New York City Is First U.S. City Chosen to Host WorldPride

New York City Is First U.S. City Chosen to Host WorldPride

For the first time in history, a global celebration of all things LGBT is coming to America and will be held in New York City in 2019, WorldPride organizers announced this week. 

The event will commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, which began in New York City in the early morning hours of June 28, 1969. When police raided the Stonewall Inn seeking to arrest LGBT patrons, “what followed were six days of uprisings by hundreds of diverse individuals,” said Rep. Jerrold Nadler of Manhattan, “demanding an end to police harassment, arrests and raids on LGBT establishments.”

In an op-ed last month in the The Advocate, Nadler wrote of his support for designating a national monument at the Stonewall Inn, which still operates as a bar under new management. “This rebellion launched a civil rights movement that continues to this day, and in the more than 45 years since, the name “Stonewall” has become synonymous with the history of America’s struggle for LGBT civil rights and the fight for equality,” Nadler wrote.

The annual event is run by InterPride, the international organization consisting of dedicated volunteers who organize and work to put on Pride events all over the world.

This WorldPride event will be locally organized by Heritage of Pride, the New York City group responsible for the city’s annual Pride celebration which draws millionsof visitors to the city every June. The 2019 global event will coinicide with two months of celebrations and programs among NYC Pride’s annual events. “While NYC Pride draws millions to NYC each June, Stonewall 50/WorldPride 2019 is anticipated to be one of the largest LGBT events ever to occur,” wrote event organizers in a news release.

As our sibling publication OUT reported, the theme of Stonewall 50/WorldPride 2019 is “Millions of Moments of Pride.”

“The Stonewall Uprising is considered the most significant event that ignited the modern LGBT rights movement, so it makes perfect sense to bring WorldPride to the birthplace of Pride in 2019,” said David Schneider, NYC Pride’s Stonewall 50 Director, “We are so grateful that our fellow Pride organizers from across the globe have chosen New York City for this momentous occasion.”

Previous WorldPride celebrations have been hosted in Toronto in 2014 and in cities such as Rome, Jerusalem and London. An upcoming celebration will take place in Madrid in 2017.

Watch a video about WorldPride Stonewall 50, below.

Elizabeth Daley

www.advocate.com/pride/2015/10/22/new-york-city-first-us-city-chosen-host-worldpride

Kim Davis Says She Is A 'Soldier For Christ'

Kim Davis Says She Is A 'Soldier For Christ'
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LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — The Kentucky clerk who found herself at the center of a heated national debate when she refused to license same-sex marriages described herself in an email as a “soldier for Christ.”

Davis’ emails, obtained by the Associated Press under the Kentucky open records law, offer some insight into her state of mind in the weeks leading up to her five-day stint in jail for defying a federal court order to issue the licenses.

“The battle has just begun,” Davis wrote in the email to a supporter in July, hours after four couples filed a federal lawsuit against her. It was the start of a monthslong legal fight against licensing same-sex marriages.

“It has truly been a firestorm here and the days are pretty much a blur, but I am confident that God is in control of all of this!!” she wrote to the supporter on July 2, the day the American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit against her on behalf of the couples. “I desire your prayers, I will need strength that only God can supply and I need a backbone like a saw log!!”

Davis stopped issuing all marriage licenses when a Supreme Court ruling in June effectively legalized gaymarriage.

A man wrote to ask where to get a marriage license and she told him to go to a neighboring county. She turned away a series of couples, both gay and straight, and a federal judge held her in contempt and sent her to jail in September, sparking a fiery debate about religious freedom in public service.

Protesters crowded the courthouse lawn and news media from across the country descended on rural Rowan County. She complained to a supporter that the demonstrators stood outside her office window chanting into bullhorns.

“Will your lawyers and several decent people be around you to protect you from the wicked threatening homosexual mob and their supporters?” a man from Somerset named Willie Ramsey wrote to ask.

“They are going to try and make a whipping post out of me!!” she wrote in her response. “I know it, but God is still alive and on the throne!!! He IS in control and knows exactly where I am!!”

She and Ramsey corresponded in late August about a looming deadline: United States District Judge David Bunning ordered her to issue the licenses, though delayed his ruling until Aug. 31 as she appealed. Both the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court declined to intervene on her behalf.

“September 1 will be the day to prepare for, if the Lord doesn’t return before then,” Davis wrote him. “I have weighed the cost, and will stay the course.”

Ramsey said he’d be willing to block the courthouse door if the law came for her that day.

“I’m sure it will be a mad house!!” she told him, adding that “God will still be in control!!”

While Davis was in jail, a deputy clerk began issuing licenses, altered to remove Davis’ name. Bunning released her on Sept. 8, with instructions not to interfere. But Davis furthered altered the licenses to replace her title with a declaration that the licenses were being issued under a federal court order. The ACLU has questioned the validity of the documents, and the legal battle wears on.

A man wrote her a week after her release, inquiring if the office would issue a marriage license to him and his wife.

She responded in all capital letters: “WE ARE OPEN FOR BUSINESS.”

 

Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Olympic Freeskier Gus Kenworthy: ‘I’m Gay’

Olympic Freeskier Gus Kenworthy: ‘I’m Gay’

Gus Kenworthy

Olympic freeskier Gus Kenworthy has come out of the closet. Kenworthy, who won AFP World Championships overall titles in 2011, 2012, and 2013, won silver at the Olympics in Sochi, Russia and won his first medal, a bronze, at the X Games in Tignes, France in the slopestyle event, came out on social media and in an interview with ESPN:

Gus Kenworthy started coming out to his family and closest friends nearly two years ago. His mom said she knew. His brother said he was proud. His best friend 
voiced unrelenting support. And if Gus Kenworthy were an average 24-year-old, the announcement — the story — might have ended there. But Gus Kenworthy is not an average 24-year-old. He is the top freeskier on the planet, an Olympic medalist, a face of the X Games. He is an elite athlete competing in the world of action sports, where sponsors — and income — are inextricably linked to image. In other words, he is an athlete with a lot to lose. But Gus Kenworthy is ready to tell that world, his sport, his truth. And so, as we sit down together in Los Angeles in September, he begins the only way he knows how: “I guess I should start by saying, ‘I’m gay.’”

I am gay. pic.twitter.com/086ayvChq2

— Gus Kenworthy (@guskenworthy) October 22, 2015

Kenworthy also updated his social media accounts with the announcement, writing on Facebook:

Gus KenworthyI am gay.

Wow, it feels good to write those words. For most of my life, I’ve been afraid to embrace that truth about myself. Recently though, I’ve gotten to the point where the pain of holding onto the lie is greater than the fear of letting go, and I’m very proud to finally be letting my guard down.

My sexuality has been something I’ve struggled to come to terms with. I’ve known I was gay since I was a kid but growing up in a town of 2,000 people, a class of 48 kids and then turning pro as an athlete when I was 16, it just wasn’t something I wanted to accept. I pushed my feelings away in the hopes that it was a passing phase but the thought of being found out kept me up at night. I constantly felt anxious, depressed and even suicidal.

Looking back, it’s crazy to see how far I’ve come. For so much of my life I’ve dreaded the day that people would find out I was gay. Now, I couldn’t be more excited to tell you all the truth. Maybe you’ve suspected that truth about me all along, or maybe it comes as a complete shock to you. Either way, it’s important for me to be open and honest with you all. Y’all have supported me through a lot of my highs and lows and I hope you’ll stay by my side as I make this transformation into the genuine me – the me that I’ve always really been.

I am so thankful to ESPN for giving me this opportunity and to Alyssa Roenigk for telling my story to the world. I think about the pain I put myself through by closeting myself for so much of my life and it breaks my heart. If only I knew then what I know now: that the people who love you, who really care about you, will be by your side no matter what; and, that those who aren’t accepting of you are not the people you want or need in your life anyway.

Part of the reason that I had such a difficult time as a kid was that I didn’t know anyone in my position and didn’t have someone to look up to, who’s footsteps I could follow in. I hope to be that person for a younger generation, to model honesty and transparency and to show people that there’s nothing cooler than being yourself and embracing the things that make you unique.

The magazine adds:

The 24-year-old Kenworthy, who finished the 2014-15 season as the Association of Freeski Professionals overall champion for the fifth year in a row, told ESPN The Magazine — in an interview done in September but published Thursday — that he contemplated quitting the sport entirely because he was distraught.

He said he’s known since the age of 5 that he is gay, but he didn’t start coming out to family and friends until two years ago.

“I never got to be proud of what I did in Sochi because I felt so horrible about what I didn’t do,” Kenworthy told ESPN The Magazine. “I didn’t want to come out as the silver medalist from Sochi. I wanted to come out as the best freeskier in the world.”

Watch:

The post Olympic Freeskier Gus Kenworthy: ‘I’m Gay’ appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Olympic Freeskier Gus Kenworthy: ‘I’m Gay’

Sir Ian McKellen Calls On All Closeted Actors To Fling Their Doors Open Wide

Sir Ian McKellen Calls On All Closeted Actors To Fling Their Doors Open Wide

ian_mckellen_4It all happened after coming out. I had no idea this silly thing was a weight on my shoulders. That’s my message to anyone in this town who thinks ‘I’ve got to stay in the closet to be successful in films.’ I didn’t. Do you want to be a famous movie star who has love scenes with ladies and in private be an unhappy gay? There’s no choice. Forget the career, dear. Go and do something else … A closet’s a really nasty place to live, you know? It’s dirty, it’s dusty, it’s full of skeletons. You don’t want it. Open that door — fling it wide and be yourself.”

 

Sir Ian McKellen, who came out publicly in 1988, in a new interview with The Hollywood Reporter

Jeremy Kinser

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Florida Lawmaker Proposes Expansive Bill To Allow Discrimination Against LGBT People

Florida Lawmaker Proposes Expansive Bill To Allow Discrimination Against LGBT People

Florida lawmakers have not given up on passing legislation that enables discrimination against the LGBT community. State Rep. Julio Gonzalez (R) has introduced a new bill that specifically empowers businesses, health providers, and child placement agencies to refuse any service to any customer if it would violate their “religious or moral convictions.”

HB 401 specifically references Florida’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), first passed in 1998, but builds upon it to ensure the use of religious beliefs to justify discrimination. Here are the three main categories of discrimination it aims to license:

  • Any health care facility, ambulatory surgery center, nursing home, assisted living facility, extended congregate care facility, or hospice is “not required to administer, recommend or deliver a medical treatment or procedure that would be contrary to the religious or moral convictions or policies of the facility or health care provider.”
  • Any person, closely held organization (small/family-run business), religious institution, or business owned or operated by a religious institution is “not required to produce, create, or deliver a product or service that would be contrary to the religious or moral convictions” of the person or organization.
  • Any private child-placing agency is “not required to perform, assist in, recommend, consent to, or participate in the placement of a child that would be contrary to the religious or moral convictions or policies of the agency.”

In all three cases, the bill exempts the discriminating individual or organization from any liability for the refusal of service, and also ensures that such refusal “does not form the basis for any disciplinary or other recriminatory action” against them.

Though the bill does not include any LGBT-specific reference, Gonzalez specifically highlighted to the Herald Tribune the examples of wedding vendors that been found in violation of nondiscrimination laws when refusing service to same-sex couples. “We have seen in other states the bakers, the photographers who don’t want to participate in certain religious events,” he said.

“This is not about discriminating,” he insisted. “This is making sure the state stops, at a narrowly crafted level, from intruding into somebody’s liberties.” This is despite the fact that the bill empowers refusals of service in ways much more explicit than similarly controversial bills considered earlier this year in Indiana and Arkansas.

Gonzalez’s bill follows just six months after the Florida House overwhelmingly voted for a bill that would have specifically enabled discrimination by child-placement agencies. Opponents of that bill offered several amendments to specifically ensure the bill’s identical protections of “religious or moral convictions” could not be used to discriminate, but those amendments were repeatedly voted down. Fortunately, the bill died shortly thereafter in the Senate Rules Committee.

The post Florida Lawmaker Proposes Expansive Bill To Allow Discrimination Against LGBT People appeared first on ThinkProgress.

Zack Ford

thinkprogress.org/lgbt/2015/10/22/3714990/florida-license-to-discriminate/

Amsterdam Lowlanders Rugby Team Go Nude For 2016 Calendar (NSFW)

Amsterdam Lowlanders Rugby Team Go Nude For 2016 Calendar (NSFW)
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The Amsterdam Lowlanders rugby team — the only rugby club in the Netherlands organized by, though not exclusive to, gay men — is going nude again to raise money for its annual calendar, this time in hopes of funding a trip to the Bingham Cup, the world cup of gay rugby, taking place in May 2016 in Nashville, Tennessee.

“Once every two years more than 60 gay rugby teams gather from all over the world to participate in one of the largest amateur Rugby Union tournaments, the Bingham Cup,” Dennis de Boer, Chairman of the Lowlanders, said in a statement. “To get our entire team to participate, including our teammates that can’t afford such a trip on their own, our members worked passionately to produce this calendar. Passion is one of the core values of rugby, just as is respect, camaraderie and 100% dedication. Since 2003 the Lowlanders offer gays the opportunity to develop these aspects, to be part of the worldwide rugby family and to feel this rough sport offers a place to everyone. It’s a huge honor for us to present the first calendar to the Leo van Herwijnen Rugby Foundation. They will give the calendar a place in their permanent exhibition at the National Rugby Center in Amsterdam.”

Check out photos from the 2016 calendar below. Interested in acquiring your own? Head here.

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Provocative Films About Gay Palestinians & Crack-Addicted Trans Working Girls Among the Bold Highlights at New York’s Newfest 2015

Provocative Films About Gay Palestinians & Crack-Addicted Trans Working Girls Among the Bold Highlights at New York’s Newfest 2015

Naz-and-Maalik-kiss

Naz and Maalik

Newfest launches with a bang tonight with Peter Greenaway’s visually stunning biopic Eisenstein in Guanajuato, and on tomorrow’s agenda is one of the world’s only LGBT film fest screenings of the highly anticipated Cate Blanchett-Rooney Mara love story Carol. But some of the most exciting flicks at this year’s incarnation of New York City’s gay film festival will be its documentaries, a heady blend of rare slice-of-life glimpses into little-seen LGBT lives from across the planet and right next door.

Undoubtedly the most controversial of Newfest 2015’s bold lineup — and especially poignant given the flare-up of Palestinian-Israeli violence in recent weeks — is Oriented, one of the first documentaries to profile gay Palestinians, and certainly the first to do so in such a positive (if far from breezy) light. Shot during the lead-up to the last round of pronounced regional tensions in 2014, the film focuses on Khader, Fadi and Naeem, three hip young gay Tel Aviv-based Palestinian friends who’ve formed an artistic resistance group called Qambuta. It’s an honest and fairly mind-blowing look at the grim and complex societal and familial challenges the guys face on a daily basis, and the creative, innovative and completely non-violent methods they’re using to overcome those pressures.

Oriented

Oriented

Another fascinating documentary gem at Newfest this year is actually a throwback two-pack, 1990’s The Salt Mines and its 1995 sequel The Transformation, both of which have barely been seen in the two decades since they were made. The Salt Mines introduces us to the almost unbelievable Manhattan-fringe world of a fierce and plucky assortment of homeless crack-addicted Latin trans prostitutes, who’ve formed a makeshift society on a near-abandoned New York City Department of Transportation lot amid broken down garbage trucks and stored mountains of winter salt. Just when you think you’ve seen it all, the film’s follow-up The Transformation reveals that five years on, the ravishing Sara is now astoundingly living in Dallas as Ricardo — not only as a born again Christian, but also engaged to marry a cis woman. As we discover that some of his former Salt Mines neighbors are meanwhile leading very different lives, it becomes obvious that Ricardo’s stunning transformation isn’t as clear-cut as it initially seems.

Other doc standouts at Newfest 2015 include Finding Phong, which follows a young Vietnamese transwoman as she prepares for gender confirmation surgery; Gazelle: The Love Issue, profiling Brazilian-born New York City club fixture, photographer and publisher Gazelle (who’s a flight attendant known as Paulo by day); and Fassbinder: To Love without Demands, a portrait of prolific but divisive bisexual director Rainer Werner Fassbinder, as remembered by his friend, Danish author and director Christian Braad Thomsen.

eisenstein

Eisenstein in Guanajuato

And while it won’t be world premiering any dramatic films this year, Newfest is certainly showcasing some of 2015’s best from other fests (many in New York City for the first time), including the aforementioned Eisenstein in Guanajuato, a gorgeous look at the sexual and creative awakening of gay Russian director Sergei Eisenstein during his early 1930s visit to Mexico; Those People, the beautifully-shot story of two young lifelong friends (and maybe more) against the gilded but seriously tarnished Manhattan backdrop of a Madoff-esque scandal; Take Me to the River, an explosive but tender family drama and Sundance favorite centering on the clash between a gay California teen and his mother’s rural Nebraska clan; Summer of Sangaile, a sweet and charmingly offbeat lesbian love story (and another Sundance favorite) set in the Lithuanian countryside; Naz and Maalik, a slice-of-life look at two in-love but closeted black Muslim teens in Brooklyn; Fourth Man Out, a working class buddy comedy (and Outfest Dramatic Feature Audience Award winner) in which a newly out guy’s three straight buds help him find a boyfriend; and The Girl King, renowned Finnish director Mika Kaurismäki’s take on the 17th century romance between Sweden’s Queen Christina and her lady-in-waiting, Countess Ebba Sparre.

The 27th edition of Newfest runs through Tuesday, October 27. For the full list of films and to purchase tickets, check out the official site.

Jeremy Kinser

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