Australian School Official Banned This Film About Kids of Gay Parents

Australian School Official Banned This Film About Kids of Gay Parents

Gayby Baby

In August 2015, the Australian documentary “Gayby Baby,” which follows the stories of four children raised in same-sex families, made the front page of Sydney’s Daily Telegraph with the headline “Gay Class Uproar.” Above it, the tagline read, “Parents outraged as Sydney school swaps lessons for PC movie session.”

“When you get six phone calls from your publicist at 5 in the morning, something must be wrong,” says director Maya Newell. Along with her former film school classmate, producer Charlotte Mars, she spent four years getting to know the families in the film.

“Gayby Baby,” which will be available on streaming services May 1, is about Gus, an energetic 10-year-old whose mothers are concerned about his growing obsession with the hyper-macho world of wrestling; Ebony, 12, a talented singer who dreams of getting into a prestigious performing arts high school; 11-year-old Graham, a shy kid who was neglected by his birth parents and only now, with the help of his adoptive dads, is learning how to read; and Matt, a precocious 11-year-old who is questioning his mother’s devout faith in God.

Director Newell, raised by lesbian parents herself — her biological father, a friend of her mom, donated sperm — remembers the impact the 2010 film “The Kids Are All Right” had on her. It was the first time she had ever seen a family resembling hers represented in the mainstream media. When she set out to make her own documentary feature, she wanted to shine the spotlight on the kids, whose voices are often left out of the often heated political debates surrounding gay marriage and adoption.

After “Gayby Baby” had its premiere at Canada’s Hot Docs Film Festival, it only made sense to Newell and producer Mars that the kids in the film be able to share their stories with other kids their age. So they decided to host special previews of the film at schools before it was released in theaters. They worked with about 40 schools across Australia, including Newell’s alma mater Burwood Girls High, and planned to screen it on Aug. 28, 2015, as part of the nationwide Wear It Purple Day campaign, which promotes sexual acceptance among youth and raises awareness of anti-LGBT bullying.

daily telegraphBut that was before New South Wales Education Minister Adrian Piccoli issued a memo to the state’s principals banning every public school in the state from screening “Gayby Baby” during school hours. And that’s when Gus’ face appeared on the front cover of the Daily Telegraph as a symbol of the “gay class uproar” controversy.

First-time feature filmmakers Newell and Mars quickly began receiving congratulations that their film was getting national attention. But they were horrified.

“There were kids that had never been bullied before, who were bullied that day at school because of that headline and what these politicians were saying,” says Newell.

“You have the leadership deciding that our film does not belong in schools, which is effectively saying that our families don’t belong there either,” says Mars.

Most frustrating to the filmmakers was that it was coming from critics who they say hadn’t seen the film and assumed it had a political agenda.

First-time feature filmmakers Maya Newell and Charlotte Mars quickly began receiving congratulations that their film was getting national attention, when a controversy erupted about screening the documentary in schools. In reality, they were horrified. (Credit: Courtesy of SUPERGRAVITY Pictures)

First-time feature filmmakers Maya Newell and Charlotte Mars quickly began receiving congratulations that their film was getting national attention, when a controversy erupted about screening the documentary in schools. In reality, they were horrified. (Credit: Courtesy of SUPERGRAVITY Pictures)

“The question we often get as kids [of LGBT parents] is: ‘What’s it like being raised by two moms? How’s it different?” says Newell. “And it’s like, ‘Different than what?’ Like everything, some things are different and some things are the same.”

Gus’ parents don’t like that their son play-wrestles his much younger sister to tears. They turn it into a conversation about how roughhousing is okay, but a type of masculinity that often mistreats women and queer people is not. Ebony’s desire to get accepted to the performing arts school is partially motivated by her hope of being in an environment where her family will be accepted, but personal goals are put on a backburner as her baby brother’s seizures land him in the hospital. Graham, who desperately wants to read so he can fit in with his new classmates, is being advised by his dads to lie about his fathers’ relationship for fear of intolerance. Matt admits to his priest that one of the main reasons he’s questioning God is because the Church tells him that his lesbian mothers are sinners.

According to the Daily Telegraph article, parents were upset that their children were asked to wear purple, that they were asked to not only watch but support a documentary on gay parenting in place of regular classes.

“Schools are supposed to be neutral and cannot propagate a political view,” Presbyterian Minister Mark Powell said. Islamic spiritual leader Imam Mohammad Trad said he thinks the issue of gay parents should be a private conversation between parents and their children.

Despite the backlash, the “Gayby Baby” filmmakers have had many supporters along the way. Their initial crowdfunding campaign to make the film raised over $100,000, which, at the time, was the most any single film project had crowdfunded in Australia. After the controversy, high-profile supporters and politicians stood up for them, including Australian politician Penny Wong, who penned an op-ed for The Guardian.

“Talking about others’ sexuality or attacking 12 year olds are priorities for some, but it’s hard to comprehend how either could be more important than preventing bullying and keeping our children safe,” wrote Wong, who has two children with her lesbian partner. “I’d encourage them to turn down the outrage and watch the film. They might learn something from these kids about respect, love and tolerance.”

Newell and Mars launched The Gayby Project, an outreach program in association with the film, which targets discriminatory legislation and aims to be an online resource that supports diverse families. In the last year, they’ve been privately showing their film to political power players hoping to help make change.

“The legislation is important, but it’s just the first step,” says Newell. “The next step is the cultural shift of how people perceive LGBT people and their families, and in many ways, that’s much more difficult. But that’s where storytelling really helps.”

“When my mother came out, my grandmother was devastated because she thought it meant that her daughter would never have a family and that she would lead a lonely barren life,” says Newell, who counts herself as part of a growing international community of “gayby boomers.” “So one of the greatest responses we’ve had has been people who’ve come up to us and say that after watching the movie, they really wanted to start a family.”

The May 1 streaming video release of “Gayby Baby” coincides with International Family Equality Day. Newell and Mars are partnering with LGBT and family equality organizations worldwide to both host theatrical screenings and participate in a digital viewing parties. For more on the film and The Gayby Baby Project, visit their website.

This story first published on PRI.org.

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Advocates and Civil Rights Leaders Convene at HRC Rally to Demand Repeal of Anti-LGBT HB 1523

Advocates and Civil Rights Leaders Convene at HRC Rally to Demand Repeal of Anti-LGBT HB 1523

Hundreds of state civil rights advocates will join HRC President Chad Griffin, former NAACP President Ben Jealous, Bishop Brian Seage of the Mississippi Episcopal Diocese, and other equality partners at HRC’s Rally to Repeal H.B. 1523, today at 3:30 p.m. CT, rain or shine, on the south side of the Mississippi State Capitol.

Advocates will march from the Capitol to the Governor’s Mansion for the rally, where they will call on Governor Phil  Bryant, Lt. Governor Tate Reeves and House Speaker Philip Gunn to listen to the broad chorus of fair-minded voters, national and local businesses, entertainers and sports figures, calling for the repeal of this discriminatory measure before it goes into effect on July 1.

H.B. 1523 has opened a massive loophole allowing almost any individual or organization to use broad justifications to discriminate against LGBTQ Mississippians at work, at school and in their communities. Under this new law, almost any individual or organization could justify discrimination against LGBTQ people, single mothers, unwed couples, and others. Tax-payer funded faith-based organizations could: refuse to recognize the marriages of same-sex couples for provision of critical services including emergency shelter; deny children in need of loving homes placement with LGBTQ families including the child’s own family member; and refuse to sell or rent a for-profit home to an LGBTQ person — even if the organization receives government funding. HB 1523 even legalizes Kim Davis-style discrimination by allowing government employees to abdicate their duties and refuse to license or solemnize marriages for LGBTQ people.

Watch live on HRC’s Facebook page at approximately 4 p.m. CDT.

www.hrc.org/blog/advocates-and-civil-rights-leaders-convene-at-hrc-rally-to-demand-repeal-of?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Austin May Become 1st Texas City to Boycott North Carolina, Mississippi Over Anti-LGBT Laws

Austin May Become 1st Texas City to Boycott North Carolina, Mississippi Over Anti-LGBT Laws

Austin North Carolina

Austin may become the first municipality in Texas to join dozens of cities and states across the country that have banned taxpayer-funded travel by public employees to Mississippi and North Carolina.

Austin’s Human Rights Commission endorsed a resolution this week recommending that the city join at least 17 others that are boycotting the two states in response to recently enacted anti-LGBT legislation.

The move could be particularly important symbolically for a city in Texas, given that similar bills are expected to be introduced here next year.

From The Austin Statesman:

The resolution “asks the Austin City Council to boycott both Mississippi and North Carolina by banning official travel to and business with these states, except in cases where the public health and safety are concerned” until the laws are changed.

The advisory board’s recommendation also said that if the City Council approves the resolution, Mayor Steve Adler should write a letter encouraging the NBA to move the 2017 All-Star Game away from Charlotte, N.C.

“What these states have passed is not what this city is about,” said Human Rights Commission member Paula Buls, who co-sponsored the resolution. She added that if similar state legislation is passed in Texas, Austin’s own ordinances protecting its LGBT community would be affected, such as the gender-neutral bathroom ordinancethat went into effect in January 2015.

Last month, I asked Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings whether the city would consider a similar ban.

“I am saddened when lawmakers in other states decide to do things that I believe to be discriminatory and contrary to my point of view,” Rawlings told me for a story in The Texas Observer. “I also wouldn’t want to unfairly punish the good mayors in states like North Carolina who are fighting for LGBT rights.”

Because both Austin and Dallas have weak-mayor forms of government, the bans require action by the full City Council. This would not be the case in Houston, which has a strong-mayor form of government, and where voters recently repealed an Equal Rights Ordinance (HERO). I’ve reached out to Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner’s office about a possible boycott of North Carolina and Mississippi — which would be significant in light of the defeat of HERO — but officials haven’t responded.

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This Major Relationship Step Has Caused Countless Feelings Of Panic In Gay Couples

This Major Relationship Step Has Caused Countless Feelings Of Panic In Gay Couples

Screen Shot 2016-04-29 at 2.12.42 PM

It could be you have a fantastic family, but it was still a bit of a process for them to come to terms with you coming out.

Even if they seem far along on their journey of embracing you, introducing them to your partner can sometimes feel like two steps back.

Awkward conversation, long silences and faked smiles aren’t how you’d have liked it to go down, that’s for sure.

But including your family in your life is the best way to show them what a loving gay relationship looks like up close, and letting them get the opportunity to know more of the real you is a blessing that they’ll soon realize. We hope.

Below, guys share their feelings surrounding this important step on Whisper:

I

My boyfriend is meeting my parents soon. I

Is it bad that I

My parents are slowly accepting the fact that I

I

My boyfriend is meeting my parents and I don

My boyfriend is finally meeting my parents for the first time. I

My parents are still adjusting to the fact that I

My boyfriend is meeting my family tomorrow. I am so excited because I

My bf is meeting my parents for the first time today. I

My boyfriend is excited to meet my family since I just met his, but I don

My boyfriend is meeting my parents for the first time today. Secretly I don

I

My boyfriend is meeting my whole family tonight. I

My mom and dad can be judgmental but I hope they will be really nice when they meet my boyfriend for the first time. I haven

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Bernie Sanders, Justin Bieber, BYU, Dallas, Ivory Stockpile, Grindr, Janet Jackson, Target, Sunday Stud: NEWS

Bernie Sanders, Justin Bieber, BYU, Dallas, Ivory Stockpile, Grindr, Janet Jackson, Target, Sunday Stud: NEWS

SandersLAWSUITS. Bernie Sanders drops his lawsuit against the DNC: “The move came Friday after an independent investigation into Democratic presidential campaigns’ handling of party voter data. The Sanders team said the investigation vindicated them and showed no evidence that they improperly accessed information belonging to Hillary Clinton‘s campaign. ‘An independent investigation of the firewall failures in the DNC’s shared voter file database has definitively confirmed that the original claims by the DNC and the Clinton campaign were wholly inaccurate,’ the campaign said in a statement.”

$$$ DOWN. Sanders fundraising totals drop: “Sen. Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaign raised $25.8 million in April, a notable decline from a month earlier when he raised $44 million. The Sanders campaign reported the latest fundraising haul on Sunday, noting that it surpassed ‘the campaign’s average monthly total of $17 million.’ Still, what was far more conspicuous was the decline in the most recent fundraising numbers from a month earlier.”

targetTARGET. Pro-Target petition reaches 100,000 signatures. “We need to stand up for transgender people and stand up for those who support transgender people. The AFA pledge to boycott Target currently has over 600,000 1 million signatures. Let us show Target that we stand with them for fair treatment of all of our citizens.”

TOILET TALK. Ted Cruz using “bathroom bills” to his benefit in Indiana: “With polls showing a narrower lead for Mr. Trump in Indiana than in the five Eastern states that he swept on Tuesday, the Cruz campaign’s private polling indicates that the bathroom issue has the power to help close the gap. Moreover, it is fresh in Indiana voters’ minds because of high-profile battles in the state in recent years over gay rights.”

THE TERRIBLE TWOSOME. Ted Cruz and Carly Fiorina release first ad:

MISSISSIPPI. Grammy Museum director and father of gay son Bob Santelli urges state to repeal anti-LGBT “religious freedom” law HB 1523: “Organizers chose Cleveland, Mississippi, for the $20 million project because of the state’s music heritage, something Santelli, a music historian, said he enjoyed during his many visits to the state over the years. The Mississippi museum opened in March, and he said he was excited to share the state’s culture and history with his son. But plans changed after Gov. Phil Bryant signed House Bill 1523. The measure, which becomes law July 1, will let government and business workers cite religious beliefs against same-sex marriage to deny services to people.”

BYUUTAH. Feds exempt BYU from protecting trans students from discrimination: “In a March 15 letter to Gilbert, the U.S. Department of Education agreed that BYU-Idaho should not have to enforce some provisions of Title IX. An education department spokeswoman confirmed Friday that civil rights investigators subsequently stopped their inquiry into the student’s complaint, which was related to classes and housing.”

DALLAS. Self-appointed bathroom cop catches woman using women’s restroom: “…the man who, um, heroically barged into a women’s restroom at Baylor Medical Center in Frisco on Thursday to make sure that Jessica Rush, who manages a local health-food takeout place, was peeing in the proper place. She was, for the record, and her situation isn’t particularly complicated. Rush was born and identifies as female and has no plans to change that. “I look very much like a girl,” she says. “I’m not trying to  transition, nothing like that.”

 

BUZZED. Justin Bieber ditched his dreadlocks:

Instagram Photo

 

tennessee lgbtWASHINGTON. Secretary of State forbids travel to conference in Tennessee: “The Washington secretary of state says no one from her office will attend a national conference in Tennessee in part because of a bill signed by the governor there allowing counselors to refuse to treat patients based the therapist’s religious or personal beliefs. Secretary of State Kim Wyman, a Republican, said in a statement Wednesday that after consideration she will not go to the National Association of Secretaries summer meeting.”

KENYA. Massive ivory stockpile burns to thwart poaching market: “There were huge plumes of smoke and ash over Nairobi National Park on Saturday as Kenya sent a message to poachers. The country burned its biggest ever stockpile of elephant and rhino tusks.”

NEW ZEALAND. Man robbed by Grindr hook-up: “Auckland City police are currently investigating the aggravated robbery, Detective Senior Sergeant Paul Newman said. The robbery appeared to be linked to the connection made between the parties through the app, he said.  ‘We are currently following lines of inquiry and therefore cannot provide specific information at this stage. However, we remind anyone who uses apps, like Grindr, to be aware of their personal safety.’”

MUSIC. Janet Jackson’s latest lyric video “Damnn Baby”.

STUD FOR SUNDAY. Toronto’s Brandon Wickens.

Instagram Photo

Instagram Photo

Instagram Photo

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Instagram Photo

 

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Ted Cruz Continues False Smear Campaign Against Transgender Americans

Ted Cruz Continues False Smear Campaign Against Transgender Americans

Today, HRC released the following statement after Senator Ted Cruz continued his transphobic attacks on NBC’s Meet the Press and CNN’s State of the Union this morning.

“After invoking the importance of the Bill of Rights, Ted Cruz had the gall to spread vicious lies about transgender people and laws that deny us critical freedoms,” said HRC Communications Director Jay Brown. “Ted Cruz’s fear-mongering campaign about attacks in restrooms has never been documented in the decades that more than 100 local non-discrimination protections have existed. The reason we need these local laws in the first place is because Congress has yet to pass a federal law protecting LGBT people, who are at risk of being fired, evicted or denied services in a majority of states because of who they are. Ted Cruz showed us firsthand today how important it is that we elect Hillary Clinton to fight for full federal equality in November.”

Fact checkers have found “there’s no evidence of dangerous predators pretending to be transgender in American bathrooms…” while Politifact rated Ted Cruz’s ad attacking Donald Trump on this issue as “mostly false,” saying “the overall message is highly distorted to scare voters.”

Cruz’s comments this morning are part of an ongoing pattern of anti-transgender rhetoric on the campaign trail. He recently suggested transgender people should “only use restrooms at home and avoid public facilities.” In addition to his recent ad smearing transgender people, his campaign threw a transgender teenager out of a campaign event. At prior campaign events, he launched a bigoted rant against the Obama Administration’s decision to support a transgender student, falsely accusing officials of forcing the school to “let a little boy take showers with junior high girls.”

Elsewhere on the campaign trail, Cruz has decried efforts to lift the ban prohibiting transgender Americans from serving openly in the military, even though the American Medical Association approved a resolution last year that said there is “no medically valid reason to exclude transgender individuals from service in the U.S. military.”

For more on Cruz’s anti-LGBT record, click here.

www.hrc.org/blog/ted-cruz-continues-false-smear-campaign-against-transgender-americans?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

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