Category Archives: NEWS

Both Sides Claim Victory In Trial Over Houston LGBT Protections: VIDEO

Both Sides Claim Victory In Trial Over Houston LGBT Protections: VIDEO

HERO

Both sides are claiming victory after the jury reached a mixed verdict Friday in the trial over a petition to repeal Houston’s Equal Rights Ordinance. 

But we won’t know which side is right until the judge issues a final ruling about how many valid signatures are on the petition. And even then, the decision is likely to be appealed. 

The Houston Chronicle reports: 

The ruling is not final, and a judge will now consider the jury’s findings about the work of more than 100 circulators of the petition that the city rejected last summer, citing overwhelming notary and signature-gatherer errors.

District Judge Robert Schaffer was not present for Friday’s ruling after nearly six days of jury deliberation. Attorneys on both sides said he will now begin counting which signatures are valid to see if opponents have reached the needed 17,269-signature threshold. Schaffer retains wide legal discretion in what he deems valid.

The jury’s ruling Friday will trigger a series of legal dominoes that, eventually, will yield a definitive answer: The judge will count the signatures, issue a decision on whether the petition is valid and then the case will almost certainly go to the appellate courts

Jurors determined there was widespread forgery on petition pages they reviewed, but no fraud. They also found that in many cases circulators failed to properly sign and subscribe petition pages.  

Geoffrey Harrison, the lead attorney for the city, told the Chronicle that supporters of the Equal Rights Ordinance should “be thrilled and dancing in their kitchen” about the verdict. Mayor Annise Parker, who authored the ordinance, issued this statement:  

Parker“I am very pleased with the jury’s verdict, and I expect the court will apply the law to the verdict and issue a final judgment confirming that the petition failed.  The City of Houston has had in place for over 100 years the same rules and legal requirements governing the referendum process to ensure fairness and avoid fraud, and the jury’s verdict confirms that the petitions did not meet the legal requirements. The plaintiffs are expected to appeal any outcome that is not in their favor.  That would be unfortunate for the City.  I believe that the majority of Houston wants this divisive fight to be over so that we are able to provide equal rights protections for all of our residents. The City is confident it will prevail.”

But opponents of the ordinance were also claiming victory. Plaintiff Jared Woodfill, the former chair of the local GOP, sent out a press release under the headline, “Favorable Jury Verdict Should Result in Victory for Voters and Religious Liberty!”

Woodfill“Great news…the jury returned a verdict that should allow the people to vote on Mayor Parker’s Unequal Rights Ordinance,” Woodfill wrote. “Judge Robert Schaffer will now apply the ruling to the almost 55,000 individuals who signed the petition. I am confident he will conclude we had the requisite 17,269 signatures necessary for the people to vote on this issue.”

The Texas Pastor Council, the anti-LGBT group that led the petition drive, also said it’s confident the judge will determine there are enough valid signatures: 

The coalition of pastors and community leaders behind the historic referendum effort to repeal Mayor Annise Parker’s pro-LGBT so-called “Equal Rights Ordinance” and the corresponding lawsuit after Parker and her legal team invalidated the petitions, responded with faith, confidence and optimism to today’s jury verdict that was nearly a fifty/fifty split on questions they considered.

“The Mayor’s lawyers went to extraordinary lengths to discredit, demean, denigrate and disqualify as many petitions and signatures as possible. Thankfully, in spite of an incredible amount of detail presented and even oft repeated by the city’s attack team, our God has again raised His standard of justice,” stated Dr. F.N. Williams, lead plaintiff for the pastors of the No UNequal Rights Coalition and Senior Pastor of Antioch Missionary Baptist Church as well as President of Houston Ministers Against Crime. …

“We are thankful that the God of justice stood with this David again against the Goliath of the machinery of city government in the hands of those like Annise Parker intent on serving her personal agenda even at the cost of voting rights of the people,” added Pastor Hernan Castano, an influential Hispanic pastor and network leader as well as one of the “Houston Five” subpoenaed by the Mayor.

Watch a report from KTRK-TV, AFTER THE JUMP … 


John Wright

www.towleroad.com/2015/02/both-sides-claim-victory-in-trial-over-houston-equal-rights-ordinance.html

So That Happened: Obama Asks Congress If It's Okay That He Started Fighting ISIS

So That Happened: Obama Asks Congress If It's Okay That He Started Fighting ISIS
So, that happened: This week, America’s ongoing battle with the Islamic State reached a new stage, specifically that stage where the president finally gets around to asking Congress if it’s okay with them that he started a war six months ago. HuffPost’s Jen Bendery joins us to give us the skinny on the latest edition of warmaking as a legislative farce.

Listen to this week’s “So, That Happened” below:

Are you a regular “So, That Happened” listener? Let us know! Tell us what you think of the show, what we’re messing up and who we need to hear more from. Send us an electronic communication at [email protected].

* * *

Some highlights from this week:

“Congress is in this place where, as one senator told me this week, they like to beat their chests and say ‘We’re the ones who control war authorization. It’s the constitutional right of Congress to do this. We’re the ones. We have the power. But … we don’t really want to do it. So, Obama did this. This is Obama’s war.'” — Jen Bendery

Meanwhile, closer to home, we have governors behaving badly: Sam Brownback of Kansas wants gays to experience workplace discrimination. Wisconsin’s Scott Walker isn’t sure he has the guts to talk about middle school science. And have you heard about all the nonsense that just brought about the resignation of Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber? We run down the nonsense.

“It’s been a weird uptick this week in governors kind of cold f*cking up left and right. Right?” — Jason Linkins

Finally, famous media people are leaving their famous media jobs. But did they jump, or were they pushed?

“Brian Williams — and this is true for most news celebrities — he’s only kind of famous. The only people who know who he is are old. He is on the “Nightly News.” Nobody watches that except for people over 65, so he’s not even a real celebrity.” — Zach Carter

* * *

We’re very happy to let you know that “So, That Happened” is available on iTunes. We’ve been working to create an eclectic and informative panel show that’s constantly evolving, a show that’s as in touch with the top stories of the week as it is with important stories that go underreported. We’ll be here on a weekly basis, bringing you the goods.

Never miss an episode: Subscribe to “So, That Happened” on iTunes, and if you like what you hear, please leave a review. We also encourage you to check out other HuffPost podcasts: HuffPost Comedy’s “Too Long; Didn’t Listen,” HuffPost Politics’ “Drinking & Talking,” HuffPost Live’s “Fine Print,” the HuffPost Weird News podcast and the HuffPost Entertainment podcast.

This podcast was edited by Ibrahim Balkhy and engineered by Brad Shannon, with assistance from Christine Conetta, Chris Gentilviso and Adriana Usero.

Have a story you’d like to hear discussed on “So, That Happened”? Email us at your convenience!

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/13/so-that-happened-obama-isis_n_6670820.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Model Boyfriends Strip Down For Adorable Gay Valentine’s Photo Shoot

Model Boyfriends Strip Down For Adorable Gay Valentine’s Photo Shoot

IMG_9675-(1)For those of you not in-the-know, Nelson Marin and Marvin Garcia are both models for underwear brand Baskit and boyfriends in real life. They share more than the frame in this Valentine’s Day photo shoot by Rich Mackey Photography. As you’d expect, the couple gets cutesy sharing kisses and butt grabs. They can’t keep their hands off each other, and or their pairs of Baskit underwear.

Marvin is wearing a pair of Just /b/ Briefs, currently 50 percent off at $11. The bubblegum/grey contrast of the underwear looks great under the maroon pants he wears, and even better out of them. The cut forms to Marvin’s legs and backside nice and snug for a casually sporty pair of underwear. Nelson is wearing a red pair of Light Briefs, currently 40 percent off at $13. These briefs have a more masculine appearance. Their body is red, contrasted by a white waistband with the brand name repeating around the elastic in navy lettering.

You can see more of this photo shoot on The Underwear Expert.

IMG_9675-(1)IMG_9700IMG_9663IMG_9580-(1)IMG_9627

Photo Credit: Rich Mackey Photography

Underwear Expert

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/4q1fu_NsZps/model-boyfriends-strip-down-for-adorable-gay-valentines-photo-shoot-20150214

Here Are The 10 Best Gay-Themed Video Games

Here Are The 10 Best Gay-Themed Video Games

hurt me plenty videogame buttLooking for a fun time? We’ve gathered some of our favorite video games with queer content here for you to browse.

Now before you get all bent out of shape: yes, we know there are far more than 10 great gay video games out there.

Which ones did we miss? Tell us your favorites in the comments and we’ll reconsider our ranking if a consensus emerges.
the last of us

1. The Last of Us

It’s been said that zombie stories are allegories for American racial anxieties, but it would be interesting to examine zombie games and movies for subtext about sexual orientation. There’s no need for subtext with The Last of Us and Left Behind, which have explicitly queer characters, frankly depicted and without leaning on stereotypes.

mass-effect-crop

2. Mass Effect and Dragon Age

It’s hard to think of two game franchises that did a better job of handling LGBT love stories. Bioware developed both, and did a magnificent job of giving players options to fall in love with characters of the same gender. As an added bonus, Dragon Age features a great trans character, and also lets you create your own characters with a wide range of gender expressions. Bioware also produced a KOTOR game with a lesbian character named Juhani.

final_fantasy_xiv

3. Final Fantasy XIV

The latest installment of FF finally lets you craft same-sex relationships. About time, considering just how campy and gay some of those bosses are. This is a far cry from Final Fantasy VII, which featured what might be a pretty problematic depiction of gays in a hot tub.

“Why should there be restrictions on who pledges their love or friendship to each other?” said producer Naoki Yoshida.

succulent

4. Succulent

Suck a popsicle. That’s it. That’s all you do in this game. And yet it’s still oddly mesmerizing, with a hunky man in his underwear drawing you closer and closer as his frozen treat melts. Meanwhile, the sexy fellows behind him gyrate and rub themselves, until it’s too late to pull back and you discover that these homogenous gay body types are really a curse.
hurt me plenty videogame butt

5. Hurt me Plenty

Created by Robert Yang, who also made Succulent, this game lets you simulate a consensual BDSM experience. You meet a sex partner, negotiate your terms, slap his ass around until it’s jiggly and red, and then engage in after-care. As an added bonus, if you have the right hardware, you can control the game with gestures, actually swatting your hand back and forth as though there’s a butt hovering right there in front of you.

mount your friends

6. Mount Your Friends

In this game, a bunch of floppy marionette-like figures wiggle around and try to climb on top of each other to make a pyramid.

Of course, they’re wearing just speedos, and their genitals are plainly obvious, swinging back and forth. Hot.

GayTony-Artwork

7. Grand Theft Auto: The Ballad of Gay Tony

Well, duh. Gay is right in the title. This is an add-on to GTA IV, and it’s a chance to play in a slightly more rainbow-filled world of bad-behavior.

Tony is the naughty gay nightclub-owning member of the crime family we all know and love from GTA IV, and so the plot dovetails nicely with the main game.

You play as Gay Tony’s bodyguard, driving around and shooting people and blowing stuff up in pursuit of a cache of diamonds.

500px-Poison_(Final_Fight)

8. Final Fight

A vintage fighting game from Capcom features a lady named Poison in a sexy slinky outfit. For a long time, producers said that it didn’t matter whether the character of Poison was male or female, but she’s popped up in more games since then, and they’ve had to figure out a more specific backstory for her.

Now producer Yoshinori Ono has confirmed that Poison has transitioned from male to female. Her latest appearance is in Ultra Street Fighter IV.

my ex boyfriend space tyrant

9. My Ex-Boyfriend the Space Tyrant

A cute point and click adventure game, this game features lots of chiseled torsos and massages. You get to click around a futuristic spacey world and gaze lovingly on men’s nearly-naked bodies. You can even unlock a special mode in which all of the characters are in their underwear. It looks like Space Ace with all the rippling muscles, but plays like a Sierra game — perfect!

 

dragopolis

10. RuPaul‘s Drag Race: Dragopolis

The superstar queens from the TV show appear in this strangely captivating little iPhone game that’s actually a bunch of drag-themed mini games. You bounce balls around a grid, collect power-ups (wigs, beads, outfits, etc) and read the villainous Apocalypstik (played by Mimi Imfurst) to filth.

 

matt baume

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A Gay Dad's Open Letter to the School Censoring a Mural of a Kiss

A Gay Dad's Open Letter to the School Censoring a Mural of a Kiss
2015-02-09-Kiss.jpg

The kiss. For some reason it, and the experience of giving and getting one, is a completely integrated aspect of the high school experience. While puckers may have been planted in earlier years, it is the high school ones that create the milestones to adulthood, the firsts we will remember our entire lives and, in truth, the magic of our adolescence.

One depiction of such a kiss is not folding harmoniously into the tapestry of its school’s life, however. Last week it caused controversy. Kaela Wilton is a 16-year-old student at Onoway Jr./Sr. High School in Alberta, Canada. For an art project, approved by her art teacher and the school principal, she depicted two young men in an affectionate kiss. After its unveiling and subsequent complaints, the school covered the mural and would not allow it to be seen.

They are now deliberating on what to do.

I know what to do: I am writing them a letter.

Dear Onoway Jr./Sr. High School officials,

I am a gay dad, the father of two 12-year-old boys. Next year they will be in a school such as yours. I dearly hope that in that school there is a mural on the wall exactly like the one that Kaela Wilton has created for you.

I write that not as one who is wildly enthusiastic for public displays of affection, nor as one who is anxious to encourage potentially sexually inappropriate behavior amongst teens. I have set standards for my sons in both of those areas, and my expectation is that they will adhere to them.

Kaela’s mural is a gentle image of young affection and blossoming adulthood. While its depiction might make some feel that it makes such gestures too visible, I would remind them that the audience observing it is participating in school dances, first dates, landmark crushes and unforgettable romantic moments on its own. The image, in terms of sexual content, stays appropriately underneath a PG-13 level.

The value of the image far outweighs any offense to even the most overreacting sensibilities.

When I was 17 I buried my instinctual longing for same-sex affection deep inside myself. It was taboo to be gay, and even though my feelings told me that that was exactly what I was, I consciously suppressed it. I suppressed it to the point that I reached a suicidal crisis point.

I will never forget first witnessing a same-sex kiss. I was on a trip into Los Angeles to look at prospective colleges for the future and was parking on the streets of Hollywood. A man was saying goodbye to his partner and, without giving it a second thought, gave him a quick, affectionate kiss on the mouth.

My reaction? The reaction from a young, closeted gay man? I laughed out loud.

It was not a laugh out of derision or condemnation. It was not a laugh because the kiss was funny. It was a laugh because it took me completely off guard, and even though my psyche was bombarded with same-sex attractions, seeing it displayed was completely foreign, and I laughed in the shock of it.

The man shot me a look of disgust, communicating a sense of violation. He was right.

Years later, and on many streets, during different relationships with men I wanted to kiss, I experienced karmic retribution for that laugh. As I wished to innocently reach out and kiss the person I was with, the homophobic world around me rose up and invaded my psyche. I could not give my innocent kiss, because some would react badly around us, and many would react as I did, with laughter, having never seen such a gesture before. Or I could kiss my man anyway and make a statement, a bold move in the face of a disapproving public. As Panti Bliss pointed out in a recent TEDtalk, that option is fine for activism, but my desire to kiss was not to make a political statement but to be romantic, so to make a bold move would ruin my intention. The romance would be gone.

The first kiss I shared with a man was not until I was 21. It was in a disco hidden down a secret alley and populated with only gay men. He was a lovely, young, British man with a perfect smile and a dancing glint in his eye. He put his arms around me and gently kissed my lips, and no one around us made us feel ashamed. It was a beautiful experience that I deserved. It is an experience that your gay students deserve, and they should not have to retreat to a secret and hidden enclave in which to experience it.

Whether they are LGBT or not, your students have been inundated with opposite-sex kisses their entire lives. If not played out in front of them in person, such events are commonplace in all available media, even in commercials, including during children’s programming. They have likely not seen even a single display of same-sex romantic expression.

This mural can change that. For your students who have same-sex attractions boiling up within them, such an affirmation can be lifesaving. It gives them and others the opportunity to witness something warm yet rare as normal and accepted. It allows them to embrace the parts of themselves that they have kept secret and removes a dark excuse for self-harm.

Those who are shocked at the display can react to the unfeeling stone wall so that in the future, when they are in front of real, honest-to-goodness humans, they can react with appropriate support, or at least rehearse how to keep their disdain to themselves.

Ms. Wilton has created something of value, in both its intention and its execution. It should not be kept hidden but unleashed to inspire hearts, love and acceptance. What could be more important than that?

My sons are on the brink of discovering who they are and what deep instincts drive them. If they were going to your school and they were finding that their instincts were heterosexual, I am sure they could look around and see plenty of public displays of affection between other guys and their girlfriends and feel, “Oh, yeah, that is me and what I want.” If it turns out that one of them is actually gay and he looks around and sees no one like him, I would hope that he could gaze upon a mural in one of your hallways and think, “OK, there I am,” and walk on to class with hope in his heart and a dream that a painting on the wall promised him was his to fulfill.

Please like the evoL= Facebook page here.

Follow us on Twitter @ JandJDad.

www.huffingtonpost.com/rob-watson/a-gay-dads-open-letter-to_4_b_6647686.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Beautiful New Video Celebrates First Day of Marriage Equality in Alabama: WATCH

Beautiful New Video Celebrates First Day of Marriage Equality in Alabama: WATCH

Freedom to Marry Alabama

Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore is doing his damnedest to try and stem the tide of change and keep inequality alive and well in his state…but he’s failing. Freedom to Marry has collected videos of happily – and lawfully – wedded gay and lesbian couples in Alabama, reminding us that there is light at the end of this tunnel, and with 47 counties and counting issuing marriage licenses, that hateful oppression that Moore and his ilk would impose upon his LGBT citizens is withering away more each day.

Evan Wolfson, founder and president of Freedom to Marry, wrote a piece at The Advocate that warns against resting on laurels, reminding us that “winning” is not the same as “won”, and that there is still work to do.

For now, though, treat yourself to three minutes of joy with Freedom to Marry’s montage AFTER THE JUMP…


Christian Walters

www.towleroad.com/2015/02/alabama-marriage-montage-courtesy-of-freedom-to-marry-video.html