Should “Finding Prince Charming” Acknowledge Robert Sepúlveda Jr.’s Escorting Past?

Should “Finding Prince Charming” Acknowledge Robert Sepúlveda Jr.’s Escorting Past?

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As we reported yesterday, the star of LOGO’s Finding Prince Charming, essentially a gay version of The Bachelor, came clean about his escorting past in an interview with Huffington Post‘s Noah Michelson early this week.

Though not particularly pleased to be confronted with the question, Robert Sepúlveda Jr briskly acknowledged his previous dalliances with sex work, saying, “The past is the past. I was young and it helped through college.”

An op-ed piece by E. Alex Jung published yesterday by Vulture argues that the show shouldn’t sweep his hustling days under the rug, but should incorporate them into the narrative of the show.

“Finding Prince Charming wants to have it both ways,” he writes.

They wanted a bachelor who looked like a porn star to activate the trashy, libidinal desires of gay men, but they didn’t want him to talk about it once they realize he might actually have been one. It’s the Madonna/whore complex, but for gay men. Indeed, what may make Finding Prince Charming interesting isn’t Sepúlveda himself, but rather the era the show represents: when marriage is not just a possibility for queer people, but an obligation.”

Meanwhile, commentators on our original story went ballistic in regards to Sepúlveda, claiming he’s a disgrace to the community. And though we find such accusations ridiculous, close-minded, and borderline evil, Sepúlveda certainly didn’t do himself any favors during his interview with Vulture, saying, “What I want the show to do is unify the community. That’s what we should we doing.”

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Riiiiight. Because anonymous comments such as these paint “the gay community” in a very favorable light.

Anyway. Our question is this: Should LOGO incorporate Sepúlveda’s escorting days into the show, or should they continue to sweep them under the rug?

Weigh in in the comments section below. Delicately.

 

 

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Drugged-Up, Muscly Barber Freaks Out On Jet, Tries Opening Emergency Door Mid-Flight

Drugged-Up, Muscly Barber Freaks Out On Jet, Tries Opening Emergency Door Mid-Flight

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There are your rough days, and then there are the days you’re so hopped up on Xanax, GHB, and cocaine that you try escaping a jet by opening the emergency exit door mid-flight.

Related: Men Die In Gay Sauna From Drug Abuse

New York nightlife personality Jordan Fragiacomo, an assistant at the Matinee party and a barber who works out of Hell’s Kitchen, was evidently having one of those days on Monday: He caused quite a scene during his flight from New York to Seattle.

Related: You Won’t Believe The Latest X-Rated Male Trend Happening In Airplane Lavatories

An unlucky passenger named Shohana Godwin wound up sitting next to Fragiacomo, and revealed to Seattle news channel KIRO 7 that “he kept stopping to go into his bag and then I watched him take a pill out of his bag.”

Meanwhile, he kept babbling about having to “cancel his flight and get off the plane, and just was kind of speaking a little gibberish.”

Related: Watch Azealia Banks Lose It On Delta, Call Flight Attendant A “F***ing F***ot”

The New York Post reports that flight crew had to restrain Fragiacomo since he was “babbling incoherently and attempting to kiss two flight attendants.”

“If you continue to restrain me,” Fragiacomo allegedly told the flight attendants, “there’s going to be problems.”

And there were indeed problems: The jet’s pilot was ultimately forced to make an emergency landing at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport at 9:45am EST.

As Elite Daily reports, one passenger recorded the incident and posted the footage to Twitter:

Vid from girl on @AlaskaAir flight from NYC to Seattle, delayed bc officials say a man tried to open a door mid-air pic.twitter.com/Ym38Hu0qCz

— Linzi Sheldon (@LinziKIRO7) August 29, 2016

Later, Fragiacomo confessed to authorities that he’d consumed GHB, cocaine, and Xanax three hours before the flight.

As NewNowNext reports, Fragiacomo once worked as a go-go boy at the now-shuttered Chelsea club Splash. Oddly, when asked for his personal identification, he instead showed officers a website that advertises his haircutting skills, including a “hot shave in the privacy of your home.”

After the incident, Fragiacomo was taken to Fairview Southdale Hospital Minnesota.

 

 

 

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Juan Gabriel was a Gay Hero to Me and My Brother, Without Ever Being Out

Juan Gabriel was a Gay Hero to Me and My Brother, Without Ever Being Out

Juan Gabriel gay

The first song I ever loved was El Noa Noa by Juan Gabriel. My mother was so obsessed with it, the title became one of my first words. As toddlers, my little brother and I danced by the record player, the only luxury for an immigrant family in Arizona, fresh from Mexico, grasping at links to the border town we left. El Divo De Juarez was from our state, looked and sounded like us, and his record was one of the few belongings we brought.

In the song, a man pleads the listener to go out dancing to a club called El Noa Noa. It’s a disco song with a country beat, the minor key make it both an invitation and lament. In Mexican pop culture, the idea of “oldies” does not exist, songs are simply passed down, so mothers and daughters, sisters and cousins have danced to that song for decades.

When my brother and I came out of the closet and moved to San Francisco, leaving our parents behind (as they had left their own parents), we packed that 45 record. Playing it as adults, we finally noticed its delicate avoidance of pronouns, the serpentine lisp, the chorus that sang of a place where things were “different.” We realized one of the most famous songs in Latin American history, played at every quinceañera and wedding, was about a gay club.

Juan Gabriel, who passed away last weekend at the age of 66, had dozens of songs that followed my brother and I throughout our lives.

They were the opening credits of telenovelas.

When new neighbors arrived from Mexico, we partied to No Vale La Pena at the start of the night and ended with Querida, when the men drank enough to let themselves feel for the one that got away and the one they married.

At my grandfather’s funeral, my aunts howled with grief at Amor Eterno.

When my uncle got divorced, I remember Ya Lo Se Que Tu Te Vas blasting while he sobbed in his car.

I watched these songs eviscerate the emotional composure of Mexican machismo all through my childhood.

Juan Gabriel was a masterful songwriter and producer but it was his voice that did it. In his seven-minute heartbreak masterpiece Hasta Que Te Conoci, it travels from feminine moans and whimpers to reach gospel heights, fusing the melisma of Spanish flamenco with Indigenous battle cries, ending in that wail. To me, it was homosexual yearning given sound.

His sexuality was never ambiguous, it was always just there, never spoken of directly, always joked about.

Our first homophobic joke was a man on TV dressed as Juan Gabriel talking about wanting to sit on a chili as my mother shifted uncomfortably in her chair. He had no girlfriends, only muses: Rocio Durcal, Ana Gabriel, Maria Felix — their campy rapport in music videos and performances the first time we saw the classic fag hag dynamic. There was the cheap reporter who, in a break with decorum, asked him if he was gay. Even though they were at eye level, Juan Gabriel looked down at the young man and in a calm tone responded “Lo que se ve no se pregunta.” What is obvious does not need to be asked. The reporter withered. It was the first time we saw shade.

Juan Gabriel was never allowed to own his homosexuality, but he never lost control of it. It was seared into his art.

To watch his decadent 1990 concert at the Palace of Fine Arts is to behold a queer artist soaring. Symphony orchestra, mariachi, choir all bowing to twenty minute versions of his songs. As soon as we could afford a VCR, my mother bought the VHS and at eleven and nine, my brother and I sat mesmerized watching our Juanga on stage in front of El Mariachi de Mexico, the very symbol of Mexican masculinity, waving a limp wrist at a fanatic audience, warning them “Don’t provoke me!” and then swinging his hips, dropping his ass to the ground, and pirouetting, all in a sparkling sequinned jacket.

Imagine what that does to two little gay boys. At that moment we knew that whatever made this man so different was not only ok, but with enough work, it could be adored.

Immigrants are forced to leave places and cultures — and so are queer people. Histories, traditions and belongings are scrubbed off until all we have is images and songs. When we weep for the death of our icons it’s a selfish grief isn’t it? The tears are for our own memories, for those links to loss, for the knowledge that their death is another signpost towards our own.

The most successful artists create vessels for these feelings and dualities. And for my brother and me, Juan Gabriel represented that duality. He was the country we left because of its poverty and homophobia, the heritage and family we sacrificed to follow our queer path.

He also represented the birth of our gayness, the development of what Harvey Milk called “fabulous emotions.” He was history, unfolding before two gay brothers, two entire countries, two cultures, two families, two existences all linked through the songs of one single gay man.

This story first appeared in 48 Hills from San Francisco

Leo HerreraLeo Herrera Orlando LGBT 5 positive things is a Mexican artist/activist and a featured Towleroad contributor. His work focuses on gay male history, sexuality and nightlife. Current projects include Blood Mirror protesting the FDA’s current ban on gay blood, as well as the recreation of 3 Eras of Gay Sex and 50 Years of Gay Male Culture. For more work, visit LeoHerrera.com and follow on Instagram.

All opinions expressed are those of the author.

The post Juan Gabriel was a Gay Hero to Me and My Brother, Without Ever Being Out appeared first on Towleroad.



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SpaceX Falcon 9 Rocket Explodes on Launch Pad at Cape Canaveral

SpaceX Falcon 9 Rocket Explodes on Launch Pad at Cape Canaveral

According to eyewitness reports on social media, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket has exploded at its launch pad at Cape Canaveral. Photos began appearing Thursday morning of a huge plume of smoke rising from the pad.

CBS News reports:

NASA says SpaceX was conducting a test firing of its unmanned rocket when the blast occurred Thursday morning. The test, considered routine, was in advance of a planned Saturday launch from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.

“It appears … the entire rocket exploded,” a source told CBS News space consultant William Harwood.

There is NO threat to general public from catastrophic abort during static test fire at SpaceX launch pad at CCAFS this morning.

— Brevard EOC (@BrevardEOC) September 1, 2016

The rocket was set to launch on Saturday carrying a satellite owned by Facebook that was the company’s first step in providing Internet to poor, disconnected areas of sub-Saharan Africa.

 

SpaceX pad on fire!! pic.twitter.com/Gx1KNEyvRD

— Kris (@krisn99) September 1, 2016

CNBCnow: BREAKING: SpaceX rocket explodes in Cape Canaveral, Florida » t.co/oHJ2yuMQpX pic.twitter.com/dRqg3lfq9t

— BullFan2016 (@BullFan2016) September 1, 2016

Doesn’t look good. SpaceX rocket reportedly just exploded on the pad. t.co/7mybhnHHb8 pic.twitter.com/kpBaXaIGXI

— Owen Williams ⚡️ (@ow) September 1, 2016

Wow, SpaceX rocket just blew up on pad. Shook our whole bldg. pic.twitter.com/PMxZA4v4IV

— SpaceCoastTiger (@TigernBear) September 1, 2016

Instagram Photo

 

Developing…

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Southern Decadence Is Not The Only Great Gay New Orleans Festival. It Is Just The Start

Southern Decadence Is Not The Only Great Gay New Orleans Festival. It Is Just The Start

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If there’s one thing the people of New Orleans love, it’s a good festival. Mardi Gras. Jazz Fest. Essence. Labor Day weekend is, of course, the iconic Southern Decadence. These are probably the best-known annual events, but just the beginning of what the city has to offer.

Related: Why These 12 Only-In-New Orleans Experiences Need To Go On Your Bucket List

There’s always something going on. So no matter the season, you will find no shortage of special experiences you can’t find anywhere else.

Check out all unique festivals and events happening year-round in New Orleans…

New Orleans Pride

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The city’s annual Pride celebration has nearly tripled–yes, tripled!–in size over the past four years, making it one of the fastest growing Prides in the country. The weekend in June is composed of your usual Pride festivities–a kick-off party, family day, parade, after-party and brunch–and tends to be less rambunctious and more family friendly (but no less fun!) than Southern Decadence, which happens later in the year.

Mardi Gras Bourbon Street Awards

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A tradition for more than four decades, the Mardi Gras Bourbon Street Awards held in February has been heralded as “the most famous drag-queen contest in America,” many from gay Mardi Gras balls. Dozens of competitors dressed in their flashiest, most outrageous getups vie for such titles as Best Drag, Best Leather, Best Group and Best of Show. Always a hoot, the spectacle is staged at the corner of Bourbon and St. Ann streets, in the heart of the city’s LGBTQ district.

Festigals

This one’s for the ladies–and their fans. Each July, the famed Festigals don their most colorful outfits, hats and feather boas for the annual summer shindig, which has been deemed “The Ultimate Girlfriend Getaway.” The weekend-long Downtown event includes everything from professional development conferences to cooking demonstrations, plus sip-and-shop parties, Bloody Mary mixers and private home tours.

Halloween New Orleans

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What started as a grassroots fundraising event during the darkest days of the HIV/AIDS crisis more than 30 years ago has turned into one of the most popular and most jubilant events in the entire South. Halloween New Orleans is a volunteer-run weekend that includes a silent auction, parties and a grand costume ball, with proceeds benefiting Project Lazarus, a local non-profit organization that offers a home to people with AIDS.

Whitney White Linen Night

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As one of the oldest cities in the country, New Orleans is rich in history and tradition. The Whitney White Linen Night was originally inspired by city residents of yesteryear, who wore white linen to stay cool in the summer heat before the invention of air conditioning. On the first Saturday of every August, art aficionados put on their fanciest threads and hit the Warehouse District to peruse the local art galleries and sample food and drink provided by local vendors. The block party is followed by an after-party at the Contemporary Arts Center with even more food, live music and artwork on display.

Faux/Real Festival

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Art lovers will appreciate this annual festival that showcases over 100 different performances over the course of three weeks in November. Whether you’re in the mood for theater, opera, dance, music or literature, it’s all happening at the Faux/Real Festival. There’s also food and drink tastings, parties, after-parties and after-after-parties, making for one heavy dose of authentic NOLA culture.

Gay Easter Parade

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Only could a city as creative as New Orleans find a way to turn a holiday like Easter gay. And for 17 years now, that’s exactly what folks have done. The Gay Easter Parade takes a leisurely hop through the French Quarter, passing by every gay bar and many gay-owned restaurants and retail shops. The parade typically includes hunky bunnies, drag queens in horse-drawn carriages, colorful floats and brass marching bands, with onlookers dressed in their Easter Sunday finest, bonnets and, of course, rainbow beads.

Saints & Sinners Literary Festival

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Writers and book nerds won’t want to miss the Saints & Sinners Literary Festival. Each March, the leading voices in literature gather for three days of readings, book signings, panel discussions, master classes and workshops–with more than a few cocktail parties, live performances and networking events thrown in for good measure.

Southern Decadence

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Of course, no list of New Orleans events would be complete without Southern Decadence, one of the most wonderful times of the year to visit New Orleans. Held annually over Labor Day weekend, the celebration attracts nearly 100k people from all over the world. It features block parties, pool parties, parades, drag shows and dancing.

It’s a wild weekend of celebration of community and the rainbow spirit of the Deep South.

Related: Watch These Guys Show Off Their New Orleans Dance Moves

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Pride, Parks & Pizza: Korey Kuhl’s San Francisco

Pride, Parks & Pizza: Korey Kuhl’s San Francisco

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Korey Kuhl is an Amazing Race star, YouTuber and popular Instagrammer

San Francisco is the only city in the world where literally everyone can truly be themselves. No matter who you are or what you’re looking for San Francisco will welcome you with open arms. When I moved there in 2011, the biggest surprise to me was just how comfortable everyone seemed in their own skin. Being from the Midwest I loved the small town feel of SF but I also loved being able to see same-sex couples walk down the street hand-in-hand. After growing up in a conservative part of the country, it was nice to see people being themselves whole-heartedly and embracing all lifestyles without limiting themselves.

The city in two sentences…

One of the best things about San Francisco is how easy it is to explore due to its size, seven miles by seven miles. You can walk across it, from bay to ocean, in an afternoon. Whether your cruising down Castro Street, playing  tourist for the day at Fisherman’s Wharf, or catching a Giant’s game at AT&T Park, you always feel like you’re in the heart of the city. It makes for a very intense experience, especially for gay men, because there are so many packed into a few square miles on the south side of the city.

On celebrity…

I don’t get recognized too often but when I do the first thing people say is that I’m taller than they anticipated. Apparently I looked short while racing around the world.

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On causes…

I’ve always supported the annual AIDS/Lifecycle bike ride from San Francisco to Los Angeles and every year it seems like I have more and more friends who participate. The ride is incredible, the community is vital, and the exercise is unmatched. You make dozens of friends in a few days. It’s a great cause as it benefits both the San Francisco AIDS Foundation and the Los Angeles LGBT Center.

On celebrating…

I love to celebrate special occasions by finding my new favorite restaurants and then hitting the town. The culinary side of San Francisco is unlike any other city I’ve ever lived in and I love taking advantage of it. Then there is the Castro bar scene, which is just so much fun, tromping from place to place and running into people. If I’m celebrating in the Castro you’ll most likely find me at Blackbird or Hi Tops. Blackbird is a stylish lounge, and you can have a serious conversation with a friend in one of the booths–or play a round of pool in the back. Hi Tops is all about sports, beer, and cheering on the Giants, Warriors and 49ers. It’s all about the atmosphere and both of those places have plenty of something special to go around.

0b7849d1-cfb0-4c6a-8cdb-bf42d4ea7ff2On pride…

SF Pride is one of a kind. It’s huge and wonderful and all-encompassing, mind blowing really my first time there. I learned over the years that it definitely helps to have a plan of attack because there’s so much to do and see during the three-day weekend. What’s nice is that you can also just let Pride take you along for the ride. The first year I lived in the city, my friends and I made plans for each day of the things we most wanted to do and see. We went to Dolores Park, we saw the parade, we partied day and night on Castro Street, but in the years since it has become much more of let’s see where the day takes us.

On the Castro Street Fair…

This is one of my favorite weekends. Living in the Castro it felt like we were having a huge neighborhood block party in my own backyard and celebrating during the day always makes me realize how much of a community the city truly is. I could walk out my front door and mingle with my neighbors over drinks or at one of the food trucks. It’s just another great opportunity for the LGBTQ community to come together as one big family, and it feels incredible.

On carefree experiences…

I usually find myself gravitating towards the water in the summer. There are plenty of great beach options between the west end of Golden Gate Park up the coast to the Golden Gate Bridge. Baker Beach and Ocean Beach are just two of my favs. I love running on Ocean Beach during overcast days because it’ll be pretty empty and cool. You can run for miles and not feel it. You experience sand on your ankles and the salt water in the air, hardly your usual urban environment. When the sun is out, Baker Beach is definitely the best spot to go with your friends. You can walk along the shore and chat with friends and enjoy incredible views of the Pacific and the Golden Gate Bridge. And if you’re looking for that clothing-optional gay beach experience, it can be found there as well. No one will bother you. It’s San Francisco.

On the perfect night…

I’m pretty simple: Dinner with friends, watching the sunset over the water, and then dancing the night away in the Castro at Toad Hall, Q Bar or Beaux Bar and Dance Club. Toad has an outside patio, Q Bar great music, and Beaux feels like a New York club transplanted to SF. Sometimes we can stop in at all three in one night since they are only blocks apart, along the route home. Depending on how late we stay out, I might substitute the sunset for a sunrise, but we’d definitely need to stop at Marcello’s Pizza on Castro Street, after the bars close of course.

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On the perfect Sunday afternoon…

My perfect Sunday would start with brunch in the Castro at either Mission Beach Cafe or Starbelly. I’m obsessed with both. And then a quick walk over to the incredible Dolores Park to relax in the sun, catch up with friends, and drink cold beer from a bottle in a brown paper bag. It’s a low-key way to pass an afternoon, and something I’ve done hundreds of times, both by myself and with friends in tow. It’s the best spot I’ve ever found to catch up with old friends and make new ones.

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Police Say They’ve Made Contact with Florida Man Who Made Orlando-Style Terror Threat Against Gay Bars

Police Say They’ve Made Contact with Florida Man Who Made Orlando-Style Terror Threat Against Gay Bars

Craig jungwirth arrested wilton manors threat

After conflicting reports yesterday that he had been arrested, Wilton Manors Police say they’ve made contact with Craig Jungwirth, the man who has threatened an Orlando-style massacre on gay bars over Labor Day Weekend.

NBC6 reports:

Police Chief Paul O’Connell said Wednesday they know where Craig Jungwirth is and they’ve made contact. Earlier Wednesday, a Fort Lauderdale city commissioner told NBC 6 that Jungwirth was taken into custody near Orlando, but police said they’re still investigating.

“We have to put pieces of the puzzle together to establish probable cause that he’s committed a crime,” O’Connell said.

Jungwirth had left this message on the page of a Facebook user:

My events are selling out cause you faggots are total patsies. None of you deserve to live. If you losers thought the Pulse nightclub shooting was bad, wait till you see what I’m planning for Labor Day.

You can’t never catch a genius from MIT and since you faggots aren’t dying from AIDS anymore, I have a better solution to exterminate you losers. [SNIP]

I’m gonna be killing you fags faster than the cops kill ni**ers. It’s time to clean up Wilton Manors from all you AIDS infested losers.

Jungwirth has been on the radar of South Florida’s gay community for some time.

RELATED: Conflicting Reports Emerge Over Arrest of Man Who Promised Orlando-Style Attack on Labor Day

Writes the blog Peacock Panache:

Earlier this year we reported on Craig Jungwirth – a man who took over the Beach Bear Weekend event in Florida and used it to solicit and scam money from unsuspecting members of the LGBTQ community. What began as a story of hisharassment of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence exploded after information surfaced that not only were the events listed for his Beach Bear Weekend event fake but also all hotel bookings through the event website didn’t actually reserve local hotels (as they’d never spoken to Jungwirth or any event organizers).

Following those two stories (here and here) Craig Jungwirth embarked on a harassment campaign against both this publication as well as the individual writers associated with it. He sent harassing text messages. He left vaguely threatening voice mails. He bombarded our social media and comments sections with spam and threats. He even attempted to hack our server several times to access the articles written about him.

The Wilton Manors Police Department released a statement:

The Wilton Manors Police Department (WMPD) takes all matters seriously especially when someone threatens the lives of the Wilton Manors Community to include our residents, business owners/employees, visitors, and the surrounding communities. The Wilton Manors Police Department is aware of this serious matter and our department is currently conducting an on-going investigation on this matter and the individual(s) involved. Due to the on-going investigation we are unable to provide any details about the investigation and what current information our department has learned about this matter and the individual(s) involved at this time.

Please know that our Police Officers and Detectives are thoroughly investigating this serious matter and we ask the community to continue to contact local law enforcement officials should they hear or see any other additional posts on Social Media/new threats made by these individual(s) or anyone else.

For all EMERGENCY type calls please Dial 9-1-1 and for all NON-EMERGENCY / REGIONAL DISPATCH type calls please call (954) 764-HELP (4357).

NBC6 reports:

“Jungwirth has a lengthy criminal history which includes stalking charges. He has a handful of restraining orders against him. Police are asking anyone else who has been threatened by Jungwirth to call them.”

Gay bars in South Florida have stepped up security in the wake of the threats. Rumors Bar and Grill in Wilton Manors has hired armed security, according to NBC6.

O’Connell said other measures are underway:

“We’re gonna have extra patrols, high visibility throughout the holiday weekend and we know Fort Lauderdale Police and the Broward Sheriff’s Office are going to work with us on that,” he said.

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