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Nora Gross & John Jackson explore black, gay masculinity in ‘Making Sweet Tea’

Nora Gross & John Jackson explore black, gay masculinity in ‘Making Sweet Tea’

Directors Nora Gross & John Jackson, Jr.

Dean John L. Jackson, Jr. and his former student Nora Gross don’t seem like typical filmmakers. The two move in academic circles; Jackson, as a professor at the University of Pennsylvania, and Gross as a graduate student.

Then author Patrick Johnson’s Making Sweet Tea came along. The book–and resultant stage show–chronicle the lives of several African-American gay men of different generations living across the American South. The seven subjects–Charles, Duncan, Shean, Freddie, Harold, Countess Vivian and Patrick himself–open up about how being queer made them question their genders, their sanity, their faith, their race and their place in broader society.

Making Sweet Tea, the documentary, has earned raves on the festival circuit where it has played limited engagements. At present, the film seeks distribution for a wider audience. Queerty caught up with Gross & Jackson to talk about the film, lending a voice to an under-recognized demographic, and their hopes for a major release.

How did Patrick’s work come to you?

JJ: Patrick and I have been running in similar circles for a long time. I remember when he was writing the book, it was such a long and arduous process. He always threatened, when it was done, to do a one-man show. So I ended up going to the first incarnation of that show in Chicago. And it was like magic. I remember leaving the theatre and telling him, I was so invested, that it really should be a film. And this was over 12 years ago or something.

Wow.

JJ: He claims to have never forgotten that. Then maybe about five years ago…

NG: I was a student in John’s class, my first year of graduate school. This is about a year after John and Patrick started filming preliminary stuff. John was looking for collaborators, and he reached out to a group of grad students on campus who were thinking about the relationship between scholarship and performance. That was interesting to me, so I came on board.

JJ: Right. Part of what was intriguing to me was that Patrick was already someone who was trying to work in multiple mediums at the same time. One of the big things we try to do here at Penn is a multi-moded scholarship. So anything you can write, you can also do in film, in dance in theatre and it can also be considered scholarship. And this felt like the perfect example.

Patrick Johnson

I love that. Obviously, Patrick had already interviewed his subjects. Were his inspirations reluctant to discuss things on camera?

JJ: Some were. The least easy to convince was Charles, I would say. He was also one of the last to see the film.

NG: We made a trip to Hickory in 2014 to film Charles. He was unwilling to be filmed at that point. It took a whole year for him to come around and get excited about it. By the time we actually filmed him, he arranged to have a client come into the salon so he could do her hair. He worked it out with the cabaret so we could film there. So he really took ownership over filming.

Wonderful.

NG: And Patrick did a lot of that negotiation with the men in advance of filming. He really had those relationships.

JJ: And they so trusted Patrick. Eventually, even Charles who was the most skittish, realized he could trust Patrick and these people Patrick had brought to the conversation.

And Charles’ journey is one of the most compelling elements of the film.

JJ: One of the things we think makes the film distinctive from the stage play is asking the men to watch Patrick perform “them” in a space that’s intimate and personal to them. I think [Charles] was intrigued by the idea.

Charles with a client

One thing I really admire about your approach is the lack of judgment. When Charles, for example, talks about his journey of understanding his gender—what it means to be a gay man, rather than a woman. He also talks candidly about taking a vow of celibacy because of his faith. You don’t judge that. But that raises the question of is he self-loathing? Is he homophobic? Does he actually adhere to his celibate vow? What do you think?

JJ: I do think probably different audience members will have a different response. If anything, I would argue Charles is the quintessential example of someone who thinks deeply and philosophizes. You may not agree with his decision, but there is so much rigorous thought and feeling going into his decision over time. For me it would be superficial to see him as simply self-loathing. He’s thinking and feeling in real-time. One of the virtues of the film is that you get to see him reflect on those changes in a way that demonstrates that he’s probably not done with the process of evolving identity.

NG: I agree with that. We are sitting in John’s office and looking at a mug with Charles’ face on it. He’s kind of our poster child.

That’s awesome.

NG: It’s interesting on a meta-level to see him respond to a screening. He was soaking it up.

JJ: The other thing is he’s still a performer, and he has such gravitas. He’s speaking not off the cuff, but out of this deep-seated place of having pondered this stuff. So I do feel like this is someone who is a living, breathing, changing human being. It may sound trite, but he exemplifies how we’re all conflicted about who and what we are. He’s one of the most thoughtful, complicated subjects I’ve been able to put on film.

On those lines, here’s a lot of talk in the film about masculinity, and the nature of manhood especially among African-American gay men. This has come up so many times in interviews I’ve done this year: the notion within the African-American community that if a man loves another man he violates his masculinity. Where does that come from?

JJ: Good question. One thing we were really touched by in Chicago was that we got the ARP award for representation, not just of gay men in general, but of older black gay men. One thing I hope the film does a good job of thematizing is not only are these men who understand the ways in which a certain sexual identity gets stigmatized, but it doesn’t debilitate them. These are men—now we’ve had a few sadly pass—who have lived long lives and seen their lives in a larger society. To go from a place where parents and siblings are hostile, to people accepting them more openly and wholly. I think there’s a version of that arc that to me is hopefully an encouraging one. Folks will never downplay the kind of challenges that come with being stigmatized as not “a man” in the way folks imagine masculinity should be embodied. These folks demonstrate the illogic of those arguments and embrace the fact that they embody some of those misconceptions about manhood.

Countess Vivian

That attitude is no way confined to the African-American community either.

JJ: Absolutely.

It’s something, I think, all queer people face: recognizing and reconciling the nature of society’s gender roles versus who they are personally.

JJ: I think that’s absolutely true. It’s something that sounds so simple but we often forget it.

The role of the church in this story is also very prominent. I think Patrick even talks at one point about all the gay men in his church—the choir director, the organist, whomever. One thing that isn’t clear in that story is if these men were out gay at the time. How do people reconcile the very homophobic attitudes in the church with including and appreciating gay people within it?

JJ: That’s probably above our pay grade.

[Laughter]

JJ: But I will say, is there is a version of how the black church—and this is true of other institutions as well—can accommodate of knowing how to keep the secret “secret enough” so you can still be public. There is a line to cross where you wouldn’t be able to come to church anymore. But it’s more about how do you interact in that environment given the huge expectations in that environment. The black church is an institution that is, historically, very explicit about what it will and will not accept on paper, but in practice is much more open. You will find every position of social proclivity, of an ideological position, of attitude in that space. It’s how does that inhabit that space?

Interesting.

JJ: One thing you really don’t know unless you do research or are part of the community is what thing can trip you up so you no longer belong. It isn’t simply because you’ve done something that’s a “sin” it’s also about how that sin unfolds in practice every day, and what other social norms you run afoul of that people are no longer to accept you there.

Related: Morris Singletary brings a message of hope & love to black men struggling with HIV

NG: I would add too that connects to something Patrick says in the film about the South in general. One aspect of Southern culture is that everybody is doing the things they say they’re not supposed to do. Committing adultery, smoking, drinking, being gay. There’s an unspoken subtext that we all know we’re breaking those rules.

Harold Mays with Patrick Johnson

On that level, it’s interesting. We think of the church as having all these dogmatic constructs. But on this level its more of a social construct, whatever that means.

JJ: Agreed.

In the same way, this is very much a Southern story. Southern culture is something that is so much discussed at the moment, both in terms of romanticizing the South, and in terms of all these ugly historical monuments of Confederate figures. I suspect people of color from the South probably don’t favor keeping the Confederate flag or statues of Robert E. Lee around. Is that also true of African-Americans in the south? For some reason, I have a feeling there’s a voice there we’re not hearing.

JJ: Good question. I think there is a version of what the black, Southern men who have been a part of this project would say about those racist symbols of the South. Part of what is demanded of them is a different kind of nuanced understanding of how to navigate whiteness and deal with a racist society that still wants to imagine itself to be genteel. When Duncan, for instance, talks about what it means to interact with white people in the South, it’s a version I heard when I was doing my dissertation in Harlem. The community was gentrifying and changing. There were a lot of wealthy, non-black people moving into the community. Almost every individual I spoke to said when they had enough money they were going to move back down south. A lot of them were from the south or had family there. The argument was that at least in the south when you talk to a white person you can believe what they are saying.

Oh my.

JJ: The idea is that in the north you have to be politically correct. In the south, if they don’t like you, they tell you so you know where you stand. Even if there’s a version of that which is offensive and challenging, at least existentially you know how to situate yourself. In Harlem, you could be having a conversation with a white person and saying all the right things, but still not trust what they’re saying. There is an honesty of conversation in the south. It’s different from “we are supporters of the Confederate flag,” there is a kind of recognition by black folks of understanding the cross-cultural facility that comes with living in a landscape like that one, and understanding that you will be dealing with folks who, historically, have been quite clear about their privilege and priority over you. You have to assert yourself in a different way to make sure you and your family have what you need. That isn’t to say the North is full of racism: it just manifests itself differently.

Very interesting. So for those who are not African-American but still care about the hurdles African-American gay men face in the South, what, in your experience of making the film, is the best thing we can do to help queer African-American men feel safe and accepted in our society?

JJ: Wow. That’s a really interesting question. I do think the reason why we’re so proud of this film is that for at least 90 minutes people are going to listen to people talk about a world they inhabit that’s different from mainstream representation. There’s a version of what I’ve heard a couple of philosophers call “listening in color;” just listening humbly, carefully about experiences that often get downplayed or mischaracterized. That’s not a trivial thing, to not jump immediately to the “culture wars” part of this discussion, but to ask what it would really mean to learn about and learn with the experiences of black gay men.

Sure.

JJ: Just to have people think about the ways they can reduce the kind of marginalization and exploitation you don’t realize you’re doing inadvertently. I always go back to the reason Patrick wanted to do in the first place is that there wasn’t a record, an archive. Part of the reason the record is important to begin with, I would argue, is because people will at some point open and learn from it. I think that’s the importance of doing films like these.

NG: I think what’s also important about this particular archive is that it has both the very specific and the universal. It has something like Charles’ story, and his complicated trajectory, which is a very specific story. Then something like Freddy’s story of losing his partner is so not about whether his partner is a man or a woman. It’s about loss and grief and love.

And along those lines, you give the last line of the film to Patrick, who says something to the effect of “Everyone wants to know how I got these guys to tell their stories. I just asked. I listened.” So last question as we wrap up: Patrick talks about how he didn’t attend funerals for people with HIV. How does he, and indeed, the larger community reconcile that?

JJ: That’s a longer interview.

NG: My sense was that the realization of that came from his process of Sweet Tea as a bigger project. The play didn’t originally include Patrick’s own story. Early in the film, Patrick wasn’t a central character. One thing we pushed for—and we even filmed three interviews with him—was trying to get him to go deeper into his own life and regrets. He’s such a natural interviewer, he spends less time presenting his own story to the world. He’s still working through that.

Patrick Johnson with Duncan

JJ: I will say that there’s been so much death—both Harold’s died, Patrick’s mother—there’s been so much death because these are older folks, that it’s brought [Patrick] back to those moments as well. It’s such a powerful subtext of what the film represents in its final form. His mother died before we even screened it.

NG: And she’d lost a lot of her memory. We got the right moment, but the next time we went back [to interview her] she couldn’t remember.

JJ: To sit with Patrick and watch those scenes is so moving.

Making Sweet Tea is currently seeking distribution, and playing small screenings across the country.

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HERE’S WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW REGARDING YOUR HIV STATUS DATAGrindr…

LIVE CHAT - GO TO ROOM


HERE’S WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW REGARDING YOUR HIV STATUS DATAGrindr…

HERE’S WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW REGARDING YOUR HIV STATUS DATA

Grindr has never sold, nor will we ever sell, personal user information – especially information regarding HIV status or last test date – to third parties or advertisers.

We have no reason to believe there has been a malicious hack or a privacy breach at Grindr.

Grindr’s mission is to provide a safe and secure space for queer people anywhere to connect to and discover their world. As a company that serves the LGBTQ community, we understand the sensitivities around HIV status. Over the last couple days, we have listened and engaged with our community. As a result, we have taken steps to discontinue sharing HIV status information with our trusted vendors, Apptimize and Localytics. Privacy is and always will be one of our top priorities. We know that there has been confusion about this, and we apologize for the distress caused to any of our users.

In the nine years since our founding in 2009, we have come to understand the greater responsibility we have to the community we serve. While our goal has always been to protect our users, we created Grindr for Equality to leverage our resources and lead in the fight to promote justice, health, and safety for LGBTQ individuals around the globe. In 2016, after consulting several international health organizations and our Grindr For Equality team, we determined that it would be beneficial for the health and well-being of our community to give users the option to publish, at their discretion, their HIV status and their “Last Tested Date” to their public profile.

Recently, there have been concerns raised about Grindr’s sharing of HIV status information with two companies that help us test our app and improve its functions for our users.  Apptimize and Localytics are two highly-regarded software vendors which help us improve the experience for our users. They take our users’ privacy seriously, and so do we.

We want to assure you that:

  1. Grindr has never sold, nor will we ever sell, personal user information – especially information regarding HIV status or last test date – to third parties or advertisers.
  2. No advertisers have ever had access to HIV status or last test date, unless they viewed it in your public profile.
  3. The HIV status and last test date information was used by Apptimize and Localytics only to provide services to Grindr.
  4. When working with these vendors, we restricted data shared to that which was appropriate for the services they are providing and encrypted it when providing it to the contractors.  This data from HIV status fields was used to test and support development of a new features, like our recently released HIV Test Reminders.
  5. Users remain in control of any and all information they choose to share on their public Grindr profile.
  6. We have no reason to believe there has been a malicious hack or a privacy breach at Grindr.

As a champion for the LGBTQ community, Grindr recognizes – and has always recognized – that it is up to each person to determine whether they want to publicly disclose their HIV status.  We respect each person’s decision whether to keep that information private, or whether to publicly disclose that information in their Grindr public profile. We know that enabling conversations about sexual health is as important as it is difficult.  And as always, we continue to look for ways to ensure Grindr remains a safe space for all.

– Scott Chen CTO and Grindr Family

FAQs

Does Grindr sell any of my information to advertisers?

  • Grindr has never sold, nor will we ever sell, users profiles  – especially information regarding HIV status or last test date – to third parties or advertisers.

What personal user profile data does Grindr share with third-parties?

  • Grindr does not share users’ profiles with anyone outside of Grindr and select trusted contractors that help us build, maintain, and improve the app and provide its features to our users’ profiles, or as otherwise described in our Privacy Policy.

  • In response to recent concerns, Grindr no longer includes HIV status in the data that our trusted contractors may see. From now on, HIV status will not be provided to even our trusted partners (other than those essential vendors involved in the viewing and hosting of profiles in the App).

  • We have removed any data regarding HIV status from both Apptimize and Localytics.

Who are Apptimize, Localytics and how does Grindr work with them?

  • Apptimize is an industry standard and trusted software vendor that helps developers test out new features by rolling them out incrementally to an app’s user profile base over time.  They do not sell data and are not an advertising or marketing firm.

  • In this instance, Grindr used Apptimize to help test and deploy new features within our app, like our recent “HIV Testing Reminder” feature. Grindr has deleted all HIV status and related information from Apptimize.

  • Localytics is another ubiquitous and trusted software vendor that helps developers monitor how their application is used. They also do not sell data, only handle encrypted data, and are not an advertising or marketing firm.  

  • In this instance, Grindr used Localytics to confirm that the new features were not causing problems with the functioning of the Grindr app. The HIV status data that Grindr provided to Localytics was encrypted. Grindr has removed HIV data from Localytics.

Who has access to my HIV status?

  • If you opt-in to include this information in your Grindr profile, your information will be visible to other Grindr users. See our privacy policy.

Can advertisers target Grindr users based on HIV status?

  • NO!  Grindr has never sold, nor will we ever sell, users’ profiles – especially information regarding HIV status or last test date – to third parties or advertisers.

  • We have not and will never share users’ self-reported HIV information with any advertisers.

Why were you sharing my HIV status with third-parties?

  • Grindr has never sold, nor will we ever sell, users’ profiles – especially information regarding HIV status or last test date – to third parties or advertisers.

  • As is customary in the industry, Grindr works with a few highly-regarded vendors to test and optimize the Grindr app. These third-parties had limited access to users’ profile data to support the rollout of new features and other site maintenance activities.

  • These trusted vendors are contractually obligated to use users’ profile data only to provide services to Grindr.

  • Our diagnostic tools support the rollout of new features and other site maintenance and DO NOT capture or store any users’ profile data regarding HIV status.

Has anyone gained access to my profile data on Grindr?

  • We have no reason to believe there has been a malicious hack or a privacy breach at Grindr.

  • We authorize only appropriate Grindr employees and trusted contractors to access your profile data, all of whom are bound by appropriate privacy and confidentiality terms.

  • We also reserve the right to share data as described in our Privacy Policy.  Again, however, we never have – and never will – share HIV status information with advertisers or sell profile data.

  • If you include information in your Grindr profile, including HIV status, it is visible to other Grindr users.

Where can I find your privacy policy?

  • A copy of our privacy policy can be found on our app or here.

Read more from our partners

Statement from Apptimize

Statement from Localytics

www.tumblr.com/grindr/172528912083/heres-what-you-should-know-regarding-your-hiv

Syphilis: What is it and why should gay men get tested regularly?

Syphilis: What is it and why should gay men get tested regularly?

condom
Using condoms can help protect you from syphilis (Photo: Shutterstock)

When did you last get checked for syphilis?

If you’re a man who has sex with other men, it was hopefully at your last STD screening. It’s recommended that if you’re sexually active, you have at check-up at least once a year – or more often if you have multiple partners.

For many reasons, syphilis rates have been soaring amongst gay and bi guys. In October, the Center for Disease Control revealed that STD rates had risen for a fifth year in a row in the US.

In 2014, just over 12,200 men who have sex with men were diagnosed with the disease. In 2018, that had risen to 18,760 – and over 60% of syphilis cases in the US are among men who have sex with men.

Related: Syphilis infections on the rise in the gay community

And it’s not just in the US. There are currently outbreaks in both Ontario and Edmonton, Canada, where numbers have “increased dramatically” since 2014.

There’s been a significant rise in the UK and Australia, while a new campaign has been launched in New Zealand this week to remind people that syphilis is not a disease of the Dark Ages.

Juxtaposing Shakespeare imagery and language with modern pick-up lines, the campaign wants to remind people that syphilis is very much a problem in the here and now.

A new health promotion campaign reminds people that syphilis is still around (Photo: NZAF)

“Syphilis is not something many people thought they’d have to worry about in their lifetimes, so there’s a real lack of knowledge about it,” said Mickey Power, marketing, communications, and fundraising manager, NZAF, to Branding in Asia.

The rise in rates could be partly because more men are engaging with condomless sex. It could be an increase in hook-ups via apps.

Related: Once-a-month injection to treat HIV passes two initial trials

It doesn’t help that syphilis can go unnoticed for a long period of time. However, just because the symptoms may be overlooked, that doesn’t mean it’s not doing great damage to your body. And left untreated, it can prove fatal.

Fortunately, if picked up early, treatment consists of antibiotics.

Know nothing about syphilis? Here are the basic facts:

Syphilis is a bacterial infection that, among gay men, is most commonly transmitted through unprotected anal sex, oral sex, and other activities like rimming.

The first sign of infection will be a painless sore, ulcer or hardened lump near the point of infection. However, those infected may not even notice this primary infection or they will dismiss it as insignificant.

Wearing a condom will help prevent you from acquiring syphilis, but not in every case. Let’s be honest: hardly anybody wears condoms for oral sex, and sometimes the sore may not be obvious or located on the genitals.

The sore or lump will go away. However, that doesn’t mean that you’re now free of syphilis.

You will become infectious to others, and although the bacteria may lay dormant in your system for years, it will eventually cause serious health problems.

Late-stage symptoms of syphilis – which may not occur many years later – can include blindness, deafness, brain damage, and heart attacks. Yes, those old 19th Century tales of people going mad with syphilis are based on fact.

That’s why it’s so important to have a blood test to check whether you have the infection. This is regardless of whether you think you have any symptoms and even if you always use condoms.

Gay and bi men should have a blood test for syphilis at least once a year. If you have multiple partners, do not feel ashamed or embarrassed to be tested twice a year or even more often than that.

Staff at sexual health clinics are not going to judge you and would prefer you to be diagnosed and treated promptly.

If you are diagnosed with syphilis, do also get checked for HIV. As syphilis symptoms can include open sores, this can increase the chances of HIV getting into your body. In recent years, around half of all gay men who test positive for syphilis test positive for HIV.

Related: Scientists ‘optimistic’ about HIV vaccine – possibly even by 2021

Can’t get to a clinic? It’s possible to order a home-testing STD kit online. Whichever way you choose to get tested, just make sure you are tested – and make it a regular part of your health routine.

If you are diagnosed with syphilis, it’s also important to inform anyone that you’ve had sex with. Yes, that might feel super awkward and they won’t welcome the news, but for the sake of their health, it’s better to know.

Depending on where you live, some clinics or health agencies may offer to notify people anonymously, so ask staff about this.

www.queerty.com/syphilis-gay-men-get-tested-regularly-20191211?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29