American Samoa don’t want the Marriage Equality decision to apply to them

American Samoa don’t want the Marriage Equality decision to apply to them

American Samoa are ‘undecided’ as to whether they will comply with the June 26 ruling which legalised gay marriage in the US.

The Samoan Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sa’ilele Malielegaoi says he thinks its not compatible with Samoan culture. ‘As long as I am here, gay marriage will never be a part of Samoan culture and society.

‘Just because it is being legalized everywhere else does not mean we should bow to the influence of the outside world.

‘As long as I live and until kingdom comes, gay marriage will never be allowed in Samoa, never.

‘Gay marriage contradicts everything Samoa stands for.’

Malielegaoi made these comments to a local news source, the Samoan Observer.

In response to the ruling, a lawsuit to determine if American Samoans are US citizens is working its way through the US judicial system. This will decide whether the territory will have to comply with the Supreme Court’s decision.

American Samoa is part of an island chain with Samoa, an independent country. In both, Christianity and conservative attitudes shape the culture.

Samesex activity is illegal in Samoa; but there is cultural acceptance of transgender people, who are know as Fa’afafine.

Despite this many of the Fa’afafine oppose samesex marriage, in line with the larger population.

The post American Samoa don’t want the Marriage Equality decision to apply to them appeared first on Gay Star News.

Jack Flanagan

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How Adult Film Mogul Chuck Holmes Helped Bill Clinton Become President And Gays Achieve Equality

How Adult Film Mogul Chuck Holmes Helped Bill Clinton Become President And Gays Achieve Equality

clinton

Holmes (left) at a fundraiser with Hillary and Bill Clinton

If you’re a fan of adult content on sites such as Sean Cody, Randy Blue and Lucas Entertainment, you’re greatly indebted to a man named Chuck Holmes. Holmes founded the legendary Falcon Studios in 1971, and helped gay men feel proud of their sexuality during an era when distributing pornography was still a criminal offense and adult films were still described as “dirty.” He would eventually use the incredible fortune he amassed for philanthropy, funding HIV/AIDS outreach programs, as well as San Francisco Community Center Project, Amnesty International, The Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund and the Human Rights Campaign, as well as helping finance Bill Clinton’s presidential campaign. Filmmaker Mike Stabile spent more than half a decade research the life and career of the mogul, who died of AIDS-related causes in 2000, and the result is the riveting Seed Money, which Outfest will screen at the Director’s Guild on July 13. Sabile spoke with Queerty about Holmes’ career, the risks adult filmmakers faced in the 1970s and what happened to Falcon porn stars when they leave the business.

fordsQueerty: What sparked your interest in Chuck as a documentary subject?

Mike Sabile: I had a friend (producer Jack Shamama) who was working at Falcon several years ago. The company had just been sold, and they were throwing out the most incredible material, most of it related to Chuck — pictures of his yacht, photos with Al Gore, FBI indictments — and this incredible story began to unfold of a man who was essentially the gay Hugh Hefner, who’d built this empire and gone on to help fund the gay rights movement.

What purpose does pornography serve in our culture?

I think it depends who you are. For most of us, out in major gay hubs, it’s light and pleasurable entertainment, like pop music or a Hollywood blockbuster. Something to tide us over. But until the late ‘90s, it was one of the only places you could see gay culture represented in a positive way, outside of a few art house movies and “Very Special Episodes” of sitcoms. And so for many gay men, coming of age in hostile environments, gay porn showed that there was another world out there — mostly in California — where you could meet other men and live openly and happily. It showed that you weren’t sick, that you weren’t alone. And for people in the closet, of course, or people who are elderly or disabled, it can be one of the mainstays of sexuality.

What distinguishes Chuck from other pornographers from his era, such as Matt Sterling?

Chuck was a businessman, first and foremost. He loved sex, and he loved porn, and he knew that to be the successful, he not only had to be the best, he had to be dependable. The early gay pornographers seem to fall into two camps: artist or con men. They either wanted to create something beautiful or meaningful, or they wanted to just make money, no matter how bad it was. Chuck seems to have had a bit of both in him, and I think that helped him really transform the industry.   

Seed_MoneyThe film touches on the subject of racism in pornography. The most popular performers seemed to be midwestern white boys with blond hair. What was the response when Chuck introduced black performers into his films?

There were always black men in Falcon movies, but they were few and far between. And they’d have titles like Mandingo, or be put in thug roles. I wish I could say it’s changed much in today’s porn. The racial politics of Falcon in the ‘80s was one of the early and compelling reasons that we wanted to make this film. We had one director tell us he had to fight to cast a brunettes, because Chuck only wanted to film blonds. Part of it was Chuck — his own racial issues, his own sexual biases — but part was also the fact that he’d been busted for selling interracial porn. And of course, the gay male market can be tremendously racist as well. I wish I could say that’s changed today.

Being a pornographer in the 1970s was a risky occupation. How did the filmmakers avoid being arrested?

It was difficult. In the beginning, it was all underground — you sold porn like you might sell drugs today. Getting caught get you sent to federal prison for years — for one movie! So it was a secret society. You found customers through word of mouth, you didn’t send things to politically conservative states (like Texas or Utah). You avoided having your picture taken, which is one of the reasons we have so little footage of Chuck. You kept your locations secret, and you tried not to draw attention to yourself. And still, many directors, like Matt Sterling and William Higgins, were either sent to prison or driven out of the country.

chJeff Stryker implies that Chuck was eventually arrested for making fisting videos. What was the real reason for his arrest and what was the impact of his lawsuit?

Chuck had shipped a 8mm film to an address in Tennesee, that turned out to be a member of law enforcement looking to entrap him. In the ‘70s, obscenity was defined by “community standards,” so if the Feds wanted to get you, they’d trick you into shipping something into a socially conservative local. In this case, it was an interracial film. He was indicted along with Matt Sterling, but Chuck threw tons of money at the case, so that he could delay it and have it moved to San Francisco, where he prevailed. Matt Sterling, who was always more cautious with money, did not, and went to prison in Texas.

Chuck was initially an outsider but his wealth and power opened a lot of powerful doors for him. He was even photographed with the Clintons. Did they know who he was? Did Chuck have political influence?

Some did and some didn’t. Chuck was often in the closet about where his wealth came from, and for many in politics it was an open secret. But it certainly came back to bite him.

clipHow did Chuck or pornography in general contribute to LGBT equality?

Chuck certainly contributed financially, and I think he thought of that as his real legacy — the National AIDS Memorial Grove in SF, the Gay and Lesbian Center, the Human Rights Campaign and the Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund. But I look at his films as even more important. I think for many gay men, they were the original “It Gets Better” video, a way to imagine that life could be different, that life could be fulfilling, that you could be sexual and happy, rather than lonely and suicidal.

How has adult filmmaking changed since Chuck’s heyday?

In some ways, it’s returned to those early days — 15 minute ‘loops’ shot in hotels and bedrooms. At a screening in San Francisco, Falcon director John Rutherford said his budget for a big film in the ’90s was $500,000. Today, it’s $15,000.

2015-03-10-1426010650-7294728-othersideofaspenturkhorizontal-thumbHow have the lives of Falcon performers such as Jeff Stryker, who you interview in the film, changed since they’ve left the adult film business?

We talked to a lot of former Falcon stars, and it really ran the gamut. Some were selling real estate, and the industry was a distant memory. Others were married, or doing personal training, or working in the industry as a director. And others were having a harder time getting by. As a culture, we’re often  backward in the way we treat porn stars — treat them like they’re wearing a scarlet letter, and then blame them when they can’t escape their past.

What do you see as Chuck’s legacy?

That it’s important to be proud of who you are, and to not let people shame you for your sexuality. There were groups that wouldn’t accept Chuck because of what he did for a living, even within our own community. As gay people, we’re more than just our sexuality, sure, but it doesn’t mean that we should be embarrassed, or hide it just because the Christian right is scared of it. It’s something to celebrate, and to be proud of.

Jeremy Kinser

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How Health Technology Can Help Achieve Your Wellness Potential

How Health Technology Can Help Achieve Your Wellness Potential

Aaron BW SMALL-with-logoAs a personal trainer, I have spent years helping people battle the physical detriments and sedentary lifestyle that accompany technological advances. What appears to be making our lives easier often results in moving less, sitting more, and putting us into postural positions that the human body was never meant to adopt for extended periods of time.

I make postural corrections a part of all of my athletes’ workout routines, and spend time explaining why endlessly hunching over a keyboard or phone leads to many of the postural distortions that make them susceptible to injury and pain. Unfortunately, this aspect of technology is here to stay. All we can do is become aware of the symptoms and combat them with proper muscular strengthening and inhibitory techniques.

But what if certain types of technology could improve our lives from a health and wellness standpoint? Two key tools that I encourage all my clients to utilize are a standard Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR) test and a body composition test. I always recommend that these be done in a professional and clinical setting to ensure the most accurate results. An RMR test is usually quite brief and involves breathing into a machine to measure oxygen and carbon dioxide. This test measures your daily caloric expenditure (energy) while at rest, which makes planning your workouts and meals much more scientifically accurate. A body composition test can include a DexaScan, a hydrostatic weighing or a device such as a Bod Pod. These three options will yield the greatest accuracy for a trainer to have accurate measurements to chart future progress or make changes as necessary. Knowing your body composition (lean mass/tissue vs. body fat) is far superior than knowing body weight alone. It is also is a great way to chart progress, instead of relying solely on the scale for answers. Both of these tests can usually be done for under $200, and are available at many locations in cities around the country. But what about day-to-day technology and its positive effects on our daily health and fitness choices?

Aaron-with-logoI recently bought an Apple Watch. I’ll be the first to admit that I’m a fanboy and I buy almost every Apple product when it launches. However, with the watch, I was a bit resistant and told myself that I really didn’t see the use in having my technology strapped to my wrist 24/7. I did some research on the one aspect of the watch that interested me – the health apps that track and chart certain data from our workouts and daily activities. Tools like Nike+ and the FitBit provide us with data that allow us to monitor our activity levels, chart our workouts and even give us insight into our sleep patterns. As I researched further, I could see the potential benefits of having a watch strapped onto my wrist to constantly monitor my habits, provide me with feedback, and remind me to do things when I most often would forget.

Fortunately for me, I have a very active lifestyle and career. My clients’ daily lifestyles might tell a different story. Most, if not all of them work in a setting where they are required to sit for long periods of time, and lead highly stressful lives that prevent them from remembering to do many of the things I coach them about. As I strapped on my Apple Watch, I was pleasantly surprised at the information I now had available at my disposal. I could see how many steps I was taking each day, and the difference in the caloric expenditure on days when I was less active, like Sundays. I was able to monitor my heart rate, both resting and while working out which is a very useful tool when programing a cardiovascular program. On days when I sat in traffic for extended periods while in between clients, or at home working on my computer, my Apple Watch would buzz me every hour and remind me to stand.

I began to fantasize about the possibilities down the road. What if I could monitor my client’s heart rate during our session from my watch? I could gauge their activity level without affecting the workout. What if my clients’ daily activity level, caloric expenditure and other pertinent information could automatically upload to me each night, so I could offer suggestions? What if the device could gently, effortlessly remind my clients to drink enough water throughout the day? The benefits of fitness tech were quickly becoming apparent.

Recently, I sought out a meal planning service that was using all of the aforementioned technology to personalize a client’s daily meals down to a science. In fact, they encouraged and included metabolic testing once a month, and had their clients wear a device for a week to estimate their individual activity level. Then they would create, prepare, and deliver clients’ meals based on their exact needs and goals. All of this for around $10 a meal! Further into our discussion, the founder informed me they were in the process of creating an app to complement their meal service. This app would be available on a smart watch and monitor a client’s activity on a minute by minute basis. Based on that information, the watch would notify a client to adjust their meals as necessary. If a client was particularly non-active during the day, the app would recalculate the clients’ caloric needs and notify them to modify their meal plan. Should a client end up being more active and need more calories, the watch would notify them to increase their food intake, and even offer healthy options based on appropriate macronutrients. This was fascinating to me.

This was the moment I knew I was right! My industry wasn’t just leaning towards using more technology – it was sprinting. The possibilities for enhancing my clients’ lives were endless. For the past decade, I’ve seen the negative effects of being tied down to technology and its detrimental effects on the human body. But perhaps technology can enhance our health and wellness by assisting us in making better choices, reminding us when to do things, and providing us with data to achieve our goals. I’ve witnessed the benefits first-hand and will continue to educate my clients on the latest tech that will benefit them in the long run. Just remember to turn off some of those pesky notifications. No one needs their wrist reminding them every time they have a text, email or Facebook notification.  Especially during an intense workout! 

For more information or to book a class, visit www.phoenixeffectla.com.

The Phoenix Effecta metabolic bootcamp that gets you in shape fast, is offered exclusively at 7264 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles, CA.

Jeremy Kinser

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ASSEMBLAGE: Meet Queer Punk Band bottoms

ASSEMBLAGE: Meet Queer Punk Band bottoms
“ASSEMBLAGE“ is an inquiry into the different ways artists utilize performance and technology to explore and express different notions of identity. An effort to push forward marginalized artists with a focus on people of color, non-western nationalities and those along the queer/trans spectrum, “ASSEMBLAGE” provides a platform for analysis of how art and performance intersect with the lives of these individuals who are visibly and openly existing in the digital age. This is the eighth installment.

Queer punk band bottoms is a musical grouping unlike any other. Made up of two performers — Jake Dibeler and Simon Leahy aka Babes Trust — and drummer Michael Prommasit, bottoms is a project that in many ways explores the complicated, nuanced relationship queer people have with themselves and the world around them in 2015.

bottoms came into fruition a bit over a year ago following the break-up of Leahy and Prommasit’s previous band Teeth. Dibeler joined the group as the lead vocalist — a style of vocalization that can only be described as high-pitched screaming in a way that almost sounds manufactured but, in reality, is Dibeler’s actual voice.

Dibeler’s voice aside, what makes bottoms so unique and important is the hyper-political nature of their work and the shades of queer identity and experience encapsulated in the group’s lyrics.

The queer community is at a strange and significant moment in time, as we move out of the aftermath of the AIDS crisis and into an era marked by PrEP, instantaneous access to sex, mainstream transgender visibility and the legalization of same-sex marriage. As specific types of queers become more visible and our relationships with sex, institutions and governance shift, we are at a place where many people are reimagining or rethinking what it means to be queer.

bottom’s music heavily explores the intersection of this complicated history marked by violence and disease and modern day realities surrounding visibility and sex.

“We’re really interested in a lot of the culture surrounding the gay community during the time of the AIDS crisis,” Diebler told The Huffington Post. “There was a great resistance from the conservatives to acknowledge the crisis, so the gay community had to look to each other for support. I hope that bottoms can harness that same sort of energy — angry queers with a message. I think that we’re in this place as gays that’s very apathetic. Being able to fuck dudes from your phone in minutes is amazing, PrEP is amazing, but it really makes for this sort of ‘pre-AIDS-there’s-nothing-wrong’ mentality — and maybe that’s true, maybe nothing is wrong and this is the end of HIV and AIDS. But at the moment — I think we need to balance this ‘have unprotected sex with a stranger in an alley’ attitude with one of respect and care for a community that lost a huge chunk of themselves in the 90s.”

bottoms also deals with notions of shame and self-hatred, shared realities for queer people navigating the world we operate in since the beginning of time. As with any way of existing the world, it can be hard to communicate the realities of queer experience to those who haven’t felt the effects of growing up as a faggot, trans person, or anywhere along the queer spectrum. For this reason, music — or more broadly, performance — serves as an immensely valuable tool to tell these stories authentically and unapologetically and, hopefully, change our culture.

As Dark Matter mentioned in a previous installment of ASSEMBLAGE, “no matter how many policies we change, no matter how many legislations we pass, people’s hearts and minds aren’t going to change. The only way to actually change people’s hearts and minds is to engage them with feeling and emotion. Because often oppression is incredibly irrational.” Using art and performance to open a dialogue about these different shades of queer experience, like learned shame and self-hatred, is very present in the work of bottoms. The group’s first music video, “My Body,” is about the complicated relationships queer people have with their bodies, from issues of gay body shame to the spectrum of transgender identity. Brooklyn performer Macy Rodman stars in the “My Body” video, below.

Performance, of course, also serves a dual role for the performer in the exploration of their own sense of self throughout this process of authentic storytelling. Within the context of a queer punk band like bottoms, the experiences being talked — or screamed — about are tangible, real and felt by every queer person in the room. At the risk of making a claim about universal queer experience (of which there is none) it can often feel very much that the pain, struggle, freedom and history of what it means to be a queer person bleeds through bottoms’ performances in an unapologetic way that truly does connect with any random queer watching from the audience — which is truly a remarkable accomplishment for any artist.

“I’m definitely always performing — literally always,” Dibeler elabprated. “‘All the worlds a stage,’ all that bullshit. It’s true, every moment is basically a standup comedy show for me, whether you want to be there or not. bottoms doesn’t really step into a role when we get on stage, and it’s the same with my own performances. I think a reason why it’s relatable in this way is because you can actually see a real person on the stage. That’s actually why I don’t really like being on stage when I perform. I’d rather be in the audience because I think it’s important to break down that wall of this ‘We’re a band and you’re an audience and you’re here to stand and listen to us.’ We want the audience to be, like, ‘Those fags in wigs are screaming about death and disease and fear are me, and I am a part of this too.'”

bottoms

As the nature of what it means to be a queer person shifts and changes with the passing of time, one can only hope that we always have art and performance that accurately reflect the intricate nuances of what these experiences are like — politically, socially, emotionally, physically.

At this strange and complicated period for the queer community, bottoms seems to be accomplishing this in an impressive way that is not only informed by our history with AIDS, persecution and violence but also the current climate of agency and self-identification that parallels mainstream LGBT “acceptance.” We hope to see more work like this from others along the spectrum of queer performance in the future.

bottoms is currently prepping to record the group’s second EP later this summer.. Their first EP, “Goodbye,” can be found here or head here for their Soundcloud.

Missed the previous installments in ASSEMBLAGE? Check out the slideshow below.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

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Thousands of Taiwanese rally for same-sex marriage

Thousands of Taiwanese rally for same-sex marriage

Thousands of gay rights supporters marched between parliament and the headquarters of Taiwan’s two main political parties, months ahead of the elections.

Same-sex marriage is becoming a ‘bigger electoral cause for voters,’ rally organizer Victoria Hsu told Reuters.

‘Young people in particular are fed up with politicians’ silence.’

Led by the Taiwan Alliance to Promote Civil Partnership Rights, the marchers shouted in front of the ruling Kuomintang’s (KMT’s) headquarters, ‘KMT, don’t be the stumbling block in equal marriage rights,’ Focus Taiwan reported.

Hsu, who is a lawyer and head of the alliance, slammed KMT for ‘repeatedly refusing to put the marriage equality bill on the agenda for discussion at the Legislative Yuan’s Judiciary and Organic Laws and Statutes Committee.

‘The final legislative session that begins in September will be the last chance for [the incumbent] lawmakers to review and pass the marriage equality bill,’ she said.

Marchers then headed to the opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) headquarters urging DPP lawmakers, who have proposed the marriage equality bill, to make more effort to push the bill through.

DPP Department of Women’s Development Director Lin Ching-yi, who was there to meet the marchers, said the party has insufficient seats in the committee to do so.

Rally in Taipei for same-sex marriage on 11 July

Rally in Taipei for same-sex marriage on 11 July

The rally was scheduled to be held earlier in the month after the US Supreme Court’s decision on 26 June but was postponed out of respect after a devastating explosion the following day at Formosa Coast Fun water park which injured 500 people.

The marriage equality bill, which would legalize same-sex marriage and allow married gay couples to adopt children, was reviewed for the first time at the Judiciary Committee in December last year.

However it has been shelved, largely due to opposition from conservative Christian groups who have formed a network to organize rallies and petition signature collections to lobby against marriage equality.

The post Thousands of Taiwanese rally for same-sex marriage appeared first on Gay Star News.

Sylvia Tan

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