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PFLAG Rescinds Award to Joy Reid Over Antigay Blog Posts
The MSNBC host claims her blog was hacked, and the antigay posts were not written by her.
www.advocate.com/media/2018/4/25/pflag-rescinds-award-joy-reid-over-antigay-blog-posts
Trump VA Pick Ronny Jackson Prescribed Himself Drugs, Wrecked Government Vehicle While Drunk
New details have emerged about Rear Adm. Ronny Jackson, the White House physician Trump has picked to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs, the NYT reports:
A nurse on his staff said Dr. Jackson had written himself prescriptions, and when caught, he asked a physician assistant to provide the medication. And at a Secret Service going away party, the doctor got intoxicated and “wrecked a government vehicle,” according to the summary.
The paper also reports that Jackson threw his own staff into a “panic” after supplying a “large supply” of Percocet to a military official without telling anyone.
7. My god. t.co/gTgQZ39nBw pic.twitter.com/sYhdexSYD3
— Yashar Ali (@yashar) April 25, 2018
Earlier, it emerged that Jackson drunkenly banged on the hotel door of a female employee during an overseas trip with President Obama in 2015.
Jackson’s confirmation hearing was postponed this week when allegations of excessive drinking on the job, and improper dispensing of medications were first reported.
Here’s what Sarah Huckabee Sanders said about Jackson today:
The post Trump VA Pick Ronny Jackson Prescribed Himself Drugs, Wrecked Government Vehicle While Drunk appeared first on Towleroad.
Trump VA Pick Ronny Jackson Prescribed Himself Drugs, Wrecked Government Vehicle While Drunk
¡Aguas! Heads Up! Connecting you to interesting Latinx media, art & cultural happenings
¡Aguas! Heads Up! Connecting you to interesting Latinx media, art & cultural happenings
1) Get Ready for “Vida”
Vida, the much-anticipated half-hour drama with both Latinx and queer content, premieres Sunday, May 6th at 8pm ET/PT on STARZ. Latinx writer Tanya Saracho’s show focuses on two Mexican-American sisters from East Los Angeles and will explore culture, identity, gender, and sexuality from a Latinx point of view.
2) Natalia LaFourcade Releases Musas Volume 2
New music from Natalia Lafourcade is finally here! She has returned to take the Latin Music industry by storm with volume 2 of her album Musas. As in her first album, Volume 2 includes another treat for fans — a song with the widely recognized guitarist duo, Los Macorinos.
3) One Day at a Time Returns for Season 3
After passionate viewer petitions for Season 3 of One Day at a Time, Netflix made many viewers happy and picked up ODAAT for another season. And the internet went crazy over the news. ODAAT follows a Cuban-American family living in Los Angeles. With a teenage lesbian lead role and a Latina veteran mother dealing with PTSD, the show tackles issues like mental illness, homophobia and LGBTQ issues, sexism, immigration, and racism faced by many in the Latinx community in the United States.
4) Cumbiatón Wants to Help You Shake it
Angelenos looking for a new place to dance and have a good time now have Cumbiatón LA. These events celebrate Latinx music and culture, and DJs play a variety of music like cumbias, afrolatinx music, Spanish rock, 80’s music, etc. For more details about upcoming events, follow them on Instagram at @cumbiaton_la
5) Here Comes Gio Bravo
Gio Bravo is a 25-year-old transgender singer-songwriter of the regional Mexican music genre. Since the age 12, he has written some 200 original songs. One of GLAAD’s Rising Stars recipients, he will be releasing his debut album El Comienzo on April 25th. In addition to the album release, you can also look forward to the release of his first music video for “Mañana Te Olvido.” And in the near future, he will also be releasing a music video for “Que Se Puede Hacer” which will star a transgender woman as the lead role.
For more information on Gio Bravo and his music, follow him on Instagram @giobravo_eltransformer
El Comienzo will be available on iTunes, Spotify, Google Play, Pandora, Amazon, and many other platforms.
6) Fuerza Fest About to Light Up NYC
Fuerza Fest, the Latinx LGBTQ festival showcasing “art on the frontline,” will take over New York from May 8th to the 20th. It will take place at the Julia de Burgos Performance & Arts Center.
1680 Lexington Avenue
New York, NY 10029
(Between 105 & 106 Streets)
ART on the FRONTLINE
7) Radio Ambulante Shares LGBT Love Story
Radio Ambulante recently shared the story of “Jaz y Lalay,” two Costa Rican women in love. ¡Viva el amor y viva la inclusión!
radioambulante.org/audio/jaz-y-lalay
8) TransMilitary
GLAAD helped fund the documentary TransMilitary which follows the stories of four transgender troops advocating and speaking out against the transgender military ban recently enacted by the administration. It premiered in March at the SXSW Film Festival and has earned a 9.2/10 on IMDb and 100% on Rotten Tomatoes.
www.glaad.org/blog/%C2%A1aguas-heads-connecting-you-interesting-latinx-media-art-cultural-happenings
Precisely Zero
For #TrueColorsDay: A story about Jack, a young LGBTQ man surviving homelessness, and the people he carries with him
I found Jack with his hands folded together, kneeling, beside a bench in the park. The sun had just begun to set. His eyes were closed as I approached. His often-furrowed brow was unusually relaxed as he mouthed words I could not understand. It was late October and the cold temperature signaled the start of winter coming. Jack was wearing a worn brown leather jacket. Not one to care for clothing, his jeans had become mudded from the spot where he knelt. I sat down on the bench, waiting silently.
Jack opened his blue eyes and began to get up. I noticed the tattoo on the right side of his neck that said “live,” with a circle of hands around it. The look he gave me could be described as grim, but that was just kind of who Jack was. He was a serious man that was not into flowery speak. To Jack, life was already complex enough without making human conversation more difficult than it already is. Our times together were often me dropping in at a location he picked and talking briefly. I thought I was bothering him, but each time after– he asked when the next time would be.
I decided to ask him about his tattoo and what inspired it.
“It’s to remind me to live.” He said.
“Well yeah, but what does that mean to you exactly? I asked.
“To enjoy life.”
I paused and just stared curiously at him. He took a deep sigh.
“I want to live. Sometimes I need that reminder. The hands are the people that got me here. I can’t forget ’em.”
After all the conversations I had with Jack, I never knew too much about the timeline of his life. I only knew the bits he would tell me off and on: how much he liked anime, his dream to one day see a show on Broadway, and the church he went to twice a week. When he spoke about homelessness, it was a singular aspect of his life that was, at times, connected to him, but never defined him. What I did know about were the other people in his life, like the pastor that took him in on a cold night, the social worker with a heart of gold, and the guy he met at a bar who let him stay overnight at his place and didn’t even ask to hook up. I knew about his mentors and the kindness of strangers. In this context, his tattoo made a lot more sense. In all his deep seriousness, at the heart of it, Jack was never solely defined by his struggles with homelessness. The people who helped him along the way were always a big part of who he was and how he defined himself. He was really only meeting with me to give a kind of thanks to them. Or maybe he was trying to emulate them by helping me out. I’m still not really sure. I do remember that day, I asked him how his time on the street impacted how he makes decisions today and he, like always, side stepped the question to jump into a story about Lisandra, the coffee shop worker who told him how to balance his first budget.
This is just one out of the 26 stories in the book I’ve been working on for the better part of 2 years on LGBTQ+ youth experiencing homelessness. After over 100 conversations with homeless LGBTQ+ youth from around the country, I specifically choose the story of Jack because it holds such power, especially on #TrueColorsDay, True Colors Fund’s international day to raise awareness around this prevalent issue. LGBTQ young people are 120% more likely to experience homelessness than non-LGBTQ youth. Many factors contribute to LGBTQ youth homelessness, but the most common reason is family rejection for being LGBTQ.While many of the stories in my book detail the specific, everyday experiences of LGBTQ+ homeless youth, I want to magnify Jack’s message that the casual decisions we make day to day add up. This day is about all the ways you can take steps, small and large, to end youth homelessness. It doesn’t always mean launching a national campaign, but could mean getting your group of friends together to volunteer. It could mean reading the many studies, books, and articles on LGBTQ+ youth homelessness. Even organizing a fundraiser for the hundreds of local and national LGBTQ+ homeless youth organizations.
When I first started volunteering and researching, it was, honestly, out of rage. I saw my friends experience homelessness and saw firsthand the lack of resources for our community. With all the structural problems that contribute to homelessness, I felt like there was nothing I could do. However, after all my conversations, I found an opportunity to amplify the voices of LGBTQ+ homeless youth. I realized that today, in our time, we have the tools and the ability to not only transform the way we as a society handle homelessness, but to end the epidemic. In the conversation about what we can all do for LGBTQ+ homeless youth, we must take the time to listen to and center the youth, themselves. Only then can we really understand how to use our own power and privileges to sustain long term change. Each of us has a role to play in this movement.
I’m an organizer and together we can end LGBTQ+ youth homelessness.
Featured: Justin Mendillo. Photo credit: GLAAD
Justin Mendillo is a Connecticut College senior studying Government and American Studies. He works for Planned Parenthood and CT Equality, and is a GLAAD Campus ambassador.
Has Mueller Questioned Thomas Roberts About Trump’s Prostitute Allegations?
The out journalist says Trump spent a night in Moscow in 2013, conflicting the president’s statements to former FBI director James Comey.
Gay dad is furious when his son gets a tattoo — until he sees what it is
Oh Dad.
Charlie Hunnam, Debbie Lesko, Press Freedom, Peter Thiel, Joy Reid, Mark Zuckerberg: HOT LINKS
BAD LIP READING. Mark Zuckerberg, masterfully done.
PRESS FREEDOM. U.S. drops to #45 in ranking of 180 countries around the world. “The United States, the country of the First Amendment, has fallen again in the Index under Donald Trump, this time two places to 45th. A media-bashing enthusiast, Trump has referred to reporters ‘enemies of the people,’ the term once used by Joseph Stalin.”
UNCONTROLLABLE AND ERRATIC. What Kanye West is, according to those close to him.
MSNBC. Joy Reid to stay on air during police probe of allegedly fabricated posts.
SETTLED. Peter Thiel reaches agreement to not buy Gawker. “The agreement was reached between Thiel’s firm and a neutral adviser in charge of liquidating Gawker’s assets following a successful lawsuit that bankrupted the company. Thiel will not pursue the site further and will provide the eventual buyer a legal release for articles in Gawker’s archive, according to an agreement, obtained by the Journal, filed Wednesday in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York.”
ARIZONA. Republican Debbie Lesko holds GOP House seat in special election: “Tipirneni conceded the race Wednesday after initially saying the outstanding votes made it too close to call. Lesko has a 52.6 percent to 47.4 percent lead over Tiperneni, or 91,390 votes to 82,316 — an Republican advantage of 9,072 votes, with 100 percent of precincts reporting, according to the Arizona secretary of state’s office.”
NEW YORK. Democrats flip longtime GOP New York Assembly seat: “Stern, an attorney and former Suffolk County legislator, won AD-10 with 59-41 percent (as of press time). While no Democrat has represented this district in the state Assembly for over three decades, Hillary Clinton won this Suffolk-area seat 52-45 and Barack Obama carried it 51-48 in 2012; tonight’s flip indicates this seat’s shift toward Democrats is progressing.”
HARDING UNIVERSITY. LGBTQ publication launched at Christian college: “The Harding University students unveiled the website, HU Queer Press 2.0, Friday, and passed out copies of the print publication, available as a PDF online.”
INDIA. Top hotelier takes fight for decriminalization of gay sex to High Court: “Keshav Suri, executive director of The Lalit Suri Hospitality Group, filed a petition with the supreme court on April 23 challenging Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) that criminalises a consensual relationship between consenting adults of the same sex. The court has agreed to hear his plea and has sought a response from the government.”
OVERRULED. Madonna loses legal battle to stop sale of hair, underwear, and Tupac breakup letter: ‘The singer won a temporary block of the auction of 22 pieces in July 2016, telling a New York City court that her celebrity status “does not obviate my right to maintain my privacy, including with regard to highly personal items”.’
AY CARAMBA. The very undressed star of Mexico’s version of Jersey Shore (wk-unfriendly).
HUNNAM HUNNAM. Here’s Charlie Hunnam stretching at the beach.
MUSIC VIDEO OF THE DAY. “Lydia” by The Magic Lantern.
HUMP DAY HOTTIE. Kev.
The post Charlie Hunnam, Debbie Lesko, Press Freedom, Peter Thiel, Joy Reid, Mark Zuckerberg: HOT LINKS appeared first on Towleroad.
Charlie Hunnam, Debbie Lesko, Press Freedom, Peter Thiel, Joy Reid, Mark Zuckerberg: HOT LINKS
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