VIDEO: In honor of National Coming Out Day, GLAAD releases collection of stories

VIDEO: In honor of National Coming Out Day, GLAAD releases collection of stories

GLAAD

In recognition of National Coming Out Day, GLAAD today debuted Out, a mini-documentary featuring the coming out stories of four LGBTQ young people.

Check out the video below!

National Coming Out Day is an annual LGBTQ awareness day observed on October 11. Founded in 1988, the emphasis is that the most basic form of activism is coming out to family, friends, and colleagues. The foundational belief is that anti-LGBTQ bias thrives in an atmosphere of silence, and that once people know that they have loved ones who are LGBTQ, they are far less likely to maintain anti-LGBTQ views.

October 11, 2016
Issues: 

www.glaad.org/blog/video-honor-national-coming-out-day-glaad-releases-collection-stories

Cheyenne Jackson Officially Graduates To Daddy Status

Cheyenne Jackson Officially Graduates To Daddy Status

cjackson15_438-edit-jpg-644x1000_q100

Cheyenne Jackson is officially a daddy.

The 41-year-old American Horror Story star and his husband of two years, Jason Landau, just shared a bunch of pictures on Instagram of their brand new baby twinsies, Willow and Ethan.

Related: Cheyenne Jackson Marries Boyfriend In Front Of Celeb Friends

“Best day of our lives,” Cheyenne wrote. ” We will never recover. Welcome to the world our beautiful Willow and Ethan.”

He later added: “I never knew how much I needed my daughter’s dimples.”

Related: Orlando Cruz, Cheyenne Jackson And Paco Leon Take Their Clothes Off For Your Vote

Jason shared some of his own pictures as well.

“Today my husband and I brought our son and daughter into this world,” he wrote. “Willow and Ethan just made us the happiest people and so thankful to now start our lives together as a family.”

Scroll down to see the adorable photos, and join us in saying congrats to the new dads…

Instagram Photo

Instagram Photo

Instagram Photo

Instagram Photo

Instagram Photo

 

 

www.queerty.com/cheyenne-jackson-officially-graduates-daddy-status-20161011?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Wax Sculpture Justin Bieber Is Wet, Shirtless, And Only Faintly Frightening

Wax Sculpture Justin Bieber Is Wet, Shirtless, And Only Faintly Frightening

screen-shot-2016-10-11-at-10-02-19-am

Flanked by spirited backup dancers, and poutier than ever, Madame Tussauds London just revealed its brand new Justin Bieber wax sculpture to the world. But is the world ready?

Related: PHOTOS: Justin Bieber Skinny-Dips Again, And Of Course The Photos Are Out

Demonstrated by the promotional video below, the wax version of Biebs is far more deserving of all those teenybopper screams and shrieks than the real thing. That’s because wax sculpture Justin Bieber skulks through the streets of London at night and eats all the children.

??? #ItsRainingBiebs pic.twitter.com/N7MQGCUlZV

— Madame Tussauds (@MadameTussauds) October 9, 2016

www.queerty.com/nothing-can-prepare-wet-shirtless-wax-sculpture-justin-bieber-20161011?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

National Coming Out Day Has Vital Legal Implications in a Political Season Fraught with Hate

National Coming Out Day Has Vital Legal Implications in a Political Season Fraught with Hate

National Coming Out Day Keith Haring

Today is National Coming Out Day. It is important every year, but particularly during a political campaign fraught with anti-minority demagoguery. Coming out also has a significant impact on the law, both on the books and how equality gets operationalized on the ground.

As we learned from the push for marriage equality, voters who knew openly gay persons were more likely to support LGBTQ equality, generally, and the freedom to marry, in particular, than those who did not.

In fact, researchers found a direct causal relationship between switching opinions from anti- to pro-marriage equality and meeting and getting to know an openly gay neighbor, co-worker, or family member. This was one of the chief motivators behind the campaign’s “neighborhood” approach.

During popular votes in Maine, for example, organizers encouraged openly gay sons and daughters to talk to their parents, their parents’ neighbors, their parents’ friends, old teachers, and other community members.

MaineThey asked openly gay Mainers to reach out to their neighbors to make sure they knew they were happily living among gay people. And since Maine voted twice on marriage equality — once in 2009, overturning the legislature’s pro-equality vote, and again in 2012, enacting marriage equality by a 53-47 vote — the effect of the neighborhood approach was evident. Mainers who had voted against marriage equality in 2009 but supported in 2012 spoke about how conversations with openly gay Mainers helped change their minds.

Coming out helps in other ways. More openly gay voters means more openly gay policymakers. And legislatures with openly gay members are less likely to pass anti-gay legislation. This makes the work of the Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund so important.

But the effects on the ground may be even more important. Openness about our identities and living our truths can help demystify worlds that many voters consider foreign.

We have seen this most recently in the media portrayals and public discourse surrounding anti-transgender laws like North Carolina’s HB 2. To many North Carolina voters, and certainly to the state’s isolated and bigoted governor, transgender individuals are not only “others,” they are completely unknowns.

The mystery and otherness of the transgender community allows opponents to fill the void with hate, lies, and nonsense.

It is, of course, a complete pretext to suggest that men are masking as transgender to attack women in bathrooms. As the revelation of Donald Trump’s bragging about sexually assaulting women shows, women in public bathrooms have much more to fear from toxic masculinity than transgender women. And yet, the public narrative, burdened by a lack of transgender role models, could be bent away from the truth.

Coming out, whether as transgender, lesbian, bisexual, or gay, matters for many reasons: for our mental health, our self esteem, and our long term happiness and success. It is also important we make our voices heard so the majority cannot ignore us when our rights and very livelihood come up for a vote.

The post National Coming Out Day Has Vital Legal Implications in a Political Season Fraught with Hate appeared first on Towleroad.


National Coming Out Day Has Vital Legal Implications in a Political Season Fraught with Hate

Seth Meyers: Trump is That Creepy Flasher in the Locker Room – WATCH

Seth Meyers: Trump is That Creepy Flasher in the Locker Room – WATCH

seth meyers billy bush tape

On Late Night, Seth Meyers took a closer look at the Donald Trump and Billy Bush tape in which Trump brags about assaulting women on a bus during an Access Hollywood shoot.

Meyers made three astute observations about the state of the race.

The first was about Trump:

“So a man who is this close to the highest office in the land now occupies the lowest office in the land: the pervert on the bus.”

The second was about the Bush family:

“Billy Bush, who somehow passed Jeb for ‘Worst Performing Bush of 2016’.”

And the third was about American culture:

“It should be noted NBC suspended Billy Bush from the TODAY show for his words on this tape, which means there is currently a higher standard for host of the third hour of the TODAY show than there is for Republican nominee for president.”

Meyers looked at Paul Ryan’s attempt to distance himself from Trump without removing his endorsement:

“Paul Ryan is so spineless at this point they carry him to and from events in a bucket.”

Meyers then moved on to Trump’s explanation of the remarks as “locker room talk” at Sunday night’s debate. And he left us with an image that might scar us forever:

“That is not the way men in locker rooms talk. Second of all, this is the problem. Trump treats the entire world like the inside of a men’s locker room. And you just know he’s the locker room type who towel dries his hair while he’s buck naked with one leg up on the bench so everyone has to avert their eyes to avoid looking at his saggy ballsack.”

Watch:

The post Seth Meyers: Trump is That Creepy Flasher in the Locker Room – WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.


Seth Meyers: Trump is That Creepy Flasher in the Locker Room – WATCH

#AM_Equality Tip Sheet: October 11, 2016

#AM_Equality Tip Sheet: October 11, 2016

NC SHOWDOWN TONIGHT: As North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory and Attorney General Roy Cooper head into their first gubernatorial debate, everyone’s awaiting their face-off over McCrory’s controversial and hateful HB2 law. New polling shows Cooper pulling away, leading McCrory 49-42, as an explosive new story overnight exposes the depths of the Governor’s unwillingness to fix the HB2 debacle that has harmed countless people and saddled North Carolina with six months of ongoing economic fallout. The debate will air statewide starting at 7 p.m. What’s driving the pre-debate coverage in North Carolina today:

  • McCrory courted anti-LGBTQ pastors as deadly hurricane bore down on NC: BuzzFeed’s Dominic Holden (@dominicholden) reports exclusively that as Hurricane Matthew barreled toward his state, McCrory “spent the night on stage addressing far-right pastors, asking them to support the state’s controversial anti-LGBT law and back his reelection.” McCrory engaged in his usual self pity, complaining he is being “shunned” for HB2, and whining about reports, including recently in The New York Times and The Washington Post, that the discriminatory law is damaging the state and sinking his political fortunes. More here.
  • “McCrory: Willing to Discriminate at Any Cost” HRC is releasing a new video highlighting the economic backlash North Carolina has suffered since McCrory hastily signed HB2 into law after legislators rammed it through in less than a day.
  • Tonight’s debate comes as McCrory is sinking in the polls and opposition to HB2 continues to grow — a recent poll found that seven in 10 NC voters say that McCrory’s discriminatory law has been bad for the state.
  • President Obama will be in Greensboro today, rallying students at North Carolina A&T University for Hillary Clinton.
  • WRAL’s editorial board urges voters to back candidates who will repeal HB2, writing that “any candidates for public office who won’t support and vote for its immediate repeal, should not have the honor of receiving anyone’s vote or holding public office.” The state has “suffered enough,” the board writes, due to McCrory and crew’s “desperate, needless and misguided grasp to foment a campaign wedge issue…”
  • The matchup will be moderated by Chuck Todd (@ChuckTodd), host of NBC’s Meet the Press, who has closely questioned McCrory previously about HB2. It didn’t go so well for McCrory, who made the specious claim that he “didn’t know” of any employment discrimination targeting LGBTQ people and admitted that parts of HB2 were “poorly thought out.”
  • Meanwhile, McCrory has finally agreed to a second debate on Oct. 18.

#turnOUT THE VOTE:

  • In Iowa: Yesterday, HRC President Chad Griffin (@ChadHGriffin) rallied phone bankers in Council Bluffs, Iowa, to get out the LGBTQ vote.
  • In Nebraska: Today, Griffin kicks off early voting in Omaha. In 2008, President Obama won Nebraska’s 2nd Congressional District, which includes Omaha, by just 1,260 votes — in a state home to more than 39,000 LGBTQ voters.

HRC CELEBRATES NATIONAL COMING OUT DAY WITH VIDEO FEATURING OUT CELEBRITIES: Today, HRC marks National Coming Out Day by releasing a new video highlighting actors, athletes, musicians, and others who are helping to advance equality by coming out and sharing their stories. HRC is also featuring guides and resources that are part of its National Coming Out Project. “Coming out — whether as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, or as an ally — is incredibly important in our fight to advance LGBTQ equality,” said Mary Beth Maxwell, HRC Senior Vice President for Programs, Research, and Training. “It takes bravery and courage to come out, and by speaking up and sharing our stories, we are helping to make the world a better place by changing hearts and minds.” More from USA Today.

  • Musician Rayvon Owen (@RayvonOwen), who came out this year, is taking over the @HRC twitter feed today at 11:30 a.m ET.… he’s among many celebrities and public figures who have come out for equality in 2016.
  • LGBTQ visibility has also increased in sports, thanks in large part to athletes, coaches and staff who have bravely come out over the last several years. More here.

TUESDAY TWEET: Mother Jones reporter Kevin Drum (@KDrum) calls out Trump’s ridiculous assertion yesterday at a Pennsylvania rally that he considers himself to be “a blue collar worker”…

Donald Trump today: “I consider myself in a certain way to be a blue collar worker.” pic.twitter.com/YYWVj6l2BN

— Kevin Drum (@kdrum) October 10, 2016

FLORIDA FEDERAL COURT EXTENDS VOTER REGISTRATION DEADLINE: Yesterday, the Florida’s Federal Court extended the voter registration deadline to 5 p.m on Wednesday to give Floridians affected by Hurricane Matthew the opportunity to vote in the 2016 elections. Yesterday, HRC called on Florida Governor Rick Scott to extend the deadline after he rejected similar requests; the Florida Democratic Party filed a lawsuit seeking an extension. Florida is home to 20 million voters, including at least 550,000 LGBTQ adults.

  • In a conversation with Logo TV’s political correspondent Raymond Braun (@RaymondBraun), Griffin emphasizes the importance of the LGBTQ vote in this election. Watch at Logo TV.

HRC ENDORSES DEBORAH ROSS OF NORTH CAROLINA FOR U.S. SENATE: Yesterday, HRC announced its endorsement of Deborah Ross for the U.S. Senate seat currently held by Richard Burr. As a candidate, Ross has spoken out and called for the repeal of the vile and dangerous HB2. Meanwhile, Burr has repeatedly opposed LGBTQ equality during his time in office. He has refused to support the Equality Act, and voted against the bipartisan Employment Non-Discrimination Act, the Student Non-Discrimination Act and hate crimes protections. More from HRC.

CAMEROON POLICE RAID LGBTQ BAR: This weekend, police in Cameroon blockaded the entrance to a bar, arresting dozens of LGBTQ people inside. More from Pink News.

READING RAINBOW

Manila Times explores the lives of transgender Indonesians, and the discrimination they face… The New York Times reviews the memoir of a transgender boy growing up in New York City… Pink News shares Australians’ frustrations with Parliament’s stall on marriage equality… San Diego LGBT Weekly says that TV station Logo will censor LGBTQ content on National Coming Out Day in solidarity with foreign countries who ban LGBTQ media… Culturess highlights 30 LGBTQ characters on TV… 

www.hrc.org/blog/am-equality-tip-sheet-october-11-2016?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed