Matthew Camp’s new jock, Chris Mazdzer’s luge bruise, & Tuc Watkins’ beach day

Matthew Camp’s new jock, Chris Mazdzer’s luge bruise, & Tuc Watkins’ beach day

This week Colton Haynes and Jeff Leatham finalized their divorce, the internet fell in love with Atlanta Pride’s ASL interpreter, Billy Porter snagged a role in the upcoming Cinderella remake, and Neil Patrick Harris went under the knife. Here’s what happened on Instagram:

Garrett Magee and AJ Walko went glamping in the desert.

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Glamping in the desert. ????

A post shared by Garrett Magee (@garrettbmagee) on

Jake Bain wore sweatpants.

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Love me some Mother Nature??

A post shared by Jake Bain (@jake.bain) on

Sterling K. Brown posed for Men’s Health.

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??Your @sterlingkbrown Thirst Trap Starter Pack ??

A post shared by Men’s Health (@menshealthmag) on

Chris Mazdzer scraped himself up.

Jonathan Van Ness liked what he saw in the mirror.

Rome Flynn picked up his shorts.

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yours.

A post shared by ENERGY the EP? (@romeflynn) on

Big Dipper modeled jockstraps with friends.

Lil Nas X showed off his arms.

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i’m not even flexing smh just naturally built ?

A post shared by Lil Nas X (@lilnasx) on

Jaboukie Young-White posed for GQ.

Anthony Bowens flexed.

Pietro Boselli climbed a rock.

Tommy Dorfman celebrated summer.

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still summer imo

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Derrick Gordon worked out at home.

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If you look closely someone is watching me workout ?

A post shared by Derrick Gordon (@itsderrickgordon) on

Ashraf Ejjbair asked for requests.

Tuc Watkins took the fam to the beach.

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I think we nailed beach day.

A post shared by theandrewrannells (@andrewrannells) on

Matthew Camp got new underwear.

Ryan Cleary leaned on his man.

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I got yours , you got mine ?? ? @tyrenredd

A post shared by Ryan Cleary (@theryancleary) on

Victor Turpin soaked up the sun.

Simon Dunn hung out on the bridge.

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Life is good… and sunny!

A post shared by Simon Dunn (@bysimondunn) on

Cody Simpson got wet in public.

Patrick McDonald hit the gym.

And Aidan Faminoff laid on the couch.

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Kellogg Put its Cereals ‘All Together’ to Celebrate LGBTQ Inclusivity and Fight Bullying, and Guess Whose Heads are Exploding

Kellogg Put its Cereals ‘All Together’ to Celebrate LGBTQ Inclusivity and Fight Bullying, and Guess Whose Heads are Exploding

Kellogg this week put Raisin Bran, Corn Flakes, Rice Krispies, Frosted Flakes, Froot Loops and Frosted Mini Wheats “all together” to make a statement about LGBTQ inclusivity and made a $50,000 donation to GLAAD to support its annual anti-bullying Spirit Day.

At Kellogg Company, we’re ALL TOGETHER taking a stand against bullying, and we’re proud to support #SpiritDay. Get your limited edition box of ALL TOGETHER cereal at t.co/EB0eb3Z5Ob pic.twitter.com/DrsuHvG9KE

— Kellogg Company (@KelloggCompany) October 17, 2019

Wrote the company: “We all belong together. So for the first time in history, our famous mascots and cereals are offered exclusively together in the same box for All Together Cereal. It’s a symbol of acceptance no matter how you look, where you’re from or who you love. We believe that all people deserve an environment where they can be their best selves. That’s why Kellogg’s has joined forces as an official partner of GLAAD to celebrate Spirit Day, the largest most visible anti-bullying campaign in the world where millions wear purple to stand up against bullying, and to support a more accepting world for LGBTQ youth. Kellogg is donating $50,000 to GLAAD to support their anti-bullying and LGBTQ advocacy work. Each limited edition box of All Together Cereal includes individual boxes: Raisin Bran, Corn Flakes, Rice Krispies, Frosted Flakes, Froot Loops and Frosted Mini Wheats.”

Said Priscilla Koranteng, Vice President, Global Talent and Chief Diversity Officer: “At Kellogg, we are firmly committed to equity and inclusion in the workplace, marketplace and in the communities where we work and live. We have long been allies and supporters of LGBTQ employees, their families and the community. For more than 100 years, Kellogg has nourished families so they can flourish and thrive, and the company continues to welcome everyone to the table.”

Naturally, homophobic right-wing and bigot bot heads are exploding:

So @KelloggsUS is taking a stand against bullying, by promoting a group that bully’s as much or more than anyone?? Idiotic!! Not a bigger group of force our lifestyle into your face and if you question it, than your a bigot group than the LBGTQ crowd!!

— PROUD AMERICAN (@USA50Stars) October 18, 2019

Good thing I do not buy any of your products anymore they are poison to humanity just like God never created humanity to be homosexual but #OneManOneWoman

— patrickmills (@patrickmills) October 19, 2019

My childhood breakfast is now a box of crap.. I dont dont care if you are LGBTQ stop trying to shove it down everyone’s throat..

— MarshallV (@KivenScott) October 19, 2019

Sodomites will certainly be ALL TOGETHER in the afterlife…

— StCasimir (@StCasimir1) October 17, 2019

I’m disappointed in our favorite cereal brand. We will be choosing a new one. My elementary kid’s cereal should not be a LGBT conversation starter. Done.

— Amy Hood (@AmyHood8611) October 18, 2019

You, your cereals and all of those characters are officially canceled in my house! @postcereals and @GeneralMills from now on. You guys just screwed up my childhood!

— DTown (@DTownWBG) October 18, 2019

Others could not be happier:

To kno ur company has such a loving and accepting stance on social issues and life makes me super happy to buy any of ur products! Great job! I’m gonna go eat my cereal now!

— Malú Ally of good (@AshleyMaluu) October 19, 2019

That’s about the gayest thing I’ve ever seen and I like it.

— John Henderson (@bike4betterlife) October 19, 2019

So proud of you Kellogg’s! Standing up to bullying! And to those who practice bigotry, prejudice, hatred & simple ignorance. A perfect way to start in the home where such horrible traits are learned. Bravo @KelloggsUS !!

— Jimmy Short (@JSAnnMargretFan) October 19, 2019

Thank you for showing all Gods children belong. I’m sure you’ll face the righteous “ religious right” but my faith is of love and cares for all people, including the misinformed. I. I’m for a few boxes!

— Erik (@Erik96948221) October 19, 2019

The post Kellogg Put its Cereals ‘All Together’ to Celebrate LGBTQ Inclusivity and Fight Bullying, and Guess Whose Heads are Exploding appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Kellogg Put its Cereals ‘All Together’ to Celebrate LGBTQ Inclusivity and Fight Bullying, and Guess Whose Heads are Exploding

This essay shows the sad reality of gay life in 1962, but offers a solution

This essay shows the sad reality of gay life in 1962, but offers a solution

One Mag Volume 10 Issue 1

Magazine cover courtesy of ONE Archives Foundation

In honor of LGBTQ History Month, we’re taking a deep dive look-back at the first gay publication in America—ONE magazine. Launched in Los Angeles in 1953, ONE was published by One, Inc., which grew from The Mattachine Society, the seminal gay-rights group founded by Harry Hay. Its editorial founders were Martin Block, Don Slater, and Dale Jennings. Produced on a shoestring and sold for 25 cents, ONE began to change the course of history with an unapologetic exploration of homosexuality and the largely unexamined societal taboo against it. 

This is the sixth in our series of ONE magazine cover stories.

Volume 10, Issue 1: Tenth Anniversary Issue

To mark ONE’s tenth anniversary, Betty Purdue (writing under the pseudonym of Geraldine Jackson) hearkened back to the first issue of the magazine, in which she wrote of her “crossing from the heterosexual world into the homosexual one—by choice.” A decade later, Purdue urged her fellow queers to step out of the shadows and into community, not just for their own sake but for the greater good:

In every other minority group I can name, the individuals stand together for common protection. Not so the homosexual minority. We have no internal unity. No sense of belonging to a group from which we both give and receive loyalty. … Instead, like a lost child, the average homosexual seems to look, not to his own group, and certainly never to himself for his protection and security, but always to the heterosexual.

IF ONLY THE HETEROSEXUAL UNDERSTOOD US, he bleats, ALL WOULD BE WELL. But deep within his heart he knows that this is simply not true. Acceptance comes from within, not without.

Purdue went on to argue that gay people were little different than non-gay people, and therefore shouldn’t make a big deal out of it.

We are different, not only from heterosexuals in general, but even from other minority groups in particular. In other minority groups, at least, their right to existence is acknowledged. Not so the homosexual minority. We—so far as the average public is concerned—should not exist at all.

The antidote, she wrote, is something akin to Homosexuals Anonymous—not because gays were “sick” but because of the communal resources and mutual support available in such a setting. In essence, she was arguing for a prototypical LGBTQ Community Center, and for her readers to stop imagining themselves alone and begin to see the bigger picture.

All we can say to that is preach., Ms. Purdue.

Thanks to ONE Archives Foundation for making this series possible. ONE Archives Foundation provides access to original source material at the ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at the University of Southern California Libraries—the largest such collection in the world.

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