Charlie Sheen reveals he is HIV positive

Charlie Sheen reveals he is HIV positive

Charlie Sheen has revealed he is HIV positive today (17 November).

The 50-year-old Two And A Half Men actor, in an interview with The Today Show, came out as one of the most high profile names to ever reveal their status.

‘I am here to admit that I am in fact HIV positive,’ the 50-year-old actor said.

‘I have to put a stop to this barrage of attacks and sub-truths and very harmful and mercurial stories that are about me that threaten the health of so many others,’ he said. ‘[It] couldn’t be farther from the truth.’

Sheen said he was diagnosed roughly four years ago, but did not say how he contracted HIV.

‘It’s a hard three letters to absorb. It’s a turning point in one’s life.’

He revealed he has paid out ‘millions’ to people who blackmailed him over revealing his status, and is hoping to be a voice for change.

The post Charlie Sheen reveals he is HIV positive appeared first on Gay Star News.

Joe Morgan

www.gaystarnews.com/article/charlie-sheen-reveals-he-is-hiv-positive/

Who Kept You Entertained The Most In 2015? Tell Us!

Who Kept You Entertained The Most In 2015? Tell Us!

The past year in entertainment has been groundbreaking. We’re all over television in series such as How To Get Away With Murder, Looking, American Horror Story and RuPaul‘s Drag Race. We’re the focus of movies great (The Danish Girl) and not-so-great (Stonewall). We’re on the music charts with Adam Lambert and Sam Smith, to name but two awesome musicians. Plus, we have straight allies like James Franco, Ariana Grande, Madonna and Nick Jonas who helped make 2015  a banner year for queer-themed entertainment.

Here are 11 entertainers — some queer, some straight, all fabulous — who kept us consistently thrilled since New Year’s Day. Cast a vote for your favorite in the poll below.

Lee

Lee Daniels

The filmmaker of the Oscar-winning drama Precious is already a favorite with Queerty readers for showcasing Zac Efron dancing in wet white undies in The Paperboy, but truly became a household name with  Empire, his buzzy hit series about the music industry that launched the smoldering Jussie Smollet to fame and introduced the world to the fierceness that is Cookie Lyon.

edg

Ellen DeGeneres

Although One Big Happy, the lesbian-centric sitcom she produced, was swiftly axed, Ellen DeGeneres continued to use her popular daytime chat show as a platform to draw attention to LGBTQ issues, giving free money to cute couples and just being endlessly entertaining. She also made this always-shirtless guy semi-famous.

Zac

Zac Efron

Zac Efron deserves a place on this list just for boldly impersonating James Franco’s foreskin, if for no other reason. OK, maybe all of his films aren’t hits (did anyone see We Are Your Friends?), but he’s never been shy at offering us some tasty eye candy, which he’ll do again when he stars in the big screen adaptation of Baywatch.

RE

Roland Emmerich

The out filmmaker, best known for apocalyptic blockbusters, surely had good intentions when he decided to direct Stonewall, about the most pivotal moment in the LGBTQ rights struggle. We know where good intentions lead, right? The controversial film bombed big time with critics and moviegoers alike and was laughed out of theaters within two weeks, grossing a total of $187,674! Still, let’s give it up for the man who’s given us what could be the campiest film since Showgirls.

JF

James Franco

There’s never been an actor quite like James Franco. The envelope-pushing entertainer won’t stop gay-baiting us, not that we want him to anyway. This year alone the man has starred in or directed 437 films, including a movie about the real-life gay porn murder scandal. He also interviewed himself to find out if he really is gay. As if that wasn’t enough he also performed as a wild west saloon girl, Carrie Bradshaw and Suzanne Somers!

ArG

Ariana Grande

Ariana Grande’s incredible pipes have garnered her scores of fans and two number one singles so far. The golden-throated, chart-topper also entertained us with a spectacular Dance on the Pier concert during New York’s Pride weekend and appeared in Ryan Murphy’s horror-comedy series Scream Queens. She’s also a bona fide ally, thanks in part to her gay brother Frankie, and made a big impact when she told the world that she was raised in a household where being gay was no big deal.

Screen Shot 2015-11-16 at 4.12.45 PM

Jonathan Groff

Although his dramedy Looking struggled in the ratings and was sadly ultimately axed, Jonathan Groff will reprise his polarizing, eternally perplexed manchild Patrick in the upcoming two-hour finale to give us some much-needed closure. Besides an appearance in an inspiring video for the Elizabeth Taylor Aids Foundation, Groff rebounded with Hamilton, the most wildly-acclaimed Broadway musical in eons (Beyonce was so impressed she told him she’s stealing his moves).

Screen Shot 2015-11-12 at 1.00.33 PM

Nick Jonas

The former purity ring-wearing boy bander went solo, might have hooked up with a guy or two, played gay, often-nude characters in his series Kingdom and Scream Queens, performed in gay bars, professed his love for queer fans, but really got us going with his sexy photo shoots.

m

Madonna

The Queen has always been and will always be on this list. Her wacky Instagram account is a source of constant bemusement, but her Rebel Heart tour reaped raves and entertained countless fans around the globe. Bitch, she’s Madonna!

RM

Ryan Murphy

With Glee ending and the beloved Jessica Lange splitting from his hit American Horror Story anthology series, Ryan Murphy remained at the forefront of the entertainment industry by convincing Lady Gaga to take the lead in AHS: Hotelgave Cheyenne Jackson a job and created a new series, Scream Queens, that gave Nick Jonas another opportunity to get undressed in front of the camera. Keep up the great work, Ryan!

AS

Amy Schumer

The undisputed “it girl” of 2015, Amy Schumer seemed to have everything (a hit series Inside Amy Schumer and movie Trainwreck) and be everywhere (a sold-out stand-up tour), she became besties with Jennifer Lawrence, photobombed a gay couple’s engagement pics and bitch even opened for Madonna on a couple of her Rebel Heart concerts.

 

Who is the most entertaining person of 2015?

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/kIP-s3znLhY/who-kept-you-entertained-the-most-in-2015-tell-us-20151117

Charlie Sheen: ‘I Am In Fact HIV Positive’ — VIDEO

Charlie Sheen: ‘I Am In Fact HIV Positive’ — VIDEO

Charlie Sheen HIV positive

Actor Charlie Sheen sat down with Matt Lauer on the TODAY show this morning and told Lauer, “I’m here to admit that I am in fact HIV positive.”

Sheen told Lauer he was diagnosed four years ago, and he has paid people millions of  dollars to keep them silent.

“That’s money they’ve taken from my children,” he added.

“I chose the companionship of insipid types,” he said. “I always led with condoms and honesty…Sadly my truth became their treason.”

Sheen said that people shook him down and threatened to reveal his status. A prostitute came over to his house and took an image of his retroviral medication and threatened to sell it to tabloids.

“I was doing a lot of drugs. I was drinking too much. I was making really bad decisions.”

Sheen said it is “impossible” that he has transmitted the virus to anyone else. He has had unprotected sex but “they were warned ahead of time” and under the care of his doctor.

Sheen’s “tiger blood” period was more of a roid rage and not a reaction to his diagnosis, he said.

“I don’t” [feel the stigma of HIV anymore], he added. “I have a responsibility to better myself and to help a lot of people. ‘

We’ll post better quality video as soon as it is available.

 

 

The post Charlie Sheen: ‘I Am In Fact HIV Positive’ — VIDEO appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Charlie Sheen: ‘I Am In Fact HIV Positive’ — VIDEO

Barbie and Gay Shame

Barbie and Gay Shame

When I think back to childhood, I think of shame.

For as far back as I can remember, I always knew I was different. I preferred a Barbie to a ball. Having a sister who was is less than a year older than me made doll access simple.

When I was born — in 1990 in a blue-collar environment — gender-neutral parenting had not caught on yet; if it had, it was sure as hell not in Syracuse, N.Y. I’m pretty sure it still isn’t. Tonka trucks, baseballs, and Nerf guns were for boys. Barbies, Easy-Bake ovens and jump ropes were for girls. Boys should play football in the street; girls should go to ballet class.

This was well before I’d heard of the gender-based wage inequality, menstrual cycles, and perineal tears during birth, and I couldn’t help but feel that girls had gotten the better end of the stick.

I was stubborn and unwavering. Having access to Sarah’s “girl” toys wasn’t enough; I wanted my own. I had post-hippie parents, and it was not hard to convince my parents that, though I had an X and a Y chromosome and a penis between my legs, I too needed dolls to be happy. If my parents ever tried to dissuade me, I certainly don’t recall. Our house was a democracy; when Sarah got a Barbie, I got one too. When Sarah got Samantha from the American Girl doll catalogue, I got Molly.

***

Every year, for birthdays and holidays, I would ask for dolls or princess castles, and most every year, that was what I was given.

It was an act of rebellion. I saw how grown men looked at my presents, and my stomach would tense inside as I would feel embarrassed; I would want to cry. I could have just waited to get them at home on my birthday or Christmas morning, in the privacy and safety of my immediate family. But, something in my early childhood head wanted to protest societal expectations.

Why shouldn’t I be able to get a new princess castle? Why should I have to hide it?

I kept asking to get those presents, and my parents — who I’m sure could see reactions just as well as me — kept giving them.

***

As I grew older, the rebellious spirit within me died down; I became more self-conscious about playing with “girl toys.”

You get so sick of hearing “Why do you talk like a girl?” so you make conscious efforts to deepen your voice, to not let your sentences go up at the end. You get so sick of hearing “Why do you walk like a girl?” so you make sure your hips aren’t switching, you walk slower, with more control. You get so sick of hearing “Why are you playing with girls’ toys?” so you just start doing it out of sight, on your own, secretly.

Other children vocalize their opinions; their preconceived notions and expectations as to what you should be, how you should behave. Grown-ups are subtler, their judgment more discreetly implied. I was so tuned into quiet, even unspoken, adult opinions. I wanted their approval. I wanted everyone’s approval. So, when visible, I morphed myself into what they wanted me to be; what I thought I should be.

***

My favorite Barbie was “Holiday Princess Belle,” the doll was based on Disney’s Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas — a VHS tape I also owned and loved. Belle came with a dark maroon lip color and a velvet ball gown with gold detailing. I played with her all the time.

I eventually grew tired of her extravagant ball gown and switched her to a blue cloth dress that I bought from Amish people at a farmer’s market. When I played with her I held her by the hair and spun her so the skirt of her bucolic gown ballooned out. I did this so often that her hair began coming off, revealing small bald spots. Luscious locks or receding hairline, I still loved her just the same.

For a while, I shared a room with my brother and sister, filled with all of our toys. When Sarah moved across the hall to her own room, I let her take most of the dolls and the trunk we kept filled with Barbies. The bunk bed that I used to share with Sarah became just my own. I moved from the top bunk to the bottom, and I filled the former with a huge pile of stuffed animals. Stuffed animals are for boys and girls, so those are fine. I can let those show.

Unbeknownst to anyone but me, I kept Belle on the top bunk, buried beneath the stuffed animals. I always knew exactly where she was.

Today she is under the Pikachu, next to the Mickey, just above the Tweety.

***

One morning, before school, I thought I was upstairs alone. I sat on my bed, humming and twirling Belle by her hair.

I heard a rustling in the hall. My heart dropped. I peered out. Who is that?

The door to my room started creaking open, and I quickly tried to stash Belle in between the bed and the wall. It was too late. My mom had seen me.

“Honey, I saw you playing with that Barbie,” she said. “Why do you feel like you have to hide it?”

I had been tranquil just a moment before. I immediately burst into tears, the kind of uncontrollable sobbing where you can’t even form a sentence.

“I d-d-d-on’t … I d-d-d-on’t want to talk about it,” I cried. “Why were you spying on me? Can’t you just pretend you didn’t see?”

“I wasn’t spying on you. I could see into your room as I walked up the stairs,” she explained softly. “Why are you so upset?”

“I know it’s a girl toy,” I said. “ Sometimes I just wish I had been born a girl; my life would be so much easier.”

“Do you think you are a girl on the inside?” she asked gently, concerned.

“NO!” I shouted. “I want to play with girls’ toys, but I don’t want to be a girl!”

I continued to cry harder and harder; I was having a panic attack, an identity crisis. I couldn’t wrap my head around why everything and everyone has to stay so tightly boxed in.

She started crying too.

“I’m sorry,” she whispered. “I was just trying to help.”

***

With my room no longer a safe space, I began hiding Belle even deeper among the jumbled heap of stuffed animals.

After careful scouting to absolutely make sure no one was proximate or observing, I would pull her out and stuff her into my armpit, shielding her beneath my billowy T-shirt. I would lock her head into my sweaty crevice and quickly creep to the bathroom. I would lock the door and play with her without anyone watching.

I took Belle into the bath with me, letting her stand beneath the spout as I imagined it was some beautiful waterfall in the fantasyland that I created for her in my mind.

Afterwards, I would towel her off, stick her back into my armpit and bring her back to my room where I put her back beneath my stuffed animals.

***

This secret playing went on for months. Then one day I heard my mom say hi from outside of the bathroom. I was taking a bath and thought I was home alone and had forgotten to bring anything in besides a towel.

Where can I hide her where no one can see? Can I keep her beneath between my thighs and still walk normally? No. Can I hide her in here?

Our bathroom was rather small, and there was not a hiding spot where I didn’t fear my mom might see her again. I really didn’t want to have to have another conversation about why I was secretive about Belle. Even if she didn’t bring it up, I hated that sense of awareness that there was something another person wanted to talk to you about. That it was in their mind and on the tip of their tongue.

I had a plan.

“I’ll be right out!” I shouted to my mom. I took Belle and brought her over to the roll of toilet paper. I began slowly unrolling it and wrapping her up; I mummified her. What better disguise? When I was done, I emptied the wastebasket and jammed her into the bottom. I covered her with the empty toilet paper rolls that had been sitting there from before.

I flushed the toilet washed my hands and scurried out.

***

That afternoon, I got distracted playing Sega. An hour passed, and I suddenly remembered Belle. I darted up the stairs to the wastebasket. It was empty!

I hurried downstairs to check the kitchen trashcan. It was empty too! The trash had been brought outside. I opened the back door and sprinted across the yard to where the garbage cans were lined up in between the garage and the fence.

There were four garbage cans, and they were all filled near to the brim with giant white trash bags. I can rummage through these, I thought. I can find Belle. I can save her.

But something within me made me hold back.

No, I thought. It’s over; Belle’s gone.

I turned around and walked back to the house. I felt like I had lost a friend, but sometimes losing a friend can also be a relief. I didn’t get to say goodbye, but in a way I did.

Did I mean to hide her, or did I mean to throw her out?

I mummified her and put her in the wastebasket. I disposed of her like trash, and like trash she was taken away to rot in some landfill. That was her fate, the fate I had delivered to her. Should I feel guilty now? Should I feel guilty that it felt like a weight had been lifted?

Should I feel sorry for her, or should I feel sorry for me? 

Kirst

SEAMUS KIRST received his master’s degree in arts journalism from the Newhouse School at Syracuse University, and has contributed to the Syracuse Media Group, The Post and Courier of Charleston, S.C., and Thought Catalog.

Seamus Kirst

www.advocate.com/commentary/2015/11/17/barbie-and-gay-shame

Rose McGowan slams Caitlyn Jenner: ‘You do not understand what being a woman is about’

Rose McGowan slams Caitlyn Jenner: ‘You do not understand what being a woman is about’

Outspoken actress Rose McGowan has said Caitlyn Jenner cannot understand what it is to be a woman because she has lived most of her life with male privilege.

The Charmed star slammed Jenner for her Glamour Women of the Year Awards acceptance speech, during which the transgender former Olympian joked that the ‘hardest part about being a woman is figuring out what to wear.’

‘I got all these new questions from people, saying, “What’s your style? What are you going to wear? Who are your heroes? Are you a feminist?” All these questions and I said, “Oh my gosh, I have so much to learn,”‘ Jenner said.

But McGowan did not find her comments funny.

‘Caitlyn Jenner you do not understand what being a woman is about at all,’ she wrote in an open letter posted on Facebook.

‘You want to be a woman and stand with us – well learn us. We are more than deciding what to wear. We are more than the stereotypes foisted upon us by people like you.

‘You’re a woman now? Well fucking learn that we have had a VERY different experience than your life of male privilege.

‘Woman of the year? No, not until you wake up and join the fight,’ she added. ‘Not by a long fucking shot.’

McGowan was not the only one unhappy with Jenner’s award.

The husband of a 9/11 hero returned his late wife’s Woman of The Year award after Jenner was given the same prize.

And last week, Jenner was confronted by transgender protesters outside an LGBTI charity event, who said she did not represent them.

McGowan clarified her comments in an update.

‘Let me amend this by saying I’m happy for what she’s doing visibility wise for the trans community, and I’m happy she’s living her truth, but comments like hers have consequences for other women,’ she wrote.

‘How we are perceived, what our values are, and leads to more stereotyping. If you know you are going to be speaking to media about being a woman, maybe come to understand our struggles.’

The actress later deleted the post.

In recent months, McGowan has taken shots at Kate Winslet and Adam Sandler. She landed in hot water last year for claiming gay men were more misogynistic than straight men.

The post Rose McGowan slams Caitlyn Jenner: ‘You do not understand what being a woman is about’ appeared first on Gay Star News.

Darren Wee

www.gaystarnews.com/article/rose-mcgowan-slams-caitlyn-jenner-you-do-not-understand-what-being-a-woman-is-about/

Indiana Senate pledges bill to balance LGBTI protections, ‘religious freedom’

Indiana Senate pledges bill to balance LGBTI protections, ‘religious freedom’

The Republican leader of the Indiana state Senate has pledged to introduce a ‘comprehensive’ bill that will balance LGBTI freedoms and ‘religious freedom.’

‘I can just tell you that there’ll be strong language in there for both civil rights and for religious freedom, and so we’ll just leave it at that,’ Senate President Pro Tempore David Long said on Monday (16 November).

‘We’re trying to do our best to get a balanced piece of legislation.’

Long refused to talk about the specifics of the proposal, other than that Senator Travis Holdman is drafting the bill, which will be heard in the 2016 legislative session beginning in January.

Holdman also declined to give details, although he told The Star he expected to file the bill Tuesday afternoon.

In March, the Senate passed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which allowed businesses to turn away LGBTI customers on religious grounds. However, Governor Mike Pence was forced to ‘fix’ after a national backlash.

Democrats have the Indiana’s reputation could be restored by just adding ‘four words and a comma’ — ‘sexual orientation, gender identity’ – to state anti-discrimination laws.

But Long said that was an oversimplification.

‘Anyone who says that is shortchanging the discussion here,’ he said.

‘The freedom of religion in our United States Constitution and certainly in the Indiana Constitution is on the same level as freedom of speech, freedom of the press and freedom of association.

‘It’s that important. We should not discount that as we discuss how do we deal with this issue of whether you expand protected class status to sexual orientation and gender identity.’

Several cities and counties in Indiana, including Indianapolis, have bylaws protecting LGBTI residents from discrimination.

The post Indiana Senate pledges bill to balance LGBTI protections, ‘religious freedom’ appeared first on Gay Star News.

Darren Wee

www.gaystarnews.com/article/indiana-senate-pledges-bill-to-balance-lgbti-protections-religious-freedom/

A transgender man in Philadelphia thought he was getting fat but he was actually pregnant

A transgender man in Philadelphia thought he was getting fat but he was actually pregnant

A transgender American man has told of his shock at discovering he had become pregnant nearly a decade after going public with his identity.

Kayden Coleman had been undergoing hormone therapy as part of his transitioning for five years but had to stop his medication in advance of having a double mastectomy.

‘To have a mastectomy you have to be off hormones for six weeks,’ Coleman told The Mirror.

‘I never thought about getting pregnant. Because of the male hormones, I didn’t think it was a possibility. It was ­definitely a surprise.’

However in that time he managed to fall pregnant to his husband Elijah.

Coleman didn’t even realize until his belly began to grow and initially put his weight gain down to not exercising enough.

He says it wasn’t until Elijah lay him down for a massage that he realized there might be more than fat in his belly.

‘One day my back was killing me,’ Coleman said.

‘Elijah was going to give me a massage, so I lay on my front on the bed. It felt like there was a pillow under my stomach but there was no pillow.’

Coleman said he actually had joked that he should get a pregnancy test before it dawned on him that he might actually need one.

When he finally saw a doctor they told him he was 21 weeks pregnant.

With only a few months before the baby was due the couple married in July of 2013 and their daughter Azaelia was born in December that year.

The couple plan to tell Azaelia about the unusual circumstances of her birth when she is five years old.

Coleman is believed to be only the second transgender ban to give birth to a baby.

Oregonian transgender man Thomas Beatie revealed to the world in 2008 that he was pregnant and he has since given birth to three children.

The post A transgender man in Philadelphia thought he was getting fat but he was actually pregnant appeared first on Gay Star News.

Andrew Potts

www.gaystarnews.com/article/a-transgender-man-in-philadelphia-thought-he-was-getting-fat-but-he-was-actually-pregnant/

Bisexual boxer who killed opponent after anti-gay slur gets biopic

Bisexual boxer who killed opponent after anti-gay slur gets biopic

The life of Emile Griffith – a bisexual boxer who killed an opponent after an anti-gay slur – is being made into biopic.

Griffith was a six-time world champion in two weight classes in the 1960s, but is best remembered for beating Benny ‘The Kid’ Parret to death on live TV.

Parret had grabbed his butt and called him a maricón (Spanish for ‘faggot’) at the weigh-ins.

Griffith and boxing were vilified after Parret’s death.

Room-director Lenny Abrahamson and producer Ed Guiney have optioned Donald McRae’s biography of Griffith – A Man’s World: The Double Life Of Emile Griffith – which was reportedly chased by ‘numerous filmmakers.’

‘It is so rich that it’s hard to know where to start,’ he told Deadline in confirming the deal.

‘As a character study, Griffith is incredibly compelling. There was a gentleness and innocence about him, and he never seemed conflicted about his sexuality; indeed he found joy in it.

‘He inhabited two worlds – the underground gay scene in New York in the ’60s and the macho world of boxing. The societal stigma at that time was dreadful and created a crushing pressure on him.’

In 1992, Griffith was viciously beaten and almost killed by six teens after leaving a gay bar in New York. He was in the hospital for four months after the assault.

‘You look at how closely his two worlds intersected,’ Abrahamson said.

‘Just how different are they, when the sport is such a celebration of the male body and the beauty of its athleticism. Go one step further, and inject the tiniest sense of sexuality, and people are up in arms.

‘Griffith himself once said a quote that just floored me. “They forgave me for killing a man, but they couldn’t forgive me for loving a man.”

‘That to me was so powerful and such a crazy contradiction. And it is still relevant today.’

In his later life, Griffith suffered from dementia pugilistica and died in 2013.

The post Bisexual boxer who killed opponent after anti-gay slur gets biopic appeared first on Gay Star News.

Darren Wee

www.gaystarnews.com/article/bisexual-boxer-who-killed-opponent-after-anti-gay-slur-gets-biopic/