Get A Peek At ‘Will & Grace’ Creator Max Mutchnick’s Office; Season Premiere Is Thursday: WATCH

Get A Peek At ‘Will & Grace’ Creator Max Mutchnick’s Office; Season Premiere Is Thursday: WATCH

Will & Grace’s Creator and Executive Producer Max Mutchnick has been having a great couple of years.

Bringing back his hit show Will & Grace was a home run for NBC and he and his partner high-powered entertainment industry attorney Erik Hyman splashed out nearly $14.5 million for a Beverly Hills mansion last month according to Variety.

Mutchnick also made Out magazine’s 2018 #OUT100 issue list which said about him, “What would the national conversation around LGBTQ issues sound like without Will & Grace? Certainly, not nearly as funny.”

“Being a member of the LGBTQ community is far and away the greatest gift of my life,” responded Mutchnick. “It’s given me everything I cherish.”

In 2018, he and creative partner David Kohan brought the show back after 11 years off the air.

Out said “As revolutionary — and hilarious — as ever, the show affirmed the pair’s ability to write masterfully across gay generations. ‘We could learn to stop searching for what makes us different and get more in touch with what makes us the same,’ Mutchnick says about the relationship between younger and older queer people.”

Today on Mutchnick’s Intsagram he posted a look into his office and creative space at NBC. “Somebody came into my office without my permission and made a video. NEW WILL & GRACE EPISODES START THIS THURSDAY!!! #willandgrace @nbcwillandgrace 

Will & Grace will return this Thursday January 31st at 9:30 p.m., following Brooklyn Nine-Nine. Watch the trailer to the season premiere featuring comedian Chelsea Handler below.

The post Get A Peek At ‘Will & Grace’ Creator Max Mutchnick’s Office; Season Premiere Is Thursday: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Get A Peek At ‘Will & Grace’ Creator Max Mutchnick’s Office; Season Premiere Is Thursday: WATCH

How ‘Rent’ made my younger self believe in a better tomorrow

How ‘Rent’ made my younger self believe in a better tomorrow

As Fox prepares to air a live, televised revival of Rent, it’s important to consider the show’s impact on the LGBTQ community. Throughout the United States, many LGBTQ individuals continue to struggle to find acceptance in their communities, accept their sexual or gender identity, and overcome isolation. The diverse and star-studded cast for the upcoming airing of Rent: Live will surely provide not only a night of fantastic entertainment but much-needed representation for many like it once did for me.

I remember it like it was yesterday: belting out the notes of Take Me or Leave Me in a church basement during my weekly voice lesson. After months of asking, my voice teacher finally let me perform the musical I had been listening to non-stop: Rent. Growing up in a small town and conservative family, the media I was permitted to see was limited. However, there was one loophole in my parents’ media restrictions: character research. As a theatre actor, I often had to research the characters I played, which is how, on a cold January day, I found the movie that changed my life.

Let’s go out TONIGHT to #RENTlive at 8/7c on @FOXTV! pic.twitter.com/o1Tz32hgbt

— RENT on FOX (@RENTonFOX) January 27, 2019

In case Rent: Live on FOX is the first time you’ll see a rendition of Rent, a quick recap is in order: The musical itself is a contemporary twist on Giacomo Puccini’s opera “La Boheme.” Set in New York City, Rent features six main characters struggling with poverty and discrimination. Yet despite their struggles, Rent is a story of hope. Developing this iconic musical for a mass television audience increases visibility for critical issues that still plague the LGBTQ community, offering a glimpse into recent queer history suddenly accessible to more young viewers than ever before. 

While attending a small religious high school, I did not know of any other openly LGBTQ+ students. Media that featured representation of queer characters was my only window to a more hopeful and accepting world–one that I dreamed of one day living in. During Rent’s two hours and fifteen minutes, I was transported to a world where diversity was beautiful yet complicated. As an isolated student struggling to accept my sexual identity, I finally had characters I could relate to. Like the main characters fought through oppression, I was surrounded by homophobic sentiments in my hometown. More than anything, I found the hope that can only come from a promise of a better tomorrow. While the main protagonists faced adversity, they built a supportive community that offered love and acceptance. The idea of one day finding a community that loved as fiercely as this group of friends in Rent gave me the hope I so desperately needed to persevere through my increasingly hostile environment.

Community representation in media is of great importance, as younger generations turn to entertainment to find respite and relatable characters that face similar struggles. Further, Rent continues to push the boundaries of traditional media representation of the LGBTQ community by featuring multiple aspects of the community as a whole. It’s safe to say that you won’t want to miss Rent: Live, tonight, January 27, on FOX.

Kate Warner is a GLAAD Campus Ambassador and junior at Point Loma Nazarene University studying psychology. Kate is excited to work within the intersection of religion and LGBT+ issues. She is especially passionate about working to make various religious orientations more accepting for those of the LGBT+ community as she serves on several social justice and ministry positions. 

January 27, 2019

www.glaad.org/amp/how-rent-made-my-younger-self-believe-better-tomorrow

Bad for business: Five times gay club promoters were caught trash talking their own patrons

Bad for business: Five times gay club promoters were caught trash talking their own patrons
A naked speed dating event came under fire this week for only allowing men under 35, but it’s hardly the first time a gay party has come under scrutiny for being discriminatory.

www.queerty.com/bad-business-five-times-gay-club-promoters-caught-trash-talking-patrons-20190127?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Cameron Kasky, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, ‏ Nancy Pelosi, Dan Rather, and More Recognize LGBT Victims of The Holocaust

Cameron Kasky, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, ‏ Nancy Pelosi, Dan Rather, and More Recognize LGBT Victims of The Holocaust

Today is International Holocaust Remembrance Day, an international memorial day that takes place every 27th of January commemorating the tragedy of the Holocaust that occurred during the Second World War.

Memorial to Gay Victims of the Holocaust in Berlin. Its inscription reads: Totgeschlagen – Totgeschwiegen (Struck Dead – Hushed-Up).

It commemorates the lives of the people killed in a genocide that resulted in the death of an estimated 6 million Jews, 8.7 million Slavs, 1.8 million ethnic Poles, 220,000 Romani people, 250,000 mentally and physically disabled people, 312,000 Serbians, 1,900 Jehovah’s Witnesses, and 9,000 homosexual men by the Nazi regime and its collaborators.

Whether they were Jewish, Roma, LGBTQ or one of the many other communities targeted, our duty to remember every soul lost to the Holocaust doesn’t wither with time. We must do all we can to stand up to genocide, hatred & bigotry in the world. #HolocaustMemorialDay #WeRemember

— Nancy Pelosi (@SpeakerPelosi) January 27, 2019

According to Attitude Magazine: “The Nazi persecution of gay men – they viewed lesbianism as a temporary condition so they suffered less – began almost as soon as Hitler took power in January 1933. SS boss Heinrich Himmler once said that eight per cent of men in Germany were gay, adding: “If that’s how things remain, our nation will fall to pieces. Those who practice homosexuality deprive Germany of the children they owe her. His solution was to ‘convert’ them by forcing them to have sex once a week with women taken from prisons and used as sex slaves. If that failed, they faced being sent to camps. Once there, they were brutalized, having their testicles boiled in water or by having 25cm pieces of wood shoved into their rectum.”

Pelois was joined by her Democratic Represenative colleague Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Parkland Massacre survivor Cameron Kasky, Journalist Dan Rather and many more in tweets on social media.

This #HolocaustMemorialDay, @HRC honors the more than six million Jews & victims, including #LGBTQ people, whose lives were viciously taken.#WeRemember and celebrate survivor Elie Wiesel, whose legacy of fighting to end bigotry and hate around the world endures. pic.twitter.com/y7HzFgdV89

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) January 27, 2019

On #HolocaustMemorialDay may we pledge that remembrance of past horrors and vigilance in the face of the ever-present currents of hate and intolerance must be a daily obligation.

— Dan Rather (@DanRather) January 27, 2019

It’s #HolocaustMemorialDay and it’s just as important today as any other day to talk to your kids about the Holocaust. There is a startling number of people MY AGE (I am an adult physically) that do not know about Auschwitz.

— Cameron Kasky (@cameron_kasky) January 27, 2019

“Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.”
~Elie Wiesel #HolocaustMemorialDay #HolocaustRemembranceDay #WeRemember pic.twitter.com/PEJEuVWj4q

— The King Center (@TheKingCenter) January 27, 2019

Today is #HolocaustMemorialDay – a day where #WeRemember not only the atrocities that result from the contagions of hatred + anti-Semitism, but also the fortitude of communities that continue to be impacted today.

A great read for today: Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl t.co/siWAoXcjwC

— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) January 27, 2019

The post Cameron Kasky, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, ‏ Nancy Pelosi, Dan Rather, and More Recognize LGBT Victims of The Holocaust appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Cameron Kasky, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, ‏ Nancy Pelosi, Dan Rather, and More Recognize LGBT Victims of The Holocaust

ICYMI: John Mulaney Talks Playing Peter Porker aka Spider-Ham in the Oscar Nominated ‘Into The Spider-Verse’ Blockbuster: WATCH

ICYMI: John Mulaney Talks Playing Peter Porker aka Spider-Ham in the Oscar Nominated ‘Into The Spider-Verse’ Blockbuster: WATCH

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse has two things we love: Spidey and comedian John Mulaney.

The Marvel and SONY Studios animated blockbuster was a sleeper hit and is now nominated for two Oscars: one for Best Animated Film.

It’s domestic total as of January 27, 2019 is $169,040,116.

It’s staying power became apparent around Christmas when Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse saw its domestic weekend box office grow from the pre-Christmas to the post-Christmas frame. “With so many other huge movies out there right now competing for consumers’ wallets, it would be easy for Spider-Verse to get lost in the shuffle” said Cinemablend on January 2, 2019.

Spider-Verse, which posted the best-ever December opening for an animated film, is not only Spidey’s fresh translation, but its larger message of including the other.

“This film is subversive and self-referential and meta — and funny! There’s so much ridiculous and wonderfully silly comedy in the movie — but what makes it work is that it’s profoundly emotional. It has a giant beating heart about these very diverse and lonely Spidermen from their different homes in the Spider-verse coming together to meet each other,” Kristine Belson, Sony Pictures Animation president, told Variety.

She points to the film’s oft-repeated tagline [which came from co-creator Stan Lee]: anyone can wear the mask.

In the film multiple versions of Spider-Man from alternate parallel universes meet including Peter Porker: The Amazing Spider-Ham (voiced by Mulaney).

Mulaney talked to Jimmy Fallon about his super secretive and profanity-laced outtakes while voicing Spider-Ham on The Tonight Show.

And from Anatomy of a Scene over at the New York Times check out the directors of the Oscar-nominated film discussing the spider-bite sequence that changes everything for its main character, Miles Morales.

A sequel to Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Versehas also already been announced.

The post ICYMI: John Mulaney Talks Playing Peter Porker aka Spider-Ham in the Oscar Nominated ‘Into The Spider-Verse’ Blockbuster: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


ICYMI: John Mulaney Talks Playing Peter Porker aka Spider-Ham in the Oscar Nominated ‘Into The Spider-Verse’ Blockbuster: WATCH

Overlooked By The Oscars: Why Every Queer Gen-Xer Should See Jonah Hill’s ‘Mid90s:’ WATCH

Overlooked By The Oscars: Why Every Queer Gen-Xer Should See Jonah Hill’s ‘Mid90s:’ WATCH

“Don’t say thank you — saying thank you that means you’re gay.” Ruben snaps at a stunned Stevie early on in Jonah Hill’s masterful directorial debut Mid90s. 

It’s a painful and transformational moment in the film at a point when Stevie (played by actor Sunny Suljic) still idolizes Ruben (played by actor and co-writer Gio Galicia) so much that his perceived rejection by the older boy is seen as an assault.

Mid90s is easily among the best American teen movies ever. It’s so sublimely well executed that it even feels vintage. The story feels personal and according to Hill it is but it’s not autobiographical “It’s a story I wanted to tell. I grew up skateboarding in LA in the mid-nineties.”

The movie has a lot to say about a lot of things but at its core is about the kind of love we have for our boyhood friends that’s often not spoken of especially in the mid 1990s.

It’s loaded with moments of what we’d call toxic masculinity today, but having lived through the time there’s a honesty and authenticity to the love and bonds formed by boys in the skate and hip hop milieu that defies categorization.

The n-word and f-word are thrown around liberally and may trigger certain people but in the words of Dave Chappelle stop “being bitch ass n****s” and listen: the paucity of words and even the words themselves are all intentional even if they feel improvised. Hill takes the suggestion of the dialogue being improvised as a compliment but insists every word is heavy with subtext and meaning. 

The movie authentically represents the subculture of skateboarders in the mid-1990s by more than using “skate cult” shortcuts. It documents a period when Jonah Hill was a self-described not-great skateboarder but hung out with a group of much better skateboarders. Drawing on Hill’s memories the film is told from the point of view of a boy, much like Hill, who didn’t really fit in any where else, who wants to be a skateboarder and be accepted by the older skaters he admires, who takes life-threatening risks with skate tricks and stunts and spends the rest of their time smoking, drinking and trash-talking.

The skaters are played by pros, but the skaters they play are unlikely to get anywhere.

They have no money, no connections.

Virtually every critic has pointed to the films parallels to director Larry Clark’s 1995 film Kids and Hill is quick to credit its influence; with the caveat that having re-watched it recently he realizes that watching it as a teen the HIV angle totally went over his head at the time. 

Personally I think Hill gives Clark’s Kids too much credit. Kids even when I saw it as a teenager felt voyeuristic and sexually exploitative using HIV as a bludgeon for bad behavior among kids in 90s. Clark likes to call it “A Wake Up Call” presumably because he’d crafted the ultimate fear campaign for parents: a nihilistic HIV-positive boy named Telly who tells his friend Casper that he has taken to only having sex with virgins.

Kids got a lot attention and generated massive controversy over it’s depiction of sex and heavy drug use that Clark shot  to look cinéma vérité but was in retrospect a hackneyed attempt to intentionally outrage and one that also suggested that this milieu was what comprised skate culture which didn’t ring true.

Clark’s “great American Teen Movie”  it was not.

The other thing that Hill gets right that Clark couldn’t possibly see is the intersection of hip-hop and skate culture both of whose peaks in the 1990s dovetailed. Hill brings this home towards the end of the film when the music (composed by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross) dubbed “The Night Everything Changed” by GZA from Liquid Swords dictates the visual narrative —and is as part of the films DNA just as a cameo by Del The Funky Homosapien as a wise junky works on its own but works on a dual level if you get the reference.

The gay thank you remark is one of many moments of emotional dysfunction that translates into pure love for boys bereft of the language they need. A group of friends who obviously love each other and form an ersatz family but lack the ability to express that love in anything but a constant one up-ness in skating or dissing each other.

It’s one of the many moments Hill sets up and executes flawlessly and why the film reverberates on so many levels.

Mid90s is in theaters now.

This article originally appeared in Chill magazine called: “Why Jonah Hill’s ‘Mid90s’ Is the Movie We Need Now” published by permission of the author.

The post Overlooked By The Oscars: Why Every Queer Gen-Xer Should See Jonah Hill’s ‘Mid90s:’ WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Overlooked By The Oscars: Why Every Queer Gen-Xer Should See Jonah Hill’s ‘Mid90s:’ WATCH