'Glee' Star Cheyenne Jackson Marries Beau Jason Landeau

'Glee' Star Cheyenne Jackson Marries Beau Jason Landeau
“Glee” star Cheyenne Jackson got married, everyone! Now that’s something to sing about.

On Saturday evening, Jackson tied the knot with entrepreneur beau Jason Landau in an outdoor ceremony at a friend’s estate in Encino, California. The two made their vows in front of loved ones, including celebrity pals Jane Lynch, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Leah Remini and Alicia Silverstone.

Jackson and Landau met last year, while they were both in rehab for alcohol addiction.

“It was love at first sight,” Jackson told People.

The two got engaged in February, six months after Jackson divorced his first husband, Monte Lapka.

“We’ve both been through a lot in our lives,” Jackson told People. “We got sober together. Now we sing and we dance together. It blows my mind.”

Congratulations to the happy couple!

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/09/15/cheyenne-jackson-marries-jason-landau_n_5823468.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Welcome To Cameroon, Where Drinking Bailey’s Irish Cream Means You’re Gay And Gets You Thrown In Jail

Welcome To Cameroon, Where Drinking Bailey’s Irish Cream Means You’re Gay And Gets You Thrown In Jail

il_340x270.324822995A man in Cameroon has been convicted of homosexuality after drinking Bailey’s Irish Cream. He’ll now spend the next half a decade in jail for consuming what a judge called a “woman’s beverage.”

Michel Togue, the man’s attorney, says this sort of thing happens all the in the west African nation, where having gay sex can land a person up to five years behind bars. He told ThinkProgress that he has defended dozens of men and women “accused” of being gay, most of whom were never actually caught in the act of having sex.

Togue explained that in Cameroon, many innocent people have been accused of homosexuality by neighbors, family members or scorned ex-lovers looking to settle scores. Once an accusation is made, police make arrests based on how individuals present themselves. For example, if somebody has a job that doesn’t fit their gender, such as a male hairdresser, it could be used as evidence of homosexuality.

“To catch people having sex, to catch them in the act, you have to break the law. You have to violate their privacy, which is an offense,” he said. “But the police will not focus on the offense of breaking the privacy of someone, but they will focus on the fact that they saw two people of the same gender having sex.”

In Tongue’s client’s case, the judge convicted the man for having “feminine mannerisms” and for drinking Bailey’s Irish Cream, which he believed should only be consumed by women.

Togue says the growing stigma against being gay is scaring people away getting tested for HIV. “They can’t go to the hospital for the treatment or even for a test because they’re afraid,” he explained. He then recalled a case in which a man told a nurse he had engaged in gay sex and the nurse reported him to police.

Togue says he hopes that people in Cameroon will learn that “a homosexual is our friend, is our brother, is our sister, is part of our family — is not a stranger, not someone coming from outside.”

Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/VOVtfSgOTeo/welcome-to-cameroon-where-drinking-baileys-irish-cream-means-youre-gay-and-gets-you-thrown-in-jail-20140915

Homophobic Minnesota Vikings Special Teams Coach Mike Priefer Returns From Suspension

Homophobic Minnesota Vikings Special Teams Coach Mike Priefer Returns From Suspension

Screen Shot 2014-09-15 at 1.33.08 PMMinnesota Vikings special teams coach Mike Priefer is being reinstated today after sitting out two games of his three game suspension. Priefer’s suspension came earlier this year following accusations from former Vikings kicker Chris Kluwe claiming that Priefer was active and central to the promotion of locker room homophobia and general hostility.

“Mike Priefer also said on multiple occasions that I would wind up burning in hell with the gays, and that the only truth was Jesus Christ and the Bible.” Kluwe wrote in an open letter Deadspin published in January. “He said all this in a semi-joking tone, and I responded in kind, as I felt a yelling match with my coach over human rights would greatly diminish my chances of remaining employed.”

While Priefer denied the accusations against him, a third party investigation into the matter corroborated at least one of Kluwe’s claims of homophobic exchanges with priefer. Kluwe, who claimed that he was let go from the Vikings because of his support of the LGBT community, recently reached a settlement with the Minnesota team after threatening to sue.

“I regret what has occurred and what I said.” Priefer said in a press conference following his suspension. “I am extremely sorry but I will learn from this situation and will work on educating others to create more tolerance and respect.”


Charles Pulliam-Moore

www.towleroad.com/2014/09/homophobic-minnesota-vikings-special-teams-coach-mike-priefer-returns-from-suspension.html

Ashley Judd 'Absolutely' Feels The Misogyny On Set In Hollywood

Ashley Judd 'Absolutely' Feels The Misogyny On Set In Hollywood
Ashley Judd has never been quiet about the media’s sexist coverage of women, and now she’s opening up about the misogyny she’s encountered as a working woman in Hollywood.

The 46-year-old actress sat down with HitFlix on Sept. 12 to discuss her upcoming movie “Dolphin Tale 2.” About three minutes into the interview, HitFlix’s Louis Virtel brought up Judd’s articulate 2012 Daily Beast article on the media’s “misogynistic assault on all women,” and asked if she’s ever encountered this sexism in her professional life. Her response: “Absolutely.”

Judd pointed out both subtle and blatant sexism she’s experienced in the workplace:

Recently, in part of the strength of my growing up — and I don’t mean just in years — but growing up spiritually, growing up emotionally, is being able to risk authority figures disapproval in order to point out what I think is workplace discrimination.

She also recounted numerous times she received “sexually charged” comments from producers and fell victim to “egregious sexual harassment” from a “famous movie mogul.” Judd told Virtel that, despite being a well-versed women’s studies minor, it wasn’t until years later when her and other actors traded similar stories of this man’s inappropriate behavior that she realized it was sexual harassment.

At the time… I had no idea at the time that that’s what was happening to me. It took years for me to identify in retrospect that that is what had occurred. Later, when some of us other actors got together and talked about it, “Oh yeah, he did that to me too.”

Judd used this anecdote to point out the importance of “female-to-female alliances” and that it’s not just women who are negatively affected by everyday misogyny. “I think the patriarchy is as abusive and exclusive to boys and men as it is girls and women and totally limits these constraining definitions of who we are and how we’re supposed to be,” she said.

That’s definitely a “W” in our book of feminist takedowns.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/09/15/ashley-judd-misogyny-in-hollywood-hitflix-interview_n_5822170.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Race to Supreme Court Is Turning Into A Real Nail-Biter

Race to Supreme Court Is Turning Into A Real Nail-Biter

The Supreme Court 2011The U.S. Supreme Court has turned into something like the most popular girl in high school, with over a dozen states jostling to invite it to the legal equivalent of senior prom in a few weeks.

September 29 is the big date when the Justices return from their summer vacation, which we assume they spent backpacking around Europe and staying at hostels in an attempt to “discover themselves.” They’ll be meeting in a closed session to look at some of the petitions before them, and decide which ones they want to take.

Or they might not. They could always decide to put off the decision until later. That would be particularly likely if there’s a decision in the Ninth or Sixth Circuits between now and the end of the month. A whole bunch of cases are awaiting a decision right now, and the Justices might decide to wait until petitions from those cases show up. (Or they might not. They are capricious, like cats.)

Also this week, we have some delightful news about Stuart Delery, one of the unsung heroes of the marriage equality movement who just got a well-deserved raise. While you were getting all worked up about whether Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie should get married, Stuart was leading all the hard work at the Department of Justice to overturn DOMA. For years, he’s been the DOJ’s champion for marriage equality, and with last week’s raise, he’s now the highest-ranking out government lawyer in American history. Somebody please throw a parade so we can make him grand marshall of it.

matt baume

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/PrNqLHW48qs/race-to-supreme-court-is-turning-into-a-real-nail-biter-20140915

LGBT BLOG




You must be 18 years old or older to chat