizens are brought to light in director PJ Raval’s documentary with a focus on three subjects, ranging from a lively Texan to a Harlem activist. Incredible and enlightening stuff, especially given the way our community has evolved and, if we’re lucky, we’ll all get to that age.

 

Folsom Forever

($19.99 DVD; Breaking Glass Pictures)

San Francisco’s Folsom Street Fair is a decadent, fetish-y, legendary annual event that has spawned satellite versions/homages in other cities around the world. Kink Crusaders director Mike Skiff’s documentary probes (har-de-har) its story with loads of amazing footage and archival material.

 


52 Tuesdays

(VOD; Kino Lorber)

This naturalistic Aussie drama from director Sophie Hyde charts the profound changes in the lives and relationship of a mother — who begins to transition to male — and 16-year-old daughter over the course of a year. This was a Sundance and Berlin Film Festival selection.

 

Boys In Brazil

($24.99 DVD; TLA)

During Sao Paulo gay pride, a quartet of closeted gay men make a pact to come out by the following year’s event. No it ain’t gonna be an easy year, with conservative family members and employers to contend with, not to mention at least one uber-closeted lover, in this Brazilian dram-com.

 

ALSO OUT:

midnight_swim_xlgThe Midnight Swim (VOD)

 

Stung (VOD)

 

While We’re Young

 

Danny Collins

 

 

Lawrence Ferber

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Here’s What Freddie Mercury Thinks of Kanye West’s ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ Performance: VIDEO

Here’s What Freddie Mercury Thinks of Kanye West’s ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ Performance: VIDEO

Freddie Kanye

At this week’s Glastonbury Festival in the UK, Kanye West made the bold move of taking on one of Queen’s most challenging songs: “Bohemian Rhapsody”.

While many have seen (and judged) the performance, the internet now has the chance to see how Freddie Mercury judged the performance.

The post Here’s What Freddie Mercury Thinks of Kanye West’s ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ Performance: VIDEO appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Here’s What Freddie Mercury Thinks of Kanye West’s ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ Performance: VIDEO

PHOTOS: Fifteen Things We Love About NYC Pride 2015

PHOTOS: Fifteen Things We Love About NYC Pride 2015

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Morning showers couldn’t stop New Yorkers from reveling in this year’s NYC Pride March, PrideFest, and Dance on the Pier. The day kicked off with Grand Marshals Sir Derek Jacobi, Sir Ian McKellen, Kasha Jacqueline Nabagesera, and J. Christopher Neal. Other highlights included Ariana Grande’s performance and fireworks. However, it was the marchers and the throngs of humanity who stole the show, taking over streets, parks, and piers in perhaps the most joyous and exuberant pride New York City has ever seen thanks to our new freedom to marry.

Here are fifteen things we loved about this year’s NYC Pride…

1.) Grand Marshal Sir Ian McKellen playing his rainbow flag

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2.) Politicians showing their support

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3.) Ariana Grande rocking it out at the Dance on the Pier

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4.) Surprise appearances by Hedwig and the Angry Inch stars Darren Criss & Rebecca Naomi Jones

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5.) Edie Windsor breaking it down at the halfway point

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6.) The Prancing Elites riling up the crowd

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7.) This amazing little boy and his rainbow dress

Dancing Boy by Jeffrey James Keyes - 18.) Lady Liberty and our straight allies who came out to celebrate equality

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9.) Bianca Del Rio and Dina Delicious living it up at Pride Fest

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10.) Sir Derek Jacobi getting rowdy with Mayor Deblasio while attending his first pride event with his long-term partner

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11.) The Ladies from Orange Is the New Black making the girls go wild

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12.) Our impromptu photo shoot with Frankie Grande before he introduced his sisterFrankie Grande by Jeffrey James Keyes - 1

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13.) Paige Turner and Bob the Drag Queen as The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt & Titus AndromedonPaige Turner Bob the Drag Queen by JJ Keyes - 1

14.) Friends and lovers having fun and goofing off throughout the day

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15.) Adorable Men everywhere we looked
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All Photography by Jeffrey James Keyes. See his full GayCities NYC Pride Photo Gallery

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Immigration Officials May Begin Considering Gender Identity When Housing Transgender Detainees

Immigration Officials May Begin Considering Gender Identity When Housing Transgender Detainees
SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — Immigration authorities will consider housing transgender detainees based on the gender they identify with in the wake of criticism about detention conditions for the population, officials said on Monday.

Detention staff should consider transgender detainees’ preferences when making decisions about housing and clothing and what pronouns should be used, Immigration and Customs Enforcement said in new guidelines for the treatment of transgender detainees.

The agency will start tracking data for transgender detainees, train detention staff and draft individual detention plans for transgender detainees to deal with issues ranging from hormone therapy to safety, said Andrew Lorenzen-Strait, ICE’s deputy assistant director of custody programs.

“ICE will allow for the placement of a transgender woman consistent with their gender identity, meaning that a transgender woman could be with biological females,” said Lorenzen-Strait, who was also appointed as a national coordinator for issues related to gay, lesbian and transgender detainees.

The move did little to quell criticism from advocates who have urged the agency to release more transgender immigration detainees, citing their increased risk of sexual assault in detention. Last week, a heckler interrupted President Barack Obama’s remarks at a gay pride event in Washington to protest the detention and deportation of gay, lesbian and transgender immigrants.

“This is all interesting on paper, to say the least, but we need to see how this actually plays out,” said Raffi Freedman-Gurspan, a policy adviser for the National Center for Transgender Equality. “We don’t think these folks should be in detention centers, period.”

The guidance comes three years after the Department of Justice issued similar rules for transgender inmates. But even now many jails and prisons aren’t following the rules and continue to house transgender inmates based on their genitalia or place them in solitary confinement purportedly for their protection, said Carl Takei, a staff attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union’s National Prison Project.

“Most prisons and jails are still in the Dark Ages about these issues,” Takei said.

Getting the rules put into practice may be tough for immigration officials, who house most detainees at contract facilities, Takei said.

ICE currently has about 60 transgender detainees. About 25 are housed in a special unit in Santa Ana, California, for transgender women and gay men. The rest are housed in different facilities across the country, mostly with the general population and consistent with their biological sex, Lorenzen-Strait said.

The agency currently houses about 31,000 detainees a day, he said.

Under the latest guidance, the agency said officials should consider a host of factors before detaining an individual, including transgender identity.

Given the population’s small numbers and increased risk, transgender immigrants should be offered alternatives to detention, said Aaron Morris, legal director of Immigration Equality.

“When you’re thinking about who should absolutely be released, pregnant women, people with severe health problems, transgender individuals, there are certain populations that weigh so heavily in favor of release that it is dumbfounding the knee-jerk reaction is always to detain,” Morris said. “It’s not in anyone’s best interest.”

But immigration enforcement advocate Jessica Vaughan, who is director of policy studies at the Center for Immigration Studies, said she worries that gender identity could trump other factors, such as flight risk, when making decisions about detention.

“In practice, this could become a double standard for transgender individuals that seems unprecedented,” Vaughan wrote in an email.

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Jeremy Renner Doesn’t Care If You Think He’s Gay

Jeremy Renner Doesn’t Care If You Think He’s Gay

jeremy rennerBut as a general rule I don’t respond to questions about my personal life. I’m not going to try to prove what I am or am not. It’s silly, right? When you google yourself and the first thing that comes up is ‘Jeremy Renner gay,’ it’s like, ‘Oh, now you’ve arrived. You’re now a giant movie star.’ So I just had a big laugh about it. I don’t care, ultimately, if that’s what people want to think, read and care about. Fucking say whatever the hell you want about me. Look at where we’re at socially—leaps and bounds ahead of where we started. That’s an amazing thing. To suggest that it’s negative, that being gay is a terrible thing, a perversion or whatever—I just don’t get it. Don’t you wish we were in a world where we’re not shaming, judging and boxing people in?”

Jeremy Renner asked about the rumors about his sexual oritentation in a wide-ranging interview with Playboy‘s Stephen Rebello

Jeremy Kinser

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Gay Iconography: Five Favorite TV Same-Sex Weddings

Gay Iconography: Five Favorite TV Same-Sex Weddings

Mitchell-Cameron-Wedding-Modern-Family-Pictures

With the effects of Friday’s historic Supreme Court decision still reverberating throughout the world, everyone (including me) has got marriage on the brain. While there is still plenty of work to be done to ensure equality for the LGBTQ community, the momentous ruling is still an important milestone, fueled by decades of work from politicians, lawyers, activists and other members of the community.

Part of the accelerated momentum we’ve witnessed these last few years has also at least partially been the result of increased representation in the media. Even Vice President Joe Biden attributed shifting attitudes to a TV show.

In a 2012 interview, he said: “I take a look at when things really began to change, is when the social culture changes. I think Will and Grace probably did more to educate the American public than almost anything anybody’s ever done so far.”

Now that the Supreme Court has validated marriages throughout the country, let’s look back at just a few of our favorite same-sex TV weddings over the years.

roc

In 1991, the Fox dramedy Roc aired the first same-sex wedding on prime time TV. Centered on the family of a trash collector in Baltimore, the episode featured the titular Roc’s uncle coming out as a gay man and then announcing his engagement to a white man.

Although Roseanne featured several LGBTQ-focused storylines during its run, one memorable moment was in 1995 when Roseanne threw a wedding for her former boss Leon (Martin Mull).

Shonda Rhimes’ TV series have been at the forefront of increasing diversity on television, including plenty of LGBTQ stories. From Callie and Arizona’s wedding on Grey’s Anatomy to the complicated relationship between James (Dan Bucatinsky) and Cyrus (Jeff Perry) on Scandal to the steamy scenes on How To Get Away With Murder, equality is always the law of the land in Shondaland.

One of the most influential couples in recent TV history has been Mitch (Jesse Tyler Ferguson) and Cam (Eric Stonestreet) on the wildly successful prime time sitcom Modern Family. Their long-awaited nuptials took place over two episodes serving as the series’ fifth season finale. Nathan Lane received a Primetime Emmy nomination for his guest spot as their friend and wedding planner, Pepper.

For a show that’s highlighted so many LGBTQ stories, it wouldn’t have been enough for Glee to marry off just one of its same-sex couples. No, no. They went and married two! Brittany (Heather Morris) and Santana (Naya Rivera) were joined by Kurt (Chris Colfer) and Blaine (Darren Criss) in a double-rainbow of matrimony.

That’s only a few. There’s been more same-sex weddings on Brothers & Sisters, Six Feet Under, and lots more. What’s your favorite TV same-sex wedding?

The post Gay Iconography: Five Favorite TV Same-Sex Weddings appeared first on Towleroad.


Bobby Hankinson

Gay Iconography: Five Favorite TV Same-Sex Weddings