Donald Trump Calls Ben Carson a ‘Total Loser’ in Pulled SNL Promo: WATCH

Donald Trump Calls Ben Carson a ‘Total Loser’ in Pulled SNL Promo: WATCH

Trump SNL total loser

Saturday Night Live posted a series of promos on Wednesday and then took them down, replacing them with a new set which had been edited. Among those promos missing in the new set were a promo in which guest host Donald Trump calls his GOP rival Ben Carson “a total loser.”

Rolling Stone reports:

“Because of equal time rules for television, Mr. Trump can only speak for four seconds in this promo,” Strong says in one of the promos. “So let me just say this,” says Trump. “Ben Carson is a complete and total loser.”

The original promo was removed from SNL’s YouTube site shortly before 4 p.m. Wednesday, and replaced less than an hour later with an “updated” version from which the Carson sketch, and two others, were removed. NBC’s entertainment publicity team did not respond to an inquiry about the switch.

Here’s the pulled promo:

Here are the replaced promos:

Meanwhile, demonstrations are going on outside NBC in midtown Manhattan, calling on the network to dump Trump:

The post Donald Trump Calls Ben Carson a ‘Total Loser’ in Pulled SNL Promo: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Donald Trump Calls Ben Carson a ‘Total Loser’ in Pulled SNL Promo: WATCH

Tokyo Issues Japan’s First Same-Sex Marriage Certificate

Tokyo Issues Japan’s First Same-Sex Marriage Certificate

Holding rainbow fans and grinning from ear to ear, a couple in Japan was photographed on Thursday with a very special document clutched in their hands: a marriage certificate officially recognizing their same-sex union. 

According to CNN, it’s the first of its kind in Japan

Koyuki Higashi, 30, and Hiroko Masuhara, 37, were married in Tokyo’s Shibuya ward on Thursday morning. 

“I am exhilarated that the city I am living has recognized my partner as my family,” said Masuhara, per Reuters.

Shibuya’s legislators voted in March to grant marriage certificates to LGBT couples, making the ward the first in Japan to recognize same-sex unions. Setagaya, another of Tokyo’s 23 wards, voted to do the same a few months later.  

The local ordinances recommend that same-sex couples be granted equal rights, including hospital visitations and apartment rentals. 

At the time of Shibuya’s vote, Toshitake Kuwahara, the ward’s then-mayor, said that young “sexual minorities” were living in fear and struggling with self-doubt in Japan.

“This is the reality,” the former mayor said, per The Associated Press. “The purpose is to realize a society where everyone can live in hope.”

Although LGBT activists praised Shibuya and Setagaya’s move to recognize same-sex unions, they noted the ordinances’ many limitations.

For one thing, they only apply to the two wards in question, and are not legally binding. As such, organizations can flout the recommendations if they so choose. 

Still, activists insist this is an important step forward for Japan, a country where LGBT issues remain taboo. As CNN notes, despite “recognition and protection from some local governments, Japan still has no national laws protecting LGBT people from discrimination. Coming out can mean getting fired, evicted or denied healthcare.” 

“I hope that this will be a step forward not only for Tokyo but for the whole of Japan to become a more comfortable place to live in, because there are LGBTs nationwide,” said Higashi, per Reuters.

The wire service says Setagaya and Shibuya both began issuing marriage certificates to same-sex couples on Thursday. 

I’m so happy,” Higashi said, her new wife by her side. “When they gave us the certificate, I cried. Our friends cried.”

Across Asia, LGBT rights are limited — or in many cases, non-existent. In Southeast Asia, for instance, being gay is criminalized in several countries. Read more about that here.

 

Earlier 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.



feeds.huffingtonpost.com/c/35496/f/677065/s/4b41e9e6/sc/38/l/0L0Shuffingtonpost0N0C20A150C110C0A50Ctokyo0Ejapan0Esame0Esex0Emarriage0In0I84771940Bhtml0Dutm0Ihp0Iref0Fgay0Evoices0Gir0FGay0KVoices/story01.htm

PHOTOS: Walter Savage Has A Degree In Forensic Chemistry And He Can Sit At Our Periodic Table Any Day

PHOTOS: Walter Savage Has A Degree In Forensic Chemistry And He Can Sit At Our Periodic Table Any Day

Screen Shot 2015-11-04 at 4.51.59 PM

Model Walter Savage has some brains to back up those alarming handsome good looks. The next time we need to determine the fabric makeup of a untagged sweater, we know exactly who we’re going to call.

All in a days work:

Dan Tracer

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/VtzcgBZmw-E/photos-walter-savage-has-a-degree-in-forensic-chemistry-and-he-can-sit-at-our-periodic-table-any-time-20151105

Open Question: Strong feelings for a guy I met in an LGBT group. I am 22 (23 this month) and he is 31? Is the age difference too much?

Open Question: Strong feelings for a guy I met in an LGBT group. I am 22 (23 this month) and he is 31? Is the age difference too much?
He is on my mind 24/7 and I care a lot about him, but is the age difference too extreme?
I’ve never dated and still a virgin, so this is all new territory!
What I know is that I would do anything for him and the times I spend with him are the best times I have had in a long time!
If the age difference is too much, can I get over how I feel without losing him as a friend?

answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20151104233933AAhjR39

France Liberalizes Blood Donation Policy for Gay Men

France Liberalizes Blood Donation Policy for Gay Men

France is easing its ban on blood donation by gay men, with plans to make its policy it somewhat more liberal what is under consideration in the U.S.

Beginning in the spring, men who have not had sex with another man in the preceding 12 months will be able to donate blood, The New York Times reports. This is the same “deferral period” recently proposed in the U.S. as an alternative to the lifetime ban on blood donations by men who have ever had sex with another man; both France and the U.S. have had those policies since the 1980s, when the AIDS epidemic began. Those who have been celibate for four months or have had only one partner in that time will be able to donate blood plasma only.

“About a year later, if studies show that the new policy has not increased health risks, the deferral period for gay men will gradually be brought in line with the deferral period for heterosexual donors,” the Times reports. “In France, heterosexual donors may not donate blood if they have had more than one partner in the preceding four months.”

“Giving one’s blood is an act of generosity and of civic responsibility that cannot be conditioned by sexual orientation,” said a statement issued Wednesday by Health Minister Marisol Touraine. “While respecting the absolute security of patients, it is a taboo, a discrimination that is being lifted today.”

Some gay activists, however, said the 12-month deferral remains too restrictive, as HIV cannot elude detection for such a long period. The group SOS Homophobie proposed a “four-month deferral period for everybody, and only in cases where risks have been taken,” according to the Times.

“What I don’t understand is why we don’t condition blood donation by high-risk behavior,” added gay French politician Jean-Luc Romero-Michel in an interview with the Times. “It isn’t being heterosexual that is a risk. It isn’t being gay that is a risk. It is behaviors that are risky.”

France follows the lead of the U.K. and the Netherlands in adopting the 12-month deferral for gay and bisexual men. Italy and Spain determine eligibility for blood donation on a case-by-case basis for people of all orientations, taking risk factors into account. Austria, Belgium, Denmark, and Germany maintain lifetime bans.

Outside Europe, Australia, Japan, and New Zealand have a 12-month deferral period for men who have sex with men, while Canada has a five-year one. Mexico bases eligibility on risk factors.

Trudy Ring

www.advocate.com/world/2015/11/04/france-liberalizes-blood-donation-policy-gay-men