WATCH: Caitlyn Jenner Honored at Glamour Magazine's Women of the Year Awards

WATCH: Caitlyn Jenner Honored at Glamour Magazine's Women of the Year Awards

Caitlyn Jenner received the Transgender Champion award at Glamour magazine’s Women of the Year celebration Monday in New York City, and wowed the crowd with a dramatic, custom-made gown. 

The 66-year-old star of E!’s docu-series I Am Cait graced the red carpet in her blue, long sleeve silk gown with black lapel detail from Moschino Couture! by Jeremy Scott. She accessorized with Neil Lane diamonds and black pumps by Barollo Italy, reported People magazine.

Jenner didn’t run from the paparazzi, as she used to do before transitioning; she stood smiling as she posed with her trademark long tresses styled in a chic updo.

Backstage, she had her first encounter with supermodel Andreja Pejic and they exchanged numbers, according to Pejic’s publicist, who shared a photo of the two trans women standing with Jeremy Scott.  

Brandswaycreative.com

Accompanying Jenner was one of her daughters, Kylie Jenner, who posted on Instagram an explanation for her denim attire: “Had some major wardrobe malfunctions but that couldn’t stop me from supporting the ones I love. You’re amazing @caitlynjenner congrats on being woman of the year @glamourmag.”

 

 

Fellow Women of the Year awardees included actress Reese Witherspoon, dancer Misty Copeland, and designer Victoria Beckham. Last year, Laverne Cox became the first trans woman recognized by Glamour as one of the Women of the Year, in addition to being one of The Advocate’s finalists for Person of the Year in 2014. 

Actress Judith Light, one of the stars of Amazon’s Transparent, presented Jenner with her award after heralding the former Olympian for helping to “teach America what it means to live a courageous and authentic life.”

Jenner thanked Light for her steadfast support of the transgender community: “You have done so many things for so many gender-nonconforming people. Having you present this to me tonight means so much to me and our community.”

“When it comes to gender, everyone in this room is on a journey,” Jenner told the audience. “We are constantly learning and growing as human beings learning about ourselves, but there is a second part of this population when it comes to gender. There is massive confusion deep down inside.”

Jenner described the months since coming out on national television and appearing on the cover of Vanity Fair as “the most eye-opening experience of my life.”

She then shared a personal milestone she said she achieved just last week:

“I haven’t been on the airlines for over a year. Why? Because I haven’t had an authentic ID. Finally, last week I got my driver’s license and gender marker F. It’s always the little things in life. I am sitting on the plane for the first time reading Glamour magazine and not having to fold over the cover so no one can see what I was actually reading, and I had it opened up beautifully and just reading through Glamour magazine was absolutely great. So thank you, Glamour magazine for honoring me tonight. I never in a million years thought I’d be here and I am sure you didn’t either.”

Watch the clip of Light and Jenner from Glamour magazine below:

 

Watch this video on The Scene.

Dawn Ennis

www.advocate.com/transgender/2015/11/10/watch-caitlyn-jenner-honored-glamour-magazines-women-year-awards

White House Endorses LGBT Anti-Discrimination Bill

White House Endorses LGBT Anti-Discrimination Bill

WASHINGTON — The White House has endorsed historic legislation that would give lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender individuals full federal protection from discrimination, White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said Tuesday. 

“It is now clear that the administration strongly supports the Equality Act,” Earnest said at a briefing. “That bill is historic legislation that would advance the cause of equality for millions of Americans.”

The Equality Act of 2015, which was introduced to Congress in July, would amend the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to include sexual orientation and gender identity as federally protected categories. The amended law would ban the discrimination of LGBT individuals from areas such as housing, public accommodations and some employment.

LGBT rights activists rejoiced when the Supreme Court ruled this summer that same-sex marriage is a constitutional right, but many LGBT individuals still suffer discrimination in their own states because there is no federal mandate of protection. 

“In most states, you can get married on Saturday, post your wedding photos to Facebook on Sunday, and then get fired on Monday just because of who you are,” Rep. David Cicilline (D-R.I.) said when introducing the bill to the House in July. 

Only about half of the the country lives in an area where the LGBT community is protected from employment discrimination, according to an October report from the Movement Advancement Project, an independent think tank that focuses on LGBT issues.

Last week, voters in Houston overturned the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance, or HERO, which would have protected LGBT individuals against discrimination in the workplace, as well as other areas.

The White House has waited until now to support the Equality Act because it wanted to evaluate the effect the law would have on certain government policies and programs, Earnest said.

“After concluding that review and determining that…this kind of legislation would achieve the desired effect…we believe that we can support it,” Earnest said.

Many people who oppose legislation of this kind argue that it is an infringement on their religious beliefs. But Earnest said that as long as such legislation balances LGBT equal rights with constitutional religious freedom, the administration can support the bill.

“We have articulated about the importance of equal rights and making sure that people can’t be discriminated against because of who they love, while, you know, at the same time making sure that we can protect religious liberty,” he said. 

The Human Rights Campaign, a major LGBT rights group, commended the administration’s statement Tuesday. 

“By endorsing the Equality Act, the White House sent a strong message that it’s time to put the politics of discrimination behind us once and for all,” said HRC President Chad Griffin.

“Now it’s time for Congress to act,” Griffin added. “Everyone should be able to live free from fear of discrimination and have a fair chance to earn a living and provide for their families, including people who are lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender.”

Also on HuffPost:

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Why Queer as Folk’s Hal Sparks insisted character be face-to-face with partner during sex

Why Queer as Folk’s Hal Sparks insisted character be face-to-face with partner during sex

The US version of Queer as Folk has been off the air for 10 years now but Hal Sparks is still getting questions about his five-year run on the show as Michael Novotny.

One of the most common question is about the steamy sex scenes he shared with his character’s professor husband Ben Bruckner who was played by the openly gay Robert Gant.

Sparks, an actor and stand-up comic who is straight, was recently asked if he was uncomfortable while filming the scenes.

‘It didn’t bother me at all that I was shooting love scenes with another man,’ he says in a recent YouTube video. ‘It was right for the character, it made sense for the story.’

Sparks adds: ‘The actual way Michael has sex with his partners was germane to who he is as a person – namely facing (his partner) which was a big aspect of it. Bobby Gant and I had discussions with executives about the fact that I believe that Michael has sex face to face because he represents the loving connection and that’s important to me to make sure people knew they were in love.’

The series about the lives and loves of a group of gay friends living in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania also starred Gale Harold, Michelle Clunie, Randy Harrison, Thea Gill, Peter Paige, Scott Lowell and Sharon Gless, among others.

The post Why Queer as Folk’s Hal Sparks insisted character be face-to-face with partner during sex appeared first on Gay Star News.

Greg Hernandez

www.gaystarnews.com/article/why-queer-as-folks-hal-sparks-insisted-character-be-face-to-face-with-partner-during-sex/

Dallas City Council Votes To Strengthen Non-Discrimination Protections for Transgender People

Dallas City Council Votes To Strengthen Non-Discrimination Protections for Transgender People

Today, the Dallas City Council unanimously approved language strengthening the city’s ordinance for transgender residents and visitors.
HRC.org

www.hrc.org/blog/entry/dallas-city-council-votes-to-strengthen-non-discrimination-protections-for?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Our Favorite Starbucks Red Cup Anti-Christmas Memes (So Far!)

Our Favorite Starbucks Red Cup Anti-Christmas Memes (So Far!)

starbucks-cupsjpg-64ad43b291e9a692By now you’ve no doubt heard about the scandal surrounding Starbucks’ new red cups, which some Christian extremists are interpreting as an act of war against Christmas.

“It’s much more than just a cup!” antigay activist Joshua Feuerstein told CNN yesterday. “The cup is very symbolic … It parallels a society that is trying to remove Christmas from Christmas!

In response to the controversy, our friend Daniel Franzese from HBO’s Looking sent us this tweet earlier today:

This will solve the Starbucks Christmas scandal..@Queerty pic.twitter.com/SAwysi6PdU

— Daniel Franzese (@WhatsupDanny) November 10, 2015

We did some digging for more Starbucks-inspired memes and, lo and behold, there are quite a few circulating on social media. Scroll down for some of our favorite Starbucks red cup anti-Christmas memes (so far!)… txlxd

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Screen shot 2015-11-10 at 12.48.30 PM

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Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/NL44PeBe5QQ/our-favorite-starbucks-red-cup-anti-christmas-memes-so-far-20151110

Newt Gingrich ‘Delighted’ by HERO Repeal, Says Congress Must Block Protections for Trans Students: LISTEN

Newt Gingrich ‘Delighted’ by HERO Repeal, Says Congress Must Block Protections for Trans Students: LISTEN

newt gingrich

Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich last week said he was delighted that Houston voters repealed the city’s Equal Rights Ordinance (HERO), and that he hopes Congress will reject a finding from the Department of Education that says Title IX protects transgender students from discrimination.

Speaking on the Houston-area radio program “The Sam Malone Show”, Gingrich said,

“I was delighted to see that the people of Houston voted for common sense. In fact, I hope the Congress is going to pick up on Houston and do the same thing to a new Department of Education regulation that says that boys who want to can declare themselves transgender and use girls’ bathrooms in high school, which I think is just one of those things where you shake your head and you wonder how really lacking in understanding of human nature the bureaucrats are who write this stuff.”

Gingrich labeled the progress made in transgender rights in recent years as “strange” cultural development. He went on to use the Obama administration’s stance on transgender rights as a means to attack its policy in Syria: “They are as far out of touch with reality in foreign policy as they are in these cultural values they keep trying to impose on the rest of us.”

Listen, below:

[h/t Right Wing Watch]

The post Newt Gingrich ‘Delighted’ by HERO Repeal, Says Congress Must Block Protections for Trans Students: LISTEN appeared first on Towleroad.


Sean Mandell

Newt Gingrich ‘Delighted’ by HERO Repeal, Says Congress Must Block Protections for Trans Students: LISTEN

How We Found Love While Looking for Fabric

How We Found Love While Looking for Fabric

In 1979, Kim Powers, a 22-year-old theater aficionado and aspiring actor, drove 30-year-old costume designer Jess Goldstein around Williamstown, Mass., looking for fabrics, but instead found love. More than 30 years later, they’re still together. 

Goldstein: One of my very first jobs out of the Yale School of Drama was designing clothes at the Williamstown Theatre Festival in Massachusetts for a Tennessee Williams play called Camino Real. When I was a grad student, I allowed my driver’s license to lapse. I couldn’t drive anywhere, so they assigned Kim to the task. He was an intern in the production office. 

Powers: When I met him for the first time, I said, “I’d love to see your sketches.” That wasn’t a line! He needed a chauffeur so he could shop for antique clothes and fabrics. Over that two-week period, we did some long-range trips into New York City, which is about 3-½ hours away from Williamstown.

Goldstein: That’s how we got to know each other. It was love at first sight. I thought he was adorable. 

Powers: It wasn’t quite love at first sight for me, but I certainly thought he was very cute, very charming, very boyish. Back in those days, everyone said Jess resembled the actor Joel Grey because he had a little Jewish face and black-framed glasses. I have a fondness for Jewish men! Maybe there was a little crush. I was also fascinated by his world. 

Goldstein: We talked a lot about theater. I loved his curiosity about life and the arts.

Powers: As a little Texas boy, I was a very stage-struck kid and I hung on his every word. On the opening night of Camino Real, he said, “I think I’m in love with you.” It was so romantic. I don’t remember what happened next. I think we probably started making out! Then the floodgates opened.

Goldstein: At the end of the summer, Kim decided that he would move to New York, where I was already living. I had an apartment on the Upper West Side. 

Powers: 666 West End Avenue! We always joked about that.

Goldstein and Powers in the early years

Goldstein and Powers in the early years.

Goldstein: He moved in with me, and we’ve been together ever since. An enduring partnership like we have has to exist as a friendship. Beyond the sex and physical attraction, you want somebody that you can talk to 24 hours a day. And someone you can laugh with. It’s not like we don’t fight, but we always know that we’ll get through it.

Powers: It’s such a cliché to say it, but you really just become each other’s best friends over the years. 

Goldstein: We got married in Provincetown in July of 2013. It was very informal — like we eloped. 

Powers: We were wearing our flip-flops and shorts. I wasn’t a bossy bride!

Goldstein: The only witness we had was our dog Frankie. 

Powers: Even though she’s a girl, we named her after Frankie Valli from Jersey Boys, which has essentially paid for our retirement. Jess designed the costumes for it — and won a Tony!
 
Goldstein: As we exchanged vows, I remember giggling a little bit because I was trying to hold back the tears. 

Powers: My tears were sort of pouring into Frankie’s fur. It just struck me: This combination of having been together for 33 years at that point and being this little Southern Baptist boy who grew up in a small town near Texas (population 18,000) who was getting married to the love of his life — my Jew from Jersey! I never thought something like that would ever happen. It was truly overwhelming. There are a million other important issues in the world and in the LGBT community, but marriage equality is an amazing check on the bucket list. 

Stephanie Fairyington

www.advocate.com/current-issue/2015/11/10/how-we-found-love-while-looking-fabric

The State of the Trans Community, Part 4 — Allies or Adversaries?

The State of the Trans Community, Part 4 — Allies or Adversaries?
As we proceed in our advocacy efforts post-HERO, no longer with any excuses to ignore the strategies of “bathroom bills” and “religious liberty” espoused by our adversaries, we need to take stock and seriously consider how we can create new allies. We’ve never been able to win more than a few local victories on our own, which we did when the trans issue was virtually unknown throughout society at large. (For an introduction to what the world was like then for many, I suggest you read this column by Liana Aghajanian.)

The ally issue was raised shortly after Election Day by this change.org petition demanding that the national LGBT organizations revert to being LG only. Being 2015, many thought this was that day’s edition of the Onion satire. Others we devastated to see such a thing publicly. I, too, was surprised by the gall it took to go public, which was mitigated by the fact the sponsor was anonymous. Not to be outdone, the anti-trans lesbian separatists promoted their own (signed) petition two days later. Then the anonymous poster of the “Drop the T” petition sat for an interview with the extreme right blog, the Federalist, to explain his views. His views were some of the most outdated and incoherent I’ve read in a long time. I’ve battled these people within the community for the past decade, both gay men and women, some at the highest levels of our community, so the intentions of these groups are nothing new.

Fortunately, some national advocacy organizations reacted rapidly, and the response yielded a counter-petition. So far there has been little in the way of incitement and hate speech.

Incitement, however, is still occurring on campuses, threatening to balkanize an already tiny community and isolate us from the mainstream of which we are a part and whose support we ultimately need. It’s been two decades since the formation of GenderPAC, a national trans advocacy group which evolved to focus on outreach to the general community on issues of gender expression and a deeper understanding of masculinity and femininity. That organization ultimate suffered from intra-communal wars demanding purity of focus on trans persons, and the progress we’ve made today is threatened by the increasing radicalization of the young generation of trans and genderqueer activists.

As a recent example, I received a letter from a young woman studying neuroscience at Scripps College in southern California. An ardent feminist as well as a scientist, Jillian Knox, was part of a campus event called Project Vulva, aimed at helping people understand the difference between a vagina and vulva. The effort to destigmatize those anatomical terms engendered backlash with the women staging the event being called transmisogynistic, transphobic, gross and ugly, and degenerated into cyberbullying in an attempt to shame Jillian and her friends into silence. One critic said, “”A trans woman is telling y’all this makes her feel uncomfortable and that’s not enough for you to rethink your stance on this? You’re gross, this whole thing is gross, have fun with your ugly cupcakes.” Really? Someone is uncomfortable and that is supposed to simply shut down the program and all discussion? Why is that person in college in the first place?

That Jillian and her friends were bullied is shameful; that the school’s trans community and its allies are so insecure that they would attack a group simply trying to teach about female anatomy is disgraceful. These women are our natural allies, whose assistance we need to achieve full equality, yet their classmates attack rather than attempt to cooperate.

We have made great progress over the past decade decoupling gender identity from genitalia. On the one hand, it’s easy, because gender identity is a brain function and genitalia are just genitals. On the other hand, trying to teach a society that has been raised for generations (millennia, actually) to believe that sex is nothing more than genitals, is extremely difficult. Because we have been successful, we have put ourselves in the unenviable but unavoidable position of dealing with bathroom panic attacks that stem from fears of male genitals.

Not that long ago trans women were assumed to have undergone genital reconstruction. No more penis, therefore, no threat that the male weapon would be used for predation, a fear that underlies transphobia. Not that there weren’t many trans women who could not afford bottom surgery, or for whom it was medically contraindicated, or who just didn’t care, but the cisgender population viewed trans women as postoperative trans women. As the decoupling began, initially targeted to include trans men rather than non-operative trans women, it became obvious to more non-trans persons, as an unintended consequence, that some trans women still had their penises, and that propelled the bathroom panic forward.

I don’t for a minute believe that we wouldn’t have bathroom panics directed towards trans equality even if all trans women had vaginas, as most civil rights movements have degenerated into bathroom civil wars for no rational reasons. But given that the trans community is diverse in its anatomy, we have, by necessity, proceeded to educate the general population that genital anatomy and brain sex/gender are two independent phenomena. We’re making progress, but that progress is impacted when we also have trans students who are offended when NARAL is protecting women’s reproductive rights without mentioning trans men, or a college is staging a performance of the slightly dated, non-genderqueer-inclusive The Vagina Monologues, or a group of female students is trying to destigmatize female genitalia.

These groups are in no way excluding trans women or trans men. Not mentioning them, or not using gender-neutral language, is not an act of exclusion. Denying trans men reproductive health care would be an act of exclusion. Refusing to discuss trans bodies in a discussion of The Vagina Monologues would be exclusion. Blocking trans women from participating in Project Vulva would be exclusion.

When we lobby for anti-discrimination protections, we fight to add categories such as gender identity and gender expression. In court we argue cases on the basis of sex discrimination and sex stereotypes. We’re fortunate that the law, in its genius, is structured around these abstract classifications with fuzzy boundaries, rather than specific identities which ebb and flow over time. That’s how we create positive change.

Politically speaking and being hard-nosed and practical, I will say that trans persons have no right to demand that language be changed to include them while alienating the vast majority in the process. Educate, yes; demand, no. Doing so alienates millions of potential allies. It is very easy to turn off those who are willing to learn about a community of which they know little but have been taught to fear. Really, is a group of girls discussing the difference between a vagina and vulva a threat to anyone? Many trans persons could use brush-ups on anatomical terminology, too.

The more important issue, though, is finding a way to work with our natural allies to deal with the more threatening resistance in this country. When three Republican presidential candidates attend a conference where speakers exhort their listeners to “kill the gays,” we can’t afford to shut down rational debate. Women discussing female anatomy doesn’t exclude anyone else from discussion, nor does it prevent trans women from educating their peers that not all women have vaginas or vulva and explaining why. That’s how you increase understanding and grow a movement.

— 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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Nick Jonas won’t say if he’s experimented sexually with other men

Nick Jonas won’t say if he’s experimented sexually with other men

Nick Jonas has become quite expert at titillating his legions of gay fans.

And he’s done it again.

The actor-singer, who plays gay characters on the drama Kingdom and the horror comedy Scream Queens, was asked at the Radio One Teen Awards if he has ever experimented sexually with another man.

Jonas replied: ‘I can’t say if I have or haven’t, but if you watch (Kingdom) you’ll see more of that.’

The young performer has openly been courting his gay fans in recent years including making live appearances at gay clubs and, on occasion, taking his shirt off.

As a result, some have accused Jonas of gay baiting.

‘In every situation when there’s an opportunity to be negative some people find the need to be,’ he says of the criticism.

 

The post Nick Jonas won’t say if he’s experimented sexually with other men appeared first on Gay Star News.

Greg Hernandez

www.gaystarnews.com/article/nick-jonas-wont-say-if-hes-experimented-sexually-with-other-men/