EastEnders Casts Trans Actor to Play Trans Character in First for British Soaps

EastEnders Casts Trans Actor to Play Trans Character in First for British Soaps

Riley Carter Millington eastenders

The British soap EastEnders has cast 21-year-old Riley Carter Millington, a trans man, to play Kyle, a young transgender man. The trans casting is a first for British soaps, according to The Guardian.

EastEnders executive producer Dominic Treadwell-Collins revealed in March the BBC1 show would be introducing a transgender character, and said he was determined the part would be played by a trans actor.

Millington’s character will debut in October and become a regular at the end of the year.

Said Millington to the BBC:

“I am excited to be joining EastEnders. I can honestly say that I have now fulfilled my two biggest dreams – to be living my life as a man and to be an actor. I cannot wait to really get stuck in with filming and I look forward to seeing what is in store for my character.”

The post EastEnders Casts Trans Actor to Play Trans Character in First for British Soaps appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

EastEnders Casts Trans Actor to Play Trans Character in First for British Soaps

Gay Geek's Guide to New York Comic Con

Gay Geek's Guide to New York Comic Con

In addition to all the geeky mainstream awesomeness unleashed at every New York Comic Con, there’s always a great deal of LGBT-geared programming and events that take place at the Big Apple’s geekfest as well.

The annual pop-culture extravaganza lasts until Monday at the Javits Center near Manhattan’s (second) gay neighborhood, Hell’s Kitchen.

Whether you’re attending the convention or you’re just geek-curious, take a look at this year’s offerings below and mark your calendars accordingly.

Dan Parent Drawing Workshop

Dan Parent

Friday

Dan Parent Drawing Workshop
11 a.m.-noon

Wanna draw your own Kevin Keller? Then come learn how from the man who created the groundbreaking gay Archie character.

Gay Manga, Yaoi and Yuri: LGBTQ Fantasy vs. Reality in Manga
12:30-1:30 p.m.

Do you know the difference between “gay manga” and yaoi manga? Do you want to start reading yaoi manga but you don’t even know where to begin or what to read first? Then this panel is for you as guests break down the different types of gay manga and explore whether their popularity hurts Japanese gays.

LGBT Men Speed Dating
2-4 p.m.

Aside from some cool swag and collectible comics you could also come home from Comic Con with a new man. Find love on the convention floor at this special two hour block of speed dating for men who love men (in or out of spandex).

New York TimesOUT presents Gay Geek Culture
4-5 p.m.

If your love of pop culture knows no bounds and stretches from Broadway to books to movies then you’ll feel right at home at this panel that celebrates everything gay geeks love. Actor Andy Mientus (who plays the Pied Piper on The Flash) is joined by novelist Damon Suede, Paul McGill (from Spiderman: Turn Off the Dark) and more as they talk about everything gay geeks love.

Archie Comics Forever
4:15-5:15 p.m.

You’re probably still swooning over the super cute reboot of Archie Andrews, or maybe you just wanna know what’s next for Kevin Keller and Josie and the Pussycats. Either way this panel featuring the team behind the Archie universe will answer all your questions about the future of Riverdale.

LGBTQIA in Comics and Pop Culture Meet-Up
5:15-6:15 p.m.

Here’s your chance to meet and talk with the panelists and attendees from the earlier New York TimesOUT panels in a more relaxed and intimate setting.

Teen Wolf
5:45-6:45 p.m.

Join the cast and creators as they talk all about MTV’s hairy hit and spill secrets from behind the scenes. Paws crossed they don’t keep their shirts on for long.

Joss Whedon

Cast of Firefly

Saturday

Firefly Reunion
11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.

Calling all lovers of the Whedonverse! Joss Whedon’s much-loved cult series Firefly will host a reunion with its stars Nathan Fillion, Zoe Washburne, and Jewel Staite. 

The X-Files
1:15-2:30 p.m.

The X-Files might not scream “gay geek,” but let us repeat two words: Gillian Anderson. Mulder and Scully have only gotten more badass as time goes on, and with a screening of the first episode of the new 2016 revival AND a Q&A with David Duchovny and series creator Chris Carter, this will surely be one of the hottest tickets of the weekend.

Prism Comics Presents Autobiography in Queer Comics
1:30-2:30 p.m.

Come hear LGBT artists and writers talk about their craft of turning their life (and coming-out) stories into comics and graphic novels.

LGBT Speeding Dating: Women
1:30-3:30 p.m.

Now it’s time for the ladies to find cosplay love!

Doctor Who Fan Screening
7:45-9:15 p.m.

Leave your TARDIS outside and watch the premiere of a new Doctor Who episode “Before the Flood” with a Q&A with the episode’s writer and Clark Collis from Entertainment Weekly.

Sleepy Hollow

Tom Mison in Sleepy Hollow

Sunday

Sleepy Hollow
4:15-5:15 p.m.

Comic con weekend may be coming to a close, but that’s no reason to lose your head! End the weekend on a high as you watch an all new episode of the Fox hit series followed by a talk with the cast and crew (including history hottie Tom Mison as Ichabod Crane).

Also, don’t forget to stop by the booth for Prism Comics/Skin Tight USA and Northwest Press and support them and LGBT comic creators by buying some great gay geek swag!

Top: Drawing by DGDrawingsxX

Christopher Rudolph

www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/2015/10/09/gay-geeks-guide-new-york-comic-con

Broadway's Sierra Boggess On Bringing The 'Soundtrack Of Her Life' To The Stage

Broadway's Sierra Boggess On Bringing The 'Soundtrack Of Her Life' To The Stage

Sierra Boggess is in the midst of rehearsals for the highly anticipated Broadway musical version of “School Of Rock,” but she’s managed to find the time to squeeze in a little performance with the New York Pops at a place called Carnegie Hall.

“There are certain times in life when you’re like, ‘I have to do this,’ and this is one of those times,” Boggess, 33, told The Huffington Post in an interview. “Acoustically, Carnegie Hall is a singer’s dream. It’s just not something you get to do every day.”

Best known for roles in “The Little Mermaid,” “Phantom of the Opera” and “Les Misérables,” the singer-actress will perform with “Downton Abbey” alum Julian Ovenden at “My Favorite Things: The Songs of Rodgers and Hammerstein.” As its title suggests, the Oct. 9 show is a celebration of the legendary composers of “Oklahoma,” “The Sound of Music,” and “Carousel,” among other shows – and Boggess couldn’t be more thrilled.

“Their music is what made me be like, ‘Oh, yes! Musical theater!’ I was very old school,” Boggess said. The show, which kicks off the Pops’ 2015-2016 season, will feature songs from “Carousel,” “The Sound of Music,” and others. Collectively, Boggess says, it will represent “the soundtrack of my life for such a long time.”

She’s quick to tout that the “transformative power of music” is a central theme in “School of Rock,” too. That musical will not only feature the tunes that made Richard Linklater’s 2003 film, which starred Jack Black, so memorable, but also new music by Andrew Lloyd Webber, with whom Boggess has had a long professional association.

“That show goes hand-in-hand so well [with my Pops performance] because it’s just about the power of music,” Boggess, who will tackle the role of Rosalie Mullins (played by Joan Cusack in the film version), said. “It’s going to be a really joyous show, and everyone is gonna the theater every night leave just feeling really awesome about life.”

The star’s in a pretty joyous mood herself these days. Prior to beginning rehearsals for the Pops and “School of Rock,” she wrapped a well-received turn in the ensemble musical, “It Shoulda Been You,” opposite Tyne Daly, Harriet Harris and David Burtka, among others. And she couldn’t be happier about being in New York during the autumn, even if her busy rehearsal schedules leave her craving “chips and ice cream.”

“My boyfriend is in the fitness industry, so it’s just horrible,” she quipped. Still, there’s an unexpected benefit of fall, too: “I’m a redhead, so I look good in fall colors.”

 “My Favorite Things: The Songs of Rodgers and Hammerstein” plays New York’s Carnegie Hall on Oct. 9. Head here for more information.

— 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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Gay DNA scientist explains why he decided to quit project

Gay DNA scientist explains why he decided to quit project

The scientist who led the research into a genetic indicator of sexuality has told Gay Star News that he feared that he may have been contributing to work that might ultimately lead to the development of biological tests for sexual orientation.

Tuck C. Ngun is a postdoctoral scholar at the University College Los Angeles’ Center for Gender-Based Biology. He and colleagues have been studying the genetics of human sexuality through the study of male twins.

Their findings were revealed yesterday at the 2015 meeting of American Society of Human Genetics in Maryland. They included the fact that they had created a saliva test that could predict, with 67% accuracy, the sexuality of subjects in the test study.

The study has yet to have been published in a peer-reviewed journal and has been met with caution by others in the science community.

Ngun, who is gay, has himself decided to withdraw from the research. He says that part of the reason for this is the ramifications of the results. He left the project last week.

‘There are many reasons why I decided to pursue other things professionally but the implications of this type of research was a large part,’ he said in an email statement to Gay Star News.

‘Any practical outcomes (tests, screens, etc.) may be many years/decades in the future but the idea that I was contributing to that, even in a tiny way, didn’t sit right with me anymore. I want to make clear that I don’t believe in the censorship of information but on a personal level, I could not continue down this path.’

Asked if he believed that there might be pre-natal testing of sexuality at some point in the future, or tests developed that could be carried out on the DNA of adults to determine their sexuality, he said, ‘I think we are a long ways off from a pre-natal test or one that can be used on adults.

‘However, I do think they are possibilities and I hope that by talking about such things now, long before they are reality, we will know how to deal with any such tests.’

One of the critics of his research has suggested that genes cannot be the only factor of influence, as some identical twins include both homosexual and heterosexual siblings.

Addressing this particular point, Ngun said, ‘I would agree that the phenomenon of identical twins who are discordant for sexual orientation shows that genes aren’t everything. This finding has been around for a long time and is not mine.’

However, he went on to say that although identical twins can have differing sexual orientations, that wasn’t necessarily proof of nurture over nature.

‘What it doesn’t say is that sexual orientation is a choice. Identical twins can experience differences in the womb. It is unlikely that social environment – the usual alternative to genes – plays a role since sexual orientation seems to be determined very early in life.’

News of the research has met a mixed response. Many in the scientific community have said the research appears interesting but needs to be properly peer reviewed. It must also be noted that the saliva test created by Ngun and his colleagues was used on an unrepresentative sample of the public; male twins only.

Others have been more concerned about the moral aspect of the studies. Human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell told the Daily Mail, ‘This research claims to be able to predict sexual orientation with “up to” 70 per cent accuracy. This doesn’t sound entirely convincing or reliable.

‘Some people fear the research might be abused by homophobic parents or regimes to test and abort fetuses that have genetic markers for homosexuality.

‘Even if the tests achieved the maximum 70 per cent detection rate, it would still leave 30 per cent undetected.

‘Any bid to exploit this research for homophobic ends is doomed to fail. Homosexuality has existed in all societies and all eras. It is part of the natural spectrum of human sexuality.’

Ngun said he was very aware of the potential moral and practical implications of his work.

Asked if he thought research into a genetic basis for sexuality might help society become more tolerant to those it viewed as ‘different’ or if he feared that it would lead to people to want to try and find a ‘cure’, Ngun said: ‘I think both of those outcomes are definite possibilities and we have to be vigilant that the work isn’t misused to find a ‘cure’.

‘The “born this way” argument has clearly been very effective but I don’t believe in the idea of moral acceptability based on biology.

‘I think we should accept people, whatever their identity, as long as they aren’t harming anyone through their actions. The transgender movement has been very good at building support using this argument and while it may be slower than “born this way” I think it is the better approach.’

The post Gay DNA scientist explains why he decided to quit project appeared first on Gay Star News.

David Hudson

www.gaystarnews.com/article/gay-dna-scientist-explains-why-he-decided-to-quit-project/

Does Being Gender-Fluid Attract Straight Guys Like Bees To Honey?

Does Being Gender-Fluid Attract Straight Guys Like Bees To Honey?

Screen Shot 2015-10-08 at 4.59.41 PMWe love the word “fluid” when it comes to gender and sexuality, and if this video from Brian Jordan Alvarez and Jason Greene (aka Freckle) is to be believed, so do the traditionally masculine “straight” guys so often pined for by gay men.

Related: The Gay Age Gap Is Real — And It’s Annoying As Hell

Of course, it’s not going to resonate with everyone, but anything that chips away at rigidity is aces in our book — isn’t that what just being gay used to be?

And while the video gives us the giggles (as we’ve come to expect from Brian), there’s something actually going on here, because we have had gender fluid friends land some truly hot, straight-perceived guys.

Nip slip…is it?

Watch below:

Dan Tracer

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/_J1Sbb3wErc/does-being-gender-fluid-attract-straight-guys-like-bees-to-honey-20151009

Suspension Bridge Snaps, Hikers Plunge in Terrifying Video: WATCH

Suspension Bridge Snaps, Hikers Plunge in Terrifying Video: WATCH

suspension bridge snaps

Four hikers in New Zealand were finishing a four-day walk around Lake Waikaremoana when they plunged 8.5 meters into a river after the suspension bridge they were walking on snapped. The incident was captured on a GoPro camera one of the hikers was wearing.

A fifth hiker was close enough to the land when the bridge snapped that he was able to make it back quickly. All of the hikers survived the fall, one of them explains in an article.

He also explains that the land management was ceded a year ago to the native Tuhoe Maori tribe and that the infrastructure likely suffered as a result of the change in ownership.

Watch (not for folks with gephyrophobia):

The post Suspension Bridge Snaps, Hikers Plunge in Terrifying Video: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Suspension Bridge Snaps, Hikers Plunge in Terrifying Video: WATCH

STUDY: DNA of Identical Twins Can Reveal Who's Gay

STUDY: DNA of Identical Twins Can Reveal Who's Gay

Researchers say they’ve come up with a formula to reveal someone’s sexual orientation using DNA found in their saliva that is 67 percent accurate. 

The study, presented Thursday to genetics experts meeting in Baltimore, traced the genetic changes in identical twins that when combined help determine whether someone is gay or straight. It’s the first to claim a method to detect sexuality, reported Reuters.. 

“To our knowledge, this is the first example of a predictive model for sexual orientation based on molecular markers,” said Tuck Ngun, a researcher at the David Geffen School of Medicine of the University of California, Los Angeles, who led the study.

According to Gallup, about 3.8 percent of the adult U.S. population identifies as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender.

Of course, the idea of a genetic test for sexuality raises concerns that someone might try to mess with these epigenetic modifications to change a baby’s inherent orientation. Currently, there is no way to selectively change epigenetic patterns on DNA, although the technology is being developed.

These concerns over the potential misuse of the test led the study’s lead researcher to quit the project entirely, and many scientists have expressed caution over the results, including Ngun himself.

He, too, worries the test has the potential to be used and abused. “I’m gay,” he told New Scientist, “and I’ve always wondered why I am the way I am. But once you have this information, you can’t control how it’s used or disseminated.”

From the moment a child is conceived and all through a person’s life, genetic changes occur, and they can be handed down from generation to generation.  These are called epigenetic changes. The underlying code remains unaltered, but how a gene is expressed — how it works — that’s what changes.

At an American Society of Human Genetics meeting in Baltimore, Ngun stated that he studied epigenetic changes called methylation in 47 pairs of male twins. Identical twins have the same underlying DNA, but the epigenetic changes can make big differences in what happens to them later in life.

In 37 of the twin pairs, one brother was homosexual and the other wasn’t. In 10 pairs, both brothers were.

Dr. Margaret McCarthy, who studies the developing brain at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, said in a statement, this is more evidence we were indeed ‘born this way:’ 

“Developing male fetuses produce very high quantities of testosterone during the second trimester and this directs psychosexual development along masculine lines, a component of which is preference for females as sexual partners.

“This study provides a major step forward in our understanding of how the brain can be affected by factors outside of the genome. It is also possible that the experience of being a homosexual or a heterosexual has itself impacted the epigenetic profile. But regardless of when, or even how, these epigenetic changes occur, their findings demonstrate a biological basis to partner preference.”

Other experts said Ngun may be going too far in saying he can predict someone’s sexual orientation by looking at his or her genes, given that his study group was very small. 

Since the associations have not yet been tested in a completely independent study population, the results should be considered no more than suggestive, say experts. There needs to be verification before any firm conclusions can be drawn, according to Johnjoe McFadden, a molecular geneticist at the University of Surrey, UK.

Ngun is optimistic his findings may lead to bigger discoveries:

“Sexual attraction is such a fundamental part of life, but it’s not something we know a lot about at the genetic and molecular level. I hope that this research helps us understand ourselves better and why we are the way we are.”

Dawn Ennis

www.advocate.com/health/2015/10/09/study-dna-identical-twins-can-reveal-whos-gay

A Gay Dad Sounds Off On The Pope's Meeting With Kim Davis

A Gay Dad Sounds Off On The Pope's Meeting With Kim Davis

Last week, I invited the pope to join my family for dinner. It was largely a symbolic gesture, although, I had a house cleaning action plan and menu picked out should he have accepted.

It was not that I wanted him to meet my family specifically, but to actually sit face to face with a family like mine. My two sons were adopted out of foster care and situations that were life threatening and dire. Our family in the world of LGBT parents is not unique. A great number have tale after tale of kids who have gone from lives of potential abuse and neglect to homes where their parents love and honor them, and that their welfare is a priority. A Cambridge study showed, as a matter of fact, that the only family structured parenting unit that picked foster care aid as its top means of creating a family are families headed by two dads.

My point to the pope was— before you judge us, before you pontificate on how our families should not be legally or morally recognized, you can at least sit with us, face to face and see what we are about.

The pope did a lot during his visit to America. The thing he did not do was meet with LGBT families. To his credit, while he was here, he did not do any overt bashing of us either.

That is, until he was on his way out.

Like a little kid who has been an absolute angel for an afternoon, and then pranks out at then end, the pope shot a spit wad as his parting gift.

He secretly met with Kim Davis and put his seal of approval on her behavior.

My letter of regret:

Dear Pope Francis,

We sat staring at the open chair at our dinner table that we had hoped would be filled by you. True, the chance that you would accept our invitation was a long shot. We were hoping that the dignity you could afford families like mine might be a possibility.

It turns out, that hope was even a longer shot.

While in America, you gave several moving speeches. You talked of the family and how you wished young people would be inspired to start one. You talked of love and bonds, and principles with which I not only agree, I live.

As you were leaving, we all could have walked away with the feeling that some common ground had been built. Instead you gave us a sense of disappointment and betrayal.

The issue is not just that you met with Kim Davis. It is that you embraced her behavior and encouraged it. You stated, following your “secret” meeting: “Conscientious objection is a right that is a part of every human right…

Conscientious objection must enter into every juridical structure because it is a right, a human right. Otherwise, we would end up in a situation where we select what is a right, saying, ‘This right, that has merit; this one does not.”

What you neglected in your pronouncement is that while one may have a right to object due to one’s conscientious beliefs, one cannot expect to do so without consequence. As with the right to free speech, one may have the right to speak freely without fear of imprisonment or jail, but it does not preclude others from both speaking back or reacting to what has been said.

A person who believes the Bible legitimizes racism and/or slavery may state their conscientious objection to anti-discrimination protections, but it does not give them the right to discriminate. A firefighter who believes flames are “the will of God” does not have the right to let houses burn down when he has agreed to hold the hose that could douse the fire and prevent catastrophe. Your right to object does not give you the right to demean others.

The most honorable objections are done with willing sacrifices.

Kim Davis reports that you thanked her for her “courage.” It makes me sad to think of defining what Kim Davis did in humiliating loving families as being “courageous.”

If you want to understand conscientious objection and bravery, I would ask you to look instead to LGBT activist Corporal Evelyn Thomas: “I served in the Army National Guard and The U.S. Marine Corps prior to the enactment of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell; during a time when “homosexuality was prohibited” under the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ). I survived my military career with damages. I survived a corrective rape. I was raped by four Marines; in which a pregnancy was the result. I carried the child of my rapists. I reported the crimes. Although it was traumatic and terrifying time, I survived the physical, mental, and emotional abuse… Too many innocent lives have been lost in this war against inequality and injustice… Many people have viewed the iconic photo. It feels strange to think of that moment in the LGBT Movement. My comrades and I stood along the White House fence with our hands handcuffed to the metal bars, as a drastic and imperative plea for President Barrack Obama to end the oppressive, barbaric, and archaic practices of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell. This is our Civil Rights Movement. Each time I look at that photo, I see 6 heroes-humans that risked their professional careers and some cases personal relationships to perform a brave act. We did not perform this act for fame or money. We did it so that the women and men serving in our military know and understand they are of value, and “their lives do matter.” We will not allow any man, woman, or government determine our worth.”

Evelyn Thomas and her comrades were brave. They made a statement for their beliefs and they understood the consequences. They did not seek to be made comfortable. They sought to be heard.

Kim Davis is not an Evelyn Thomas. She is asking for the world around her to be forced to conform to her own narrow view. The fact that you might share her worldview does not make it any more worthy or legitimate to impose on others who do not.

The afterglow of your trip is gone. Bernie Sander’s tears over your forward thinking principles have dried. It was not that you snubbed LGBT families and fell silent in speaking on our rights, it is whom you chose to see and support instead. Salt, meet wound.

We look at your empty chair at our dinner table and realize it is small compared to the emptiness you ultimately left in our hearts, and in our hopes for you. When you were told that you had been a “star” on this trip, you replied “how many stars have we seen go out and fall?”

Point taken.

Rob Watson lives in Santa Cruz with his family.  He is a writer for The Next Family and Evol Equals. 

 

More on The Next Family: 

 

 

 

 

Also on HuffPost: 

 

 

 

— 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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Chelsea Clinton takes credit for pushing mom Hillary to support same-sex marriage

Chelsea Clinton takes credit for pushing mom Hillary to support same-sex marriage

Chelsea Clinton has claimed she was the driving force behind her mother’s support for same-sex marriage in the US.

Speaking on Ellen DeGeneres’ show, Hillary Clinton’s daughter described her mum as ‘really funny’ and said she had won ‘the mom jackpot’.

Clinton also said she was the one to push her mother to support same-sex marriage – by getting involved in the fight for equal marriage first.

‘When I got married in 2010 to my best friend, it just crystallized so fundamentally to me that everyone should be allowed to marry their best friend,’ the younger Clinton told Ellen.

‘And so I joined the equal marriage fight in New York and we got equal marriage in New York in 2011.’

Chelsea Clinton also said she was proud to say her daughter, Charlotte, would grow up in a country where ‘she can marry whoever she wants to marry’.

Last month, it was revealed that Hillary Clinton was ‘a little put off’ by gay rights, with Bill Clinton telling a long-term friend gay people ‘acting out’ made his wife uncomfortable.

Now a mother herself, Chelsea told Ellen she didn’t think she could love, respect and admire her mother more, but the electoral campaign and the hard work she does to ensure that every little girl – and every little boy – could live up to their potential had proven her wrong – just like the fact that Hillary didn’t give up.

‘When I see her being attacked, I just have even more respect that she keeps fighting,’ Chelsea Clinton said when Ellen asked how she felt when seeing her mother being attacked.

‘Because I think she could have stopped a long time ago – she still would have accomplished a lot.

‘But that she keeps going because there is so much unfinished business.’

The post Chelsea Clinton takes credit for pushing mom Hillary to support same-sex marriage appeared first on Gay Star News.

Stefanie Gerdes

www.gaystarnews.com/article/chelsea-clinton-takes-credit-for-pushing-mom-hillary-to-support-same-sex-marriage/