Intimate Photo of Russian Gay Couple Crowned World Press Photo of the Year

Intimate Photo of Russian Gay Couple Crowned World Press Photo of the Year

Nissen

Danish photographer Mads Nissen’s above image of a gay couple in Russia has just won the World Press Photo of the Year 2014, the Associated Press reports:

The intimate image of Jon and Alex is part of a larger project by Nissen called “Homophobia in Russia” that highlights how life is increasingly difficult for sexual minorities in Russia.

Nissen said he sees the image, shot in St. Petersburg, as “a modern-day Romeo and Juliet story” about two people in love but facing outside forces who want to deny them their feelings.

Its sensitivity also appeared intended to act as a counterpoint to gruesome photographs and video spread by terrorists that increasingly come to dominate the news.

“Today, terrorists use graphic images for propaganda. We have to respond with something more subtle, intense and thoughtful,” said World Press Photo jury member Alessia Glaviano.

Check out more images from Nissen’s powerful and haunting “Homophobia in Russia” here


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2015/02/intimate-photo-of-russian-gay-couple-crowned-world-press-photo-of-the-year.html

Indiana Queen, Queer Alt-Country Band, Releases 'This Is Me Trying' (VIDEO)

Indiana Queen, Queer Alt-Country Band, Releases 'This Is Me Trying' (VIDEO)
Queer alt-country band Indiana Queen just released a music video for the song “This Is Me Trying” from their upcoming new album. The video is a melancholy love story shot in black in white and directed by Jeff Swafford of the web-series Three.

“We are writing songs from an openly gay perspective,” says lead singer Kevin Thornton, “but the story of ‘This Is Me Trying’ is something anyone can relate to. It’s a sort of damned if you do, damned if you don’t love story.”

The new album by Indiana Queen takes country roots and spins them from an usual perspective. “I have no interest in pretending to be someone else. I don’t care if Nashville isn’t ready for it,” says Thornton in reference to his sexuality. “The album is country, but let’s be serious there is nothing traditional about Indiana Queen.”

There are traces of Hank Williams. The pulse of “Jolene.” Chord progressions that originated in the Baptist Hymnal. However, these influences meet at an unexpected crossroads with Antony and The Johnsons, Roxy Music and Tom Waits.

Check out the video above and for more on Indiana Queen, head here.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/12/indiana-queen-this-is-me-trying_n_6664626.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Rand Paul, Mike Huckabee to Star in Film Featuring Activist Credited with Uganda’s Anti-LGBT Law

Rand Paul, Mike Huckabee to Star in Film Featuring Activist Credited with Uganda’s Anti-LGBT Law

HRC calls on both to renounce affiliation with documentary highlighting infamous activist Scott Lively, who will stand trial in federal court for alleged crimes against humanity.
HRC.org

www.hrc.org/blog/entry/rand-paul-mike-huckabee-to-star-in-film-featuring-activist-credited-with-ug?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

West Virginia Town With Five Residents Votes For LGBT Anti-Discrimination Order

West Virginia Town With Five Residents Votes For LGBT Anti-Discrimination Order

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Thurmond, West Virginia has become the smallest town in the United States to pass an order banning discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity, reports WVPV.

In a unanimous vote on Monday night, Thurmond’s five residents approved employment, housing and public accommodation protections to a new town-wide Human Rights Act.

Andrew Schneider, Executive Director of statewide advocacy group Fairness WV, said the Thurmond ordinance is stronger than current protections in West Virginia’s Human Rights Act.

Although attempts to extend protections have failed in the West Virginia Legislature for years, towns including Charleston, Huntington, Morgantown, Athens, and Harpers Ferry have adopted similar ordinances banning discrimination against LGBT people.

Despite progress, politicians around the United States continue attempts to repeal non-discrimination orders.


Jim Redmond

www.towleroad.com/2015/02/virginia-town-with-five-residents-votes-for-pro-lgbt-anti-discrimination-order.html

Rand Paul, Mike Huckabee To Appear In Anti-Gay Documentary

Rand Paul, Mike Huckabee To Appear In Anti-Gay Documentary
WASHINGTON — Two possible GOP presidential contenders and four congressmen are slated to appear in a new documentary that claims the push for gay rights threatens Christianity.

“What kind of freedom of speech do we have if a person who expresses a biblical viewpoint about marriage is told they can’t open their businesses in a location?” asks Mike Huckabee, the former Arkansas governor and prospective 2016 presidential candidate, in the trailer for the documentary “Light Wins: How To Overcome The Criminalization Of Christianity,” which was first reported by Right Wing Watch.

The film is a project by socially conservative activist Janet Porter, who plans to release it later this month.

According to an email Porter sent to supporters last week, the documentary also features Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), as well as Reps. Trent Franks (R-Ariz.), Louie Gohmert (R-Texas), Tim Huelskamp (R-Kan.) and Steve King (R-Iowa).

None of these lawmakers were featured in the trailer. Their offices did not return requests for comment on their participation and whether they agree with the direction of the documentary.

“If homosexual activists get everything they want, it will be nothing less than the criminalization of Christianity,” argues an unidentified man featured in the “Light Wins” trailer. A second trailer, also posted by Right Wing Watch, argues that the Boy Scouts of America “needlessly caved to a dark sexual agenda that violates the safety [and] innocence of our children” perpetrated by the “homosexual lobby.”

The Human Rights Campaign, which advocates for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender equality, is calling on Huckabee and Paul to renounce their involvement in the film. It’s the group’s first major action targeting a potential 2016 candidate.

Particularly troubling to group is the appearance of a radical pastor named Scott Lively in the film. Lively has pushed an anti-gay agenda internationally, and is widely seen as a leader in fanning the flames of hate in Uganda that led to legislation criminalizing homosexuality. (The measure was ultimately struck down in court.)

“Hate is not an American value, and we urge Senator Paul and Governor Huckabee to renounce their affiliation with this film as well and categorically reject Scott Lively’s horrendous exportation of anti-LGBT bigotry abroad,” said JoDee Winterhof, the Human Rights Campaign’s vice president for policy and political affairs. “It would be unconscionable for any American, let alone one who seeks the presidency, to affiliate with such venomous and dangerous extremism.”

Huckabee’s appearance in “Light Wins” is not entirely out of character, since he’s been known as more socially conservative than many potential candidates. Last month, he argued that states could have the final say on marriage equality, regardless of whether the Supreme Court rules that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry.

“I may be lonely, I may be the only one, but I’m going to stand absolutely faithful to the issue of marriage not because it’s a politically expedient thing to do because it isn’t,” Huckabee said. “I’m going to do it because I believe it’s the right position, it’s the biblical position, it’s the historical position.”

Paul’s involvement in the documentary is more surprising. When asked about same-sex marriage recently, he affirmed that he favors so-called traditional marriage, but believes the Republican Party should tolerate different views.

“If you tell people from Alabama, Mississippi or Georgia, ‘You know what, guys, we’ve been wrong, and we’re gonna be the pro-gay-marriage party,’ they’re either gonna stay home or — I mean, many of these people joined the Republican Party because of these social issues,” Paul said in an interview last summer.

“So I don’t think we can completely flip,” he added. “But can we become, to use the overused term, a bigger tent? I think we can and can agree to disagree on a lot of these issues. I think the party will evolve. It’ll either continue to lose, or it’ll become a bigger place where there’s a mixture of opinions.”

In another interview a couple months later, Paul acknowledged that “society’s changing” and becoming more accepting of marriage equality.

“The bottom line is, I’m old fashioned, I’m a traditionalist,” he said. “I believe in old-fashioned traditional marriage. But, I don’t really think the government needs to be too involved with this, and I think that the Republican Party can have people on both sides of the issue.”

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/12/rand-paul-documentary_n_6664836.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices