First Openly Gay NFL Player Michael Sam To 'Step Away' From Football

First Openly Gay NFL Player Michael Sam To 'Step Away' From Football

By Eric M. Johnson

Aug 14 (Reuters) – Michael Sam, who last year became the first openly gay player drafted by a National Football League team, said on Friday he was stepping away from football, citing concerns over his mental health.

The Canadian Football League’s Montreal Alouettes, with whom he signed a contract in May, said on its team website that Sam had left the team for personal reasons and as a result had been placed on the team’s suspended list.

“The last 12 months have been very difficult for me, to the point where I became concerned with my mental health,” Sam wrote on Twitter. “Because of this I am going to step away from the game at this time.”

 

The last 12 months have been very difficult for me, to the point where I became concerned with my mental health. Because of this I am 1/3

— Michael Sam (@MichaelSamNFL) August 14, 2015

going to step away from the game at this time. I thank the Alouettes for this opportunity and hope to be back on the field soon. Thank 2/3

— Michael Sam (@MichaelSamNFL) August 14, 2015

 

“Thank you all for your understanding and support,” he added.

Sam also thanked the Alouettes, and said he hoped to be back on the field soon. The defensive lineman was suspended by the Alouettes in June after he left the team’s training camp for unexplained personal reasons.

The National Football League’s St. Louis Rams selected Sam in the seventh round of the 2014 draft but waived him in the final round of cuts. He was picked up by the Dallas Cowboys but they released him from their practice squad in October.

Sam was the Southeastern Conference Defensive Player of the Year as a senior at the University of Missouri before graduating in December 2013.

The following February, before the NFL Draft, he announced he was gay.

ESPN reported that Sam agreed to a two-year deal with the Alouettes this summer. It also reported that he sat out the team’s first five games and that he failed to record a tackle during his team debut on August 7.

Sam’s supporters have said that his sexuality is irrelevant to his performance and have dismissed suggestions that an openly gay player would be a distraction for a professional football team. (Reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle; Editing by Will Dunham and Ken Wills)

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Watch: Hidden camera shows straight couples defending gay adoptive parents against harasser

Watch: Hidden camera shows straight couples defending gay adoptive parents against harasser

The situation is a setup staged by ABC’s What Would You Do?, a popular TV series which puts actors in real life scenarios to catch the reactions of bystanders when someone nearby is being harassed, or mistreated.

In this What Would You Do? episode filmed in Plainfield, New Jersey, a woman who disapproves of gay couples adopting children is seen and heard warning the expectant mother that she should not let her child be adopted by the gay couple who were also present.

In one scene, the woman suggests to the gay couple to get a pet instead.

Watch straight men and straight couples sitting at the next table speak up against the woman and offer words of support to the gay couple.

The post Watch: Hidden camera shows straight couples defending gay adoptive parents against harasser appeared first on Gay Star News.

Sylvia Tan

www.gaystarnews.com/article/watch-hidden-camera-shows-straight-couples-defending-gay-adoptive-parents-against-harasser/

What It Is Like Having an LGBT Parent: Let's Get the Facts Straight

What It Is Like Having an LGBT Parent: Let's Get the Facts Straight

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My father told me he was gay when I was 13. He said he had known ever since he was a little boy. Growing up Catholic in North Carolina during the 1960s did not present the most welcoming of circumstances for a gay man. For a lot of people, it is difficult to understand how a gay man could marry a woman and have children, but it is a lot more common than one might think. Most of my girlfriends are ecstatic when I tell them I have a gay dad; most of my guy friends are uncomfortable. For me, it’s a fact of life.

First, let me explain to you what it is not: It does not just mean I have a “cool dad” who goes shopping with me and that we get our nails done together (although, occasionally, we do).

This is what it is like: Harnessing my anger when I hear about hate crimes against the LGBT community and crying when I hear about LGBT kids committing suicide because of bullying. Biting my tongue (not often successfully,) when someone tells me that being gay, transgender, bisexual, etc. is “wrong, immoral or sick.” Watching the confused look on a person’s face when I try to explain why my dad stayed in the closet for 20 years and started a family as a straight man. Feeling hurt and frustrated when people actually believe gays set bad examples for their kids and being teased in grade school and, at that time, feeling ashamed. Have you ever tried to explain to someone that your stepdad is your father’s husband?

I fight against the ignorance because I know what it is actually like having a gay dad: wonderful. I adore watching him love my stepdad fully and wholeheartedly, no differently than two straight people would. Having a married gay dad means I get to have not only one intelligent, warm-hearted dad, but two. My dad, as a writer and advocate for the LGBT community, has become a resource and beacon of hope for lesbians and gays all around the world enduring the same struggle he did, and he encourages them to be open about who they are. As for changes in my life? I have become accepting and welcoming of all, regardless of how different they may be from me.

The relationship my father and I have today did not come easily, but it sure was worth it. Through a lot of counseling, tears and love, he became not only a better parent but a best friend. I am not sure if we became closer because he came out of the closet, but by showing his authentic self, our bond strengthened. He does not fit the so-called stereotypical “gay man,” but we certainly do enjoy our lunch dates and nights out on the town together. Our relationship is no different than any other good father and daughter bond. He still calls me every so often to make sure I am focusing on my studies, taking care of myself and staying away from bad boys and parties. (Sorry, Dad.)

Having a gay dad is so much more than meets the eye, but I would not have it any other way, and in fact I couldn’t. At forty-three years of age, I’m glad he finally figured that out too.

Marisa’s father writes at The Authentic Life

A revised edition of this article appeared on Odyssey.

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www.huffingtonpost.com/marisa-dameron/what-it-is-like-having-a-gay-parent_b_7989668.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Video shows tense marriage license standoff at Rowan County Clerk’s office in Kentucky

Video shows tense marriage license standoff at Rowan County Clerk’s office in Kentucky

A new video shows the frustration endured by Kentucky couple David Moore and David Ermold as they returned to the Rowan County Clerk’s office this week to request a marriage license.

Last month, the couple was refused by County Clerk Kim Davis who this week lost a battle in federal court. A judge ruled that her religious beliefs could not legally be used as a reason to not perform the duties she pledged to do when she took the oath of office.

Davis was nowhere to be seen on Thursday (13 August) but her staff continued to defy the judge’s ruling on her behalf. They told the couple marriage licenses were still not being issued.

‘I will say that people are cruel, they are cruel, these people are cruel,’ a tearful Ermold is seen saying in the video. ‘This is how gay people are treated in this country. This is what it’s like. This is how it feels.’

Moore and Ermold have been together for 17 years.

Same sex marriage was made legal in all 50 US states by the Supreme Court on 26 June. Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear had previously weighed in telling Davis and other clerks to issue licenses or resign.

The post Video shows tense marriage license standoff at Rowan County Clerk’s office in Kentucky appeared first on Gay Star News.

Greg Hernandez

www.gaystarnews.com/article/video-shows-tense-marriage-license-standoff-at-rowan-county-clerks-office-in-kentucky/

Stonewall Veteran Miss Major Blasts Upcoming Film: ‘Everybody Can’t Be White!’ – VIDEO

Stonewall Veteran Miss Major Blasts Upcoming Film: ‘Everybody Can’t Be White!’ – VIDEO

miss major

One of the veterans of the 1969 Stonewall riots is speaking out strongly against Roland Emmerich’s upcoming film Stonewall, which is currently embroiled in controversy after a first trailer triggered accusations that it was ignoring the role drag queens, the transgender community, and people of color played in watershed LGBT rights event.

Miss Major Griffen-Gracy, whose displeasure with the film was mentioned in the parody trailer we feature on Towleroad earlier, spoke to Autostraddle this week about why the film was a disservice to the memory of those who stood up at the Stonewall Inn.

It’s so disappointing. They keep doing this! My first thought is: how dare they attempt to do this again? A few years ago they did another Stonewall movie, and I swear if I saw a black person, it had to be a shadow running against the face of somebody who was white!

It’s absolutely absurd — you know, young people today aren’t stupid. They can read the history, they know that this is not the way it happened. These people can’t let it go! Everybody can’t be white! This is a country of different colors and people and thoughts and attitudes and feelings, and they try to make all of those the same for some reason.

Related, Larry Kramer Speaks Out Against ‘Stonewall’ Boycott Efforts: ‘Don’t Listen to the Crazies’ 

She continued:

Let’s wake up, I mean, gosh, I know this is a serious thing but let’s keep some humor here. These people need to be acknowledged for the role they played. And that they existed! It’s so important that they at least realized that Marsha and Sylvia existed and that they did so much to help the community. And they tried to work with the [mainstream LGBTQ Community]. For me and the girls who lived Uptown, they did so much.

I hope a lot of people read this and get their heads out of their ass.

Miss Major also shared a detailed account of what went down in June 1969. You can read her full interview with Autostraddle here.

Below, you can check out this recent interview she did with The Transgender Oral History Project in which she reflects on her experiences during the Stonewall riots.

The post Stonewall Veteran Miss Major Blasts Upcoming Film: ‘Everybody Can’t Be White!’ – VIDEO appeared first on Towleroad.


Kyler Geoffroy

Stonewall Veteran Miss Major Blasts Upcoming Film: ‘Everybody Can’t Be White!’ – VIDEO

Photographer, Felipe Vasquez, Shares New Photo Series About the Dark Side of Falling in Love (NSFW)

Photographer, Felipe Vasquez, Shares New Photo Series About the Dark Side of Falling in Love (NSFW)
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Chapter 1 – Body Betrays Itself

Recently, I met with photographer, Felipe Vasquez. He gave me a peek at his newest project, Soliloquy, and we discussed love, vulnerability and possession. A photograph from each chapter of Soliloquy is included throughout the interview, the other images can be found at his website.To see more of his work, check out his instragram account @amphibian06.

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Chapter 2 – Purification

Phillip M. Miner (PM): It’s called Soliloquy. A soliloquy is a conversation, what conversation were you having?

Felipe Vasquez (FV): Traditionally, a “soliloquy” is sort of like a monologue, only that it functions more as an inner conversation, rather than a speech to an audience. I titled it this because the project works to me almost as a play. It is staged into chapters; each as a buildup to a new scenario. I worked on every segment in a stream-of-consciousness manner and later grouped them into a more cohesive storyline.

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Chapter 3 – Ascent

The narrative explores the mental, physical and emotional effects of spirit possessions by creating a comparison to the act of falling in love; drawing upon a series of self-portraits that illustrate the notion of succumbing to the presence of another being, human or otherwise, to the point of absolute self-abandonment.

Soliloquy reflects my relationship experiences with men and how they’ve affected my life. But also, the more universal idea of commitment and how we can give in so selflessly and lose control over ourselves at such extremes.

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Chapter 4 – An Offering to Saturn

PM: I think possession is an appropriate way to think about love.

FV: It’s a nihilistic way of thinking about it. I was talking to a friend and he said, “It’s interesting that you see love in that way because to me, it’s not about giving in entirely and becoming taken. It’s more about giving and receiving.”

Love, obviously, as any other aspect of the human experience, has many sides to it. We all navigate through life differently and bring in and take away things from one another, but I also think that love, in particular, is a tumultuous experience that is universally encountered in extremes. It is something we can all relate to.

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Chapter 5 – (him)

PM: Looking at it, the narrative focuses on the darker side of love.

FV: It definitely derived from a dark backbone. When I began working on the series, I was in quite a harrowing mindset. I was full of anger and anxiety and the focus became figuring out a way to transfer all that negativity into a substantial body of work. The references that were coming to me came from media that explored the brutality and the agony but also the tenacity of humanity. As I was going through the process, however, I determined I didn’t want the series to be so one-sided and I needed to give it a broader range.

Eventually, the pace became more organic and I included segments that would work as breathing time from all the tension. “Purification,” for instance, represents the idea of water cleansing a moment of sudden inhibition. While “Ascent” carries on that sense of relief by expanding on the cool tonality of its imagery. These two chapters are placed in the beginning of the series, as I wanted to provide the narrative with a sense of irregularity — a path that doesn’t run linearly, but rather erratically, to then pick up on a very chaotic speed to its climax. The way human relationships often function.

Prior to Soliloquy, I was coming out of some poisonous relationships that felt like a cycle where one bad situation could only be fixed by a worse one. This is undoubtedly the most autobiographical project I have ever created.

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Chapter 6 – Seed

PM: You mentioned references. Who inspired you while you were creating this.

FV: Music is vital to me. It has always helped me solidify concepts and establish accurate emotive outputs within my creative process. With Soliloquy, I was inspired by the ferocious voice and compositions of Diamanda Galás and Margeret Chardiet’s gorgeous noise project, Pharmakon. But even more so, by the work of Austrian artist, Soap&Skin, whose emotionally charged music has served as a catharsis during some of the darkest periods I’ve endured.

I’m also very much influenced by film. I consider Lars Von Trier to be the greatest filmmaker of our time — a true storyteller unafraid to expose the vast spectrum of the human experience, and in this particular case, his film Antichrist was a big influence as was Andrzej Żuławski’s Possession.

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Chapter 6: Seed

I admire Matthew Barney and Marina Abramović because of their ability to use the corporeal to emote a large range of subjects. Barney’s take on sexuality, mythology, metamorphosis and the definition of gender, played a crucial role on the development of this series. While Abramović’ courageous and relentless use of her body as a form of expression, has consistently motivated me to challenge my own endurance and to eloquently channel that energy into art.

The most important aspect about the process of making Soliloquy was to pursue the idea of emotional transcendence through physical stimuli. Each time I entered the “stage,” I made it my ultimate objective to engage in situations where my body would be pushed to its limits. To access a place of exhaustion where the performance would deliver a moment of true emotional consumption.

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Chapter 7 – Penance

PM: Do you think being gay in a society that only recently accepted our relationships impacts our ability to have functional relationships?

I have experienced that in New York City things are enhanced and multiplied and more intense than they are in many places — I’m going to dare to say that. But I think in terms of relationships, you bring into this territory that is tricky as it is, every insecurity and fear that you have gathered in life. Most homosexuals grow up in an environment where it isn’t okay to be who you are. So you grow up with guilt and a burden that you now also have to balance with your partner’s. That, in addition to the baggage that society puts on us by telling us who to love and how to love them, becomes a very difficult dynamic.

This series is not exactly about identifying self-loathing or analysing my orientation, but my sexual-identity is as much a part of who I am as everything else. And though in my case this signifies being a homosexual, it is more so about general sexuality — the concept of carnal desire; the roles of dominance and submission; the heighten stages of euphoric romance, but also the voluminous depravities and the extents we can reach when we are overpowered by our feelings.

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Chapter 8 – Rite of Lechery and Succumbing – Part I

PM: It feels to me that there’s a lot of vulnerability with this series.

FV: I knew from the beginning that I was going to bare it all with this project. I’ve done a lot of self-portraiture in the past that involves costumes and elaborate settings made to disguise my identity. With Soliloquy, I wanted a black backdrop that would set everything in a limbo, undefined and deserted, and therefore, place the spotlight solely on the character. The nudity was important to represent vulnerability and to emphasize on the primitive aspects of the human body.

There is a piece called “Seed,” where I’m covered in black, coarse hair. It is a point in which I wanted to highlight this concept of the body acting against you and literally bringing you to your knees under the presence of a higher power. At the end of this sequence, the character is licking the ground — embodying a sort of “master and servant” ideology where the struggle is both something tortuous and enjoyable; love being a difficult endeavor, sometimes devastating, but one that we also long for even at its darkest. The most vulnerable place a human being can be in.

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Chapter 9 – Mutilation 3

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Miley Cyrus fully understands why Caitlyn Jenner is living out her transition in the spotlight

Miley Cyrus fully understands why Caitlyn Jenner is living out her transition in the spotlight

Caitlyn Jenner has her critics but Miley Cyrus is not one of them.

Jenner and TV’s one-time Hannah Montana, who are more than 40 years apart in age, have forged a friendship as they both emerged this year as two of the most famous women in the LGBTI community.

‘We’ve talked a lot about how you can never make every single person happy,’ Cyrus tells Marie Claire.

Cyrus acknowledged earlier this year that not all of her romantic relationships have been with men while Jenner came out as transgender in April in a widely seen interview with Diane Sawyer.

She then re-introduced herself to the world as Caitlyn on the cover of Vanity Fair in June and last month, an eight-episode docu-series about her transition called I Am Cait premiered on E!

‘We always laugh about people saying she transitioned to be famous. Which is crazy,’ Cyrus says. ‘Caitlyn has to tell her story, because if she doesn’t, everyone else is going to tell it for her.’

Jenner became a household name at the 1976 Olympics by winning the gold medal in the decathlon as Bruce. After years of doing television commentating, some acting and giving motivational speeches, Jenner’s fame once again rocketed through his family’s reality show Keeping Up With the Kardashians.

 

 

 

 

The post Miley Cyrus fully understands why Caitlyn Jenner is living out her transition in the spotlight appeared first on Gay Star News.

Greg Hernandez

www.gaystarnews.com/article/miley-cyrus-fully-understands-why-caitlyn-jenner-is-living-out-her-transition-in-the-spotlight/