Somos sementes – representatividade negra e disputa política no Estado brasileiro Tema: participação política negra

Somos sementes – representatividade negra e disputa política no Estado brasileiro Tema: participação política negra

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Somos sementes – representatividade negra e disputa política no Estado brasileiro Tema: participação política negra

Foto: Mídia Ninja
Em 1932, por força de um decreto, o voto feminino foi assegurado no Brasil. Em 1934, Antonieta de Barros, mulher negra, professora, natural de Santa Catarina, tornou-se a primeira deputada do seu estado. Antes e depois desse episódio, temos assistido a múltiplos esforços de mulheres e homens negrAs para ocupar espaços da política institucional no Legislativo e no Executivo do país. O respeito a esse direito de se fazer presente, porém, segue sendo fragilizado de diferentes formas. Campanhas pelo “Voto Negro”, por exemplo, ainda são vistas com desconfiança, uma vez que possuímos profundas dificuldades em promover um debate franco sobre as evidentes desigualdades sócio-raciais. A trágica execução da vereadora Marielle Franco no Rio de Janeiro em 2018 deu provas de tudo isso. Mas, como nunca antes, essa desastrosa perda foi ressignificada e transformada em estímulo para a ampliação da presença, sobretudo, de outras mulheres negras e de mandatos comprometidos com o enfrentamento do racismo, do machismo, da LGBTfobia e outras práticas de exclusão que atingem não só a maioria da população, mas a nação como um todo. Mobilizada por esse cenário, a mesa “Somos sementes –representatividade negra e disputa política no Estado brasileiro” será uma oportunidade para uma reflexão compartilhada entre políticas negras com trajetórias diversas que estão na linha de frente das batalhas para que o poder legitimado pelo povo seja exercido em benefício do povo!

Debatedoras:

Erica Malunguinho (PSOL – São Paulo/Brasil)
Regina Sousa (PT – Teresina/Brasil)
Olivia Santana (PCdoB – Salvador/Brasil)
Mediação – Amarilis Costa

Somos sementes – representatividade negra e disputa política no Estado brasileiro Tema: participação política negra

HRC Announces Elevate: A Fellowship Advancing Public Health Leadership for Trans Women of Color

HRC Announces Elevate: A Fellowship Advancing Public Health Leadership for Trans Women of Color

HRC Foundation is pleased to announce the launch of “Elevate: A Fellowship Advancing Public Health Leadership for Transgender Women of Color.” The Elevate Fellowship is a pilot program that seeks to develop the leadership capacity of transgender women in the South to increase career opportunities and improve public health systems.

“Black and Latinx transgender women are often overlooked within the workforce, specifically in public health,” said HRC Foundation’s Director of HIV & Health Equity J. Maurice McCants-Pearsall. “In many ways they are relegated to solely working in community outreach and HIV testing roles. As we seek to give voice to those who have been pushed to the margins, it is important that we develop and expand access to equitable professional development opportunities.”

During its inaugural year, Elevate will focus on skills-building as well as professional and leadership development, consisting of one intensive in-person training and a series of interactive webinars.

“Recently a stellar group of advocates and community leaders met at HRC to create groundbreaking convent in collaboration with the Human Rights Campaign,” said Executive Director of Advocates for Better Care Atlanta Tori Cooper, who will be one of four trans women facilitating during the fellowship. “We will address the totality of persons described as ‘marginalized’ in an effort to reduce stigma, problem solve and create healthier futures.”

Each point of engagement is designed to increase competencies that improve health outcomes within the Black and Latinx transgender community in Arkansas, Alabama, Mississippi and Texas, all part of HRC’s Project One America program. Participants must have at least one year of experience in health-related direct services and/or advocacy work and be willing to commit to a one-year cohort. The program is open to applicants who identify as transgender women of color — including non-binary and trans-feminine people.

For more details please visit: hrc.im/elevatefellowship

www.hrc.org/blog/hrc-announces-elevate-fellowship-advancing-trans-public-health-leadership?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Dan Levy to be honored with the Davidson/Valentini Award at the 2019 GLAAD Gala San Francisco

Dan Levy to be honored with the Davidson/Valentini Award at the 2019 GLAAD Gala San Francisco

Credit: Dan Levy

Today, GLAAD announced that Emmy®-nominated showrunner, writer, director, producer, and actor Dan Levy will be honored with the Davidson/Valentini Award at the 2019 GLAAD Gala San Francisco on September 28th. GLAAD’s Davidson/Valentini Award is presented to an LGBTQ media professional who has made a significant difference in promoting acceptance for the LGBTQ community. 

Dan Levy is best known for his work on the groundbreaking comedy series, Schitt’s Creek, which he co-created with his father, Eugene Levy. In addition to being the co-creator, showrunner, executive producer, and writer of Schitt’s Creek, Levy stars as the hilarious David Rose, one of the first openly pansexual characters depicted on television. Schitt’s Creek airs on CBC in Canada and Pop TV in the United States.

“Through his work on-screen and behind the scenes of Schitt’s Creek, Dan Levy moves LGBTQ visibility on television forward in humorous, compelling, and necessary ways,” says Sarah Kate Ellis, President and CEO of GLAAD. “By featuring and celebrating a pansexual character, Dan and Schitt’s Creek are expanding representation of the spectrum of idenities within the LGBTQ community in a way that other content creators should model. Dan has been such a powerful advocate throughout his career, and continues to use his platform to uplift and inspire LGBTQ youth.”

Schitt’s Creek has earned its fair share of accolades just this year alone, boasting four Emmy® nominations, a TCA Award nomination for Outstanding Achievement in Comedy and a GLAAD Media Awards nomination for Outstanding Comedy Series. Levy also won Best Comedic Performance at the MTV Movie & TV Awards for his role on the show, as well as a Canadian Screen Award for Best Comedy. In total, the show has garnered nearly two dozen awards and more than 50 nominations.

Levy, who identifies as a gay man, has consistently been recognized as a trailblazer in the LGBTQ community. In 2015, Levy was included in the OUT 100 list, a spotlight on the LGBTQ community’s brightest voices. In 2017, Levy used his online platform to call out a Globe & Mail reporter for using “offensive, irresponsible, and homophobic” language to describe him, and sent a message of positivity and love to youth who have ever been criticized for being different. In 2018, Levy and Schitt’s Creek created an online fundraiser called “Fight For Our Future,” which raised money for GLAAD to “continue to fight for the rights of LGBTQ people everywhere.” In June 2019, Levy was also honored in Queerty’s Pride50, a list of “50 trailblazing individuals who actively ensure society remains moving towards equality, acceptance and dignity for all queer people.” This year on Levy’s birthday on August 9, Schitt’s Creek fans raised over $20,000 for the LGBT Youth Line in Ontario, Canada, which will go towards providing resources to LGBTQ youth in rural areas and indigenous communities across the province. 

Previous recipients of the Davidson/Valentini Award include Ross Mathews, Don Lemon, Lee Daniels, Adam Lambert, Hannah Hart, Sandra Bernhard, Alec Mapa, Tyler Oakley, B.D. Wong, and Ilene Chaiken, among others.

The GLAAD Gala San Francisco celebrates and features storytellers and tech innovators who accelerate LGBTQ acceptance and helps fund GLAAD’s digital advocacy work to grow LGBTQ inclusion in digital and social media. 

The 2019 GLAAD Gala San Francisco, which will be hosted by RuPaul’s Drag Race and Broadway star Peppermint, will take place at the Hyatt Regency San Francisco on September 28th. For more information on the event, including how to purchase tickets, visit www.glaad.org/events/2019-san-francisco-gala

The 2019 GLAAD Gala San Francisco is presented by Gilead, Ketel One Family-Made Vodka & Wells Fargo, with official partner Google. 

August 13, 2019

www.glaad.org/blog/dan-levy-be-honored-davidsonvalentini-award-2019-glaad-gala-san-francisco

GLAAD Responds to IMDb Revision of Birth Name Policy for Transgender Professionals in the Entertainment Industry: “it remains imperfect”

GLAAD Responds to IMDb Revision of Birth Name Policy for Transgender Professionals in the Entertainment Industry: “it remains imperfect”

Credit: IMDb

Today, GLAAD responded to IMDb’s revised birth name policy that will now allow some entertainment industry professionals to remove their birth names from the biography section of their profiles.

“Revealing a transgender person’s birth name without permission is an invasion of privacy that can put them at risk for discrimination,” said Nick Adams, GLAAD’s Director of Transgender Media. “IMDb’s new policy is a step in the right direction and gives some transgender professionals in the entertainment industry the dignity and respect that they’ve long deserved – however, it remains imperfect. Trans people with credits under their old name for work in front of or behind the camera will still be affected by IMDb’s determination to publish outdated information. The platform still has a long way to go in maintaining the privacy of all the entertainment industry professionals listed on the site. GLAAD and SAG-AFTRA, along with trans people working in Hollywood, will continue to advocate that IMDb create policies that respect everyone’s privacy and safety.”

An IMDb spokesperson explained the new policy to Variety, noting that: “IMDb now permits the removal of birth names if the birth name is not broadly publicly known and the person no longer voluntarily uses their birth name.” They continued: “To remove a birth name either the person concerned or their professional industry representative simply needs to contact IMDb’s customer support staff to request a birth name removal. Once the IMDb team determines that an individual’s birth name should be removed — subject to this updated process — we will review and remove every occurrence of their birth name within their biographical page on IMDB.”

It is important to note that, according to Variety, the IMDb spokesperson said for prior credits where a transgender person was credited as their birth name, that old name will remain listed in parentheses in the credits section of their own IMDb page and the title pages for the project. For actors and below the line professionals like cinematographers, editors, production designers, art directors, makeup artists, and costume designers, this policy means their private gender history is disclosed to potential employers whenever they apply for a new job.

It is good news that some transgender people whose birth name was added to IMDb without their consent are now able to have that name removed, but GLAAD reached out to IMDb and parent company Amazon for clarification around this policy and to explain the continuing harm caused by allowing prior credits to remain on the site unchanged.

In June 2019, GLAAD signed on to support SAG-AFTRA in the fight against IMDb from publishing performers’ private information. Other LGBTQ organizations including the National LGBTQ Task Force, the Transgender Law Center, the Transgender Legal Defense & Education Fund, Transcend Legal, Inc, and the Equality Federation also signed on. GLAAD and other organizations called for change via numerous media appearances and at industry events. In a legal filing, the coalition of organizations joined SAG-AFTRA in speaking out against the continued publication of the birth names of transgender performers and people in the entertainment industry without their consent. Read the legal filing in full here

SAG-AFTRA has been fighting for enforcement of California’s anti-age discrimination law, known as AB 1687, which requires subscription-based entertainment casting databases such as IMDbPro to remove paid subscribers’ date-of-birth information from its websites, including IMDb.com, upon request. In February 2018, a judge stopped enforcement of the law. SAG-AFTRA and its allies are currently appealing that ruling with oral argument before the Ninth Circuit scheduled on Sept. 9.

Today, SAG-AFTRA President Gabrielle Carteris also responded to the policy change: “While this half-measure is a step forward in protecting the personal safety of and reducing employment discrimination for transgender people, in revising its birth name policy, IMDb admits to invading the privacy of performers and putting them at risk for discrimination. IMDb can make no principled distinction to justify its arbitrary choices about when to invade the privacy of performers.”

Carteris continued, “IMDb has more work to do. SAG-AFTRA and its allies continue to fight to protect all performers and for enforcement of California’s anti-age discrimination law. This change in birth name policy should help make it clear to the appellate judges that the harm here is fundamental and compelling, and that California law AB 1687 is necessary in order to remedy IMDb’s discriminatory practice.”

August 13, 2019

www.glaad.org/blog/glaad-responds-imdb-revision-birth-name-policy-transgender-professionals-entertainment-industry

Quick Tip: How to Search by Username on POF

Quick Tip: How to Search by Username on POF

“I want to search by username on POF but can’t seem to find the search bar, is this still a feature?” If you’re an upgraded member on POF, you’re in luck! The ability to search by username is one of the great features we offer to our upgraded users. If you are using the free […]

The post Quick Tip: How to Search by Username on POF appeared first on PlentyOfFish Blog.

Quick Tip: How to Search by Username on Plenty of Fish

Odell Beckham Jr. shuts down homophobes mocking his thirst-inducing Calvin Klein photo shoot

Odell Beckham Jr. shuts down homophobes mocking his thirst-inducing Calvin Klein photo shoot

NFL star Odell Beckham Jr. is not having any of the homophobic nonsense currently being directed at him on social media.

This week, the Cleveland Browns receiver shared a thirsty photo from his upcoming Calvin Klein underwear campaign to Instagram, along with the caption: “Here’s a pic of me and a world class lamp.”

So far, the photo, which is part of a larger campaign that also includes Diplo, Gigi Hadid, Jacob Elordi, Lay Zhang, and Jelly Lin in “real-life” situations, has received over 800K likes and 22K comments, including several homophobic ones.

“Boy look gay as hell,” one person wrote.

“Omm he gay,” another added.

“He low key gay tho,” a third person said.

But it didn’t stop there.

“Bro that’s mad weird,” someone else commented.

“He tryna defend the fact that he’s gay,” yet another person added.

“It’s not too late to delete this breh,” wrote another follower.

Beckham directly responded to the criticism in a comment on the post that read:

Yallll chilllll mann damnnnn! It be a lot of y’all sayin sus and alll the other comments that realllly be a direct reflection of who u are! Im straight! Like beyond it. If I sit here and defend myself y’all gon say im tryna defend myself , if I sit there and say nothin yalll gon say ‘seee he didn’t say anything..’I’m good wit me. Which is dumb straightttt… Period. lol I don’t neeed to say this shxt no mooooo! Half y’all girls in these comments. This the last time ima break this shxt down for y’all. And lastly before I got hit the weight room! Much love to everybody out there! Fellas sorry man, gotta get a (bag) for it!

In a recent interview with GQ, Beckham addressed the gay rumors that have been following him around since 2015.

“I’ve never had an opportunity to talk about this,” he said. “Honestly wasn’t offended.  … It was almost more funny to me.”

Later in the interview, he added, “I have no problem with anyone’s sexual orientation. … Love is love. If you’re attracted to somebody, you’re attracted to somebody. There was such a stigma built up, [as though] I don’t like my own women. It’s like, no, I don’t like anybody who annoys me. [laughs]”

Scroll down for more pics from Beckham’s Instagram page…

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