Grease ‘Sandy Is Dead Theory’ Blew Our Minds, Man! Creator Blames Acid

Grease ‘Sandy Is Dead Theory’ Blew Our Minds, Man! Creator Blames Acid

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Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta. AP/PARAMOUNT.

Have you heard the fan theory suggesting Grease tells the coma dream of Sandy, who dies at the end of the movie in the strange scene at the end where the car levitates and rises toward the heavens?

It seems to have first taken root on Reddit before getting a major social media boost when actress Sarah Michelle Gellar posted about it on Facebook, writing:

Wait this has blown my mind- has anyone heard this theory about the movie #Grease At the end of the movie, Danny Zuko and Sandy Olsson fly off in a red convertible as they wave goodbye to their friends on the solid ground below, leading to the conclusion that the flying car was the final result of Sandy’s fantasy. (As in she is dead) 

During the song “Summer Nights,” Danny and Sandy recount how they first met and started a summer fling. The line, “I saved her life, she nearly drowned,” suggests that Sandy actually did drown and the whole movie is an elaborate musical fantasy due to the lack of oxygen getting to her brain. The flying red convertible also suggests that Sandy is happily being whisked away to heaven at the end of the movie. Wait what?!?!

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Jim Jacobs, who wrote the original book and musical with Warren Casey, tells TMZ that the theory has no merit and that whoever made it up “must have been on acid.”

So Sandy lives on after all. Still an interesting way to view the movie and something this theory will be hard to kill, even with the creator denouncing it.

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Bill Maher Highlights Some of the Lesser Known Trump Endorsements: WATCH

Bill Maher Highlights Some of the Lesser Known Trump Endorsements: WATCH

Bill Maher

On Real Time last night, Bill Maher pointed out some of the unusual endorsements Hillary Clinton has been getting from publications that usually slant conservative or don’t endorse at all – the Dallas Morning News, the Arizona Republic, and USA Today…

And to be fair, Maher thought he should point out some of the lesser known publications that have given their endorsement to Trump. Magazines like Car and Liar, Unpopular Science, Whine Aficionado, American Sociopath, Good Housekeeper, Modern Mail Order Bride, and more…

Watch:

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Bill Maher Highlights Some of the Lesser Known Trump Endorsements: WATCH

The US Ambassador to Denmark is a Reality TV Star. Now You Can Watch His Show

The US Ambassador to Denmark is a Reality TV Star. Now You Can Watch His Show

Rufus Gifford

Rufus Gifford, the US ambassador to Denmark, is not your typical diplomat, prone to a life of boring ceremonies and stiff speeches.

No, Ambassador Gifford is something of a celebrity. He’s the star of a popular reality show on Danish TV — but, don’t hear that and think of Bravo franchises.

“We call it a documentary series, not a reality show, to distinguish ourselves as much as we can from the Real Housewives and the Kardashians,“ the American diplomat said during a visit to The World’s studios. His show won a Danish television award and has just premiered on Netflix — so those in the States can start watching it, too.

It’s called “Jeg Er Ambassadøren fra Amerika,” or “I Am the Ambassador From America.”

The cameras follow Gifford around, doing what he does as ambassador; each episode also offers a candid glimpse into his personal life in Copenhagen. You can watch him say goodbye to his golden retriever as he heads off to work, embrace his husband Stephen DeVincent — Gifford is openly gay — or ride along with him as he travels to Danish high schools to talk with young students.

Now that the documentary series is available to larger audiences, Gifford says he hopes viewers will see what it means to be a diplomat and a public servant.

“When I agreed to do a documentary series on @dr3tv … I thought only a few thousand people would see it. … Well, today it premieres on @netflix in the US, UK, Canada, Australia and other countries,” Gifford wrote recently on Instagram. “Never in my wildest dreams did I believe this would happen.”

“And while I am incredibly nervous about the show being aired all over the world — especially in my home country — I believe in it with all my heart. Just as it has done in Denmark, I hope very much that it will serve as a vehicle through which you learn a little about the US, a little about Denmark, a little about diplomacy and the unique bond between people and nations. And hopefully make you smile and laugh a little along the way. Most of all I hope you enjoy.”

The idea to chronicle Gifford’s life on TV was partly proposed by Danish television producers, and partly his own idea based on his experiences as an ambassador.

“When I first took the job I was traveling around Denmark and really trying to get a sense of how the US Embassy in Copenhagen really fit into the culture in Denmark. One of the things I was really struck by was the fact that Danes really had not a clue about what we did. There was sort of a fascination with what we did, but there was this perception that we would play golf during the day and go to cocktail parties at night and in between, go into the Embassy where we’re up to nefarious things somehow, and it I just felt so wrong to me,” he said.

“What I really wanted to do was … take our message to a broader audience, a younger audience, a more diverse audience. How do you do that? You need to get outside of your box, you need to get outside from behind your desk, and go to them. So you know, the show is an attempt to do that.”

Gifford’s future is a little uncertain. He’s a political appointee serving under President Barack Obama, whose presidential term ends soon. There might be another televison series in his future, or another diplomatic post — or maybe he’ll take the advice of his many newfound Danish fans who have urged the ambassasor to mount his own campaign for the US presidency.

This article first appeared on PRI’s The World.

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The US Ambassador to Denmark is a Reality TV Star. Now You Can Watch His Show

Erie County Councilmember Jay Breneman speaks at Pridefest

Erie County Councilmember Jay Breneman speaks at Pridefest

Michael Mahler posted a video:

Erie County Councilmember Jay Breneman speaks at Pridefest

Pride Weekend was held August 26-28, 2016 in Erie PA. The weekend began with a Pride Kick-Off Drag Show held at the Zone Dance Club, 133 W 18th St, Erie PA. Performers at the drag show were Michelle Michaels, Misty Michaels Kall, Lovin Heart, Jill Jameson and Vicky Bendme.

Saturday began with the March to Pridefest organized by NW PA Pride Alliance. The step off was at the Zone Dance Club. Parade units included NW PA Pride Alliance, Erie County Executive Kathy Dahlkemper, Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Erie, Temple Anshe Hesed, LBT Women of Erie, Erie Democratic Coordinated Campaign, General Electric Transportation GLBTA Alliance, Ladyfest Erie, Northwestern High School GSA, Eerie Roller Girls, TransFamily of NWPA Transgender Support Group, and Community United Church. There were 152 people in the parade.

Media coverage included Erie Times News, both local TV news crews, and .MIC from NYC.

NW PA Pride Alliance also organized Pridefest, which was held in Griswold Park after the parade. Over 370 people attended Pridefest. The keynote speaker was Erie County Councilmember Jay Breneman. Performers for Pridefest included drag performers Michelle Michaels, Misty Michaels Kall, Jill Jameson and musical acts Populi, Honest Mistakes and Billy Wynn,

GEAE sponsored a tent at Pridefest for HIV, Hep C and syphilis testing that was performed by Erie County Department of Health and Community Health Net.

Info tables at Pridefest included American Civil Liberties Union of PA Northwest Chapter, Canine Partners for Life, Children’s Aid Society of Mercer County, Community Health Net, Community United Church, Crime Victim Center of Erie County, Eerie Roller Girls, Erie Vegan and Vegetarian Society, Families United Network, Inc., Family Pathways, General Electric Transportation GLBTA Alliance, Iadeluca Chiropractic Center, Lake Erie Counseling Associates, LBT Women, LPL Financial Advisor Diane Gardner, Ms. Zewe, National Organization for Women, NWPA Chapter (NWPANOW), Pennsylvania Youth Congress, Persad Center, PNC Bank, Safe Harbor Behavioral Health, SafeNet Center, Temple Anshe Hesed, TransFamily of NWPA Transgender Support Group, Unitarian-Universalist Congregation of Erie, and Whispering Lake Grove.

Vendor tables included Chinese Lagoon, Elite Jewelry By Jasmine, LuLaRoe, Monacella Massage & Kinesiology, Origami Owl, Pampered Chef, Peach, Rainbow Creations, and Scents.

Special thanks to volunteers Jodi Shay, Kim Conti, Andrea Shaffer, Deb Spilko, and Johauna. Photos are by Deb Spilko and Andrea Shaffer.

After Pridefest, GEAE held an After Pride Party at the Bourbon Barrel that was attended by 100 people and which collected clothing items for SafeNet. The Zone Dance Club held an Island Heat Tropical Glow Party.

The next day, Sunday, August 28, NWPA Pride Alliance held Pride Day at Waldameer Park and Waterworld. About 100 people attended.

10 Ten Iconic Images Of Love & Defiance Illustrate The Road To Equality

10 Ten Iconic Images Of Love & Defiance Illustrate The Road To Equality

 

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On June 26, 2015, we celebrated and cried tears of joy as the US Supreme Court decreed the end to marriage discrimination. Then we snapped photos with our smart phones and posted them on social media, mimicking the process by which Americans got to know us and support marriage equality in the first place.

In fact, looking back through the last 50 years at the start of LGBT History Month, no one can help but reflect on the iconic images that contributed to the nation’s long march towards equality. In some ways, the march is still in it’s infancy, which much left to achieve, but this month we celebrate the victories in images…

1. Frank Kameny and the Mattachine Society of Washington

frank-kameny-c-19070Sometimes called the gay Rosa Parks, Frank Kameny was fired as a government astronomer in 1957 because of his sexual orientation. His appeal of that decision was the first national petition to a high court for a violation of human rights based on sexual orientation. Photo Credit: Kay Tobin

2. The Stonewall Riots

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The Stonewall riots broke out in the early morning on June 28, 1969 at the Stonewall Inn. It is part of the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission’s Greenwich Village Historic District, a National Historic Landmark, and the first U.S. National Monument dedicated to the LGBTQ-rights movement. Photo Credit: New York Daily News

3. Gay Liberation Front

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On July 4 of 1969 members of the Mattachine Society New York formed The Gay Liberation Front, working to organize a march to keep the spirt of the Stonewall rising going. The GLF worked tirelessly to demand the end of persecution against homosexuals. Photo Credit: Peter Hujar

4. Harvey Milk at the 1987 San Francisco Gay Pride March

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Harvey Milk, the first openly gay man elected to public office in the United States, at the 1978 San Francisco Gay Pride march. Photo Credit: Terry Schmitt/Chronicle 1978

5. The Love of Marty Robinson and Tom Doerr

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Marty Robinson and Tom Doerr made history in 1970 when they appeared on the cover of America’s first gay weekly  newspaper. Robinson was a union carpenter and Doerr a graphic novelist (who designed the Lambda symbol). At a meeting of the Village Independent Democrats Marty attacked society’s mistreatment and demanded the club help stop police harassment. This image is of Tom Doerr and Marty Robinson during a Gay Activists Alliance sit-in back in 1970. Photo Credit: Diana Davies Collection at the New York Public Library

6. The Marriage of Jack Baker and Michael McConnell

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In 1971, Minneapolis couple Jack Baker and Michael McConnell beat the odds and found a way to get married, decades before everyone else. In their book The Wedding Heard ‘Round the World they share an amazing story of their campaign for marriage equality. Photo Credit: Paul R. Hagen

7. New York City’s Marriage Equality Act

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On July 24, 2011 the Manhattan City Clerk’s office was buzzing at 141 Worth Street. We were there to document the first few same-sex couples getting married under the Marriage Equality Act in New York City. Christine Quinn introduced five of the first couples to crowd that cheered as each waved their certificate of marriage. Photo Credit: Jeffrey James Keyes/Queerty

8. RuPaul at 2009 Capital Pride

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RuPaul fired up the crowd at the Washington, DC 2009 Capital Pride Festival, sixteen years after The 1993 March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation rally. Ru asked everybody to show “love” towards Pennsylvania Avenue. Photo Credit: Billy Khuong Photography

9. Edie Windsor Goes to Washington

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Edie Windsor and Thea Spyer’s love affair lasted for forty years before they were married in 2007. Two years later when Syper passed away, Windsor was ordered to pay $363,000 in estate taxes because the federal government did not acknowledge their union. Windsor challenged the constitutionality of the Defense of Marriage Act. Photo Credit: Kate Barrett

10. Californians React to Supreme Court Rulings on Prop 8 and DOMA

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On June 26, 2013 the Supreme Court struck down a crucial part of the Defense of Marriage Act and dismissed the argument to the Proposition 8 ruling. Activists and allies took to the streets and Justin Sullivan captured this image of a same-sex marriage supporter showing her support. It’s difficult to say where we would be without the love and support from our straight allies. Photo Credit: Justin Sullivan

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Britney Spears: “My Twenties Were Horrible.” Well, Yes.

Britney Spears: “My Twenties Were Horrible.” Well, Yes.

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Britney Spears recently visited the British chat show Lorraine to be gushed on by overzealous interviewer Dan Wootton and discuss her new album Glory, the joys of being single, and why she’s enjoying her thirties.

Related: Acquaint Yourself With Britney Spears’ Harem Of Male Backup Dancers

“I like my thirties way more than my twenties,” she says. “My twenties were horrible. And my teens was fun. But I like thirties. Thirties is great. You know who you really are.”

Candid.

Watch:

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“Finding Prince Charming” Spoof 1,000 Times Better Than Actual Show

“Finding Prince Charming” Spoof 1,000 Times Better Than Actual Show

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Oversharing is the order of the day on every reality show; a point perfectly illustrated in “Totally Yourself on Prince Charming,” a pitch-perfect skewering of the overall cringeworthiness of Logo’s answer to “The Bachelor.”

Related: When Your Gay Friends Give You Terrible Advice

The short clip stars Go-Go Boy Interrupted‘s Jimmy Fowlie and comedian Tom Lenk as two prospective suitors who touch upon dead mothers, lactose intolerance, and sleep-eating in increasingly desperate bids to win over “entrepreneur” Robert Sepulveda, Jr.

Let’s get awkward:

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Guys Sound Off On What It Was Like To Be Gay In The ’90s

Guys Sound Off On What It Was Like To Be Gay In The ’90s

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A young writer working on project about gay life in the mid-1990s recently turned to Reddit for help with his research, and the responses have been surprisingly interesting.

Here’s what the original post says:

I’m a writer and I was curious about this. There’s a lot of information about the 80s (for obvious reasons) but not a ton about the 90s. I’m pretty young so I don’t remember much about the 90s, so I’d appreciate the help.

The story is set in 1995, in LA. It would help a lot to know stuff specifically about LA, but if you just have information about what it was like in the mid 90s that’s good, too.

Things like how and where gay guys met, the after-effects and continuation of the AIDs crisis, political climate, any of that stuff is good. I’ve done some reading but I feel like it’s not enough.

Thank you so much for your time and responses.

Now, check out some of the replies…

Several people mention the homophobic social and political atmosphere in the country at the time.

“The Religious Right was still very powerful at that point,” one person writes. “Look up how Bill Clinton’s sex scandal nearly brought down his presidency. Look at the discussions around DADT and DOMA.”

“I remember being scared to come out because my parents (or at least my mom) openly used anti-gay language, would listen to Dr. Laura in the car when we went somewhere, and would openly comment against pro-gay causes,” another person adds.

“Los Angeles in general was kind of liberal, but not so liberal as it’s become over the last 20 years,” a third person chimes in. “CA was still electing Republican governors. The anti-gay marriage Prop. 22 passed in 2000, including being voted for by a majority of people in Los Angeles.”

Related: PHOTOS: These Vintage Gay Pride Photos Are Absolutely Everything

They also mention how gay men started fleeing en masse from small towns and rural areas to bigger cities where they could live their lives more openly.

“In the mid-90s, many gay men left rural areas if they could and went to places like New Orleans, Atlanta, D.C., etc.,” one person recalls, “so the gay people left behind were even more isolated, especially if they were poor or uneducated and couldn’t easily get out.”

“People fleeing other parts of the country would move to WeHo and try to fit in by quickly adopting all the dress styles, manners, and other habits of those who lived there,” another person adds. “Lots of Mormons fleeing Utah.”

HIV/AIDS is also brought up.

“1994-1995 was pretty much the peak of deaths from AIDS in the United States because the peak of infections had been in the early 80s,” one person says. “The natural course of the progression of the disease caught up with many people at around the same time. The death rate dropped sharply in the later 90s.”

He continues: “The depth and breadth of that grief left its mark on all of us who lived through that period. I was young enough to have known what safe sex was before becoming sexually active, but the age group just a few years older was decimated.”

Another person writes: “[Safe sex] was indoctrinated into us because of the AIDS crisis, and since anti-retroviral drugs were still in their infancy HIV was still very feared. There was actually a kid in my class who was born with a heart condition and he ended up getting HIV from a blood transfusion when he was an infant. Poor kid was out sick all the time and died when I was in third grade.”

Related: PHOTOS: Vintage Pics From Waikiki’s Gay Beaches Prove That Speedos Never Go Out Of Style

And, not surprisingly, Madonna gets a little shout out.

“The only person whom I read publicly defending the rights of gays and lesbians was Madonna,” one man explains. “So I always looked up to her in some ways. I remembered watching Truth Or Dare in the cinema, and her acceptance and embrace of her gay dancers–whom she had referred to as her ‘family.’”

Then, of course, there was the social scene, which primarily included clubs and chatrooms.

“Club culture was really big because it was what you had to do to meet other gay guys,” one guy says. “Gay dot com came online sometime around the late nineties and provided an alternative. Back then it was this awful Java-based chat client.”

He continues: “At the time chat rooms were still social spaces, so you’d have people who would be there just to hook up who might spam out ads in the main chat, but you’d also have people actively engaging in group conversations. It’s something I really miss from back then, as I made a lot of good friends that way and nowadays everything is catered toward people who are just looking for sex.”

Do you have any memories of being gay in the ’90s? Share them in the comments below…

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