Category Archives: NEWS

Jake Gyllenhaal Gets Pumped, Michael Hoffman Works Out Nude

Jake Gyllenhaal Gets Pumped, Michael Hoffman Works Out Nude

pipjxf5abpzowjyrssfo

Jake Gyllenhaal gets his DeNiro on. After losing weight and gaining wide-spread acclaim for his turn in the current thriller Nightcrawler, the beloved actor has bulked up to play a prize-fighting champ in the upcoming Southpaw.

_79379168_024886477-2

And, um, Mickey Rourke has returned to the boxing ring in real life and defeated a fighter half his age.

We love Neil Patrick Harris as much as the next gay, but can Tina Fey and Amy Poehler just host every awards show?

alan_turing_portrait

War hero and computer pioneer Alan Turing, whose eventful, but tragic life is the subject of The Imitation Game starring Benedict Cumberbatch, feared his sexual orientation would be used to discredit his groundbreaking work.

Once again, Liza Minnelli proves it’s not over “Until the End.”

Hey millennials, Coco Peru has all the answers.

Screen Shot 2014-11-29 at 5.43.57 PM

Internet personality (we use that term very loosely) Michael Hoffman made a stink about being humiliated when the j.o. video was, ahem, leaked, but he apparently has no qualms about filming a completely nude workout video (NSFW link).

 

If acting, talking shit about gay people and selling Chick-fil-A sandwiches doesn’t work out for Kirk Cameron, he might make it as a professional dancer. Or maybe not if his attempt at the moonwalk is any indication.

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/IBOyf3TgRjA/jake-gyllenhaal-gets-pumped-michael-hoffman-works-out-nude-20141130

'Shake it Off' Lip Sync Battle: D.C. Gay Flag Football League Vs. Adorable Son and Dad: VIDEO

'Shake it Off' Lip Sync Battle: D.C. Gay Flag Football League Vs. Adorable Son and Dad: VIDEO

Shakeitoff

One oh-so-catchy song. Two incredible covers.

Decide which one reigns supreme AFTER THE JUMP

DC Gay Flag Football does “Shake It Off” from dc gay flag football on Vimeo.

 

 

Who Shook It Off Better?
D.C. Gay Flag Football League no question
The fabulous father and son duo
They were both fantastic

Poll Maker


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2014/11/shake-it-off-lip-sync-battle-dc-gay-flag-football-league-vs-adorable-son-and-dad-videos.html

Some Of Hollywood’s Most Notorious Gay Murders Remain Unsolved / Queerty

Some Of Hollywood’s Most Notorious Gay Murders Remain Unsolved / Queerty
Homicides in Tinseltown are nothing new. With an estimated annual average of 300-400 killings per year in the city of Los Angeles, we hear about a new murder occurring there practically every day. But yet there are those cases that stand out and, for whatever reason, seem to stick with us. Whether it’s because the details are particularly gruesome or the perpetrator was never caught — perhaps the victim is our favorite movie (or porn movie) star — something about these particular tragedies strikes a chord.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/11/30/hollywood-gay-murders_n_6236836.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson Resigns: VIDEO

Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson Resigns: VIDEO

Wilson

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch is reporting Darren Wilson, the Ferguson police officer who fatally shot Michael Brown August 9, has resigned from the Ferguson Police Department.

In a telephone interview Saturday evening, Wilson said he resigned after the police department told him it had received threats that violence would ensue if he remained an employee.

“I’m resigning of my own free will,” he said. “I’m not willing to let someone else get hurt because of me.”

He said resigning was “the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do.”

On Monday, a grand jury decided not to indict Wilson in Brown’s death.

Read Wilson’s resignation letter:

I, Darren Wilson, hereby resign my commission as a police officer with the City of Ferguson effective immediately. I have been told that my continues employment may put the residents and police officers of the City of Ferguson at risk, which is a circumstance that I cannot allow. For obvious reasons, I wanted to wait until the grand jury made their decision before I officially made my decision to resign. It was my hope to continue in police work, but the safety of other police officers and the community are of the paramount importance to me. It is my hope that my resignation will allow the community to heal. I would like to thank all of my supporters and fellow officers throughout this process.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch adds:

Anthony Gray, an attorney representing the Brown family, said he believes Wilson was acting merely for his own benefit.

“It’s probably in his best interest to sever his ties with the Ferguson community, as well as the Ferguson police department,” Gray said. “I think this incident has severely compromised his ability to police in the way he was paid to do by the city.”

Watch a news report on Wilson’s resignation AFTER THE JUMP…(autoplay)

And if you missed our coverage of LGBT organizations reacting to the grand jury decision, click here

 


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2014/11/ferguson-police-officer-darren-wilson-resigns-video.html

Indian Police Detain 167 Transgender Women After Bangalore Pride Protest: VIDEO

Indian Police Detain 167 Transgender Women After Bangalore Pride Protest: VIDEO

Picture 2

Indian police initiated a “crackdown” on public begging that resulted in the jailing of 167 hijras, which are transgender Indian women and also third gender identifiers, in a Hoysalas beggars colony located on the outskirts of Bangalore reports The Advocate and LGBT Indian news source Orinam. The crackdown began a day after Bangalore’s Pride parade concluded. An anti-begging law enacted in 1975 under the Karnataka Prohibition of Beggary Act declares that detained beggars must go to a “relief center” for “rehabilitation” and stay there for a total of three years.

Fortunately, police later released all 167 hijras after they wrote guarantees saying that they will no longer ask strangers for money or food however, India’s LGBT community believes the crackdown is a response directed toward the community after protests staged at Bangalore’s Pride parade denounced the recriminalization of homosexuality that occurred in December 2013. Nearly 2,000 hijras and their supporters marched to the town hall on Wednesday to protest the actions of police after the crackdown sweep that occurred on Monday.

Orinam is calling for an inquiry, claiming that many of the hijras were not actively begging-many were going about their daily chores at the time they were taken into custody. Orinam also claims police barged into hijra homes, dragging them out onto the street. Critics of the anti-begging law claim that it makes looking poor a criminal act, leaving hijras susceptible to incarceration because they’re often considered “untouchables,” that do not have access to certain forms and levels of employment. Although all 167 of those detained were quickly released, many are fearful that hijra arrests will continue in the coming weeks.

Film maker and photographer Luigi Storto released a trailer almost a year ago for his film “Naleena,” about hijra life and the unique procedure a hijra undergoes to “renounce” one’s gender. Watch the intriguing trailer, AFTER THE JUMP

 


Anthony Costello

www.towleroad.com/2014/11/indian-police-detain-167-transgender-women-after-bangalore-pride-protest.html

Shape Up! Here’s A Healthy Holiday How-To

Shape Up! Here’s A Healthy Holiday How-To

unnamedWell, the holidays have arrived. Right around now, many of us throw in the towel and lose focus on our fitness and wellness. You say you’ll start back up in January, but a few pounds later you’re left feeling bloated and depressed as you don your gay apparel (now seemingly tighter in all the wrong spots!).

It doesn’t have to be like this. Follow these tips and you’ll ring in this holiday season feeling and looking amazing!  But run run, Rudolph, you have to start now!

1. Indulge!

That’s right, I said indulge. Plan out your cheat meals (not days) and limit them to once or twice a week. Have two holiday parties this weekend? Great! Have fun! Eat, drink and be merry, but take away the Chinese food on Tuesday night, the big Sunday brunch, the cookies at the office, and the after work cocktails. Little cheats add up in a big way.

unnamed-12. Schedule Your Workouts.

Take out your planner and figure out when you are going to exercise at the beginning of every week. Be realistic, though. If you never have been a 6AM athlete, you probably won’t become one in December.  Reflect on strategies that have worked well for you during busy times this year and apply them.

3. Be Accountable.

Hire a trainer. Sign up for bootcamp classes with a buddy to keep you both motivated. Heck, you could even instruct your boyfriend to return all of your gifts this year unless you uphold your fitness routine. Okay, that’s crazy talk, but find a way to be accountable to yourself or others.

4. Be Grateful.

Many of us equate the holidays with stress.  I have my clients write down something they are grateful for and one thing they have done for their health and well-being every day during the holidays. This simple exercise only takes a few minutes and really helps to alleviate stress, keeps you thinking positively, and serves as a daily reminder to stay connected to your fitness and wellness.

We believe in you. Keep motivated and dedicated to your fitness regimen throughout the month so that you sail into the New Year looking like the champ you are meant to be.

The Phoenix Effecta metabolic bootcamp that gets you in shape fast, is offered exclusively at Mansion Fitness, 7914 Santa Monica Blvd., West Hollywood.

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/NcHCao5reUo/shape-up-heres-a-healthy-holiday-how-to-20141130

Is 'Coming Out' a Western Construct?

Is 'Coming Out' a Western Construct?
A couple weeks ago, I contacted my cousin in Iran to ask him a few questions relating to my research paper on gender and sexual politics in Iran. As an Iranian-American who is pretty passionate about LGBT issues, I was beyond excited to hear my cousin’s perspective. I wanted to be sure that I went into the conversation with an unassuming and open-minded attitude. This, I came to find, was much easier said than done.

I started by asking him if he knew of any people who are “out of the closet,” what I preemptively presumed to be a rather simple question. My cousin took a quick pause and responded by asking me what “out of the closet” meant. Assuming an English to Farsi translation issue was causing my cousin’s confusion, I tried to reframe my question by asking him if he knew of any people who are publicly gay, people who have announced their homosexuality to their friends and family. He responded by asking me why anyone would do that.

I immediately assumed my cousin’s lack of knowledge about “coming out” signified that homosexuals in Iran endure adversity. The fact that my 20-or-so year-old, relatively liberal cousin did not know of any “out” homosexuals proved to me that homosexuality is completely taboo in Iranian society. I found the answer I was subconsciously thirsty for right off the bat — homosexuals are oppressed in Iran.

I moved onto my next question. I asked my cousin if he broadly had any knowledge of same-sex practice in Iran. He told me that, in his experience, many Iranians experiment with homosexuality. He said that this most often occurs in the younger generations at parties and social gatherings, though he did mention that some older married men secretly have male lovers. I was shocked; how could such seemingly fluid sexuality exist in a society that, according my cousin, did not have “out” homosexuals?

I did some research. Mahdavi Paris’ “Passionate Uprisings: Young People, Sexuality and Politics in Post-Revolutionary Iran” clarified a lot of my confusion. In this article, Mahdavi explains that many young Iranian people, as part of the greater underground “sexual revolution,” experiment with homosexuality. They see it as a way to resist conservative, seemingly outdated societal norms the Iranian government imposes. Same-sex experimentation, for many, is an extension of youthfulness, nonconformity, and fun — not necessarily any indicator of identity.

Why is Western society — myself included — so obsessed with pulling people into certain categories? In an era when sexuality is increasingly understood to be a fluid spectrum, why must we assume that any non-oppressive society must have its fair share of “out-of-the-closet” homosexuals?

All too often, I hear people obsessing over whether someone is “gay” or “straight.” This inherently makes it difficult for a heterosexual-leaning person to experiment with the same sex without receiving judgment. Identity is built by the experiences, places, people, thoughts, creeds, and so on in our lives. It is practically impossible to monolithically group identities together on the grounds of perceived commonalities. We may be forcing non-heteronormative people to flee towards “gay” or “straight” as safe-havens, even if they might not necessarily fit the associated paradigms. In the growingly “progressive” West, the gay-straight binary ironically fosters prejudice against those who might fall in between and those who might not see their sexuality as indicative of their identity.

We need to be aware of our own cultural constructs in our discourse on gender and sexuality in other parts of the world. While there may be some Iranians who fit into the Western homosexual paradigm, there seems to be a significant Iranian population that does not see experimentation as a part of their identity and thus does not feel the need to “come out.” Trying to understand foreign phenomena through the lens of our own is extremely dangerous and can engender a Western-superiority complex. It may impose the need for other places to play “cultural catch-up,” blinding us from our own shortfalls in the process.

More than anything, my conversation with my cousin allowed me to better understand some of the weaknesses of the Western-supported model of sexuality. Maybe, instead of solely criticizing sexual politics in Iran and elsewhere, Western society should also be open towards learning from these different experiences and modes of living. Doing so may help us move past the Western superiority complex and enter a phase of cross-cultural collaboration, improvement, and learning.

www.huffingtonpost.com/ali-ahmadi/is-coming-out-a-western-construct_b_6226434.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices