WATCH: President Obama Calls Marriage Plaintiff Jim Obergefell On the Steps of the Supreme Court

WATCH: President Obama Calls Marriage Plaintiff Jim Obergefell On the Steps of the Supreme Court

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Jim Obergefell, the plaintiff at the center of the SCOTUS gay marriage case, gave his initial reaction to today’s pro-equality ruling outside the high court’s steps a short while ago.

Said Obergefell in part:

Now at long last, Ohio will recognize our marriage and most important marriage equality will come to every state across our country. It’s my hope that the term ‘gay marriage’ will soon be a thing of the past. That from this day forward, it will simply be ‘marriage.’ And our nation will be better off because of it.

President Obama also called Obergefell to offer his congratulations.

Watch both videos below:

The post WATCH: President Obama Calls Marriage Plaintiff Jim Obergefell On the Steps of the Supreme Court appeared first on Towleroad.


Kyler Geoffroy

WATCH: President Obama Calls Marriage Plaintiff Jim Obergefell On the Steps of the Supreme Court

Lauryn Farris' Story From The RaiseAChild.US Let Love Define Family Series

Lauryn Farris' Story From The RaiseAChild.US Let Love Define Family Series
If there was ever a couple who truly Let Love Define Family, it’s Lauryn and Kerry Farris of San Antonio, Texas. Married as a cisgender straight couple nearly four decades ago, they remained in love and committed to one another as Lauryn transitioned to live and present as a woman, even during a five-year period while they were divorced. The parents of two biological sons, they became foster parents to a 17-year-old transgender girl who will join their family through adoption. On the eve of their day in family court, Lauryn spoke with RaiseAChild.US Founder and CEO Rich Valenza and contributing writer Beth Hallstrom about her life, faith, activism and expanding family.

Lauryn Farris: My name is Lauryn Harold Farris and I guess my middle name is Harold now because I was a junior and my father and my son both shared the same name.

My family today and my family tomorrow will be slightly different in that I’ve been married to the same woman for 33 years — we’ve been together 36 years. We have two biological boys, one 28 and one 22, and we have a foster daughter who is 17. Tomorrow, she becomes our adopted daughter.

Beth Hallstrom: That’s wonderful. Congratulations!

Farris: We’re also doing a name and gender change for her tomorrow. That’s pretty unheard of here in Texas for her age and with Child Protective Services, as far as we know. The only way to reissue a birth certificate in Texas is through adoption. So, we will get to reissue her birth certificate with not only her corrected name, but also her corrected gender markers.

Rich Valenza: That’s a big day tomorrow.

Farris: We’re also doing a dual adoption tomorrow — a joint adoption. There are more same-sex couples and families in San Antonio than any other city in the state.

Hallstrom: That’s fascinating. I wouldn’t have guessed that about San Antonio.

Farris: Most of the adoptions in the entire state are done in San Antonio, as are almost all name and gender marker changes. So, we’re really a pretty progressive city and one of the most equal. I was part of facilitating that back in 2013 when the city updated its non-discrimination ordinance to include sexual orientation and gender identity.

Valenza: What do you think makes San Antonio so liberal, accepting and inclusive?

Farris: We are a very Hispanic community and a very Catholic community. Much of our public community is very loving and much of our Catholic community has a “live and let live” attitude. When we get a lot of marchers together — there are a lot of freedom marches — all of these groups have welcomed the gay community.

I stood on the podium when we passed the non-discrimination ordinance with a Hispanic grandmother and Dominican nun who were supporting human rights. So, I think that’s why, but when you get outside the 410 loop in San Antonio, it’s a different world.

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Valenza: Lauryn, you’ve mentioned religion a number of times. I’m curious about your faith.

Farris: I’m a pretty devout Christian and when people have real, true faith, they can move mountains. They don’t fear things like other people’s opinions. Many of the trailblazers in our community come from some very strong faith backgrounds and they continue with their faith even when rejected by the church.

That’s where the real strength comes from — from their faith. I believe what got our family through the transition was our faith.

Hallstrom: And do your children share your faith?

Farris: My younger son struggles a lot and he identifies as spiritual but non-religious at this point. But my older son is very active in the Metropolitan Community Church and our daughter has a strong belief in faith. When we began transitioning, one of the first things Kerry, my partner, and I wanted to do was come out to our minister.

One of my strongest memories of transitioning was having lunch with our minister as Lauryn. Kerry and I explained to him what was happening and who Lauryn was. The first words out of his mouth were, “You know you’ll never be able to take communion again,” then he turned to Kerry and said, “You and the boys are welcome any time.” I will never forget that.

Valenza: How did you get past that incident?

Farris: It was Mike Piazza [the progressive spiritual leader and former senior pastor and dean of the Cathedral of Hope in Dallas, Texas] who helped me break down the barrier that kept me from loving and accepting myself. Mike helped me understand that this is the way God made me and intended for me to be. Once I realized that, I realized that God would love me just the way I am. It was not a curse, it was a blessing.

This was before the meeting with our minister in San Antonio, while Kerry and I were divorced. Mike’s counseling helped me get past my alcohol abuse and allowed Kerry and I to re-marry.

Hallstrom: Did Kerry feel the same way?

Farris: Well, we’d been married a long time and Kerry knew about Lauryn before we were married. She didn’t really understand it. Thirty years ago it wasn’t like we could research it on the Internet! She thought I would change. Before the boys were born I went to cross-dressing groups and she was okay with that. I had an alcohol problem and it got worse and that’s when we actually divorced for five years. That’s when I worked with Mike Piazza, when I came out and within just a couple years, I was able to accept who I was. Then Kerry and I were remarried.

Within a few years of that, we made the decision to come out together. It was a big transition for Kerry and it took her awhile to get used to it. She doesn’t like to do public speaking, but she doesn’t mind talking about it at all. She tells her story and we just are who we are. We even remained close during the divorce. It’s destiny. There are so many reasons we shouldn’t be together but we love each other.

Valenza: Tell us about the girl you’re going to adopt. How did she come in to your life?

Farris: First, let me tell you how I got involved in the community. I got a call from a woman I know who said, “I know you’re transitioning and I really need your help. There’s a 17-year old transgender girl who lives out by you and I’d really Iike you to meet her. When she came out to her family, they told her to leave and never come back. She’s living on the streets and there are no shelters that will take her. She’s sleeping under a bridge and really struggling.”

So, I met her a few times. We would go to lunch and then, one Friday, I’ll never forget, she didn’t show up. I texted my friend asking if she’d seen her and, as far as I know now, no one’s ever seen her again. And I said, “Never again. I will never let this happen again to another transgender youth. I will do all in my power to prevent it.”

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Hallstrom: Are there many transgender people in San Antonio?

Farris: We used to tell homeless people to go to Austin or Houston because there are shelters there that will let trans people live as trans people. Most shelters make people live based on their genitalia. Now, we have an LGBTQ shelter in San Antonio. I was involved with that even before it was open.

Hallstrom: Describe your involvement after your experience with the teen who disappeared.

Farris: I got really involved with helping at local homeless shelters. I got involved with Child Protective Services and its program Circle of Support. When a child turns 16, they put together a Circle of Support of people who will help support them when they age out of the system. I had met Catizia [their foster daughter] as a mentor and, at one meeting, they were really just yelling at her about her grades. She was failing every class and they couldn’t understand it.

I suggested we ask Catizia about her environment. She was going to a school outside that loop I spoke of — a very conservative school. She told stories about other students throwing water bottles at her and one of her teachers asking in front of the whole class, “So, does everybody know your little secret?” So, I got a little angrier and turned to the group leader and said, “Maybe she should come live with us!” 26 days later we were licensed as foster parents.

Valenza: What was it like in the beginning, after Catizia moved in?

Farris: She was seeing a counselor weekly. She had anger issues and she didn’t really know how to be what she was born to be. She was going back and forth to be able to survive in her previous living environment. If I mentioned she was transgender, it really upset her and she got angry.

Valenza: And today?

Farris: She sees her counselor once a month now and no longer has anger issues. She fully transitioned in the past year and we’ve been invited to media training conferences in Washington, D.C. Now she wants to tell her story whenever she can. Every semester at the [University of Texas] Health Science Center, she makes them cry with her story. She inspired a study of the transgender population in San Antonio and their health needs.

Valenza: With those you love, it’s worth the investment. You invested that time and love in your daughter and she’s made an amazing turnaround. How is your relationship with your sons?

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Farris: My older son lives in San Antonio and he has my 21-month-old grand baby. He is an activist for the trans community and speaks often. My younger son graduated recently from college with a degree in psychology and wants to work with children. Our relationship, especially with my older son, is much better now. When I first came out he was angry because we were very close and he felt I had lied to him. We actually worked together on the non-discrimination ordinance and, when it passed, I lost it. I broke into tears and when I was walking out of the courthouse, there were news crews everywhere and he just stepped in front of me and took care of Mom. I think difficult situations are bonding opportunities.

With my immediate family, I think we’re closer now.

Valenza: That’s an amazing testament to what a loving family can do. I’m sure it wasn’t easy. You know, I came out late in life. I was 27 when I came out and my biggest fear was: would people still love me? Would I be accepted? I imagine it was the same if you had any fears when you made your transition. Was that the case?

Farris: I’ve thought a lot about this and I’ve written about it before. The transition of every transgender person I’ve met has been different. I’ve been involved in almost every national and local LGBT organization there is. One of the things I really believe is that each of us has our own individual barriers to self acceptance. To be able to love ourselves and truly accept ourselves — most of us have a barrier. For me it was faith.

I’ve talked about Mike Piazza before and I will tell you that at communion on that Easter Sunday when I was almost 40 and he said, “All are worthy, all are welcome,” that was the epiphany that broke my barrier and, at that time, I did not even realize that was a barrier for me. It wasn’t about people loving me — it was, would God love me? And what I realized was that God loved me just the way I was.

Hallstrom: Lauryn, you and your family have experienced quite a journey and evolution over the past 36 years. Looking back, what are your thoughts?

Farris: I think one of the great tragedies is that we transgender people, in the past, don’t typically come out until later in life. As trans people, we raise our children and then don’t come out until later. But, worst of all, our children and spouses miss out on being able to grow up with our best selves. We all miss out on the best versions of who we are during the best years of our lives. Because we wait, still living a lie, we all lose so much. I really think our society needs to change.

RaiseAChild.US is the nationwide leader in the recruitment and support of LGBT and all prospective parents interested in building families through fostering and adoption to meet the needs of the 400,000 children in the foster care system. RaiseAChild.US recruits, educates, and nurtures supportive relationships equally with all prospective foster and adoptive parents while partnering with agencies to improve the process of advancing foster children to safe, loving and permanent homes. For information about how you can become a foster or adoptive parent, please visit www.RaiseAChild.US.

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Here Are Eight Awesome Can’t Miss NYC Pride Events

Here Are Eight Awesome Can’t Miss NYC Pride Events

New York is the city that started it all back in June 1970. Around 2,000 activist types turned out for the very first “Gay Liberation Day” march one year after the 1969 Stonewall Riots. This year, more than two million are expected to attend the festivities. For the math challenged, that’s one thousand X the original crowd. Not bad for a parade that’s not even 50 yet.

[Related Post: Five Things To Know About Ariana Grande Before Her Pride Performance]

Here are eight awesome events at this year’s NYC Pride

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Play House Pride Friday (June 26)

Go hard or go home at Play House Pride Friday. This 18+ party is being held at the Museum of Sex and features tunes spun by DJ Steve Sidewalk and Mikey Mikey Mó. Dougie Meyer will also host his infamous hot body contest (we can’t wait to see those photos!) with lighting by Nick Rubertas.

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Bear Yourself Underwear Party: Pride Edition (June 26)

Check your clothes at the door and bear yourself at the Bear Yourself Underwear Party: Pride Edition at Rockbar. $5 gets you access to go-go bears and cubs, dirty beats by DJ Chauncey D, and drink specials. Kick off Pride weekend by kicking off your pants.

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Fantasy: A Burlesque Masquerade (June 26)

NYC Pride & Brian Rafferty Productions will host an extravagant burlesque masquerade in NYC’s newest gem, The Diamond Horseshoe. Hidden beneath Times Square, this 20 million dollar club showcases performance artists, lighting, sound and special effects. The party last until 5AM. Get your tickets here.

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WE Party: University (June 27)

Prepare for sensory overload. The legendary Hammerstein Ballroom will be transformed into NYC’s biggest mega-club for WE Party: University, complete with bad teachers, jocks, cheerleaders, coaches and frat boys. Get educated with thousands of the hottest men from around the world, where you’ll learn from the musical beats of DJ’s Sagi Kariv from Tel Aviv and Micky Friedmann from Berlin. Tickets are on sale now.

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3rd Annual Beefcake Pride Boat Cruise Party (June 27) 

Ahoy! Cruise with 400 hot cubs, chubs, bears and beefcakes at the 3rd Annual Beefcake Pride Boat Cruise Party presented by Chris Reed. The voyage takes cruisers around Fire Island and includes jams by DJ Jonny Mack–plus a full bar and buffet. Meet guys, have fun, dance and take in the sights of New York City at sunset, but be sure to get your tickets early.

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Teaze: 12 (June 27)

Ladies, this one’s just for you. Don’t miss the only official women’s event of NYC Pride. Teaze (formerly Rapture on the River) is one of the nation’s largest, longest-running dance events created just for the ladies.  This year’s DJ booth will feature DJ Sherock, Whitney Day, and Ruby Rose from Netflix’s Orange is the New Black. Tickets are available here.

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Dance on the Pier: Dance 29 (June 28)

Now in its 29th year, Dance on the Pier will feature some of the biggest and best talent from around the world with a performance by Ariana Grande and more sounds from DJs Wayne G, The Cube Guys, and Ralphi Rosario, plus fireworks. Proceeds benefit New York City’s Pride events and local orgs. Tickets required.

Can’t make it to NYC for Pride this year? Find out what’s happening in your city by checking out the GayCities Pride Guides presented by our friends at AT&T.

Graham Gremore

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Get Ready for Equality With Rachel Maddow’s Highlight Reel From SCOTUS Gay Marriage Oral Arguments: VIDEO

Get Ready for Equality With Rachel Maddow’s Highlight Reel From SCOTUS Gay Marriage Oral Arguments: VIDEO

maddow

With the Supreme Court expected to issue its gay marriage decision either today or Monday, Rachel Maddow took a look back at some highlights from the oral arguments in Obergefell v. Hodges that took place in April.

Maddow also discussed speculation about the timing and substance of the ruling.

The post Get Ready for Equality With Rachel Maddow’s Highlight Reel From SCOTUS Gay Marriage Oral Arguments: VIDEO appeared first on Towleroad.


Kyler Geoffroy

Get Ready for Equality With Rachel Maddow’s Highlight Reel From SCOTUS Gay Marriage Oral Arguments: VIDEO

All About Larry Kramer In Love And Anger

All About Larry Kramer In Love And Anger

Larry Kramer speaking at a Boston Gay Town Meeting 6.9.87 at historic Faneuil Hall in Boston MA sponsored by the Boston Lesbian and Gay Political Alliance.

Larry Kramer speaking at a Boston Gay Town Meeting 6.9.87 at historic Faneuil Hall in Boston MA sponsored by the Boston Lesbian and Gay Political Alliance.

After all of the fantastic documentaries about the early years of the AIDS crisis that have emerged in the past few years — including How to Survive a Plague, United in Anger, We Were Here and Vito — it was only a matter of time before someone made one that focussed on Larry Kramer.

Love him or hate him, and he is a polarizing figure, Kramer’s angry brand of confrontational activism helped to shape the LGBT communities’ response to the plague. He co-founded the GMHC (Gay Men’s Health Crisis, and was later  kicked off the board) and founded the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP). He railed against government and corporate indifference towards HIV as it spread, in particular against New York City Mayor Ed Koch and President Ronald Reagan. He wrote The Normal Heart, the play that essentially told his own fight against the disease and its terrifying impact.

Veteran lesbian filmmaker and activist Jean Carlomusto has done an admirable job with Larry Kramer in Love and Anger (airing on HBO beginning June 29), a feature-length film that shows us Kramer’s beginnings as a Hollywood producer and screenwriter (he was nominated for an Oscar for his Women in Love screenplay), explores the reaction to his controversial 1978 novel Faggots and then walks us through the agony of AIDS. It’s a film that’s as moving as it is informative, a welcome addition to the growing list of documentaries examining the early onslaught of AIDS/HIV.

The history of AIDS, of course, wouldn’t be the same without him. Carlomusto talked to Queerty about documenting Kramer from her New York office.

Larry Kramer being arrested in an aids protest demonstration in front of the White House in June 1987 Photograph by Dennis Brack bb45

Larry Kramer being arrested in an AIDS protest demonstration in front of the White House in June 1987, Photograph by Dennis Brack

Queerty: Larry Kramer told me he was reluctant to do this documentary. How did you convince him to participate?

Jean Carlomusto: Larry was reluctant at first. The first time we asked him, he was like, ‘Oh Jean, so many people have asked me. And at one point someone was starting to do one, and it didn’t feel right.’ Then a couple of things happened that were very serendipitous. I said something to the effect of, ‘I’m going to make a documentary whether you’re involved or not!’ But I knew that Jean wasn’t going to twist his arm in any way he doesn’t want it twisted. He saw a documentary I had done called Sex in an Epidemic and saw that I was very fair with the history, even when presenting people who disagreed with each other. I always told him I’d be really fair. What matters to me is the truth, and the truth is I don’t think anyone can deny his place in the fight against AIDS. Larry was the clarion call, pushing us all beyond what we thought we could do. For that he deserves credit. Collaborating with Larry’s husband David was just as important in many ways, because Larry was sick during a lot of the filming. He gave me permission to shoot in the hospital.

When writing about Larry Kramer at one point, I referred to him as the conscience of the epidemic.

Yes. The conscience — and the anger at the mishandling of AIDS. I don’t think he would have become the person he’d become, if when he’s approached [then Mayor of New York] Ed Koch in 1981 and told him something needed to be done, and Koch had actually done something. I think Larry would have been a very different man. The fact is, everywhere he went in the early days, all that success that he’d had in his early career, none of that mattered. He was just treated like some kind of wacko, talking about a plague that didn’t exist. That made him angry, and it catalyzed this fiercely protective man, who had been dismissed by his father.

I remember going to those ACT UP meetings in New York in 1988. The meetings were so fraught. It was such an intense time.

That was the soil that helped ACT UP to grow. I really associate that room with the heady days of ACT UP, when there’d be 300 people who were engaged in a very democratic process. It was a horrible time, but it was a gift to see such an organized and resourceful response.

You have some great footage of Vito Russo interviewing Kramer on cable-access TV.

I have to say we have some great researchers on this film. Shanti Avirgan, a co-producer of the film, went to the gay and lesbian archives, and they have tapes of all of Russo’s show that he did, called Emerald City. The tapes were literally falling apart as we had them transferred. Thank God for HBO and their technical resources, because we were able to get the recording to a place where it was viewable, and to transfer the tapes.

larrykramer06You’ve known Larry for a long time. Is there one thing you learned about him while making this documentary that you didn’t know before?

I saw up close that he’s really fairly shy. That was kind of unexpected, just how shy he is. Except for when he’s trying to get a message across or trying to get his creative work out there, I don’t think he’s someone who enjoys being in the spotlight. If it’s for Larry and his work it’s one thing, but being the centre of attention in a documentary, I think he has mixed feelings about that. The fact that more people are getting to know him right now, he’ll use that to get a new message across. In this case, trying to get to a cure. He brings more eyes to any issue, because of who he is. He’s used his public persona to fight injustice. I think that’s very laudable. I thought that when I started this, that Larry might hate me. I thought I might get skewered. He’s had a lot of outs with people. But I feel even more appreciation for Larry. I saw him fight and come back from an illness that almost killed him twice in a year. I had just watched my father go through a year-long illness and die. I was amazed at the resources Larry pulled together to get back to his work. He wanted to get back to his writing. He’s working on a sequel to The Normal Heart. He wanted to get well to finish that and to be with David.

Did you think of approaching his enemies? Seems like mainly you talk to his friends and allies.

I did. Some of them told me no, that they wouldn’t do it. Hard for me to divulge who those were. Not everybody was pro-Larry in the film. Larry had an awful relationship with some people, and he was thrown off the board of GMHC (Gay Men’s Health Crisis). There are people in the film who profoundly disagreed with Larry. Dr. Anthony Fauci should have hated Larry. Larry said some terrible things about him. Larry and Fauci are still in dialogue about a cure. Larry still hasn’t decided entirely if he was a hero or a villain.

What’s changed about Larry in the 20 years that you’ve known him?
He’s mellowed. I don’t want to say he’s not angry, because he still is. He’s just not quite as vitriolic as he was. I see him as slightly more laid back. But trust me, I still wouldn’t want to piss him off. I don’t think anyone would.

Jeremy Kinser

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Gay People ‘Welcome’ But Cannot Discuss LGBT Rights During Pope Francis’ Visit to Philadelphia: VIDEO

Gay People ‘Welcome’ But Cannot Discuss LGBT Rights During Pope Francis’ Visit to Philadelphia: VIDEO

Pope Francis

World Meeting of FamiliesGay activists will be banned from addressing LGBT issues at a Catholic family congress during Pope Francis’ visit to the U.S. later this year, reports Reunters.

The World Meeting of Families will take place in Philadelphia September 22-27.

The city’s Archbishop Charles Chaput said that although “people who have experienced same-sex attraction are welcome like everyone else,” there will be no “platform at the meeting for people to lobby for positions contrary to the life of our Church.”

15,000 people are expected to attend the congress to hear lectures and take part in workshops on family issues. Pope Francis is expected to attend for the last two days and two million people are likely to attend a public mass to end the event.

The only event dedicated to LGBT issues at the congress will be presented by a celibate gay Catholic priest who “will talk about his own coming to terms with his sexual orientation and the manner in which he embraced the teachings of the Church.”

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The post Gay People ‘Welcome’ But Cannot Discuss LGBT Rights During Pope Francis’ Visit to Philadelphia: VIDEO appeared first on Towleroad.


Michael Fitzgerald

Gay People ‘Welcome’ But Cannot Discuss LGBT Rights During Pope Francis’ Visit to Philadelphia: VIDEO