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Daily Archives: November 19, 2015
Moms for Trangender Equality
Moms for Trangender Equality
Brighton Pride Parade 2015: We are over here !
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Jackie Biskupski Elected As Salt Lake City’s First Openly Gay Mayor
Jackie Biskupski Elected As Salt Lake City’s First Openly Gay Mayor
[Photo by Rick Bowmer/Associated Press] Prior to the foster child incident, the Salt Lake City-based Mormon church issued a set of new rules that targeted gay parents and their children. According to the Guardian, “the new policy bans baptisms until the …
Gay Adult Videographer Found Murdered Near Dallas – VIDEO
Gay Adult Videographer Found Murdered Near Dallas – VIDEO
A 60-year-old man who apparently specialized in gay porn photography and videography was found murdered at his office near Dallas on Tuesday. Firefighters responding to a report of smoke found Michael Castagne inside his suite at an office park in …
Show Tackles Dating While Gay and Disabled
Trib Talk: Utah Scouting and BSA gay policy
Sarah Paulson On The Serenity Of 'Carol' And The Frenzy Of 'American Horror Story'
Sarah Paulson On The Serenity Of 'Carol' And The Frenzy Of 'American Horror Story'
Sarah Paulson has a lot to juggle right now: two Ryan Murphy shows (“American Horror Story: Hotel” and “American Crime Story: The People v. O.J. Simpson,” which premieres in February) and a Todd Haynes movie (“Carol“). They couldn’t seem more different, but watching Paulson bounce from one disparate project to the next is no surprise by now. On “AHS,” she plays Sally, a dead inhabitant of the mysterious titular hotel whose frazzled ensemble and sadistic addictions are one with Murphy’s fictional universe. In “American Crime Story,” she plays Marcia Clark, the lead prosecutor in the 1995 Simpson murder trial. And in the 1950s-set “Carol,” she plays Abby, the childhood friend of Cate Blanchett’s title character, with whom she is still in love after a brief romantic fling. Got all that? We sat down with Paulson earlier this week to discuss it all.
Between “American Horror Story” and “Carol,” and with “American Crime Story” on the horizon, you’ve having an incredible few months. All these roles are kind of living in the past, “Hotel” in a very different way than the others.
Yeah, my “Hotel” character died in the ‘90s, so it’s a bit of another world and time that Sally is living in, for sure. And “Crime Story” takes place in the ‘90s, too.
And they’re very costume-driven, especially “Hotel” and “Carol.”
Wait till you see the costumes in “Crime Story.” That’s all I’ll tell you. I’m just saying let’s not throw that out because there are pretty exciting window-pane shoulder pads. Don’t forget. That’s gonna be in there.
Ah, yes. The spillover from the ‘80s, of course.
The spillover of the ‘80s into the early ‘90s. That’s going to be really special.
When you’re doing these rich costume dramas, how vital is it to know your character’s aesthetic before taking the role?
I had a meeting with Sandy Powell, the costume designer on this movie. I must have had three or four fittings with Sandy, who I th
ink is a real genius. Cate said something really wonderful in the press conference this morning, which is that the clothes feel like clothes and not like costumes. As beautiful as they are, you don’t get the sense that it’s a costume designer going, “Let’s put her in a lot of this.” And of course Todd decided everybody had a color.
For me, it was when Sandy Powell put the signet ring on me as Abby. I looked down at my hand and there was something about it. That and all of my scarves. I wore a lot of neck scarves with blazers. It just looked like photographs I had seen of gay women in the ‘50s. I immediately thought, “Oh, I know,” and that kind of thing is very helpful when you’re playing something. Just like my leopard coat with Sally. If I don’t have a cigarette and that coat on, I don’t really know how to do the scene. It’s very weird.
At what point did you see Sally’s look? We have the advantage of historical hindsight when it comes to “Carol,” but the universe in “Hotel” is out of this world.
Well, that was a Ryan thing. He had also directed the first two episodes of “Crime Story” and I was doing that at the same time, so he was slammed. We had not had meetings about Sally’s look prior to my first day of shooting. He approved all my clothes, but in terms of my hair and makeup, we did not know what the hell we were going to do. I came in and I had all the eye makeup on, the way that it is now, and my hair was just sort of fucked up. Ryan literally looked at it and said, “I like everything, but the hair is not iconic enough.” He originally wanted my hair quite long, and I had short hair. I had this sort of funny thing where every year of “Horror Story,” I’ve had a different hair color or an opposing thing to the season before, and I’ve never had short blond hair. Also, I just didn’t want to put extensions in and I didn’t want to wear a wig. I’d been wearing a wig as Marcia Clark. I just said, “Please let me not.” He said, “Why don’t we crimp it?” I was like, “Crimp it, Myrtle Snow style?” He said, “Yes!” And then all of a sudden it became this triangular, weird bush. What’s the character’s name in “Blade Runner”? It’s her, mixed with Magenta from “Rocky Horror Picture Show” and what’s-her-head from “Rugrats.” I looked like all of them. Instantly, I know that if I stood and there was a shadow of me on the wall, that the audience would go, “That’s Sally.” That’s what Ryan wanted, an immediately identifiable shape to her. I thought it was so smart and cool.
How often does that happen, where you aren’t sure how you’ll play a character until the camera rolls?
It depends. I did have the first scripts for the first two “Horror Stories” before we started, but I was so entrenched in the Marcia Clark of it all that I was just trusting the Sally thing was going to come out in whatever way. And because she was a drunky and because she was dead, I thought I didn’t have a lot of boundaries. It’s sort of limitless, what I can do with her — and also because of the ways I’d played other characters, on “Horror Story” particularly. This girl had no heroism to her. I thought, “There’s going to be great freedom to me maybe not planning so much, the way I have in the past with other characters.” It was partly circumstantial because I didn’t have the time because of the Marcia Clark component of this, but also because it lends itself very nicely to the character. It’s like throwing caution to the wind and let the chips fall where they may, and see what comes out of you. The uglier it is, the rawer it is and probably the better it will be. I thought, “Don’t be overly precious about it.” I just sort of learned into it.
Is it a relief to play a character who’s so unlayered? She’s wild and manipulative, and that’s that.
Yeah, Sally is a little bit like “what you see is what you get.” There are things we’re going to learn about her as we go along that will be like, “Oh!” I think it’s just going to make it click about what all this need is about and where the addictions come from and what the addictions actually are because there are some that may not even be fully exposed yet.
She has an addiction to a lack of remorse.
Yes, and she also has an addiction to other people’s emotions and a fascination to watching people have them. She has reactions to them having emotions, but she doesn’t really know what the feeling is, yet she’s crying. She’s like, “I can know that this is sad, but I’m not really feeling sad, but I’m crying.” And she’s just always injured by everything. She feels so unseen. She’s like a walking bruise, and instead of retreating, she’ll punch you in the nose if you squeeze her bruise too hard. As opposed to becoming a wallflower, she’s just going to take you down. And I like that. I’ve never played a character like that before.
And she’s so the inverse of Abby. Obviously those two projects are apples to oranges, but in terms of your résumé, it’s quite a range. Abby is someone who is in love and it’s not going to map out, and yet she has such a resilience, while Carol, whom she loves, is struggling to actualize herself in a lot of ways.
She’s got a strength, for sure, that Carol doesn’t have. But think about it: Abby didn’t choose to marry a man, she didn’t choose to go with the confines of 1950s societal norms. She just isn’t doing that. I don’t know if it’s about being bolder or braver or just a bigger inability to not go with what is inauthentic for her. And I don’t think she’s making a political statement about it — it’s just who she is. But I think it’s probably going to cause her to maybe be a little lonelier. Maybe. But I think she wants Carol. Period. The end.
Do you see hope for Abby’s life outside of what we see in “Carol”?
I do, for anybody who’s capable of that kind of selfless friendship. I mean, you’re in love with a person, but you’re going to go help them by taking the person they are in love with who isn’t you and getting them safely home, and then staying in contact with that person. Basically, I think it also speaks to the confines of society for gay women at that time. It was not a big enough world, so if you found a person you could relate to and who was of your tribe, you weren’t so likely to want to let go of them, no matter what, even if it meant that person was in love with someone else. You still wanted to be near them because that was your world that you had built. Carol and Abby have known each other since they were children.
At first, the movie just hints at Abby and Carol’s history. It takes a while to get the full story and I was worried it wouldn’t come at all.
It’s almost at the end, and it’s done in a very unemotional way, just like, “Here’s what it was.” There had been a scene in the movie that we shot that didn’t make the film, which was a scene between Abby and [Therese, Carol’s new love interest, played by Rooney Mara] in the kitchen right before Carol and Therese take off on the road, where basically Abby is really questioning Therese’s motivation and what she wants and what she’s after. I spent a lot of time making it very clear to Therese that Carol is very fragile and you better not be fucking with my friend. But that scene is not in the movie, so some of that jealousy that I have was very clear in that scene. Because it’s not there, I think some of the other stuff is a bit more mysterious, which is fine. Having a mysterious character that’s got so much strength and has enough of an impact where you still feel the weight of Abby in the movie, I think is a plenty fine thing.
In reading the script for the first time, were you hoping for that backstory or did you want the mystery to linger?
I didn’t know what I was wanting because I didn’t know what the story was yet. When I read the script, there was also a moment where I ask Cate’s character to get back together with me that’s also not in the movie. I say, “Let’s open the furniture store. Let’s try again, you and me.” She rebuffs me and says no. It’s then when Abby says, “Well, I’ve got my eye on a redhead anyway, and it’s fine.” That stuff probably added too much confusion in terms of keeping this story very clearly about Carol’s love affair and not about my pain about not being with Carol. As much as it was sad for me for Abby to lose those scenes, for the movie’s sake, it was probably cleaner and better. But in the script that I read, I got everything I needed in terms of all that history between Carol and myself. All of my jealousy was in the script, so I had that at my fingertips. And then in the book there’s much more Abby than in the screenplay.
It was definitely an example of beautiful female friendship and loyalty. Yes, this friendship did have a romantic component at one time, but it was not something that was going to cause the relationship to dissolve because it didn’t work out romantically. They had a bigger bond than that.
Aside from the fact that every director works differently, does being on the set of “Carol” feel radically different from the set of “American Horror Story”? “Carol” is serene and quiet, while “AHS” is loud and audacious.
Yes, it was not a huge crew on “Carol.” It was a very contained. We did the movie quickly. It was only six weeks and I was there for half of that. There was an element of ease and a quiet restraint, whereas “Horror Story” is just a shitshow in the sense that something is happening at a breakneck pace every second. We’re trying to get a blood gag to work and prosthetics applied, and, oh, we’re going to do a new scene now all of a sudden, and you’re like, “I gotta learn these pages!” There’s something very immediate about “Horror Story,” where you are just ready to go all the time. Your game is on and ready, and there’s something about “Carol” — and it was partly the tone that Todd set — that was incredibly subdued, but not without great energy and purpose. There was a quiet respect for the material and everyone was so excited to be there and wanting to get it right. Visually, there was a kind of mistiness. The way it looked in the movie was exactly the way it felt when we were shooting it, and that doesn’t always happen when you see something you’ve done.
Have you often watched your work and said, “That’s not the way I pictured that”?
Yes! More often than not.
What has surprised you the most?
Maybe it was during “Martha Marcy May Marlene,” actually. We shot that movie in two sections, so two weeks was the cult section, and then the family stuff with me and [Elizabeth Olsen and Hugh Dancy] was all a separate section, so I never came into contact with any of those people. It was only my imagining of that life that Martha was living based on the script. Also, sometimes we would be shooting — and I didn’t even really know this — but we’d be doing a scene where Hugh Dancy and I are in the kitchen having an intimate conversation where you would think the conversation we were having was the thing that was being photographed, but actually the camera was between us and shooting Lizzy Olsen in the other room, and that ended up being on screen. There were just so many things to do with the camera that I had no idea were happening, so you end up seeing it and going, “Wait, what? Oh! Wow!” Whereas with “Carol,” the way everything looked is exactly the way it looks. It was not a surprise to me at all.
With “AHS,” you lost a head but gained a lot of blood. This is a very gory season.
A lot of blood, and death. This is the first time I’m dead on the show. I’m the only survivor of all my seasons of “Horror Story,” except for now. I’ve lost that title, which sucks.
Is it a relief to play only one character this season?
It was an interesting thing. Because I had played the double-headed girls on “Freak Show” last year, somehow it really prepared me because I was doing Marcia Clark and Sally at the same time this year. I was very used to working in a schizophrenic, split way as the twins. So I’d go in one morning and play Marcia Clark, and then the next day I’d be playing Sally and then I’d have to scrub Sally off when I was going into the trailer as Marcia Clark the next day. So, at this point, it’s old hat for me on “Horror Story.” The more frenetic and insane, the more it feels like home. If it were calm on the set of “Horror Story,” I think I’d have to call somebody and say something is really wrong over here.
Was filming “Crime Story” as wild, given it’s also a Ryan Murphy production?
Very, very different. It’s not kinetic like that. That story is a story we know the beginning of and we know the end of. He can’t come in and sort of magically change anything, so it’s going to be interesting.
“Carol” opens in select theaters on Nov. 20. “American Horror Story: Hotel” airs Wednesdays on FX at 10 p.m. EST. “American Crime Story” premieres Feb. 2 on FX.
This interview has been edited and condensed.
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5 home gadgets to make your partner happy this Christmas
5 home gadgets to make your partner happy this Christmas
Christmas is quickly coming up – time to make sure you’re prepared so the holidays can’t catch you before you’re ready.
We’ve compiled, with the help of Innovate Online, the coolest gadgets to buy your partner this Christmas. Make your house shine with a Robot Cleaner or drink a great cup of coffee with a Nespresso Machine – this Christmas, we’ve got you covered with the best gadgets for every room of your house.
Apple TV
There’s no doubt the all-new Apple TV is the must-have gadget for your TV and the perfect gadget to stream your favourite episodes of Game of Thrones or Orange Is The New Black.
Apple’s newly released fourth-generation Apple TV has been completely redesigned and comes with all sorts of improvements – most notable, its own operating system called tvOS.
The jewel in its crown is no doubt the very cool Glass Touch surface Siri remote: simply scroll your finger across to bring up menus, change the volume or bounce between apps. Better yet, you can ask Siri to play the latest movie and they’ll respond to your command.
Nespresso Machine
A kitchen isn’t complete unless is has a coffee machine. And a coffee machine just isn’t a match for a Nespresso machine – or, as George Clooney famously says, “Nespresso. What else?”
What greater luxury than to wake up every morning and prepare a coffee in seconds with a flick of a switch, without any annoying waits?
Not just that, but the machine is bound to become a statement piece in your kitchen, with plenty of stylish and sexy designs to choose from – and best of all, you can pick from a variety of flavours and complexities with each coffee capsule, allowing for a new aroma and taste every morning.
Hoover Expert Robot Vacuum Cleaner
Admit it, you hate vacuuming. It’s okay, we all do.
But what if we told you could leave the vacuuming to someone, or rather something, else, with a sleek, modern design feeling like it came straight out of a sci-fi movie (just without the danger of it turning sentinent).
The Hoover Expert robot vacuum cleaner will mean you’ll never have to do the vacuuming yourself again: simply set the cleaner to go and it will start cleaning your home all by itself.
Inbuilt sensors mean the Hoover Expert knows where to go, where to stop and ensure it’ll never fall down stairs!
It even comes with two virtual walls, preventing it from going into unwanted rooms or areas of the home – so there should be nothing stopping you from throwing out your old vacuum to buy one of these right now!
Fitbit Scales
After eating non-stop over the Christmas period we’ll all find our pants a little tighter; so why not make your weight loss easily trackable?
There’s no better way to do so than with the super-sleek Fitbit Scales, available in either white or black.
We’re all familiar with the nifty Fitbit pedometers that sync with your phone, but now you can go a step further (pun intended) and keep track of your weight, BMI, body fat percentage and more.
And besides being completely compatible with your Fitbit tracker, the scales also recognise multiple users so you can easily share with your partner.
Lumie Bodyclock Starter
We’ve covered the kitchen, the TV room and the bathroom, let’s move onto the bedroom!
If you’re waking up groggy and grumpy, it might just be that you’re simply waking up the wrong way.
The Lumie Bodyclock is the best way to wake up in the morning: through its dawn simulator, the Lumie helps you wake up gradually by increasing natural light over 30 minutes, allowing your body to wake up naturally.
Boosting your mood (who isn’t happy when being woken up by the sun?), energy and productivity, it’ll help keep your sleep patterns on track, too.
The post 5 home gadgets to make your partner happy this Christmas appeared first on Gay Star News.
Stefanie Gerdes
www.gaystarnews.com/article/5-home-gadgets-to-make-your-partner-happy-this-christmas/
Police Arrest Boyfriend’s Best Friend In Gay Houston Man’s Horrific Murder – VIDEO
Police Arrest Boyfriend’s Best Friend In Gay Houston Man’s Horrific Murder – VIDEO
Authorities have arrested a suspect who reportedly bound, gagged and fatally bludgeoned a gay Houston-area man before setting his pickup truck on fire last week.
The father of 28-year-old Marc Pourner (above) remains convinced his son’s murder was an anti-gay hate crime, and he says the suspect was the best friend of Pourner’s boyfriend.
Police in Lafayette, Indiana, on Tuesday arrested 22-year-old David James Brown (right) and charged him with capital murder in Pourner’s death, according to The Lafayette Journal & Courier:
After receiving a tip that Brown might be hiding out in a rural Buck Creek home, Tippecanoe County sheriff’s deputies started watching the house Tuesday, Tippecanoe County sheriff’s Maj. Charlie Williams said. When Brown left the house, police followed him eastbound into Delphi, where Tippecanoe County, Carroll County deputies and Delphi police converged on Brown’s car.
He gave up without an incident, Williams said.
Pourner’s family and friends gathered Wednesday night for a vigil at the site where his body and truck were found. From KTRK-TV:
Pourner’s father says the suspect is best friends with his son’s boyfriend. He suspects the motive for killing his son, who was gay, could be hate.
“We didn’t need to suspect. We had information that told us exactly what happened when the incident occurred,” the father said.
According to media reports, Pourner’s roommates say he left his home in Spring, a Houston suburb, after receiving a late-night phone call last Wednesday that involved an argument. Pourner was reported missing after he didn’t show up for his job as bookkeeper at a local grocery store. His body was found near his burnt-out truck over the weekend in a heavily wooded area of Montgomery County, north of Houston. He reportedly died of blunt force trauma to the head.
RELATED: Gay Houston Man Tied Up And Murdered In Possible Hate Crime: VIDEO
KHOU-TV reports on Wednesday’s vigil:
Marc Pourner was 28, outspoken, opinionated and so proud to be gay, friends said his confidence gave them the heart to be themselves. So even with eyes drowning in tears over Marc’s murder, three dozen used candles to say what words cannot.
“Since day one, that’s all we did was laugh,” Patrick Sargent said. “He’s going to be missed.”
Pourer’s father said his son was generous, loving and trusting, which led to him being taken advantage of by Brown.
“My wife and I hugged and clapped and cheered,” he said of Brown’s arrest. “We cannot wait to see this gentleman go on trial. It’s our ultimate hope to attend his execution in Huntsville at the earliest possible time.”
Watch KHOU-TV’s report below.
The post Police Arrest Boyfriend’s Best Friend In Gay Houston Man’s Horrific Murder – VIDEO appeared first on Towleroad.
John Wright
Police Arrest Boyfriend’s Best Friend In Gay Houston Man’s Horrific Murder – VIDEO