This Guy Built A Treehouse In His Living Room From Upcycled Barn Wood

This Guy Built A Treehouse In His Living Room From Upcycled Barn Wood
Chris Brandler is a guy who has taken ‘upcycling’ to a whole other level.

Not content with sanding down an old chest of drawers and coating them in a sample pot of Farrow & Ball, he’s made a career out of turning old barn wood into beautiful pieces of furniture – and was even commissioned to kit-out swimmer Tom Daley’s house.

He’s also the only person we’ve come across to build a treehouse in his home. Along with his wife Polly, who looks after visuals and branding, he was kind enough to show us around this real-life childhood dream.

Take a peek.

Check out more of Brandler London’s work here.

sourced.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2017/10/27/this-guy-built-a-treehouse-in-his-living-room-from-upcycled-barn/

Stolen “Love Island” sex tape features ‘explosive’ bisexual threesome with gay Instagram star

Stolen “Love Island” sex tape features ‘explosive’ bisexual threesome with gay Instagram star
The naughty tape was purportedly stolen from a publicist’s car.

www.queerty.com/stolen-love-island-sex-tape-features-explosive-bisexual-threesome-gay-instagram-star-20171027?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

One Million Moms Enraged at Disney Channel for Introducing a Gay Kid to Popular Series ‘Andi Mack’

One Million Moms Enraged at Disney Channel for Introducing a Gay Kid to Popular Series ‘Andi Mack’

Andi Mack

ANDI MACK – Disney Channel’s “Andi Mack” stars Sofia Wylie as Buffy Driscoll, Joshua Rush as Cyrus Goodman, Peyton Elizabeth Lee as Andi Mack, and Asher Angel as Jonah Beck. (Disney Channel/Photographer)

The American Family Association subgroup One Million Moms is predictably enraged over the Disney Channel’s groundbreaking introduction of a gay character into its popular series Andi Mack.

RELATED: Teen Character to Realize He’s Gay in Groundbreaking Storyline on Top Disney Channel Show ‘Andi Mack’

Writes the group in a call to action on its website:

 What is wrong with having family-friendly content that is acceptable for all ages or even leaving a couple of networks solely for children’s entertainment? Disney Channel is gradually becoming another Freeform Network. As one of only a few channels catering to children, it cannot possibly be that Disney Channel has a financial need for more adult viewers.

By choosing to abandon family-friendly entertainment, Disney’s inexplicable choice to move toward more “adult” fare may ultimately prove to be a huge mistake.

Disney’s first gay kiss aired earlier this year on Disney XD’s animated series “Star vs. the Forces of Evil.” The scene took place at a concert where the band played a romantic tune that inspired many couples in the audience to kiss; a few of those couples — none of which involved a main character — were same sex.

The Disney Channel is deliberately choosing to “move forward” and promote adult content to children. By choosing to move in the direction of more “adult” stories and content, the Disney Channel – and the entire Disney media empire – may be choosing to sacrifice something far more precious… children’s innocence.

Disney won’t budge on this.

The post One Million Moms Enraged at Disney Channel for Introducing a Gay Kid to Popular Series ‘Andi Mack’ appeared first on Towleroad.


One Million Moms Enraged at Disney Channel for Introducing a Gay Kid to Popular Series ‘Andi Mack’

Google Pixel 2 XL Review

Google Pixel 2 XL Review
Google’s Pixel smartphones are designed from the ground up to be the purest expression of what an Android smartphone should be.

They are simple, incredibly powerful yet ultimately devoid of all personality, instead opting to give you a blank slate upon which you can build the smartphone of your dreams.

The first Pixel did in many ways perfectly encapsulate this utopian vision, but it was not without its flaws. The larger version felt too big for its screen size, while the wedge shape didn’t have everyone convinced. Then there was the small storage coupled with a sky-high price tag.

It also felt like it was trying too hard, perfectly shown off with an annoying ad campaign designed to convince you that you didn’t need that iPhone anymore.

Sadly the Pixel 2 does still have a similarly-focused advertising campaign, but this time Google has given its phone a true sense of purpose. Powered by the company’s formidable AI, the Pixel 2 is your ultimate companion for the outside world, a hitchhiker’s towel if you will.

Design

This is by far and away Google’s best-looking product so far. The all-metal body has given a soft-touch matt finish that feels almost like stone to the touch yet has none of the weight that you would expect.

It’s comfy and grippy to hold and unlike so many other smartphones out there it almost never picks up fingerprint marks or smudges. The same cannot be said for the glass accent at the top however.

Google has made the wholly intelligent decision of moving the camera from being underneath the glass accent in the original Pixel to its own metal-ringed housing. The previous design looked neat but the moment you cracked any part of that glass you ran the risk of utterly ruining the camera too. This is no longer a problem.

There’s very little else of note other than the lone USB-C port at the bottom, twin stereo speakers and finally the huge P-OLED curved display that takes up just about the entire front of the phone.

Screen

Speaking of which the screen on the Pixel 2 XL is a 6-inch Plastic OLED display that boasts a resolution of 2880×1440.

Now since our time using it the display has become an issue of controversy in two areas: Colour reproduction and screen burn-in issues.

Addressing the first it is unmistakably clear that what Google has done here is go for what it believes is accuracy over anything else. Unfortunately accuracy doesn’t look good when showing it off to your friends or looking at it every day.

When we first started using it the difference was stark. Colours looked a little muted which meant that was is very clearly red in the Gmail icon looks almost brown on the Pixel 2 XL’s display. Google thankfully does give you the option of turning on a feature called Vivid Colours which then gives the screen a much-needed boost.

Secondly, there have been reports of screen burn-in issues for some customers. This is where the pixels effectively show a residual ‘ghost’ of a previous image that has been used over and over again.

In this instance it looks as though the menu icons at the bottom can be ‘burnt’ into the display. It’s a very subtle effect but considering how expensive this phone is you wouldn’t expect to see something like this happening after just a few weeks, or even a few years.

To be clear, we have no concrete information of how widespread this issue is and in our own testing we haven’t had any problems whatsoever. With this in mind though we would say that if you do get the Pixel 2 XL, keep a close eye on how the display is performing and at the first sign of trouble contact Google or the shop you bought it from, you’ll almost certainly get a free replacement.

Google says it is actively investigating these reports and the hope is that it is just an isolated issue, no-one wants to see a repeat of the Note 7 fiasco all over again.

These issues aside we have to say that it is still a very good display, just not the best we’ve ever seen.

Camera

The original Pixel had one of the best cameras we’d ever seen on a smartphone and we’re happy to report that Google has once again raised the bar with the Pixel 2.

The interface is simple, practical and places almost all of the heavy-lifting on the Pixel itself. All you have to do is be in roughly the right time and place.

Google uses a combination of its own machine-learning software combined with a much bigger sensor to squeeze every last drop of detail out of the images it takes.

The results are astonishing, and while some might question the purity of what you’re ending up with the simple fact is that for 99% of customers, all they care about is pointing it in the right direction and ending up with something that on the surface at least looks like it could have been captured on a professional camera.

To this end Google now offers its own version of the ‘Portrait Mode’ effect that has swept through smartphones of late. Unlike Samsung and Apple which use dual-lens systems, Google’s Pixel 2 creates this background blur through software alone.

Despite this, Google’s version might be the best of them all. No it can’t offer the increased lighting enhancements that the iPhone 8 and iPhone X can but on sheer accuracy alone the blurring effect is astonishingly good.

As if that wasn’t enough, the Pixel 2 XL’s front camera can also take Portrait photos and honestly, they’re just as excellent as the rear camera.

Video should also get a mention here as Google has employed its own image-stabilisation and once again the results are very impressive indeed. Movement during video is smooth, with very few artefacts appearing throughout.

It can record at 60fps in 1080p, however it is limited to 30fps at 4K. It can also shoot slo-mo footage at either 120 or 240 fps.

Features

The Pixel 2 XL runs pure Android 8.0. That means there’s no bloatware, no apps you weren’t expecting and you’ll be first in line for new updates as they’re pushed out by Google.

Android has evolved a lot in the last few years, taking on board ideas from other manufacturers and even ideas from Apple’s iOS.

The result of which is that this is Google’s most accomplished operating system yet. It’s fantastically simple to use and yet still highly-customisable.

It’s also full of small but notable little features that just make using the phone on a day-to-day basis that much easier.

Icons now have a little notch above them whenever there’s a notification, swipe left and you’ll get your very own customisable news feed that shows the latest news about your favourite topics, local weather as well as contextual information about a journey you’re taking.

The always-on lock screen now uses the smartphones microphones to recognise music that’s being played around you. In case you’re worrying about privacy, it’s actually drawing on an internal database of over 10,000 songs so the microphone recordings will never leave the phone.

The notification tray at the top has also been streamlined to organise your notifications by app rather than time you received them. If we’re being honest it’s not our favourite part of Android and it can still feel quite busy to look at when you’re trying to quickly disseminate the most important information.

A new and more quirky feature is the addition of something called Active Edge. It’s only available on the Pixel 2 XL and it uses sensors built into the sides of the phone allowing you to squeeze it to launch Google Assistant. We’ve seen this before on HTC’s U11 and as we found with that phone it can become extremely useful if you’re the kind of person who likes using voice assistants a lot. Sadly it’s not customisable.

If you’re wondering why we haven’t mentioned the processor or RAM yet there’s a very good reason which is that quite simply it’s not important. The Snapdragon 835 and 4GB of RAM are considerably more than enough to power this phone and everything we’ve thrown at it has run smoothly and opened quickly.

The battery life is also excellent. We’ve been consistently getting a full day out of it and at one point we could even throw some virtual reality content at it and still have enough battery to see us through to the end of the day.

Conclusion

With the exception of the current screen issues that appear to be plaguing some handsets this is without doubt the best smartphone Google has ever made.

It doesn’t have the same WOW factor as say the Samsung Galaxy or Note 8 but it instead it opts to be quietly brilliant instead. It’s extremely well-built, sturdy and a joy to use on a day-to-day basis.

The camera is truly remarkable, and with the recent news that Google has actually hidden a dormant imaging chip inside the Pixel 2 the camera will only get better.

The Pixel 2 isn’t just an impressive piece of hardware, it’s the foundation upon which Google will build it’s AI-first future. As we move into 2018, Google will add new AI-powered features to the Pixel 2. From Google Lens to predictive messaging and even allowing your camera to literally remove objects from the world around it.

Who should buy the Google Pixel 2 XL?

This is not a case of Android vs Apple anymore. By now people have chosen their ecosystems and generally become locked into them. If you’re looking to get a new Android smartphone then, the Pixel 2 is without doubt one of the best smartphones we’ve ever used. It’s just so quietly competent in every single thing that it does. As a warning however, we have to recommend that you keep a close eye on the screen or simply wait until Google has worked out if it’s actually a serious issue or just an isolated problem.

Who shouldn’t buy the Google Pixel 2 XL?

The Pixel 2 is an expensive smartphone, it’s also designed to showcase the pinnacle of what Google can offer in terms of artificial intelligence and virtual reality. If being on the bleeding edge isn’t for you then Android offers you an absolute treasure trove of cheaper alternatives. Just be sure that you can go without the camera on this phone, it really is that good.

The Google Pixel 2 XL is available now in 64GB or 128GB for £799 and £899 respectively.

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/google-pixel-2-xl-review_uk_59ef6310e4b07cf8380ca85d

Asexuality: Shape and size may vary

Asexuality: Shape and size may vary

Graphic credit: Asexual Awareness Week

Happy Asexual Awareness Week!

It is 2017 and there is still seldom conversation and dialogue about asexuality as an orientation for humans and what it means. If someone is asexual, they may experience little to no sexual attraction. Asexuality – it’s just as fluid of a spectrum as other orientations!

Ace” is used as an umbrella term to include the spectrum of asexuality. Individuals who identify as asexual likely have varied and personalized experiences. It is important to recognize that asexual people exist on a spectrum of sexual attraction. Some asexual people have sex regularly, some asexual people are in relationships, and some asexual people engage in self-pleasure. These facts do not invalidate someone’s asexual identity.

Visibility and awareness of asexuality is important, but hard to find. The U.S. media, entertainment, pop culture, art, and what is understood as marketable operates under a lens that assumes that people experience sexual attraction. In this context, everyone represented in media is “allosexual” (a term for people who do not identify as asexual).

When other LGBTQ identities are represented, we are often still assuming allosexuality to be the “norm” or “default”– like being cisgender and straight. I encourage people who feel sexual attraction towards others to use the word allosexual to describe themselves—similarly to how people who aren’t transgender use the word cisgender to describe themselves, diffusing the notion that any identity is more “normal” than other.

As an asexual, trans, AFAB (assigned female at birth), person of color, my body has been objectified throughout my life. My identity has subjected me to being hypersexualized and having heterosexuality imposed upon me. It is very common for people who are a part of the LGBTQ community to have our identity, experiences, and attractions (or lack thereof) attacked, questioned, and challenged; and this is not okay.

In my activism, advocacy, and artistry, I am keen on raising questions, challenging norms and (mis)representations. I have helped a friend with an essay on asexuality and have had difficult conversations with people who don’t understand. I am open about the nuances and complexities of my identity so that I can engage in healthy and effective conversations with others, providing firsthand accounts and my life experiences on panels, in rehearsals, and at dinner with friends. I am always discovering and inquiring about my identity and my feelings – my curiosity to learn about other identities gave me the language and tools I needed before I knew I needed them.

Whether you or someone you know is or may be asexual, it is important to address asexuality as a valid identity. This will help us change the way we think about what’s normal in order to improve the lives and experiences of all young people.

Check out some of my favorite resources and share them with your friends and family!

Resources:

Asexual Awareness Week

The Asexual Visibility and Education Network

Videos I love:

x rance is a GLAAD Campus Ambassador and a senior at Ithaca College, studying Theater, Dance and Art History. As a queer, trans, person of color x has put advocacy, activism, and accessibility at the forefront of their art, pursuits, and projects. Their main topics of interests are the intersections of race, (a)gender identity, and neurodivergence which they explore through choreography, performance art, installation, and scholarship.

October 27, 2017
Issues: 

www.glaad.org/blog/asexuality-shape-and-size-may-vary

Jack’d Comes for Grindr, Calling Out the App for Allowing Racist Profiles

Jack’d Comes for Grindr, Calling Out the App for Allowing Racist Profiles

Jackd Grindr

Hook-up app Jackd, which is geared toward gay urban millennials, urged its members this week to be “the generation that ends racism” and came for the biggest competitor in the field: Grindr.

In a new video titled “The Generation That Ends Racism,” Jack’d blasts Grindr for allowing users to post discriminatory and racist preferences like “no fats, no femmes” and “No blacks, no Asians” on its platform.

RELATED: An Asian Man and a White Man Switch Grindr Profiles for a Day: WATCH

Said Alon Rivel, the Director of Global Marketing at Jackd: “We have a zero tolerance policy for racism on Jackd. We encourage members being discriminated against or harassed to report it to our customer service department.  If we find the allegations to be true, we  will  immediately delete the profile of the offending member regardless if they are a paid member or not.  Our members’ comfort and safety will always trump making money.”

Apps like Grindr need to take responsibility, added Rivel: “There is a difference between being attracted to certain characteristics of a man and spewing hate and/or attacking others for their religion or the color of their skin. Racism, in both the real and virtual worlds, is not ok.  As gay men, we are all minorities and we need to stand together in accepting and supporting our differences.”

The Advocate spoke with Grindr VP of marketing Peter Sloterdyk, who said “sexual racism is a larger problem within our community and impacts all dating apps, not just Grindr.”

Added Sloterdyk: “[Grindr] prohibits the use of offensive or racist language and encourage our community to report offending profiles through our app’s built-in system.”

Watch Jack’d’s ad:

The post Jack’d Comes for Grindr, Calling Out the App for Allowing Racist Profiles appeared first on Towleroad.


Jack’d Comes for Grindr, Calling Out the App for Allowing Racist Profiles

Free Things To Do With Your Kids In London And The UK This November

Free Things To Do With Your Kids In London And The UK This November
Free firework displays and traditional Guy Fawkes celebrations

Many of the most lavish firework displays are now ticketed events but, thankfully, there are still a few free and impressive firework shows.

3 November, from 7.30pm

Norwich Big Boom fireworks

The prime spot to watch the fifth Big Boom is in front of City Hall, with fireworks launched from Norwich Castle. The display has been designed to bang and sparkle in time with the beat of the music playing.

4 November, from 5pm

As many as 100,000 people turn up each year, so keep your kids close. This is an all-day Guy Fawkes show, with a funfair from midday, food and drink stalls opening at 5pm and the fireworks kicking off at 8pm.

Alternatively, take an evening picnic and head to the nearest hill with amazing views – Hampstead Heath, Greenwich Park or Primrose Hill. (Don’t bring your own fireworks or Chinese lanterns, as these are now banned.)

4 November, 7pm

Caerphilly Fireworks, South Wales

The historic setting of Caerphilly Castle makes the most spectacular backdrop for this free fireworks display.

Bridgwater Carnival Day, Somerset

During the day, the streets will host jugglers, stilt walkers, street theatre, marching bands and children’s entertainment in the build up to the evening parade. The carnival procession of over 100 different floats will take two hours. The grand finale is the Squibbing display, unique to Bridgwater, in which 150 squibs (large fireworks strapped to a block of wood attached to a pole) are all lit at the same time in two rows down the High Street producing a dramatically long trail of fire.

4 November

Flaming Tar Barrels at Ottery  St Mary, South Devon

Barrels soaked with tar are lit outside each of the town’s pubs and carried through the crowded streets and alleys in this spectacular custom which originated in the 17th century. One of the biggest bonfires in the South West , at over 10 metres high, is lit on the banks of the River Otter.

5 November, from 4pm

River of Light festival in Liverpool and the Wirral

The fireworks display itself, which is taking place from three barges in the middle of the River Mersey, is scheduled to start at 6:30pm, and over 200,000 spectators are expected. Celebrating the city’s Beatles’ heritage, the fireworks will be set to Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.

Mann Island Atrium is the place to head with families, with lantern making workshops and glitter and UV face painting. There will be performances including drums, pyrotechnics, fire breathers, stilt walkers and acrobatics on The Strand and Princes Parade, followed by a carnival-style lantern parade.

On the Liverpool side, people will have a great view from the waterfront running from Alexandra Tower on Princes Parade to past the Arena and Convention Centre. In Wirral, people can view the show along the promenade right the way from New Brighton through to Seacombe and on to Woodside.

5 November, 5 – 9pm

Enjoy food and drink stalls and a funfair before the explosive free finale at Glasgow Green.

4 & 5 November,

Thrills and spills at Skegness Beach Race, Lincolnshire

The Skegness beach race has grown into one the largest off-road motocross events in the UK since the first race in 2010, making a fun spectator event. The circuit includes impressive mounds, jumps, waves, hoops, chicanes and fast natural sandy straights with kids, quads and sidecar (!) races on Saturday and adult solos on Sunday.

5 November, 6am – 4.30pm

Over 400 vintage cars driving from London to Brighton

For early bird Londoners, the annual London to Brighton Veteran Car Run is an unforgettable scene, especially for kids who are car enthusiasts. Cars congregate at Hyde Park from 6.00am with the first car departing at sunrise (7.02am) and the last car leaving by 8.30am. If that’s a little too early for you, check out other places to see the cavalcade en route. In Brighton the first cars cross the finish line at Madeira Drive on the seafront from 10.02am and the event officially closes at 4.30pm.

The world’s longest running motoring celebration, the Run commemorates the Locomotives on the Highway Act of 1896. It was this Act that raised the speed limit for ‘light locomotives’ from 4 mph to 14mph and abolished the requirement for these vehicles to be preceded by a man on foot carrying a red flag. A red flag is still symbolically destroyed at the beginning of the Run.

7 November, 5pm

You know Christmas is coming when Oxford Street is transformed by sparkly, glowing lights. This year, the shopping hub will be home to 1,778 decorations inspired by falling snowflakes. No news yet on which celeb will be pushing the button.  Regent Street’s grand stretch will be lit up from 16 November.

Weston Super Mare Carnival, North Somerset

Up to 140 illuminated floats, fancy dress walkers and marching bands wind their way through the town in this annual three-hour celebration. Each float can be 100ft long and lit by over 25,000 bulbs.

11 November, from 9am

The pageantry of the Lord Mayor’s Show in London.

For over 800 years the newly-elected Lord Mayor of London has made his or her way from the City to distant Westminster to swear loyalty to the Crown. The Lord Mayor’s Show is still the oldest and grandest civic procession in the world.

At 8.30 the Lord Mayor travels up the Thames from Westminster in a grand flotilla led by QRB Gloriana (the one the Queen got drenched in during the Jubilee celebrations).  At 11.02am, after a two minute silence, the Lord Mayor’s Procession sets off from Mansion House. It pauses at the Royal Courts while the Lord Mayor swears allegiance and then returns by the Victoria Embankment at 1pm. The tail of the procession reaches Mansion House just after 2pm.

The best vantage points and liveliest crowd  is from Bank to St Pauls between 11 and 12.30. For a less crowded viewpoint, head between Blackfriars and Mansion House station between 1.15 and 2.30. At 5.15pm there will a magnificent fireworks display over the Thames, between Blackfriars and Waterloo.

Not to be confused with Greater London’s Mayor Sadiq Khan, the Lord Mayor of London is the Mayor of the City of London and head of the Corporation of London and his role is mostly ceremonial and social, not political.

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/free-things-to-do-with-your-kids-in-london-and-the-uk-this-november_uk_59f0d717e4b043885914b2e6