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Former GOP Congressman Aaron Schock spotted at Coachella making out with a guy
Schock’s positions at one time earned him a 0 percent approval rating from the Human Rights Campaign for his opposition to LGBT equality. This queen…
Keri Russell and Adam Driver Fizzle in Broadway’s ‘Burn This’: REVIEW
Keri Russell swipes a match that won’t catch. Adam Driver strikes one up, but of course it’s out before long. Rarely does a single moment so literally, and unfortunately, stand in for the whole. Both stars on stage at the Hudson Theatre have considerable tools at their disposal — Russell is fresh off the best work of her career on The Americans, Driver an Oscar nominee — but the revival of Burn This that opened there tonight is flame-retardant nonetheless. An affair between their two characters never lets off sparks.
Lanford Wilson’s 1987 play, originally headlined on Broadway by John Malkovich and Joan Allen, circles a single combustible relationship with little else to fuel the action. Some consider it the openly gay playwright’s HIV/AIDS drama, though the young male lovers being mourned at the outset have died in a freak boating accident. One of them was a promising young dancer; Russell plays his roommate and artistic partner, Driver the older brother who survives him.
The two meet when he bursts through her door in the middle of the night. Because her spacious loft recalls a too-bright version of the apartment from Friends (scenic design is by Derek McLane, lighting by Natasha Katz), it’s hard not to think of Kramer. He reminds her of the friend gone too soon, while she offers a glimpse of the brother he was too narrow-minded to know. Another pair of unlikely but clearly fated lovers fall quickly into bed. He has a wife (or says he does), and she a yuppie boyfriend (David Furr) plus a sardonic (still living) gay roommate on whom nothing is lost (Brandon Uranowitz).
Driver’s character runs hot like a furnace, New Jersey tongue spouting off like a turbo engine, his every emotion overflowing like a proto-Tony Soprano on coke. Driver, who cut his teeth on New York stages, makes a satisfying meal of it, particularly as floodgates of fraternal mourning burst open. Russell’s dancer-turned-choreographer is the sketchier drawn of the two characters, almost always operating out of exasperation with the men who surround her. When it’s her turn to listen (which is often), Russell is alive to the moment, but ultimately out of her element. Her Broadway debut finds her stuck in a single register, one regrettably close to teenage petulance.
If Wilson’s drama was meant as an oblique comment on its times, or this revival means to speak to ours, director Michael Mayer’s production makes neither case. Its 1987 setting comes heavily flanked in air quotes, from costumes (by Clint Ramos) that occasionally double as intentional punchlines to throwback tunes that perhaps do so inadvertently (as when Heart cries out “how do I get you alone?” over the lovers’ first off-stage duet in the sheets). The production’s nostalgic sheen glosses over a hollow center.
Both Russell and Driver broke through playing tormented lovers on TV shows that defined generations of young people, to whose grown-up taste the play’s erotic promo art undoubtedly aims to appeal. But the only magnetism evidenced here is the alignment of Hollywood schedules.
Recent theatre features…
All the Questions I Had Watching Glenda Jackson in ‘King Lear’ on Broadway: REVIEW
‘What the Constitution Means to Me’ is the First Must-See Show of the Year: REVIEW
Temptations Musical ‘Ain’t Too Proud’ Makes a Play for Soul on Broadway: REVIEW
Kelli O’Hara Dazzles in ‘Kiss Me, Kate’ on Broadway: REVIEW
‘Be More Chill’ Is Like an Incel’s Answer to ‘Mean Girls’: REVIEW
The Most Interesting Part of Broadway’s ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ Already Happened Off Stage: REVIEW
Broadway’s ‘The Cher Show’ Is a Feast for Fans and an Assertion of Legacy: REVIEW
Follow Naveen Kumar on Twitter: @Mr_NaveenKumar
photos by matthew murphy
The post Keri Russell and Adam Driver Fizzle in Broadway’s ‘Burn This’: REVIEW appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.
Keri Russell and Adam Driver Fizzle in Broadway’s ‘Burn This’: REVIEW
Elizabeth Debicki & Gemma Arterton Are on Fire in ‘Vita and Virginia’
Finally, the trailer for the film about the years-long love affair between Virginia Woolf and Vita Sackville-West is here. And it was worth the wait.
www.advocate.com/film/2019/4/16/elizabeth-debicki-gemma-arterton-are-fire-vita-and-virginia
Jimmy Fallon’s hilarious Pete Buttigieg impression is so spot on, it’s scary
Disgraced GOP Rep. Aaron Schock Photographed with Posse of Shirtless Men at Coachella
Former GOP Rep. Aaron Schock, who recently slid out of corruption charges including filing false tax returns, mail fraud, wire fraud, submitting false reports to the FEC, false statements, and theft of government funds, defrauding the government of more than $100,000, was seen partying it up at Coachella over the weekend with a posse of shirtless men.
Aside from the dropped corruption charges, Schock is known for his support of a federal amendment to ban same-sex marriage and his support of the military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy. As well as that Downton Abbey office, and his unforgettable turquoise belt.
So activist James Duke Mason couldn’t hold back when he spotted this photo of Schock (second from left) partying at Coachella.
Wrote Mason on Facebook: “Normally I wouldn’t comment on something like this, but I am just infuriated by these images of former Republican (and anti-gay) Congressman Aaron Schock partying with a group of gay men at Coachella. The fact that he would think he could show his face in public, particularly when he has NEVER renounced or apologized for his votes against gay marriage, gays in the military and against anti-discrimination laws is astounding. My intention isn’t to out him or target him personally, but simply to point out the hypocrisy. I saw him at a recent gay social event in West Hollywood and shook his hand before I even knew who he was; he should really be ashamed of himself. And the gays who associate with him without calling him out should know better. It really is a disgrace.”
The post Disgraced GOP Rep. Aaron Schock Photographed with Posse of Shirtless Men at Coachella appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.
Disgraced GOP Rep. Aaron Schock Photographed with Posse of Shirtless Men at Coachella
Georgia Engel, Notre Dame, David Burtka, Russell Crowe as Roger Ailes, At-Home DNA Tests, Frank Ocean: HOT LINKS
RIP. Mary Tyler Moore actress Georgia Engel dies.
NOTRE DAME. After hundreds of millions pledged, senior fundraising adviser laments that aid didn’t come sooner: “The importance of restoring this cathedral is only in the full light today, which is frustrating because part of it has been burned in the fire and has now disappeared.”
‘PUBLIC HEALTH RISK’ AOC quits Facebook: ‘In an interview Sunday with the Yahoo News podcast “Skullduggery,” the New York Democrat said she stopped using her Facebook account and was scaling back on all social media, which she described as a “public health risk” because it can lead to “increased isolation, depression, anxiety, addiction, escapism.”’
FRANK OCEAN. A great interview with GAYLETTER.
TAXES. Beto O’Rourke releases 10 years of returns.
MICHIGAN. Man sues parents for $86,822.16 for destroying his porn collection.
CHER. Trump tweeted that he finally agrees with her on something.
JULIAN ASSANGE. U.S. gave verbal pledge of no death penalty. ‘The process of moving Assange out of the Ecuadorian Embassy started a year ago, on March 7, 2018, when the Ecuadorians made their first request to the U.K.: a letter asking for written assurances that the U.K. would not extradite Assange to a country where he could face the death penalty, according to the Ecuadorian Interior Minister Maria Paula Romo.’
MISSISSIPPI. Bald eagle throuple raising chick.
MILESTONES. Oldest person living with HIV turns 100: “I feel happy,” the soft-spoken senior told Canada’s CTV News, speaking through a translator at a hospital in Portugal. “I’ve spent these years without hardship and without troubles.”
NEW JERSEY. Ban on gay conversion therapy won’t be overturned: “The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to take a case that sought to overturn a New Jersey law banning conversion therapy — a medically discredited practice of attempting to change a child’s sexual orientation from gay to straight.”
ILHAN OMAR. Freshman Democrat takes in $832K after facing controversy: “Omar raised $832,000 in the first quarter, according to her FEC report — among the best totals posted by any House Democrat. Roughly half of her donations, $415,000, came from people who gave less than $200 to Omar, and the majority of her funds, $631,000, came from online donors who gave via ActBlue, the Democratic online fundraising platform that has been such a boon to the party’s candidates in recent years that Republicans are scrambling to develop an alternative.”
ECUADOR. 40 million cyber attacks assault nation after they allowed arrest of Wikileaks found Julian Assange: ‘Patricio Real, Ecuador’s deputy minister for information and communication technologies, said the attacks, which began on Thursday, had “principally come from the United States, Brazil, Holland, Germany, Romania, France, Austria and the United Kingdom,” as well as from the South American country itself.’
WHAT’S COOKING. Neil Patrick Harris helps David Burtka launch new cookbook. “Life Is a Party: Deliciously Doable Recipes to Make Every Day a Celebration!”
23 AND ME. The perils of the at-home DNA test.
HOST CHAT OF THE DAY. Trevor Noah interviews Stephen Colbert.
TRAILER OF THE DAY. Russell Crowe as Roger Ailes in The Loudest Voice which debutsSunday, June 30 at 10/9c
TUESDAY’S MAN. Emerson Pedreira.
View this post on InstagramDe um dia desses aí… #bear #beard #muscule #boy #tbt #men
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The post Georgia Engel, Notre Dame, David Burtka, Russell Crowe as Roger Ailes, At-Home DNA Tests, Frank Ocean: HOT LINKS appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.
New Video of Transgender Singer Shea Diamond in “Americans for the Equality Act” Campaign
HRC released a new video from HRC’s Americans for the Equality Act campaign featuring singer and songwriter Shea Diamond. In the new video, Diamond shares her powerful story as a transgender woman and artist from the South and calls on Congress to advance the Equality Act — bipartisan legislation that would finally extend clear, comprehensive non-discrimination protections to millions of LGBTQ people nationwide. The Americans for the Equality Act series, filmed by award-winning directors Dustin Lance Black and Paris Barclay, first launched last month with a debut video featuring Academy Award-winning actress Sally Field and her son Sam Greisman.
“Shea Diamond is a profoundly gifted singer and musician whose story of being a proud transgender woman of color from the South is giving hope to countless people across the nation. We are grateful to partner with her as she speaks out for the Equality Act,” said HRC President Chad Griffin. “The harsh reality is that LGBTQ Americans face real and persistent discrimination in their everyday lives, and it’s far past time Congress take action and pass this legislation providing clear, comprehensive nationwide non-discrimination protections. Shea is a phenomenal talent and incredible advocate, and she delivers an empowering message of resilience and hope to LGBTQ youth, letting them know they deserve to feel safe, supported and protected under our nation’s civil rights laws.”
“So much of the progress of the LGBTQ movement has hinged on our ability to tell our stories and move people — and that’s the same spirit with which we’ve approached this compelling project,” said Emmy Award-winning director Paris Barclay when the campaign launched last month.
“Every American deserves a fair shot at a job to support themselves and their family, and the security of a roof over their head. These are key ingredients in what we’ve long cherished as our ‘American Dream.’” said Academy Award-winning director Dustin Lance Black. “But until the Equality Act is signed into law, this dream may not be a reality for far too many Americans in many areas of our wild and wonderful country.”
As a black transgender woman, Shea Diamond has always had to fight to live her truth and is committed to amplifying the voices and experiences of her community. This game-changing new singer-songwriter is living her dream with Seen It All — her soulful and soul-baring debut EP (Asylum Records) that was executive-produced by hit songwriter Justin Tranter. On Seen It All, Shea — who is now calling Los Angeles home as she sets out to conquer the music world — bravely tells her truth to a world that hasn’t always wanted to really see her. “I’m the flame that you can’t un-see,” she announces with unapologetic honesty on the haunting opener “American Pie.” Read more about Shea’s trailblazing journey as a recording artist here.
Currently, 50 percent of LGBTQ Americans live in one of the 30 states without statewide legal non-discrimination protections for LGBTQ people — leaving millions at risk of being fired, denied housing or refused service simply because of who they are or whom they love. The Equality Act would guarantee existing civil rights laws apply to LGBTQ people by providing clear, consistent non-discrimination protections based on sexual orientation or gender identity across key areas of life, including employment, housing, credit, education, public spaces and services, federally-funded programs and jury service.
Reintroduced in Congress on March 13, the Equality Act has growing unprecedented support, including from nearly 70 percent of Americans, hundreds of members of Congress, 180 major businesses and more than 350 social justice, religious, medical and child welfare organizations. Recent polling finds that a growing majority of Americans support federal non-discrimination protections and LGBTQ equality. A recent survey by PRRI found that nearly seven in 10 Americans support laws like the Equality Act, including majorities in every single state and majorities of Republicans, Independents and Democrats alike.
Over the coming weeks, HRC will roll out additional videos in the Americans for the Equality Act series featuring a powerhouse lineup of supportive film and television actors, influencers, musicians and professional athletes, including Adam Rippon, Alexandra Billings, Charlie and Max Carver, Dustin Lance Black, Paris and Christopher Barclay, Gloria Calderon Kellett, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jane Lynch, Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Justin Mikita, Justina Machado, Karamo Brown, Marcia Gay Harden and Nyle DiMarco. The Americans for the Equality Act series is modeled after HRC’s successful Americans for Marriage Equality campaign.
How This Year’s Outstanding Blog Nominees Are Using Their Platform to Elevate the LGBTQ Community
The Outstanding Blog category of the GLAAD Media Awards continues to recognize the incredible work of various blogs that highlight significant issues affecting the LGBTQ community. This year’s nominees – including Gay with Kids, Holy Bullies and Headless Monsters, My Fabulous Disease, Pittsburgh Lesbian Correspondents, and TransGriot – individually provide diverse perspectives, while collectively showcasing what it means to accelerate acceptance and elevate the stories of the LGBTQ community. Hear what each nominee has to say about the inspiration behind their blog, the significance of their work within the community and the importance of blogging in today’s society.
Founded by Brian Rosenberg and Ferd Van Gameren in 2014, Gay with Kids is the world’s largest digital media brand centered on helping gay, bi and trans dads and dads-to-be navigate through fatherhood. When asked about the inspiration behind the blog, David Dodge, an editor at Gay with Kids, told GLAAD: “Here’s the thing about queer men who want to become dads—“whoops” is rarely a word you’ll hear associated with our family creation stories. When we become parents, it is typically only after years of planning, researching, saving, and hoping. We often have to save for many years before we’re able to afford the costs associated with adoption (~$30,000) or surrogacy (~$120,000).” Dodge notes that since there are “hours of research and legal questions to consider when [queer men] explore more modern paths to fatherhood”, Gay with Kids was created to fill an existing void, “as there really was no singular online source for gay, bi and trans men to turn to gain [this type of] information” before 2014.
Since “[LGBTQ people are] constantly placed in the position of having to defend our families…against “religious freedom” bills…[and those] who question the legitimacy of our families,” Dodge expresses that Gay with Kids was started “with the goal of creating a community and safe space for queer men who are or hope to become fathers—where we start from a place of celebrating, not defending, our families.” In addition to providing resources to gay, bi, and trans dads, Dodge says that Gay with Kids’ “most profound message…is told through the daily stories we tell of queer men happily and proudly living their lives and raising their children.” With the idea of helping queer men realize that parenthood is not impossible and “you can be both gay and a dad,” Dodge mentions that Gay with Kids is truly helping people with its content: “I can’t count the number of younger queer men who thank us weekly on social media…for simply bringing them images and stories of queer men who have successfully become dads.”
Of the blog posts published within the last year, Dodge says that “the work our blog does to fight for the rights and of queer dads stands out the most.” For example, Dodge mentions that the 2018 Father’s Day cover story focused on “the need for better paid parental leave policies for fathers—particularly queer and adoptive dads” and “brought the inspiring story of two couples that are fighting from within their own companies to create change.” This type of content provides such a necessary voice within the LGBTQ community and highlights exactly why Gay with Kids has now been nominated in the Outstanding Blog category for a second consecutive year. To Dodge, a GLAAD Media Award nomination “…alone means the world to [them], but is particularly meaningful for what it has done/will do in helping support the purpose of our blog—to increase the visibility of queer dads.”
Operated by Alvin A. McEwen, Holy Bullies and Headless Monsters is a blog centered on analyzing and challenging misinformation about the LGBTQ community circulated by religiously conservative organizations and groups. McEwen, a African-American gay man who resides in South Carolina, founded the blog in 2006, inspired largely by “the lies told about the LGBTQ community by organizations like the Family Research Council [and] the Alliance Defending Freedom.” McEwen told GLAAD that “aside from undermining our rights, the lies [these organizations] tell influence others to treat us terribly,” which he says “played a huge part in [his] inability to come out and accept [himself] for the longest time.”
In his own words, Holy Bullies and Headless Monsters’ central message is to showcase “the unfortunate fact that there are groups and activists out there attempting to undermine the LGBTQ community, our families, and our safety.” To McEwen, this is exactly why his blog represents such a powerful voice within the LGBTQ community, stating that he “[doesn’t] think people fully understand what these groups and activists are after…Even in our own community.” McEwen believes that “what [these people] don’t understand is the big picture [and]…The precedent” set when we fail to expose the lies about, and targeted discrimination against, the LGBTQ community. When asked about the importance of blogging, especially in today’s society, McEwen answered that since certain media outlets purposefully exclude the voices of the LGBTQ community, “blogging allows for us to elbow our way to a seat at the table where we should have been in the first place.”
One blog post that stood out to McEwen this past year was titled “Husband/wife tandem working to ensure discriminatory, religiously biased regulations of Trump Administration,” which he believes “underlines the type of opposition the LGBTQ community has to deal with.” This message encompasses the ethos of his blog – the idea that providing “[k]nowledge of [these] actions” is the first step in challenging the lies and discrimination facing the LGBTQ community today. Although this is Holy Bullies and Headless Monsters’ fourth time nominated in this category – including a win in 2017 – McEwen says that he is “always grateful for the nomination.” To him, “It means that [his] posts are being read and [his] voice is being listened to…And it motivates [him] to keep pushing forward and do more so all of our voices heard.”
My Fabulous Disease is a blog run by Mark S. King, which he says represents “his voice as a person living with HIV.” My Fabulous Disease acts his own “contribution to our community dialogue”, while also showcasing his “artistic outlet as a writer, [his] effort to chronicle the HIV epidemic, and occasionally [his] primal scream.” To King, there has “never been a more crucial time in the HIV/AIDS epidemic than this moment,” which he states has influenced the message of his blog to change over time “to include the stories of black men and women — where the new epidemic resides — and particularly transgender women.”
When asked why his blog represents a powerful voice within the LGBTQ community, King told GLAAD: “My journey is a testament and a documentation of the AIDS epidemic as it has affected gay white men like myself. In order to be a responsible trustee of this legacy, I know my writing must continue to broaden to include my brothers and sisters with their own stories to tell. My Fabulous Disease is important for our community because it models what it means to be inclusive within our broad ranks. We must look beyond ourselves”. To King, blogging is such an essential tool because of how personal and relatable is: “With the gentrification of the media we consume, bloggers are a pure voice of an individual. Believe me, I cannot count how many times a written piece of mine has garnered the response, ‘thank you, only you could have written this.’ I often joke that I am just a man with HIV and a keyboard, but it is that simple fact that gives me purpose and power. I am beholden to no one, I call it like I see it, and I dare to admit mistakes and remain teachable.”
When asked about his most influential blog posts over the past year, King provided three highlights: a post titled “How HIV Activists Helped Create the Jeff Flake Elevator Moment”; a written and video on the HIV Activists at Positive Women’s Network; and his own coverage of the 2018 International AIDS Conference in Amsterdam. These three pieces of work not only showcase the diverse set of topics that King seeks to cover, but also display exactly why this is My Fabulous Diseases’ fourth time being nominated for Outstanding Blog at the GLAAD Media Awards, with previous nominations in 2015, 2017 and 2018. In addition to stating how this nomination showcases how “[his] voice has carried beyond the HIV arena… [and] that our issues are being acknowledged beyond our usual turf,” King mentions that ‘[t]he nomination this year is especially exciting because our rights and our health are under attack as marginalized people just as we could be turning a monumental corner on the HIV epidemic in the United States.” King also notes that he “dream[s] of taking home the win [in this category] one day.”
After appearing on local radio under the name “Pittsburgh’s Official Lesbian Correspondent,” Sue Kerr decided to extend her reach and voice through the creation of her blog Pittsburgh Lesbian Correspondents in December 2005. As a trained social worker who has “been enthralled by the power of social media…as a community organizing tool”, Kerr sees “blogging [as] an extension of [her] community organizing work as an LGBTQ activist, a feminist, a social worker, and just a human being.” In learning that “sharing [her] opinions as a queer disabled woman blogger is political”, Kerr says the central message of her blog is about “occupying space that isn’t kind to marginalized voices and stak[ing] your claim, be it about cats or politics or any topic. Your voice matters.”
On why her blog represents an important voice within the LGBTQ community, Kerr mentions that “There are no LGBTQ media outlets in Western Pennsylvania and only a handful statewide.” Despite the “proliferation of bias on broadcast media”, Kerr argues that “[bloggers] can put forth alternative perspectives and call attention to crisis in the media, including coverage of LGBTQ issues.” In an area where her voice is one of very few, Kerr believes that blogs like hers create “a dynamic archive of the early 21st century in LGBTQ life here in Western Pennsylvania.” When asked why blogging as an important tool in today’s society, Kerr expressed: “Blogging is important because in some communities it is the only place where people “read” about their own lives and experiences and identities.” However, she further notes that “blogging is endangered by the same forces that silence us elsewhere in community life,” ultimately calling on “the foundations, the major organizations investing in bloggers both to support our ongoing work and to specifically work on preserving the archives”.
To Kerr, a standout series of blog posts from the past year center on Turahn Jenkins, “a candidate for Allegheny County District Attorney who told a room of LGBTQ activists that he believes we are sinful.” Kerr argues that one of the most significant aspects of this situation is that it highlights “the repudiation of the voices of Black trans women and other Black queer folx” by his remaining queer supporters. In highlighting such pressing, yet isolated issues in her community, Pittsburgh Lesbian Correspondents represents an integral voice with the LGBTQ community and demonstrates why it has scored a second consecutive nomination in the Outstanding Blog Category. On the significance of this nomination, Kerr stated: “I’m a 48 year old cisgender white disabled queer woman and yet I must still have something relevant to say…to be nearing 15 years along with some of the other current and former nominees is a testimony to the staying power of the media.” She continued, “One of the most frequent silencing tactics I hear is ‘No one reads your blog anyway, Sue’ – I guess maybe this demonstrates that’s not quite accurate, is it?”. Kerr also highlighted that “the term ‘blog’ was coined in 1999 so to be nominated on the 20th anniversary of that historical moment is especially nice.”
Since 2006, Monica Roberts has used her blog TransGriot to bring discussion and awareness to issues affecting the trans community. As a black trans woman herself, the mission of Roberts’ blog, as stated on her website, is to “introduce [people] to and talk about your African descended trans brothers and trans sisters across the Diaspora, reclaim and document our chocolate flavored trans history, speak truth to power, comment on the things that impact our trans community from an Afrocentric perspective.” As discussed in a profile on Roberts published by The Daily Beast in February, Roberts has been dedicated to discovering and investigating the murders of transgender individuals in America, ultimately publishing her findings on TransGriot. As The Daily Beast profile highlights, Transgriot is often the first source to bring attention to these murders and “National LGBT advocacy organizations and mainstream news outlets alike rely on [Roberts] as an early source of information.”
Although there were other transgender-focused blogs that appeared during the blogging boom of 2000s, Roberts created TransGriot as a way to cover trans issues from a “black and person of color perspective” – something she felt was missing from the blogging landscape. In addition to covering issues surrounding violence, The Daily Beast notes that “Roberts has been serving as a sort of online historian for the transgender community since her first post in 2006. In fact, the ‘Griot’ portion of her blog’s name is a reference to West African singers and poets who act as oral historians.” Overall, TransGriot “celebrates accomplishments, mourns heroes, and issues biting political commentary.”
However, after Roberts’ profile appeared in The Daily Beast, her blog was mysteriously taken down without warning. In an interview with Out, Roberts said that she believed the TERFs – trans-exclusionary radical feminists – were behind the blog’s takedown, noting that they “are coordinating with the Republican Party, the conservative movement, and white Evangelicals to attack trans folks, and they have been since 2015.” Now that her blog is back up, Roberts told Out that “All [this removal] did was piss me off and make me even more determined to keep this blog alive and keep speaking truth to power and keep calling out our enemies, foreign and domestic.”
This is TransGriot’s 4th nomination for Outstanding Blog, following a win in the category last year. The blog’s ability to capture and report on a wide array of trans issues in a timely manner, highlights exactly why TransGriot is such a vital voice within the LGBTQ community. On the importance of TransGriot, Roberts told Out: “’I can’t tell you how many times I’ve run into some trans millennial who tells me that my blog inspired them to do this or inspired them to do that. At least five people have told me that reading my blog posts is what kept them from committing suicide. So every time I sit down and start writing a post, I keep that in mind — that what I’m writing may inspire someone who does not want to persevere.’”
For a full list of the nominees for the 30th Annual GLAAD Media Awards, including Gay with Kids, Holy Bullies and Headless Monsters, My Fabulous Disease, Pittsburgh Lesbian Correspondents, and TransGriot, please visit glaad.org/mediaawards/nominees.
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