In the Aftermath of Pittsburgh, Hanukkah is a Reminder of Our Resilience in the Face of Hatred

In the Aftermath of Pittsburgh, Hanukkah is a Reminder of Our Resilience in the Face of Hatred

Hanukkah is a joyous eight-day Festival of Lights in the Hebrew calendar. It is a time when Jews celebrate the Jewish victory over a tyrant king and the rededication of the Temple in Jerusalem.

But this year’s celebration will have additional significance for many who are both celebrating Hanukkah and grieving after the mass shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh that took the lives of 11 worshippers.

Countless people were affected by this act of hate violence — and it’s no surprise that for LGBTQ Jews, this horrific attack continues to remind of past tragedies.

For decades, LGBTQ people have been targeted by bias-motivated violence. According to the FBI, bias-motivated crimes based on race, religion, disability and gender all increased in the last year. Easy access to deadly weapons has only exacerbated this threat.

But it is during times like this when the teachable moments of Hanukkah are the most relevant. The holiday offers an opportunity for us to remind ourselves what Hanukkah has taught us through the centuries – resilience is a powerful force.

“Every person can be a small light,” said Hayley Miller, HRC’s Associate Director of Digital and Social. “And just as the small quantity of oil that fueled the miracle of light for eight nights, when we are our authentic selves, we can be a beacon of light that shines in this dark period of U.S. history.”

May this Hanukkah be filled with wonder and light!

www.hrc.org/blog/in-the-aftermath-of-pittsburgh-hanukkah-is-a-reminder-of-our-resilience-in?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

61st Annual Grammy Awards nominate a huge number of LGBTQ artists across all categories

61st Annual Grammy Awards nominate a huge number of LGBTQ artists across all categories

Brandi Carlile

The 61st Annual Grammy Awards are going to look extremely queer this year with a huge number of LGBTQ artists nominated across all of the categories.

“Not only are LGBTQ listeners some of the most engaged fans, but we are also writing, producing, and performing some of music’s biggest and most influential hits across all genres,” said Zeke Stokes, GLAAD’s Vice President of Programs. “This year’s extensive list of LGBTQ Grammy nominees is a reflection of an emerging reality in the industry and it’s long overdue.” 

Out country singer/songwriter Brandi Carlile earned six nominations, making her the most nominated woman at the 2019 Grammys. Carlile’s song The Joke was nominated for Record of the Year, Song of the Year, Best American Roots Performance, and Best American Roots Song. Her album “By The Way, I Forgive You” was nominated for Album of the Year and Best Americana Album.

Lady Gaga A Star is Born

Bisexual singer Lady Gaga received five nominations this year, for Record of the Year, Song of the Year, Best Pop Duo/Group Performance, and Best Song Written For Visual Media for Shallow from the soundtrack to the film A Star Is Born. She was also nominated for Best Pop Solo Performance for Joanne (Where Do You Think You’re Goin’?)

Janelle Monáe, who came out as pansexual last spring, was nominated for Album of the Year, for her iconic album “Dirty Computer.” Monáe is also nominated for Best Music Video for PYNK.

Janelle Monae

Bebe Rexha was nominated in the Best New Artist category. Last spring, Bebe said that she could “fall in love with a man or a woman.”

Also over the Song of the Year category, Aussie songwriter Sarah Aarons was nominated for co-writing The Middle for Zedd feat. Maren Morris and Grey. Sarah performed her hit track for the first time at GLAAD’s Spirit Day concert this past October. And transgender songwriter Teddy Geiger was also nominated in the Song of the Year category for co-writing In My Blood for Shawn Mendes.

Sarah Aarons

Transgender singer SOPHIE was nominated for Best Dance/Electronic Album for “Oil Of Every Pearl’s Un-Insides.”

St. Vincent was nominated for Best Rock Song for the song Masseduction and Best Alternative Music Album and Best Recording Package for her album of the same name.

Out musical theater songwriter Benj Pasek was nominated for Best Song Written For Visual Media for This Is Me from the soundtrack to The Greatest Showman. The soundtrack, which Benj helmed along with his songwriting partner Justin Paul, was also nominated for Best Compilation Soundtrack For Visual Media.

Meshell Ndegeocello was nominated for Best Urban Contemporary Album for “Ventriloquism.” And Linda Perry was nominated in the prestigious Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical category.

In additional ally nomination news, friend of GLAAD Kacey Musgraves was nominated for Album of the Year and Best Country Album for “Golden Hour,” as well as Best Country Solo Performance for her song Butterflies. She was also nominated alongside out country songwriter Shane McAnally for co-writing her track Space Cowboy. Country singer/songwriter Waylon Payne was nominated for Best American Roots Song for co-writing All The Trouble with and for Lee Ann Womack.

Lastly, Dolly Parton will be the Recording Academy’s 2019 MusiCares Person of the Year. 

December 7, 2018

www.glaad.org/blog/61st-annual-grammy-awards-nominate-huge-number-lgbtq-artists-across-all-categories

Trump Picks Former ‘FOX & Friends’ Correspondent Heather Nauert as UN Ambassador

Trump Picks Former ‘FOX & Friends’ Correspondent Heather Nauert as UN Ambassador

Donald Trump picked former FOX & Friends correspondent Heather Nauert as Ambassador to the United Nations, replacing Nikki Haley who resigned last month. Nauert has served as a spokesperson for the State Department since April 2017.

Bloomberg reported: “Nauert, 48, is an unusual choice for the UN role given that she had little experience in government or foreign policy before joining the administration in April 2017 after several years as an anchor and correspondent for Fox News, including on the “Fox and Friends” show watched by Trump. Haley also lacked foreign policy experience when she took the UN posting, but she had twice been elected governor of South Carolina.”

NPR added: “Nauert was camera-ready when she came to the State Department in April 2017, having worked at ABC and Fox. She never traveled with and was not close to her first boss at the department, former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. With Mike Pompeo in charge of State, Nauert has been on the road much more. Yet she faced some criticism for a tourist-like Instagram post from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on a trip that was meant to focus on the killing of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi. There have been other missteps, including the time when she cited D-Day — the Allied invasion of Normandy against the Nazis — as an example of America’s strong relationship with Germany. She’s been a strong defender of Trump’s at the podium, something he has clearly noticed.”

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Trump Picks Former ‘FOX & Friends’ Correspondent Heather Nauert as UN Ambassador

Kevin Hart Steps Down as Oscar Host After Furor Over Past Homophobic Statements

Kevin Hart Steps Down as Oscar Host After Furor Over Past Homophobic Statements

Kevin Hart has stepped down as host of the Oscars after past homophobic tweets surfaced online.

Tweeted Hart: “I have made the choice to step down from hosting this year’s Oscar’s….this is because I do not want to be a distraction on a night that should be celebrated by so many amazing talented artists. I sincerely apologize to the LGBTQ community for my insensitive words from my past…I’m sorry that I hurt people.. I am evolving and want to continue to do so. My goal is to bring people together not tear us apart. Much love & appreciation to the Academy. I hope we can meet again.”

I have made the choice to step down from hosting this year’s Oscar’s….this is because I do not want to be a distraction on a night that should be celebrated by so many amazing talented artists. I sincerely apologize to the LGBTQ community for my insensitive words from my past.

— Kevin Hart (@KevinHart4real) December 7, 2018

I’m sorry that I hurt people.. I am evolving and want to continue to do so. My goal is to bring people together not tear us apart. Much love & appreciation to the Academy. I hope we can meet again.

— Kevin Hart (@KevinHart4real) December 7, 2018

The controversy began after a gay son ‘comedy’ bit from a 2010 stand-up comedy special resurfaced on Twitter.

In the bit, Hart makes a “joke” about not wanting a gay son, saying, “One of my biggest fears is my son growing up and being gay. That’s a fear. Keep in mind, I’m not homophobic. I have nothing against gay people. Be happy. Do what you want to do. But me, being a heterosexual male, if I can prevent my son from being gay, I will.”

Hart continued, telling the audience he’s worried about “handling his son’s first gay moment correctly,” saying that when your kid has his “first gay moment…you gotta nip it in the bud right then.”

“Hey, stop! That’s gay! Quit it!”, says Hart, to gales of laughter. Hart then goes on to describe seeing another boy “grinding on [his] son’s ass,” telling the audience that he “panicked” and “knocked them both down.”

Another tweet read “Yo if my son comes home & try’s 2 play with my daughters doll house I’m going 2 break it over his head & say n my voice ‘stop that’s gay’.”

Hart posted two Instagram videos on Thursday. The second said that he had received a call from the Academy who told him to apologize or lose the hosting gig. Hart said he would “stand [his] ground” and see what happened.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

Stop looking for reasons to be negative…Stop searching for reasons to be angry….I swear I wish you guys could see/feel/understand the mental place that I am in. I am truly happy people….there is nothing that you can do to change that…NOTHING. I work hard on a daily basis to spread positivity to all….with that being said. If u want to search my history or past and anger yourselves with what u find that is fine with me. I’m almost 40 years old and I’m in love with the man that I am becoming. You LIVE and YOU LEARN & YOU GROW & YOU MATURE. I live to Love….Please take your negative energy and put it into something constructive. Please….What’s understood should never have to be said. I LOVE EVERYBODY…..ONCE AGAIN EVERYBODY. If you choose to not believe me then that’s on you….Have a beautiful day

A post shared by Kevin Hart (@kevinhart4real) on

 

View this post on Instagram

 

I know who I am & so do the people closest to me. #LiveLoveLaugh

A post shared by Kevin Hart (@kevinhart4real) on

 

In a Reddit AMA in 2014, Hart was asked, “You find a lot of comedy in male insecurities, including a famous bit where you express fear that your son will be gay. You praised Frank Ocean at the MTV VMAs in 2012 for having the courage to come out, and recently said in an interview that you don’t do jokes any more about gays. What changed your mind on this subject of humor?”

He replied:  “It’s just a sensitive topic and I respect people of all orientations. So, it’s just best left alone.”

He later told Rolling Stone: “It’s about my fear. I’m thinking about what I did as a dad, did I do something wrong, and if I did, what was it? Not that I’m not gonna love my son or think about him any differently. The funny thing within that joke is it’s me getting mad at my son because of my own insecurities — I panicked. It has nothing to do with him, it’s about me. That’s the difference between bringing a joke across that’s well thought-out and saying something just to ruffle feathers. I wouldn’t tell that joke today, because when I said it, the times weren’t as sensitive as they are now. I think we love to make big deals out of things that aren’t necessarily big deals, because we can. These things become public spectacles. So why set yourself up for failure?”

In 2015, Hart said he would never play a gay role  because of his own insecurities, revealing that he turned down a spot in 2008’s Tropic Thunder because the role was for a “flagrant” gay character.

Said Hart: “Not because I have any ill will or disrespect, it’s because I feel like I can’t do that because I don’t think I’m really going to dive into that role 100%. Because of the insecurities about myself trying to play that part. Like, would I think people are going to think while I’m trying to do this is going to stop me from playing that part the way that I’m supposed to. ”

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Kevin Hart Steps Down as Oscar Host After Furor Over Past Homophobic Statements

Bryan Cranston Headlines a Bold but Bloodless ‘Network’ on Broadway: REVIEW

Bryan Cranston Headlines a Bold but Bloodless ‘Network’ on Broadway: REVIEW

Proselytizing on the evening news has come a long way since anchorman Howard Beale went raving mad in Network. Over the near half century since the film’s 1976 release, talking heads have become a 24-hour business and anyone with a Twitter account can grab the mic and gripe.

London’s National Theatre production, which opened at the Belasco Theatre tonight, very badly wants the material to be its message — to show us how far everything has spun out of control by taking us back to where it began.

Network’s prescience is terrifying, no doubt — but just as much feels quaint, given the radical expanse of our media landscape in comparison to a time when network news was appointment television. The play’s dialogue is largely lifted straight from Paddy Chayefsky’s Oscar-winning screenplay, about an anchorman on his way out who gets a second shot at hit ratings after he loses it on air. (He’s mad as hell, and he’s not going to take it anymore, as you may recall.)

Lee Hall’s stage adaptation is littered with truisms poised to elicit knowing grumbles from the audience: “The first rule of news. You do not become the news.” “We’re not in the business of morality.” “This tube can make or break presidents, popes, and prime ministers… And woe is us if it ever falls into the wrong hands of the wrong people.”

Yes, American television gave rise to a president who manipulated its power to control people, all while promising he was an everyman instead of a celebrity. You’ve read the op-eds.

We already know that Beale’s populist anxieties — corporate interests undermining democracy, media brainwashing the people, foreign interference in American sovereignty — have become our living nightmare. What director Ivo van Hove’s slick but mostly soulless production fails to do is couch much of this in heart-pounding human drama, despite a deeply felt and characteristically robust turn from Bryan Cranston.

Aside from the Breaking Bad star’s visceral performance, most everything else about Van Hove’s production feels rather more hospitable to androids than human players. Its only pulse often comes from the incongruous club beats that make up the director’s customarily heavy-handed score. Television is a cool medium, and the stage is lined with them (scenic and lighting design are by Van Hove’s longtime collaborator Jan Versweyveld, video design by Tal Yarden), often playing vintage commercials on loop. The setting seems to be neither back then nor now, but some sort of stylized in between where ideas operate independently of character.

Orphan Black’s Tatiana Maslany is peculiarly staid as the alternately fiery and poised executive who turns Beale’s show into a hit and beds his veteran producer (Faye Dunaway won an Oscar for her withering performance). Tony Goldwyn fares better, but is woefully miscast as the latter grizzled producer supposedly in his winter years (anyone who thinks Goldwyn isn’t in the prime of life has none in their veins). An affair between the two, palpably flesh and blood on screen, is reduced here to a B-plot that feels extraneous rather than anchoring the story in the messy stuff of life. When his wife (Alyssa Bresnahan) rails at him for the betrayal you want to tell her how little she ought to worry.

Perhaps the biggest question looming over Network is whether a ranting white stalwart of the old guard is really a suitable avatar for our current rage against the machine. If he were, he may have needed fewer of Van Hove’s bells and whistles to capture and sustain our attention.

Recent theatre features…
Broadway’s ‘The Cher Show’ Is a Feast for Fans and an Assertion of Legacy: REVIEW
Feel-Good New Musical ‘The Prom’ Wears a Big Heart on Its Puffy Sleeve – REVIEW
Broadway’s ‘American Son’ Starring Kerry Washington Is the Most Vacuous Kind of Race Play: REVIEW
Michael Urie and Mercedes Ruehl Lead Transcendent Broadway Revival of ‘Torch Song’: REVIEW

The Legacy of Gloria Steinem Burns Bright in ‘Gloria: A Life’ Off-Broadway: REVIEW
Stockard Channing and Glenn Close Make Magic of Maternal Strife Off-Broadway: REVIEW
‘What the Constitution Means to Me’ Is the Best Political Play of the Trump Era: REVIEW

Follow Naveen Kumar on Twitter: @Mr_NaveenKumar
(photos: jan versweyveld)

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Bryan Cranston Headlines a Bold but Bloodless ‘Network’ on Broadway: REVIEW