WATCH: Preview the final season of ‘Eastsiders’

WATCH: Preview the final season of ‘Eastsiders’

Ahead of its December 1 release on Netflix, the trailer for the fourth and final season of Kit Williamson’s Eastsiders is now available for your previewing pleasure.

Season four picks up a year after the previous season left off, with some exciting newcomers including Jake Choi (Single Parents), Hailee Sahar (Pose) and Tom Lenk (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) joining a returning cast featuring Williamson, John Halbach, Willam Belli, Van Hansis, Stephen Guarino, Brianna Brown, Matthew McKelligon and Leith M. Burke.

“Cal (Kit Williamson) and Thom (Van Hansis) are back home from season three’s cross-country road trip, still a couple but wondering if they are really just best friends with benefits. Douglas (Willam) and Quincy (Stephen Guarino) are engaged to be married, but with very different ideas about what a gay wedding should be. Hillary (Brianna Brown) and Ian (John Halbach) are cohabiting peacefully; and Jeremy (Matthew McKelligon) and Derrick (Leith M. Burke) have taken a huge step in their relationship by fostering a child.”

Watch:

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Feast Your Eyes on the Final Season of ‘EastSiders’ — TRAILER

Feast Your Eyes on the Final Season of ‘EastSiders’ — TRAILER

Kit Williamson’s Emmy-nominated series EastSiders is headed back to Netflix on December 1 for a fourth and final season and looks set to tackle age-old questions about long term relationships, open marriages, and commitment with a lot of humor, sex, and drag.

An update on EastSiders’ characters, for those of you familiar with the series: “Cal (Kit Williamson) and Thom (Van Hansis) are back home from season three’s cross-country road trip, still a couple but wondering if they are really just best friends with benefits. Douglas (Willam) and Quincy (Stephen Guarino) are engaged to be married, but with very different ideas about what a gay wedding should be. Hillary (Brianna Brown) and Ian (John Halbach) are cohabiting peacefully; and Jeremy (Matthew McKelligon) and Derrick (Leith M. Burke) have taken a huge step in their relationship by fostering a child.”

Joining the cast this season are Jake Choi (Single Parents), Hailee Sahar (Pose), Tom Lenk (Buffy the Vampire Slayer), Daniel Newman (The Walking Dead), Lin Shaye (Insidious), Bryan Batt (Mad Men), Traci Lords (Crybaby, Swedish Dicks), Manila Luzon and Katya Zamolodchikova (Drag Race), Max Emerson, Chris Salvatore (Eating Out), Jai Rodriguez (original Queer Eye), Brea Grant (Heroes), Satya Bhabha (Sens8), Jolly Abraham (Law & Order: SVU and Broadway’s Bombay Dreams), Seth Daniel (Feral), adult film star Adam Ramzi, drag performers Marta Beatchu and Biqtch Pudding (Dragula), Mark Kanemura (So You Think You Can Dance), RJ Aguilar, Andres Camilo, Rick Twombley-King and Griff Twombley-King.

Check out the trailer:

The post Feast Your Eyes on the Final Season of ‘EastSiders’ — TRAILER appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Feast Your Eyes on the Final Season of ‘EastSiders’ — TRAILER

This Thanksgiving, Support and Center Native American People

This Thanksgiving, Support and Center Native American People

Post submitted by Ana Flores, HRC Senior Manager, Inclusion, Education & Engagement

As people across the U.S. gather to celebrate Thanksgiving, it is important to acknowledge that much of what we have been taught about the holiday is actually unverified. Too often, we rewrite history instead of facing difficult truths about our past.

Many people make reference to a celebration of a successful harvest by the pilgrims that was attended by some members of the Wampanoag tribe; while others point to the massacre of the Pequot people as the first Thanksgiving celebration. Thanksgiving itself was not established as a holiday until 1863.

What is clear is that the story that we hear in classrooms of the Pilgrims and Indians living in harmony after sitting down to enjoy a Thanksgiving meal together is not true.

Despite centuries of systematic displacement, marginalization and sustained genocide at the hands of European settlers and European-Americans, Native Americans have shaped the land we know today. Yet, Native American people are still deeply marginalized within the U.S.

Native Americans face high levels of poverty, addiction and incarceration. They experience the highest levels of food insecurity. Native American women and LGBTQ Native American youth face heartbreaking levels of physical and sexual violence. LGBTQ Native American youth report high levels of stress, anxiety and rejection in their homes and communities; as well as high rates of attempted suicide and self medication.

As you come together with friends and loved ones to celebrate this holiday, here are some ways to practice allyship with Native American communities:

  • Recognize that all lands in the U.S. are Native lands, and research more about the tribes that are indigenous to your area.
  • Learn more about the history of Native American displacement and genocide in the U.S. and share it with your friends. We recommend starting by reading Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz’s “An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States.”
  • Elevate the work of organizations that are run by Native American people and doing work to empower the Native American community.
  • Learn more about traditional Native American foods and try to incorporate them into your Thanksgiving dinner.

This Thanksgiving, we must honor and support our Native American family and recommit to centering their lives and stories.

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