Cuerpos Libres • 18/03/2017 • São Sebastião (DF)

Cuerpos Libres • 18/03/2017 • São Sebastião (DF)

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Cuerpos Libres • 18/03/2017 • São Sebastião (DF)

A QUEBRADA TAMBÉM É LGBT+!

Em São Sebastião (DF) para descentralizar a produção cultural LGBT+ do Plano Piloto, esta sendo realizada a Cuerpos Libres. Um evento sobre diversidade de gênero e sexual na quebrada que agora em sua segunda edição deixará São Seba mais colorida!
Pelo direito de existir fora da norma. Para não precisar ir ao centro para beijar na boca. Por acreditar no diálogo, na educação, na ocupação, na arte, no fervo e, substancialmente, na cultura para a transformação e enfrentamento das opressões, as LGBT+s estarão bem plenas na Casa Frida e Loja BOOM. #CuerposLibres

Foto: Mídia Ninja

Cuerpos Libres • 18/03/2017 • São Sebastião (DF)

WATCH: John Waters movie star Divine was a murderer!

WATCH: John Waters movie star Divine was a murderer!

Divine’s role as a cray cray mass murderer who meets a violent end is at the heart of John Waters’ early camp classic Multiple Maniacs, which a whole new generation can enjoy in restored glory thanks to Criterion Collection. That is just one highlight of this edition of What To Watch, our biweekly guide of theatrical and home entertainment releases.

Now for the trailers and details!

 

THEATRICAL RELEASES

 

A Woman, A Part

(Opens March 22 at NYC’s IFC Center)

Feeling typecast and trapped in a popular network show, rebounding from a bout of illness, 40-something L.A. actress Anna Baskin (Maggie Siff of “Mad Men”) has a sort of meltdown and returns east to New York, where she tries to reconnect with ex-members of an experimental theater troupe she was once part of. Those include the openly queer Kate (Cara Seymour, so excellent as the nun who give abortions on Cinemax’s “The Knick”), with whom she shared some romance, and Isaac (Fast And Furious franchise’s John Ortiz). Complicating matters? Kate and Isaac are in the process of mounting a show that seems to be about a thinly veiled version of Anna… A healthy dose of complex, female-driven indie cinema, written and directed by first time feature filmmaker/visual artist Elisabeth Subrin.

 

DVD/VOD

Multiple Maniacs

($39.99 Blu-ray, $29.99 DVD; Criterion Collection)

John Waters’ 1970 feature is deliciously trashy, campy, shocking and filled with his beloved Dreamland ensemble of actors, and has received a 4K restoration for this Criterion Collection release. The late great Divine plays the sociopath (of course) owner of a freakshow of sorts, whose audiences are treated to robbery at gunpoint during the climax of their experience. Annnnddd that’s just the set-up. It gets crazier, with lesbians, rosaries stuck where the sun don’t shine, murder conspiracies, and a blaze of gunfire. Extras include a new commentary from Waters (always worth the price of admission alone), new interviews with cast and crew, and a video essay. A must!!

 

20th Century Women

($24.99 Blu-ray, $19.98 DVD; Lionsgate)

Writer/director Mike Mills’ semi-autobiographical dramedy, for which he received a Best Original Screenplay Academy Award nomination, is a moving, beautifully acted tribute to his mother (his previous film, 2010’s Beginners, addressed his father’s coming out of the closet late in life). Mills’ alter-ego, teenaged Jamie, is being raised by chain smoking single mother Dorothea (Annette Bening) in the boarding house she runs, whose residents Jamie gets close to. Teenage rebellion, relationships and music all play a big part, while Dorothea strains to stay connected to her son. Mills makes such smart decisions here and hits nerves, from his use of music to the way his characters narrate the film with knowledge of their respective futures. Extras include two featurettes and a commentary.

 

Fair Haven

($24.99 DVD; Breaking Glass Pictures)

Mike Pence should probably be forced to sit through this effective, emotional drama about “ex-gay” conversion therapy. Directed by Kerstin Karlhuber from Jack Bryan’s script, Fair Haven stars Michael Grant as 19-year-old pianist James, who returns from a stint at a Christian “reparative therapy” clinic to his rural farm home and family. Tortured by his father (Tom Wopat), who prevents his son from attending music school in evil big city Boston so he can go to community college and be groomed as a farmer, James struggles to keep his sexuality under wraps while avoiding a former boyfriend, Charlie. Can James reconcile his identity at the same time as his family? Extras include interviews and behind the scenes.

 

Hug-O-Gram: Season 1

($24.99 DVD; Flat Four Productions)

This delightful six-episode Canadian webseries – partially funded via a Telus phone carrier Storyhive Project grant – stars its creator, Todd Kipp, as Benjamin Aubergine, who makes a living as “Hug-O-Gram” delivery man. Alas, he soon finds that bringing hugs and happiness to lonely people can prove a little less savory and sane than anticipated: in fact, it brings him in contact with bona fide cray cray folks… and potentially, a new nemesis. Clocking in at just under 50 minutes, this is fun, queer stuff indeed, and we certainly wouldn’t refuse a body grab from Kipp (who looks like the love child of Liev Schreiber and Hugh Jackman).

 

Bromance

($24.99 DVD; TLA)

This Argentinean import from director Lucas Santa Ana – original title Como Una Novia Sin Sexo, a bit of a spoiler if you read/speak Spanish – sees a quartet of young friends, three male and one female, on a camping trip together. Once arrived, the female, Juli, realizes she may not only be a third wheel for this cock party, but could also be bringing something more than platonic to these boys’ connections the surface…

A Little Lust

($24.99 DVD; TLA)

When a gay 16-year-old, Rocco, comes out to his family as a result of a bullying incident, it sets forth a chain of coming of age epiphanies and experiences, plus a heaping dose of rebellion! Can his open minded parents cope with this hormonal tornado? And will Rocco succeed in fulfilling his two big dreams – having sex and seeing his fave pop star in concert?

 

STREAMING/TV/CABLE

The Most Hated Woman In America

(Premieres March 24th; Netflix)

Director Tommy O’Haver, of 1998 LGBT romcom classic Billy’s Hollywood Screen Kiss and 2001’s Get Over It, brings us this gripping Netflix original picture. A true crime tale based on the 1995 disappearance of feminist and Athiesm activist Madalyn Murray O’Hair (played here by Melissa Leo), it charts her founding of “American Athiests” and fight for religious freedom – and right to not have a religion – which saw O’Hair labeled “the most hated women in America.” Considering politics as they are right now, this is a timely one. Having made its world premiere at SXSW this month, Netflix makes it available to subscribers worldwide on March 24th.

 

ALSO OUT:

 

Julieta

 

Why Him?

 

Miss Sloane

 

Fantastic Beasts & Where To Find Them

www.queerty.com/watch-john-waters-movie-star-divine-murderer-20170319?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Chuck Berry, Paul Manafort, Sean Spicer, Floyd Mayweather, Amy Lamé, Ryan Murphy, Tomoya Hosoda: HOT LINKS

Chuck Berry, Paul Manafort, Sean Spicer, Floyd Mayweather, Amy Lamé, Ryan Murphy, Tomoya Hosoda: HOT LINKS

RIP. Rock legend Chuck Berry. “Chuck Berry, who died Saturday at 90, was one of the architects of rock ’n’ roll, as a singer, songwriter and guitarist. More than any artist of the 1950s, his songs exploded with imagery that saw rock ’n’ roll not just as a fad but as the future — a vision of freedom that transcended generation and race.”

ANOTHER SEAN SPICER LIE. Rachel Maddow broke the law. “I think it showed a couple things. One, it’s illegal to publish those tax returns…THere’s an act that prohibits that on another citizen. The idea that they would hype the idea that they obtained an illegal document.”

WHITE HOUSE BOUND? Melania and Barron Trump are reportedly moving in June. “Sources familiar with the situation tell us, contrary to some reports the president’s wife and son may stay in NYC indefinitely, we’re told they are ‘absolutely moving after the school year.’”

Paul ManafortWANTED. Ukrainian prosecutors seek to question former Trump campaign aide Paul Manafort in corruption case: “Prosecutors in Kiev said they have made seven separate appeals over the past two years for help in questioning President Donald Trump’s former campaign manager, including letters to FBI Director James Comey and US Justice Department officials. Ukrainian officials said the US has not responded to those requests.”

QUEENS, NYC. Man attacks two transgender women, is charged with hate crime: “He allegedly started yelling anti-gay slurs at them, calling them “b*tches” and “f*ggots” before pushing one of the women to the ground. He then punched and kicked her, police said. O’Meara left the scene, but returned with a cane to continue attacking one of the women, according to police.”

Ybor’s gay bathhouse on fire again after last week’s arson t.co/dM7VA5NmED pic.twitter.com/IXQG49AZrA

— Media Beast (@Mediabeast3) March 18, 2017

TAMPA. Fire breaks out at gay bathhouse for second time in two weeks: “The last fire caused $100,000 in damage was ruled an arson, but no arrests have been made. This Saturday’s fire started about 3 a.m., said Tampa Fire Chief Thomas Forward. When crews came to the scene at 1512 E Eighth Ave., they saw smoke and flames coming through the building’s windows, Forward said. But it wasn’t until 20 minutes later that a second alarm for more units was called. Soon it was a three-alarm fire.”

CHEF Q. Floyd Mayweather’s personal chef says her sexual orientation may have factored in her firing. “I don’t think he’s ever looked at me past as just a gay person or a lesbian.”

Tomoya HosodaJAPAN. First country to elect a trans man to public office: “In a world first, the Japanese city of Iruma has elected a trans man to public office. Tomoya Hosoda, 25, has been elected a councillor of the city. He came out as trans while studying medical science at Teikyo University, and began transition in 2015.”

‘CHUBBY WHITE AMERICAN LESBIAN’. Amy Lamé called in to save London’s nightlife: “Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, appointed Ms. Lamé in November as the city’s Night Czar, dedicated to fostering and promoting night life in the city. Belying its reputation as a world capital for food and entertainment, London has lost about 50 percent of its nightclubs and 35 percent of its locally owned and operated music spots since 2007. The city’s best loved clubs have had acrimonious public fights with developers and residents to stay open.”

murphyPOSE. Ryan Murphy drama, about ’80s NYC, picked up by FX. “Set in 1986, Pose examines the juxtaposition of several segments of life and society in New York City: the emergence of the luxury Trump-era universe, the downtown social and literary scene and the ball culture world. Murphy has begun casting for the show, which is expected to feature largely new and unknown performers.

FINLAND. Gay Kurd takes advantage of new same-sex marriage law: “I have decided to marry a man. It is neither acting nor something artificial. This is my nature which I am proud of. I am not a stranger. It was the society that didn’t accept me.I am proud to be the first gay Kurd in Finland to hold the ceremony on this historic day, being one of those whose names were written in the history of this country.”

100 YEARS OF BEAUTY. India.

SUNDAY PUMP. Reuben Joseph.

Instagram Photo

 

Instagram Photo

 

Instagram Photo

 

Instagram Photo

The post Chuck Berry, Paul Manafort, Sean Spicer, Floyd Mayweather, Amy Lamé, Ryan Murphy, Tomoya Hosoda: HOT LINKS appeared first on Towleroad.


Chuck Berry, Paul Manafort, Sean Spicer, Floyd Mayweather, Amy Lamé, Ryan Murphy, Tomoya Hosoda: HOT LINKS

Do gay men have a misogyny problem?

Do gay men have a misogyny problem?

Most people would agree that homophobia sucks. So does misogyny. So why do so many guy guys who have experienced discrimination in their own lives still say and do demeaning things toward women?

Way back in 2014, Rose McGowan took a lot of heat for saying, “Gay men are as misogynistic as straight men, if not more so.” McGowan later apologized for the comment, saying she shouldn’t have made such a sweeping generalization. But her sentiment really wasn’t too far off.

In an op-ed titled Sorry, Gay Guys, I’m Not Here For Your Casual Misogyny published by NewNowNext last week, writer Nico Lang says misogyny among gay men is still alive and well.

“We all know someone who loudly proclaims how grossed out he is by vaginas,” Lang writes. “Then there are the guys who think its fine to drunkenly toggle a woman’s breasts in a bar because he’s not attracted to her.”

Now, in an op-ed published by Elite Dailywriter Sean Abrams says he’s totally done with being labeled as a “gay best friend,” and he’s directing his frustrations about it at women.

“If you’ve ever heard those three words, odds are, you’ll assume we’re someone who is overtly sassy, will talk sex tips with no judgment and can tell you when your ass looks fat without you getting offended,” Abrams writes with just the slightest trace of misogyny.

He continues, “‘GBFs’ are all the rage, it seems. It’s cool for girls to be unique and–outside their regular circle of gal pals–have that one guy whom they can hang around without the fear of that person always trying to get in their pants.”

By “girls” and “gals” we assume he means women, not female children.

Abrams says the media is at least partially to blame for the whole GBF phenomenon, thanks to movies like 1995’s “Clueless,” 2004’s “Mean Girls,” and 2010’s “Easy A.”

“Apparently, we like to get things riled up, bringing around excitement in the form of some quality catfights,” he writes. “But that’s too bad, considering I f*cking hate getting myself caught up in the middle of stupid drama. I have no time for that, and I’m around for way more than to be at your beck and call.”

Being labeled as a GBF may seem like fun at first, Abrams continues, “but when it continues to be a repetitive trope that misuses our sexuality to pigeonhole gays into a sole role as the sassy, advice-giving influencer in your friend group, then there’s nothing to be applauded.”

We would add that pigeonholing women into a role of needy, emotional basket cases in constant need of reassurance and affection shouldn’t be applauded either.

The whole thing, Abrams says, is “dehumanizing.” Especially because he is “as far from effeminate as you can get when it comes to my mannerisms.”

Going back to Nico Lang’s article, Lang says attitudes like this are not helpful.

“Misogyny hurts gay men, too,” he writes. “Because misogyny is at the root of homophobia.”

He explains:

Gay men are stereotyped as feminine because we have sex with men, and society has a negative association with femininity. It’s an insult to walk, throw, or talk like a girl. When a gay man is beaten up, or taunted as a “faggot,” it’s because he’s viewed as being like a woman. Which is the worst thing a man can be. (Just look at all the “no femme” profiles on Grindr.)

So where do we go from here?

Lang says gay men can start by being a little more open-minded.

“We can all benefit from a little education,” he writes, “and instead of brushing off accusations of sexism or, worse, gaslighting our female friends, we should just listen. But if gay men don’t evolve past their own misogyny, it’s not because our sexuality gives us a pass. It’s because we refuse to learn.”

Word.

www.queerty.com/gay-men-misogyny-problem-20170319?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Upcoming Bravo Show ‘Stripped’ Strips Participants of Everything, Including Their Underwear: WATCH

Upcoming Bravo Show ‘Stripped’ Strips Participants of Everything, Including Their Underwear: WATCH

Stripped

Bravo has been aggressively promoting its upcoming summer show Stripped in which folks are stripped of everything. It seems to be a Naked and Afraid in the real world:

This new social experiment will have participants give up of all of their material possessions, from clothing to furniture to money, for 21 days with only toilet paper, water, and food rations provided. So yes, that means they’ll have to strip down to their birthday suits in front of a camera crew and the whole world, as you can see in the above sneak peek of the series. All the while, they still have to go about their daily lives, doing things like showing up to work and hanging out with friends. Each day, participants will be able to get back one item they absolutely can’t live without from a mobile storage container with their belongings located a half-mile away from their home. And what do they get after surviving three weeks of an experiment that “most Americans would consider insane”? Well, there are no prizes at the end of Stripped, at least of the tangible variety, but participants will find that figuring out what really matters to them most will prove to be a life-changing experience.

Some of you, however, may have just as fine a time checking out the promotional spandex.

Watch:

The show hit SXSW recently:

 

 

The post Upcoming Bravo Show ‘Stripped’ Strips Participants of Everything, Including Their Underwear: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.



www.towleroad.com/2017/03/stripped/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+towleroad%2Ffeed+%28Towleroad+Gay+News+%29

Steve Bannon and the Trump alt-right want you. Don’t be fooled by the new homophobia.

Steve Bannon and the Trump alt-right want you. Don’t be fooled by the new homophobia.

So now we know that Steve Bannon, the Trump advisor who turned Breitbart into the house organ of the alt-right, doesn’t really care all that much about us one way or another. This is hardly a revelation for someone who gave professional troll Milo Yiannopoulos his prominent and profitable (until recently) perch. But Bannon and Milo are figureheads in a bait-and-switch scheme.

The scheme is this: convincing some of us that the alt-right is okay with homosexuality in order to convert some of us to the white nationalist cause, which can make room for the participation of privileged white gay men. In order to do this, Bannon and Trump must convince us that the real enemy of  LGBTQ is Islam, not the alt-right. Remember when Trump, after the Orlando Pulse nightclub massacre, claimed that as president he would do a better job protecting LGBTQs from the threat of “Islamic terrorism?”

Don’t be fooled. The alt-right is a stew of hatred, and homophobia is a huge part of it.

On the surface, it’s easy to think that Bannon and Milo represent a new kind of conservative. And in one sense, they do. They want to blow up the existing order because the existing order is irredeemably tainted by liberal ideas. The world that Bannon and the alt-right have in mind is white nationalism, a world in which “Judeo-Christian values” reign. (Funny, though, how the Judeo part keeps getting lost.)

Sounds a lot like standard social conservatives, right? But it’s not. Bannon doesn’t really care all that much about the usual culture war –same-sex marriage, abortion–unless they intersect with his belief that political correctness is robbing people–his people–of their liberty. It’s a world in which the oppressed become the oppressor.

Take religious “liberty,” for example. The religious right has taken up this cause because they believe that marriage equality is wrong and that homosexuality is a sin. This isn’t Bannon’s thinking. He doesn’t seem bothered by marriage equality. But when it becomes a political correctness issue involving the rights of homophobic florists, then he cares.

As a result of this crossover belief, a lot of conservatives have been willing to cast their lot with Bannon. They might not agree with his line of reasoning, but they are fine with his conclusions. The fact that some of the worst homophobes are happy to form an alliance with Bannon should be warning flag enough.

Of course, there will always be some gay people so desperate for conservative approval that they will gladly sign on to the Bannon bandwagon. Chris Barron, of the rightfully defunct GOProud, thinks Bannon is a swell fellow. (The fact that Barron is on the Breitbart payroll may help.)

In theory, if homophobia was no longer a core characteristic of American conservatives, there would be a significant number of LGBTQ people who would be willing to identify as conservative. There’s no question a minority of white, gay men lead fairly protected lives. In fact, some like Barron, may even be among the two-thirds of men who believe there actually is something called political correctness and that it goes too far. Who wants to worry about offending someone when things are good, their thinking may go?

Now that the alt-right viewpoint has a powerful perch within the White House, it may be all too easy for some of these privileged men to succumb to the illusion that it’s actually not as bad as it’s been made out to be. Add to that the idea that maybe the leaders are friendly toward us, and it’s a recipe for recruitment.

The problem is that the alt-right isn’t just a conservative movement. It’s a way far-right movement that loves to fan the flames of hatred, so much so that the lines between white nationalism and white supremacy are often blurred beyond recognition. Up until Trump’s election, the alt-right was considered the fringe, a word often properly proceeded by the word “lunatic.”

Putting Bannon and Milo aside, on this issue they are hardly representative of most alt-right followers–young men who aggressively flout their heterosexuality. Their mascot is the vaguely creepy Pepe the Frog, but their memes are a lot worse than that. One popular one is Electric Pence, images of a high-voltage Mike Pence electrocuting gay people to cure them of their homosexuality. Or take a look at the slurs hurled at popular writer Michaelangelo Signorile after he criticized Jimmy Fallon’s softball treatment of then-candidate Trump.

You don’t even have to dig that far to see that even Milo wasn’t immune to their antigay hatred. The Daily Stormer website referred to Milo as a “deplorable kike faggot” who was harming the movement by claiming to represent it.

What the next four years will bring is anyone’s guess. But let’s not fool ourselves into believing that it’s an advance for us because the leader of a hate movement doesn’t automatically despise us. There are plenty of others who are part of that movement and allies of it who do.

www.queerty.com/steve-bannon-trump-alt-right-want-dont-fooled-new-homophobia-20170319?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

The Vatican is ‘All Words, No Action’ on Addressing Child Sex Abuse

The Vatican is ‘All Words, No Action’ on Addressing Child Sex Abuse

Pope Francis

When Pope Francis named two victims of clergy sexual abuse to a new Vatican commission on the protection of minors in 2014, some observers took it as a sign that the pope was getting serious about the issue.

But Marie Collins says there was still some skepticism.

“A lot of people felt that I was just being asked [to join] the commission as a sort of token survivor,” says Collins, who was sexually abused as a child by a Catholic priest in Ireland. “I wanted to be sure that the commission was sincere.”

Collins went ahead and joined the Vatican commission. If there was a chance for finding solutions to this problem in the Catholic Church, she wanted to be part of it.

Nearly three years later, however, Collins decided she had to resign. She officially stepped down from the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors on March 1, which was also Ash Wednesday.

Collins says the work being done by the members of the commission to protect children and vulnerable adults, and to find justice for survivors like herself, is all very important.

“Everyone on the commission [was] working very hard for that,” Collins says. “That was good. But the response from the Vatican, not so good.”

In a written statement about her decision to step down from the commission, Collins said, “I find it impossible to listen to public statements about the deep concern in the Church for the care of those whose lives have been blighted by abuse, yet to watch privately as a congregation in the Vatican refuses to even acknowledge their letters!”

“It is a reflection of how this whole abuse crisis in the Church has been handled: with fine words in public and contrary actions behind closed doors.”

Collins says the Vatican bureaucracy was slow to fund the commission’s work and to grant access to officials, and that she is not entirely sure why.

“There are still those in the Vatican,” Collins says, “that have the old attitudes and the old views towards anyone coming in from the outside, as they would see it, telling them what to do. They don’t like it.”

“Although the pope has backed initiatives put forward by the commission, they haven’t actually turned into reality. So, what we have now still is words and no actions.”

Some leaders within the Vatican want things to change, says Paul Vallely, author of “Pope Francis: The Struggle for the Soul of Catholicism.”

Among them, Vallely says, is Cardinal Sean O’Malley, who is the archbishop of Boston and the head of the Vatican commission on protecting minors. “He’s working pretty hard behind the scenes to get movement, but he’s being blocked by other people in the Vatican,” Vallely says.

Vallely adds that there is a risk in the approach taken by Pope Francis. On the one hand, the pope has talked about “zero tolerance” for Catholic clergy who’ve sexually abused children.

“He talks about setting up a tribunal to discipline bishops who fail to act on abuser priests. But then, he doesn’t actually enforce these things,” he says.

Particularly egregious to some observers, Vallely says, was the appointment by Pope Francis of a bishop in Chile with a dubious record when it comes to child abuse. That sort of thing, Vallely says, does not amount to “zero tolerance.”

The Vatican commission on child protection is expected to continue its work. In addition to Collins, the second member who was also a victim of sex abuse is Peter Saunders. But he was put on a leave of absence after having disagreements with his fellow commission members and becoming increasingly critical of Pope Francis.

Vallely says Pope Francis could decide to take the recommendations from the commission and implement them. For example, he says the pope could tell Vatican authorities to put members of the Catholic clergy suspected of sexual abuse of children in front of new tribunals.

But so far, that does not appear to be happening.

“There are lots of things he could do, if he wanted to act decisively on this, as he has in other areas of his papacy,” Vallely says.

The foot-dragging inside the Vatican could be about politics, turf wars or resistance to the pope, says Collins, the former commission member, adding, “Maybe [Pope Francis] could have been stronger.” But in any case, she says the holdup is simply unacceptable.

“We haven’t seen any accountability really. You’ve seen one or two people maybe being allowed to resign, but even then, it’s all to avoid scandal. You don’t see people removed, and I’m talking about bishops.”

“It’s depressing, it’s dispiriting, it’s frustrating. In 2017, it should not be still happening,” Collins says. “Accountability is the main issue, because if there’s some consequence for not protecting children properly, then you might see better protection.”

This article first appeared on PRI The World.

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The Vatican is ‘All Words, No Action’ on Addressing Child Sex Abuse