Security guard charged with murder of unarmed black gay man in Walgreens

Security guard charged with murder of unarmed black gay man in Walgreens
The Los Angeles District Attorney has charged Donald Vincent Ciota II with murder after he shot and killed a gay homeless man, Jonathan Hart, in the back.

www.queerty.com/security-guard-charged-murder-unarmed-black-gay-man-walgreens-20190102?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

‘Curb Your Enthusiasm’ Actor who Played Father of Trans Son Died

‘Curb Your Enthusiasm’ Actor who Played Father of Trans Son Died

Bob Einstein, who played Jerry Funkhouser on HBO’s Curb Your Enthusiasm since its beginnings, died today in Indian Wells, CA reported Deadline.

He was 76 and recently had been diagnosed with cancer.

The two-time Emmy winner also created the wacky Super Dave Osborne character.

Last year his character on Curb introduced Larry to his trans son Joey (who had formerly been introduced as his daughter Jodi).

Rabbi: I’d like to bring forward Kenny’s uncle, Martin Funkhouser, who would like to say a few words.

Larry: Great.

Rabbi: Martin, please?

Marty: Thank you, Rabbi Dorfman.

Larry: Oh, sorry.

Jerry: I would like to take a moment to acknowledge my former beautiful daughter Jodi, who’s now my handsome son Joey. – I love you, Joey. Thank you. I love you.
Keep up the good work. Thank you.

Watch the clip below.

 

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‘Curb Your Enthusiasm’ Actor Who Played Father Of Trans Son Died

Do You Know the LGBTQ 2000s? Test Your Grasp of its Pop Icons, Influencers, and Political Heroes

Do You Know the LGBTQ 2000s? Test Your Grasp of its Pop Icons, Influencers, and Political Heroes

PRESENTED by WorldPride 2019 | Stonewall 50

Next summer, WorldPride comes to the United States for the first time to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall uprising. The sixth edition of the culturally-diverse WorldPride will attract millions of LGBTQI+ revelers for the largest celebration of Pride in history. In honor of this incredible event Towleroad is celebrating 50 years of LGBTQI+ history with a series examining queer life from the 1960s through today.

Considering how rapidly LGBT rights and acceptance have accelerated over the last eight years, it’s hard to believe what a different world we were living in at the turn of the century.

There are high school students today who were alive at a time when sodomy laws criminalized consensual relations between men in the privacy of their homes in the United States of America. This wasn’t ancient history; this was yesterday.

In the 2003 landmark civil rights decision Lawrence v. Texas, the Supreme Court overturned sodomy laws in 14 states. “The state cannot demean their existence or control their destiny by making their private sexual conduct a crime,” wrote Justice Kennedy in the majority opinion.

That sentiment became representative of the shifting attitudes toward queer people throughout the early aughts. Increased acceptance started the ball in motion for what would become the primary (for better or worse) civil rights cause of the aughts: marriage equality.

Vermont became the first state to implement civil unions in 2000. The “separate but equal” solution spread in the subsequent years, as Connecticut, California, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Oregon and Washington followed.

Although nationwide marriage equality is a reality today, the earliest same-sex marriages were issued in San Francisco in early 2004. (Massachusetts’ state supreme court ruled in late 2003 requiring the state to legally recognize same-sex marriage, but it didn’t go into effect until May 2004.) Connecticut, Vermont, New Hampshire, Iowa and Washington, D.C. began recognizing same-sex marriages by the end of the decade.

Just like we’ve seen ludicrous bathroom bills flood legislatures in light of the increased visibility of trans individuals, the spread of marriage equality galvanized conservatives. Twenty-nine states had amended their constitutions to ban same-sex marriage by 2010.

The most infamous of these discriminatory initiatives was California’s Proposition 8. The ballot measure proposed an amendment to the state constitution that would define marriage as between one man and one woman. Voters passed the measure in 2008, and it was met with overwhelming opposition.

Celebrities, activists and politicians decried Prop. 8, including a legendary, tongue-in-cheek live reading of Prop. 8 the Musical. The proposition — heavily impacted by influences outside the state — faced a long legal battle into the 2010s, the most significant being a 2010 ruling by Chief Judge Vaughn Walker of the U.S. District Court of the Northern District of California. He ruled the proposition was unconstitutional, a decision ultimately upheld by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court.

The ideological war was on. According to Gallup polling, the majority of Americans didn’t support same-sex marriage until 2011 when, presumably, people saw the proverbial sky didn’t fall in states where same-sex marriages were taking place.

Also fueling this cultural evolution was an increase in LGBTQ representation. After decades of slowly increasing visibility in media, the early aughts began telling more nuanced and complex queer stories. (Though, overwhelmingly, they still focused on white gays and lesbians.)

The most prominent, of course, was NBC’s Will & Grace. The recently rebooted series may not have featured the most groundbreaking portrayals of gay people, but it was still a broadly popular mainstream network sitcom with multiple gay principal characters. In 2012, Vice President Joe Biden credited the series, saying Will & Grace “probably did more to educate the American public than almost anything anybody’s ever done so far.”

Similarly, Bravo’s hit series Queer Eye for the Straight Guy brought a (sanitized, family-friendly) gay perspective to audiences in 2003. The highly-rated first season made the original Fab Five household names and introduced gay people into homes all over the country.

While mainstream America was getting easily-digestible exposure to gay people on Will & Grace and Queer Eye, two of television’s greatest queer series were airing on premium cable.

Queer As Folk, an American take on Russell T Davies’ British series of the same name, became the first hour-long drama on American television focused on the lives of homosexuals. The show ran from 2000-2005 on Showtime, tackling a range of issues including hate crimes, HIV/AIDS, open relationships, drug use and sex in the gay community with refreshing candor. (More than a decade before How to Get Away With Murder, it was the first series to show simulated sex between men on American television.)

As gay men were getting increased exposure on television, a series dedicated to gay women, The L Word, debuted in 2004 (also on Showtime) to critical acclaim. Focusing on gay women in West Hollywood, the series offered a more realistic portrayal of lesbian characters than, say Xena and Gabrielle, but still was a bit soapier and more melodramatic.

Although it didn’t have the reach of Queer As Folk or The L Word, another important queer series from the early aughts was Noah’s Arc. Racial diversity in LGBTQ representation is still lacking today, but 20 years ago, it was barely existent. Noah’s Arc was Logo’s first scripted series, and it became the network’s highest-rated original series before being abruptly canceled after the second season’s cliffhanger finale. A follow-up film, Noah’s Arc: Jumping the Broom, opened in limited release in 2008.

“It’s hard for me to really grasp the impact of Noah’s Arc on TV’s landscape,” Noah’s Arc star Darryl Stephens said in a 2014 interview. “I know I’ve heard from and continue to hear from hundreds if not thousands of people who loved the characters on that show. To me, it was a fun little soap opera. To some, it was television’s first affirmation of black gay love–ever. I’m not sure how much the show managed to change television depictions of black gay men or the weight of its impact with respect to the TV shows that followed it, but I know that the people who enjoyed it have been incredibly loyal and vocal about how much it meant to them.”

On the big screen, few LGBTQ films have made a bigger impact than 2005’s Academy Award-winning film, Brokeback Mountain. Famously starring the late Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal — two heterosexual actors hitting the peak of their popularity — the story offered a heartbreaking, raw tale of rough and tumble ranchers that fall in love. It was the kind of love story even most open-minded mainstream audiences had never seen.

Most people look back at Brokeback Mountain‘s Academy Awards loss for Best Picture as a blow to LGBTQ storytelling. However, 2005 was a year featuring so many queer films, including the big-screen adaptation of Rent, Transamerica, Capote and Breakfast on Pluto.

Against the backdrop of increased exposure to queer people, legal protections and resources also expanded outside of marriage laws. At the beginning of the 2000s only one-third of the population was covered under state laws banning at least one type of anti-gay discrimination. By the end of the decade, 21 states and the District of Columbia had laws to protect gays and lesbians from discrimination. By 2010, there were more than 4,000 registered gay-straight alliances in the country (up from TWO in 1990).

The early aughts could also be considered an important milestone toward the “Transgender Tipping Point.” Thanks to the tireless work of transgender activists, the gay and lesbian community evolved into a more inclusive LGBT movement. There was only one state (Minnesota) that had a law to protect trans people from discrimination in the year 2000. A dozen more states and the District of Columbia added protections in the following 10 years. Although today the trans community is still at disproportionate risk for discrimination (even from within the LGBT community) and violence, these were important early steps toward trans equality.

As the decade drew to a close, the election of President Barack Obama in 2008 and increased media saturation of megahits like Glee, True Blood and Modern Family paved the way for the rapid sea change that washed over American society in the 2010s.

There is still so much work to do to ensure safety, dignity and equality, particularly for trans and queer people of color. However, looking back at the hard work of generations of queer people, it’s clear to see the arc of history still bends toward justice.

This is just a taste of the rich queer history of the 2000s. What were some key moments and important memories we missed? Leave your impressions of the LGBTQ ’00s in the comments below…

Get all the info on WorldPride at the official website, or by following @NYCPride on Twitter and Instagram.

The post Do You Know the LGBTQ 2000s? Test Your Grasp of its Pop Icons, Influencers, and Political Heroes appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Do You Know the LGBTQ 2000s? Test Your Grasp of its Pop Icons, Influencers, and Political Heroes

Ricky Martin Announced He and Jwan Yosef Have Baby Daughter

Ricky Martin Announced He and Jwan Yosef Have Baby Daughter

Three times seems to be the charm for Ricky Martin and his husband Jwan Yosef who announced via Instagram that they had a baby girl: Lucia Martin-Yosef.

“We are beyond happy to announce that we have become parents to a beautiful and healthy baby girl, Lucia Martin-Yosef. It has been a special time for us and we cant wait to see where this stellar baby will take us. Both her beautiful brothers and me and Ricky have fallen in love with Lucia,” Yosef, 34, captioned a photo of Lucia holding one of her fathers’ hands.

Martin posted the same photo on his IG saying, “We are excited to announce that we have become parents of a beautiful and healthy girl whom we have named Lucia Martin-Yosef.”

“This has undoubtedly been a unique birthday and celebration of Christmas in our lives,” Martin continued.

He concluded, “Both her brothers and Jwan and I are completely in love with our baby and grateful to be able to start this 2019 with the best gift we could receive, the gift of life.”

Lucia joins Martin’s 9-year-old twin sons Matteo and Valentino, whom he is raising with Yosef.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

Nos emociona anunciar que nos hemos convertido en padres de una hermosa y saludable niña a la que hemos llamado Lucía Martin-Yosef. Esto ha sido sin duda un cumpleaños y celebración de la Navidad única en nuestras vidas. Tanto sus hermanos como Jwan y yo estamos completamente enamorados de nuestra beba y agradecidos de poder comenzar este 2019 con el mejor regalo que podíamos recibir, el regalo de la vida. We are beyond happy to announce that we have become parents to a beautiful and healthy baby girl, Lucia Martin-Yosef. It has been a special time for us and we cant wait to see where this stellar baby will take us. Both her beautiful brothers and me and Jwan have fallen in love with Lucia

A post shared by Ricky (@ricky_martin) on

A tired daddy.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

Días sin dormir y soy feliz. El 2019 viene bien. #busybusy #secretproject

A post shared by Ricky (@ricky_martin) on

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Ricky Martin Announced He and Jwan Yosef Have Baby Daughter

Louis CK is gonna need lotion after reading this blistering clapback to his queer-phobic routine

Louis CK is gonna need lotion after reading this blistering clapback to his queer-phobic routine
A Facebook user named George Godwyn has dropped f-bombs, mics and hot tea all over Louis CK’s “anti-PC” standup routine.

www.queerty.com/louis-ck-gonna-need-lotion-reading-blistering-clapback-queer-phobic-routine-20190102?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Pro Wrestler Anthony Bowens: ‘I Prefer to Be Labeled Now as Gay’ Not Bisexual – WATCH

Pro Wrestler Anthony Bowens: ‘I Prefer to Be Labeled Now as Gay’ Not Bisexual – WATCH

Professional wrestler and vlogger Anthony Bowens said he now wants to be identified as gay. Bowens had formerly identified as bisexual.

Said Bowen in a video labeled “COMING OUT… again”: “The main purpose of this video is to tell everybody that I prefer to be labeled now as gay. [As far as reactions] there’s going to be ‘thank you, it’s great that you’re being open and honest and we love you’, there’s going to be the ‘well, we knew that’ and there’s going to be the ‘bi now gay later’ people.”

Added Bowen, who said he still advocates for bisexuality ‘100 percent’, in the video: “I really didn’t have a thought of men until maybe midway through high school, towards the latter end, I had a dream about one of my friends. And…but after that dream I was like, ‘Ooh. Something’s different here.’ And I kept having more of them…and then I identified myself then as liking both genders. I came out as bisexual. It was a very real thing. I identified as bisexual because I really didn’t know much about the LGBTQ community. I didn’t really dive into it much because I was closeted. So the closest thing that I knew that I could relate to based upon that time period of my life was bisexual. As you get older, your viewpoints change. The way you look at the world changes, the way you look at yourself changes. Specifically more so in the past couple of months, this past year, I was looking at some old articles of mine because I was coming up with a new character for my wrestling career. And the articles kept labeling me as ‘bisexual’, and it was kind of annoying me that they had to continually put what I was, I couldn’t just be a professional wrestler, I was the ‘bisexual pro wrestler’ but I just wasn’t identifying with that term any more.”

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Pro Wrestler Anthony Bowens: ‘I Prefer to Be Labeled Now as Gay’ Not Bisexual – WATCH

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: January 2, 2019

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: January 2, 2019

HAPPY NEW YEAR! HRC IS ROLLING UP ITS SLEEVES AND GETTING TO WORK FOR LGBTQ AMERICANS ALONG WITH A NEW PRO-EQUALITY HOUSE:

  • Michigan sworn in a pro-equality slate of statewide officials yesterday, including Governor Gretchen Whitmer! More from Detroit Free Press.

It’s been a long year, but let’s take a moment to celebrate that in 2019 @realDonaldTrump will be met by SPEAKER Nancy Pelosi, Senators Baldwin, Rosen, and Sinema, and a diverse pro-equality majority who are going to help defeat his toxic politics of hate.

— Chad Griffin (@ChadHGriffin) January 1, 2019

#TRUMPSHUTDOWN — GOVERNMENT REMAINS CLOSED DUE TO CONTINUING FAILURE OF TRUMP-PENCE ADMINISTRATION: Said HRC Government Affairs Director David Stacy (@david_stacy): “Rather than using the Presidency for publicity stunts, we urge Donald Trump to work with Congress to immediately find a viable solution to reopen the government that funds essential government services and puts hardworking federal employees and their families first.” More from HRC.

LAMBDA LEGAL URGES SCOTUS TO MAINTAIN INJUNCTION AGAINST TRUMP TRANS MILITARY BAN: “Allowing this unconstitutional policy to take effect would immediately harm both transgender troops and our national security,” said HRC National Press Secretary Sarah McBride (@SarahEMcBride). “We are grateful to Lambda Legal and Outserve-SLDN for representing HRC and our fellow plaintiffs in this critical case, and we hope that the Supreme Court will maintain the preliminary injunction so that brave transgender service members and qualified recruits can continue to serve our nation with distinction.” More from YubaNet.

WHAT WE’RE READING WEDNESDAY — “I AM JEWISH. I WEAR GLASSES. I AM BISEXUAL — AND I AM THE ROSE QUEEN”: A great read to start off 20-bi-teen! Louise Deser Siskel writes of her historic coronation in the Los Angeles Times.

“While I am almost certainly not the first member of the LGBTQ community on the court, I hope that by saying so publicly, I might encourage others to be proud of who they are.”- Louise Siskel is the first openly #LGBTQ person to be named #RoseParade Queen. t.co/kIOUQHqIt1

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) January 1, 2019

UNCONSCIONABLE — DEVOS RESCINDS CRITICAL PROTECTIONS FOR STUDENTS OF COLOR: “While the revocation of this guidance would not change federal civil rights laws, this dangerous action would embolden discriminatory practices that push students of color, including LGBTQ students of color, out of the classroom,” said HRC Government Affairs Director David Stacy. “It is particularly outrageous to utilize a commission tasked with addressing gun violence in schools as a tool to undermine protections for students of color.” More from HRC.

ANTI-LGBTQ MARTHA MCSALLY APPOINTED TO U.S. SENATE AFTER LOSING AZ SENATE RACE TO PRO-EQUALITY KYRSTEN SINEMA: Said HRC Arizona State Director Justin Unga. “From her votes to gut critical health care protections, to kowtowing to Trump’s shameful ban on transgender service members — McSally has proven that she is more interested in political pandering than working to address the issues that matter to all Arizonans. We’re disappointed with this appointment.” More from HRC.

LOUIS C.K. ATTACKS NON-BINARY PEOPLE, PARKLAND SURVIVORS, AND ASIAN AND PACIFIC ISLANDERS IN DISGUSTING STAND UP ROUTINE: More from Variety.

  • And FYI: non-binary people aren’t a “new phenomenon” — they’ve always existed, writes Travis Alabanza (@travisalabanza) in HuffPost.

A timely resolution to take into 2019: respect people.

Respect their pronouns. Model this behavior to others. It makes a world of difference. t.co/kRCvqGkyRk

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) December 31, 2018

STARLEY, SHEA DIAMOND AND WILL WIESENFELD JOIN HRC’S EQUALITY ROCKS CAMPAIGN

  • Check out this interview with Diamond in Billboard.

.@iamsheadiamond looks back on her debut EP and performing with Cyndi Lauper: “I’m still in awe and disbelief” t.co/MKfidE3xTj pic.twitter.com/xDwtmGS4Zr

— billboard (@billboard) December 27, 2018

GLOBAL EQUALITY NEWS

NEW REPORT FROM OSCE DOCUMENTS HORRIFIC ANTI-LGBTQ CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY IN CHECHNYA: Refuting denials from Chechen and Russian authorities, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) details the systematic torture, abuse and murder of LGBTQ people. It cites “overwhelming evidence that there have been grave violations of the rights of LGBTI persons in the Chechen Republic,” while documenting gruesome personal stories from victims of the Chechen regime’s cruelty. More from HRC.

JAMAICAN LGBTQ ORGANIZATION’S HEADQUARTERS DESTROYED:

.@HRC is saddened to learn about the destruction of @EqualityJa‘s HQ.

Good news is that no one was hurt, and we join with you as you seek more information.

Happy New Year to all our partners and friends in #Jamaica. t.co/M8CZiBJNMz

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) January 1, 2019

HRC PARNTERS WITH PERU’S LARGEST LGBTQ EQUALITY ORG TO PROMOTE WORKPLACE INCLUSION: The Lima-based organization Presente recently released the findings of Diagnóstico de Diversidad y Equidad, its recent survey evaluating LGBT-inclusion in more than 50 businesses and multinationals that used HRC’s Spanish-language business toolkit to assess workplace policies and practices. More from HRC.

SELF-PROCLAIMED ‘PROUD HOMOPHOBE’ JAIR BOLSONARO TAKES OFFICE AS BRAZIL’S NEW PRESIDENT: More from Pink News.

READING RAINBOW – Bookmark now to read on your lunch break!

HRC interviews trans advocate and author Brynn Tannehill (@BrynnTannehill); Japan Times explores how the country is increasing LGBTQ tourism; Autostraddle lists their 11 best dressed LGBTQ celebs in 2018

Have news? Send us your news and tips at [email protected]. Click here to subscribe to #AM_Equality and follow @HRC for all the latest news. Thanks for reading!

www.hrc.org/blog/am-equality-tipsheet-january-2-2019?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Jonathan Van Ness Announces Break-Up with Rugby Player Boyfriend Wilco Froneman

Jonathan Van Ness Announces Break-Up with Rugby Player Boyfriend Wilco Froneman

Queer Eye‘s grooming guru Jonathan Van Ness took to Instagram to announced he had broken up with his rugby player boyfriend Wilco Froneman.

Wrote Van Ness on Instagram: “She taught me love, she taught me patience, how she handles pain, that shits amazing. I’ve loved and I’ve lost but that’s not what I see because look what I found ain’t no need for searching, rounding out my 2018 with a very gorg THANK U NEXT. #selflove  Please don’t go in on Wilco, he doesn’t need the anger & I don’t want to see him suffer so just know I’m all good & sometimes people break up — Love you all so much ”

 

Van Ness had earlier written “cheaters never prosper” but amended his post.

Froneman shared the news as well, writing: “Not only did Jonathan van Ness give me the best moments of 2018, but undoubtedly the best moments of my life. I will always love him and cherish every moment we shared. I encourage everyone to continue to send him love, no one deserves anything less.”

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Jonathan Van Ness Announces Break-Up with Rugby Player Boyfriend Wilco Froneman