12-Year-Old Mexican Boy Attempts to Block Thousands of Anti-Gay Protesters

12-Year-Old Mexican Boy Attempts to Block Thousands of Anti-Gay Protesters

12 year old mexican boy marriage

Across Mexico over the weekend, thousands of “pro-family” groups protested against same-sex marriage as the country moves toward marriage equality. In one particular march in Celaya, Guanajuato, a 12-year-old boy was photographed in the middle of the street trying to block the march of 11,000 people from moving forward.

Journalist Manuel Rodriguez captured an image that is instantly iconic.

As the publication Regeneracion noted, we’ve seen one very similar shot in Tiananmen Square in Beijing in 1989. It’s reminiscent of the “tank man” image the world knows so well.

Said Rodriguez to Generacion: “At first I thought the child was only playing.”

But Rodriguez interviewed the child later, who said, “I have an uncle who is gay and I hate the hatred.”

In Tijuana, thousands marched as well, and nationwide protests drew hundreds of thousands, the L.A. Times reports:

Thousands of opponents of same-sex marriage, including Tijuana’s new Roman Catholic archbishop, gathered for a rally in the city Saturday to protest Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto’s proposed constitutional reform favoring the right of couples to marry regardless of gender identity or sexual orientation. The morning march to City Hall was one of dozens of such protests across Mexico that took place Saturday, drawing a combined hundreds of thousands of citizens. The demonstrations come on the heels of a series of legal victories scored by proponents of same-sex marriage in states across Mexico.

Same-sex marriage has been legalized in Mexico City and 9 of the nation’s 31 states. There are challenges in the 22 other states underway.

Video of the march in Celaya:

(via reddit)

The post 12-Year-Old Mexican Boy Attempts to Block Thousands of Anti-Gay Protesters appeared first on Towleroad.



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Condragulations to RuPaul for Winning His First-Ever Emmy for Best Reality TV Host: WATCH

Condragulations to RuPaul for Winning His First-Ever Emmy for Best Reality TV Host: WATCH

RuPaul Emmy

RuPaul beat out American Idol’s Ryan Seacrest, Dancing With the Stars’ Tom Bergeron, Hollywood Game Night’s Jane Lynch, Little Big Shots’ Steve Harvey andProject Runway’s Heidi Klum and Tim Gunn to win his first ever Emmy Award for hosting RuPaul’s Drag Race. The awards were handed out over the weekend as part of the Creative Arts Emmys.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, “The award, which has only been given out since 2008, has been won by Survivor host Jeff Probst four times. Lynch has won twice, and Klum and Gunn have won once.”

Said RuPaul upon accepting the award: “Earlier this year I was quoted as saying I’d rather have an enema than have an Emmy. But thanks to the Television Academy, I can have both!”

RuPaul talked to reporters backstage about what the show represents:

“I think what our show represents is the tenacity of the human spirit. The 100-plus girls who have told their story on our show have really helped so many young people around the world…these young people who now have people to help them navigate their own unique stories.”

When asked about winning the Emmy, RuPaul added:

“I really didn’t expect this. I came here thinking I got invited to the prom and I’m going to dance my ass off tonight, but i didn’t expect that I would have this in my hand when I was dancing tonight. It’s a very special night not just for me but for all of the young people around the world who dance to the beat of a different drummer.”

When congratulated on the award, RuPaul also corrected a reporter. “I think you mean, ‘conDRAGulations’,” a term that has become well-known in his drag-oriented lexicon.

He added:

“I can’t not say ‘Condragulations’ anymore. I think it’s applicable to almost anything.”

Watch:

Backstage RuPaul also talked to Yahoo!

The post Condragulations to RuPaul for Winning His First-Ever Emmy for Best Reality TV Host: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.



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Emmys Countdown: first time LGBTQ nominees from the other side of the camera

Emmys Countdown: first time LGBTQ nominees from the other side of the camera

Photo Credit of MAKING A MURDER: Television Academy

 

With the 68th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards taking place next Sunday, September 18, 2016, broadcast live on ABC at 7pm ET/4pm PT, a lot of attention is paid to honorees, actors and actresses, who bring characters to life by imbuing them with passion, humor, song and searing honesty.  But before they ever rehearsed their first line, writers conceived of their world, choreographers were marking the steps, directors envisioned how shots were to be made and producers were in charge of the whole ball of wax.

By encouraging LGBTQ artists and visionaries to tell their stories and amplify their rich and diverse lives through entertainment media, GLAAD is excited to see that this is a banner year for so many talented LGBTQ content creators on network and cable television, as well as online platforms.  Some are first time nominees, and others are legends in their own right.

In this first of three pre-Sunday features on Emmy nominees, we’re spotlighting LGBTQ first-time Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Emmy Award honorees.  Though several have been recognized on the festival circuit and other award programs, this is their first foray on this TV red carpet.  So…let’s begin.

Netflix:  Making A MurdererLaura Ricciardi and Moira Demos impacted the viewing public in a way no one really expected.  Making a Murder: Fighting for Their Lives was part of a Netflix documentary series that examined crime stories from an in-depth investigative format.  The series was filmed over the course of ten years, with the filmmakers moving back and forth from New York City to Wisconsin during filming. Moira and Laura share nominations for Outstanding Direction and Outstanding Writing for a Non-Fiction Program, while Laura is also nom’d for Outstanding Documentary or Non-Fiction Series.

(At press time, Laura Ricciardi and Moira Demos shared two Emmys for Outstanding Direction and Outstanding Writing for a Non-Fiction Program, and Laura Ricciardi won the Emmy for Outstanding Documentary or Non-Fiction Series.  In accepting the awards,  they thanked their families, production team and subjects by saying “If they had not trusted us to take the time to listen and share their stories accurately and fairly, there would be no series.”

 

Even though Tig Notaro is a familiar presence to those of us who have enjoyed her appearances on The Office, Community, Dog Bites Man, and (as if we need a reminder) as “Officer Tig” on The Sarah Silverman Program, she is up for her first Emmy (Outstanding Writing for a Variety Special) for her HBO special Tig Notaro:  Boyish Girl Interrupted.  Many artists use their private lives as fodder for their public material, but Tig has always been right out there; honest and candid in a way that unites the audience in the experience of our shared humanity.  As she stated within a Deadline.com interview:

I think that people are going to think of me however they want to think of me. Whether it’s female, or gay, or cancer, or funny, or unfunny. I have no control over that and so I always go back to, “Well, I think this is funny or interesting, and I’m going to talk about that.”  I just try not to think too much about how I’m perceived.  I think as long as I’m still selling tickets and can pay my mortgage, then people are probably thinking good enough things or whatever about me to keep the train moving.

(At press time, The Late Late Show Carpool Karaoke Prime Time Special won the Emmy for Outstanding Variety Special.)

 

Jen Richards is a writer, actress, consultant and advocate, who can now count this first Emmy nomination to her list of honors.  As the co-writer, star and producer of Her Story, she is nominated for Outstanding Short Form Comedy or Drama Series, the only indie web series to be nominated that category.  The series was Executive Produced by The Vagina Monologues author Eve Ensler, and produced by Katherine Fisher. An accomplished and leading voice within the trans community, she co-founded and was the director of The Trans 100, was a series regular on the GLAAD Award-winning E! reality series I Am Cait, and was featured in Logo’s Beautiful As I Want To BeHer Story is about two trans women in Los Angeles who have given up on love, when suddenly chance encounters give them hope.

(At press time, Children’s Hospital won the Emmy in this category.)

 

GLAAD has praised GAYCATION since it first premiered for pushing the reality show genre into new, uncharted and vulnerable realms.  As its co-Executive Producer and creator, Academy Award-nominated actress Ellen Page guides us through LGBTQ cultures around the world…often risking her life, and that of her best friend Ian Daniel.  There really has been nothing like it on television.  Nominated for Outstanding Unstructured Reality Program, GAYCATION has taken us from Ukraine and the tragedy of Orlando, to a life-threatening trip to Brazil.

(At press time, Born This Way, the disability stereotype-busting reality show, won the Emmy Award in this category.)

 

Whether telling our stories is scripted, documented or told in a reality setting, accelerating acceptance of LGBTQ people is most powerfully done one story at a time … one image at a time … one episode at a time.  Content matters, and the power of entertainment media cannot be denied.  So whether our stories win awards or not, they have already succeeded in becoming part of the narrative of who we are as a people and a culture.  ACCEPT may well be one of the most powerful words in moving LGTBQ people and families forward into a future free from bias.

September 12, 2016

www.glaad.org/blog/emmys-countdown-first-time-lgbtq-nominees-other-side-camera

Night Scenes @ CAMP-er-VAN

Night Scenes @ CAMP-er-VAN

UCL Urban Lab posted a photo:

Night Scenes @ CAMP-er-VAN

On 10 September 2016, Dr Ben Campkin and Laura Marshall from the UCL Urban Laboratory were invited to delver a workshop as part of their LGBTQI Nightlife in London research at the CAMP-er-VAN, at Peckham Festival. After presenting emerging research findings, Ben and Laura were joined by DJ, producer and visual artist Jeffrey Hinton, international cabaret artist Mzz Kimberley and Tia Simon-Campbell and Olivia Mastin fron Bbz London.

Night Scenes @ CAMP-er-VAN

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