Zackary Drucker and Hari Nef Push Beyond 'Trans Tipping Point' on Good Cover

Zackary Drucker and Hari Nef Push Beyond 'Trans Tipping Point' on Good Cover

“I’ve heard more than one trans person say that it’s like the best of times and the worst of times,” explains performance artist Zackary Drucker in a special joint interview with actress Hari Nef in the Fall 2015 issue of GOOD magazine, now on newsstands. “It’s troubling the ways in which we’re being offered these opportunities. Then there’s this speculation that with the increased visibility of trans people, there’s this unintended backlash hitting the most disenfranchised members of our community. We really do have a responsibility to bring the community up. I think the only way that’s going to happen is through gainful employment.”

Last year The Advocate praised Laverne Cox, the Orange Is the New Black actress, for her groundbreaking appearance on the cover of the June 9 issue of Time magazine. That issue trumpeted a new era of trans awareness dubbed “the transgender tipping point.” This new era routinely features a roster of talented, articulate, camera-ready transgender spokespeople like Cox, and trans male bodybuilder Aydian Dowling, whose beauty adheres to traditional binary norms for female and male appearance.

In their conversation with GOOD, Drucker and Nef critique the so-called transgender tipping point, extolling its benefits, while also charging that it ignores the realities of the majority of trans people who do not enjoy the privileges of these celebrated few trans spokespeople.

“I honestly feel like it’s purely a question of power,” says Nef in the interview. She continues:

“Now we’re in the limelight with this weird, narrow window to attain exposure and money and visibility, and every trans woman who can needs to try and get a piece. I want us all up here — making money, pushing legislation, philanthropy, advocacy, calling people out — but at the end of the day, because it’s a media thing, it’s probably going to be — us here talking being a prime example — trans women working in media and politics. As trans women with white privilege, we may be given more opportunities, and we have this dire responsibility to pass the mic. We need to advocate for trans women of color, and we need to do more than talk about it. The danger is so disproportionate right now to how much shine we’re getting, and I’m more scared than I am triumphant.”

Profiled this year in The Advocate’s report on the real-life trans people influencing the Emmy-winning Amazon original series, Transparent, Drucker is a 32-year-old co-producer and advisor on the series, and a celebrated trans feminine photographer and performance artist who often works with the trans male artist Rhys Ernst.

Drucker grew up in the suburbs of Syracuse, New York, by what she describes to blog LA I’m Yours as “two really fantastic, progressive, educated parents.” With a Master’s in Fine Arts from the California Institute of the Arts and a Bachelor’s in Fine Arts from New York City’s School of Visual Arts, Drucker and Ernst’s 2013 film She Gone Rouge was featured at Outfest, and the pair’s photographic series, “Relationship” was shown at the prestigious Whitney Biennial. She is currently represented by the Luis De Jesus Gallery in Los Angeles.

GOOD MAGAZINE

Ten years Drucker’s junior and a recent graduate of the undergraduate theater program at Columbia University, Nef is also a fashion model and writer who will be a featured actress in the upcoming second season of Transparent. Hailing from Newton, Mass., she walked the Eckhaus Latta and Hood by Air fashion shows this spring. This year Nef became the first trans model to be signed to the elite IMG Worldwide modeling agency, reports Vogue magazine.

In the lead image that opens the GOOD interview, Nef and Drucker hold hands against a background of cool, grey stone slabs. Both are resplendent in stark white pantsuits (Nef’s by Stella McCartney and Drucker’s by Narciso Rodriguez with a capelet by Todd Lynn). They boldly don white after Labor Day, their pants’ overlong hems covering their feet in a carnivalesque manner.

Nef’s hair is brown, bobbed, and tousled and her sleeves hang long, belling at the wrists. Drucker’s shoulder-length hair is blond and pressed and her capelet covers her nearly-bare shoulders and arms. Both trans women stare gently yet commandingly at the camera. The image expresses a stunning, moody dissonance: tender sisterhood styled with a high fashion sheen. 

Towards the end of the GOOD interview, Drucker talks about the intergenerational divide among trans leaders, highlighting the fact that it is only recently that prominent trans individuals have been recognized in the mainstream:

“I look around sometimes and think: Are we as a community actually being lifted up? Or are we just pawns in this sort of prurient curiosity of a cis-normative world? There’s no answer, it’s yet to be seen. Yes, I would like to be optimistic and say that we’re moving toward the future where this next generation of trans people will finally be able to get ahead. Phyllis Frye, our nation’s first openly transgender judge, is on the cover of The New York Times. Those people have always existed as well, people who have operated in an overground economy, and who have made an impact regardless of the obstacles of being trans, but that usually happens with late transitioners.”

The beautiful dissonances and anxious criticisms within the words and images of Drucker and Nef in GOOD push the much-discussed transgender tipping point into an unprecedented complexity, where privilege and peril are styled and debated in equal measure.

Cleis Abeni

www.advocate.com/transgender/2015/10/06/zackary-drucker-and-hari-nef-push-beyond-trans-tipping-point-good-cover

Hollywood Is Finally Realizing It Can Make Films About Lesbians

Hollywood Is Finally Realizing It Can Make Films About Lesbians

The lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community has had a tumultuous relationship with Hollywood over the years in its struggle to gain visibility. However, lesbian scholar Lillian Faderman explained to HuffPost Live on Monday that in the past year alone, she’s seen remarkable changes for lesbians on the big screen.

Faderman, the author of The Gay Revolution: The Story of the Struggleexplained to host Caroline Modarressy-Tehrani that Hollywood’s recent willingness to tell lesbian stories has made a “huge difference.”

“What’s happening finally in Hollywood — and, in fact, just this year has made a huge difference — is that Hollywood is beginning to realize that they can indeed make films about lesbians,” Faderman said, citing films like “Grandma,” starring Lily Tomlin.  

“Now, there are other films coming out that Hollywood has produced that are absolutely groundbreaking in that finally Hollywood is realizing that we have stories to tell,” Faderman said. She hailed films like “Carol” and “Freeheld,” which feature lesbian characters as “heroes.”

“That all of this should happen in one year is really quite extraordinary,” Faderman said.   

Watch the full segment on Lesbian history: from Sappho to Ellen here. 

Want more HuffPost Live? Stream us anytime on Go90, Verizon’s mobile social entertainment network, and listen to our best interviews on iTunes.

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Gay Arizona Sheriff Paul Babeu Announces Second Bid For Congress

Gay Arizona Sheriff Paul Babeu Announces Second Bid For Congress

paul babeu

Pinal County, Arizona Sheriff Paul Babeu will once again seek a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives.

paul_babeu_and_joseBabeu, a Republican, first ran for Congress in 2012 before pulling out of the race after news broke of his relationship with an undocumented male immigrant. That man alleged that Babeu threatened him with deportation if he divulged details of his relationship with Babeu. Babeu was not out at the time and had a staunch anti-immigration record, giving the story plenty of legs. A state investigation exonerated Babeu but the scandal destroyed his congressional ambitions at the time.

AZ Central reports:

Babeu said he regrets not publicly sharing earlier that he is gay, which he thinks might have prevented some of the controversy.

But Babeu said his support continues to be high.

“That was a very difficult time for me personally and politically,” he said. “I had to survive through that and keep in mind that we got more votes than anyone elected in my county, including (2012 Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney). … I trust the voters to judge me on my performance, my merit and my contributions to the community.”

Babeu said he supports the recent Supreme Court decision to legalize marriage for same-sex couples. When asked about Kim Davis, the Kentucky county clerk who was briefly jailed for refusing to grant licenses to gay couples based on her religious beliefs, Babeu said all laws must be enforced.

“The rule of law is the basis of our civilization. Let’s (as a country) move on. There are far more important and pressing issues facing us,” he said.

 As for his chances this election cycle, Babeu said,

“This is the district I am hoping and planning to flip to go from Democrat to Republican,” after two terms in Kirkpatrick’s hands, Babeu said. “You’re going to have a representative that votes for a balanced budget, that’s going to take the tough votes on entitlements, a representative who understands the (Environmental Protection Agency) needs to deal fairly with Arizona.”

Babeu faces a crowded GOP field, running against Eagar rancher and Pinal County businessman Gary Kiehne, former Arizona Secretary of State and gubernatorial candidate Ken Bennett, Navajo businessman Shawn Redd and Arizona House Speaker David Gowan, as TriValleyCentral.com reports.

Watch a news report on the race for Arizona’s 1st congressional district, below:

The post Gay Arizona Sheriff Paul Babeu Announces Second Bid For Congress appeared first on Towleroad.


Sean Mandell

Gay Arizona Sheriff Paul Babeu Announces Second Bid For Congress

Former NFLer Kordell Stewart Denies Romance With Andrew “I’m Not Gay No More” Caldwell

Former NFLer Kordell Stewart Denies Romance With Andrew “I’m Not Gay No More” Caldwell

KSACFormer-Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Kordell Stewart says he never dated Andrew Caldwell, who became a viral video sensation with his breathless pulpit proclamation, “I’m not gay no more!” and describes the man as “delusional” for claiming otherwise.

“I’m a heterosexual man,” Stewart, who is divorced from Real Housewives of Atlanta‘s Porsha Williams, insisted to TMZ Sports that he’s never even heard of Caldwell.

“There’s no room in my personality for that lifestyle,” Stewart continued. “It’s not what I believe in.”

The rumors began when Caldwell was a guest on The Shakeup, a popular radio show last week, and announced to listeners that he was in a secret relationship with the former football quarterback, bragging that Stewart bought him everything from purses to expensive cars.

Related: Kordell Stewart Denies Gay Rumors: “I’m A 100 Percent Man!”

TMZ reports that Stewart believes he’s been defamed by Caldwell, but hasn’t decided whether he’ll sue.

Related: Viral Video Sensation Andrew Caldwell Admits “I Still Have Desires” About Mens

 

Watch Caldwell boast of his relationship with Stewart below.

Jeremy Kinser

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Former Priest: Vatican Sends Gay Priests to Convent to be 'Cured'

Former Priest: Vatican Sends Gay Priests to Convent to be 'Cured'

As Pope Francis leads a synod of bishops in discussions about Catholic families, a former member of the Vatican family has reportedly revealed a long-held secret regarding priests who exhibit what the defrocked Father called “homosexual tendencies.” 

This former priest claims they are packed off to a religious retreat in the mountains outside Milan, in order to be “cured.”

The report in the Italian newspaper La Repubblica on Monday quoted 44-year-old Mario Bonfanti, who said he was forced to leave his Italian parish by his superiors three years ago, despite the fact that he was not in a relationship and had maintained his vow of celibacy.

Bonfanti told the newspaper that priests suspected of being gay are often sent to a convent in the northern Italian city of Trento in order to “reflect” on their futures.

“There exists a convent where priests who manifest inappropriate sexual tendencies are sent to reflect. It’s a place where they help you to rediscover the straight and narrow. They wanted to ‘cure’ me but I refused to go,” he told La Repubblica.

The Venturini Convent was founded by Mario Venturini, a priest, in 1928, reported the UK newspaper The Telegraph, and can “accommodate a large number of priests, offering them an open and tranquil environment in which they can confront their problems.”

Psychiatrists and psychologists are on hand, The Telegraph claimed, to help with “various types of therapy.”

Father Gianluigi Pasto, 71, the head of the convent, told The Telegraph: “Priests come to us for a period of formation and personal reflection. At the moment we have neither gay priests nor pedophile priests here. Certainly our job is to welcome everybody.”

The facility dealt with priests who suffered from depression, alcoholism and who had “problems connected to sex,” he said.

“We don’t speak of our work but it is well known to many bishops and dioceses. They know what we can offer.”

When asked for more information, however, a spokesman for the convent told The Telegraph: “We have nothing more to say.”

The Vatican declined to confirm or deny whether the convent dealt with priests who were struggling with their sexuality.

The role of gay Catholics within the Church is one of the subjects being discussed at the three-week-long synod, which was preceded by the firing of a high-ranking priest who worked in the Vatican press office and came out in an Italian newspaper. 

As The Advocate previously reported, the synod opened with a clear statement by Hungarian Cardinal Péter Erdo about marriage equality: “There is no basis for comparing or making analogies, even remotely, between homosexual unions and God’s plan for matrimony and the family,” he said.

Dawn Ennis

www.advocate.com/religion/2015/10/06/former-priest-vatican-sends-gay-priests-convent-be-cured

Interracial Couples Share The Insults They’ve Experienced In Insightful Photo Series

Interracial Couples Share The Insults They’ve Experienced In Insightful Photo Series

Interracial dating shouldn’t be taboo, but some people who date outside their race are sometimes ostracized.

Donna Picnkley told The Huffington Post that she is standing up for these couples with her photo series titled “Sticks and Stones.” The Arkansas-based photography professor began the project in May 2014.

Picnkley was photographing a white woman and her black boyfriend when the woman’s mother told Picnkley that people often make horrible comments about their relationship. “If you go black, they won’t touch you,” Picnkley said the woman’s mother recalled hearing people tell her daughter.

Picnkley said this was upsetting for her because she’d heard of instances like this in the past, so she decided to photograph more interracial couples. She said she took the photos in black and white to distract from skin tones and focus more on each couple’s affection for each other. She also asked each couple she photographed to write down an insult they’ve received from someone else about being in an interracial relationship. 

“They are disgusting,” one couple wrote. Another couple wrote that they once heard, “If she can’t use your comb, don’t bring her home!”

“I just wanted to show them that, you know, we should be treated equally,” Picnkley told HuffPost.

As of last year, the number of Americans who were in favor of different races marrying each other increased 24 percent from four years earlier, according to Pew Research Center. Perhaps most striking to Picnkley, she said, was the number of younger couples she photographed who have experienced hate speech.

“It’s kind of interesting to see, with race relations the way they are, you would think that you would only hear the comments made to older couples, but I’m finding out I have a lot of young couples, too, that have had comments made to them,” she said. “I find that kind of disturbing. It’s not getting better.”

Picnkley said that the photo series is ongoing and hopes that it will help people become more open to interracial relationships and less judgmental.

“Anyone is entitled to love,” she said. “It’s not just same race. Love’s love.”

Scroll down to see more moving photos from Picnkley’s “Sticks and Stones” series.

 

 Follow HuffPost Black Voices

 H/T Slate

 

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Vatican is sending gay priests to a monastery to be ‘cured’, former clergy claim

Vatican is sending gay priests to a monastery to be ‘cured’, former clergy claim

The Vatican is attempting to ‘cure gay priests’ in a monastery alongside pedophiles and drug addicts, it has been claimed.

Former priests have come forward claiming that those who show ‘inappropriate sexual tendencies’ are sent to a monastery in Trento.

This involves a period of ‘training, personal reflection and enlightenment’.

These claims in the Italian press have emerged after Father Krzysztof Charamsa, a Polish theologian, was sacked after he came out as gay and had a long-term partner.

It also follows a Vatican insider suggesting that 50% of the priests that meet in the Vatican are secretly gay.

Gianluigi Pastó, the priest in charge at the monastery, has said ‘I can only say that here we help the priests become healthy.

In an interview with La Repubblica, he denied the institution was specifically for gay or pedophile priests but did not deny whether they had come in the past.

He also did not reveal their methods, merely pointing to the website that said they use ‘various types of therapy’.

A Vatican spokesman said: ‘There is no comment.’

‘Gay cure’ therapy is considered to be extremely harmful, both mentally and physically, by the World Health Organization and they have advised that it should not be attempted by anyone. Such ‘treatments’ range from prayer therapy to electric shock torture.

The post Vatican is sending gay priests to a monastery to be ‘cured’, former clergy claim appeared first on Gay Star News.

Joe Morgan

www.gaystarnews.com/article/vatican-is-sending-gay-priests-to-a-monastery-to-be-cured-former-clergy-claim/

The Pope’s Gay Friend Insists Meeting With Kim Davis Was A Set-Up

The Pope’s Gay Friend Insists Meeting With Kim Davis Was A Set-Up

1507245_10151969498011559_1742031793_oYayo Grassi, the gay former student of Pope Francis‘ who met with him last week, has claimed the meeting between Francis and Rowan County clerk Kim Davis was a set-up.

Speaking with Washington Post reporter EJ Dionne on The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell, Grassi insists the Pope knew the man at his side was his boyfriend.

“Oh absolutely, yes yes,” Grassi said. “In the video, that segment you just showed, when I introduced him to my boyfriend he said, ‘oh yes, of course, I remember you. We met in San Pietro.”

Asked how he felt about the meeting with Kim Davis, Grassi noted, “He basically was set up for this meeting with Mrs. Davis. I think that he was extremely surprised. I was very surprised and very suspicious from the very beginning that this was not something that came naturally from the Pope as an invitation. When things started to come out was when I realized… I think that I know who was behind this. And I honestly wouldn’t have said anything had it not been that the Vatican press office released that statement and somehow, the press got a hold of me.”

Watch the segment here.

H/t: LGBTQ Nation

Jeremy Kinser

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