First Full Trailer For 'Jurassic World' Debuts: VIDEO

First Full Trailer For 'Jurassic World' Debuts: VIDEO

Pratt1

The first full trailer for the hotly anticipated Jurassic World has finally hit. The latest promo reveals that Jurassic World will continue to delve into its franchise’s tried and true exploration of mankind’s arrogance and lack of respect for nature. The video also delivers a healthy dose of Chris Pratt (one of the sexiest men alive) and Bryce Dallas Howard who proudly proclaims that she and the other Jurassic Park scientists have created a new hybrid dinosaur. A revelation that leaves Pratt gobsmacked: “You just went and made a new dinosaur? Probably not a good idea.” A more succinct way of saying, “Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could that they didn’t stop to think if they should.”

Go deeper into the park, AFTER THE JUMP…

Jurassic World starring Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Ty Simpkins, and BD Wong opens in theaters June 12 of next year.  

Bryce

 


Sean Mandell

www.towleroad.com/2014/11/first-full-trailer-for-jurassic-world-debuts-video.html

Conservative Pastors Vow Not To Perform Civil Marriages At All — Gay Or Straight

Conservative Pastors Vow Not To Perform Civil Marriages At All — Gay Or Straight
(RNS) What’s the surest way conservative pastors can avoid any government mandate to perform same-sex marriages? According to one prominent religious journal and a growing number of ministers, the answer is not to perform any civil marriages at all.

First Things, a conservative religious publication, has launched a movement encouraging pastors to refuse to perform marriages as representatives of the state. A signing statement called “The Marriage Pledge” has been posted to the journal’s website, where ministers can affix their names electronically. The pledge was drafted by Ephraim Radner, an ordained Anglican and professor of historical theology at Toronto School of Theology’s Wycliffe College, and Christopher Seitz, an ordained Episcopal priest and senior research professor at Wycliffe.

“In many jurisdictions, including many of the United States, civil authorities have adopted a definition of marriage that explicitly rejects the age-old requirement of male-female pairing,” the pledge says. “In a few short years or even months, it is very likely that this new definition will become the law of the land, and in all jurisdictions the rights, privileges, and duties of marriage will be granted to men in partnership with men, and women with women.”

The document concludes: “we, the undersigned, commit ourselves to disengaging civil and Christian marriage in the performance of our pastoral duties. We will no longer serve as agents of the state in marriage. We will no longer sign government-provided marriage certificates. … We will preside only at those weddings that seek to establish a Christian marriage in accord with the principles articulated and lived out from the beginning of the Church’s life.”

As of Thursday (Nov. 20), nearly 150 people had signed the pledge, including ordained clergy, laypeople, chaplains and at least one bishop.

On Tuesday, First Things’ editor, R.R. Reno, teed up the effort with a column titled, “A Time to Rend.”
Reno wrote: “For a long time Christianity has sewn its teachings into the fabric of Western culture. That was a good thing. … But the season of sewing is ending. Now is a time for rending, not for the sake of disengaging from culture or retreating from the public square, but so that our salt does not lose its savor.”

The concept that civil and religious marriage should be separate is not entirely novel. At U.S. Catholic, columnist Bryan Cones has asked, “Is it time to separate church and state marriages?” And writer Len Woolley raised similar questions at the Mormon-run Deseret News.

But the idea isn’t just limited to conservatives.

Gene Robinson, the first openly gay Episcopal bishop, proposed the idea as early as 2009. By 2011, three North Carolina church pastors and at least one in Virginia quit signing marriage licenses as a way of opposing state bans on same-sex marriages they felt violated their conscience.

And in July of this year, Paul Waldman argued at The American Prospect, a progressive publication, that religious couples should fill out state-mandated marriage forms and then have the religious ceremony of their choosing. “The wedding, in other words, should be a ritual with no content prescribed by the state, no ‘By the power vested in me by the state of Indiana’ at all.”

Waldman added: “The state doesn’t tell you how to celebrate Christmas or Ramadan, and it shouldn’t tell you how to get married.”

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/11/25/first-things-gay-marriage-pledge_n_6194230.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Older Gay Guys Are Looking For Love But Sometimes Just Younger Tricks

Older Gay Guys Are Looking For Love But Sometimes Just Younger Tricks

Have you ever fantasized about turning your real-life ups and downs into a miniseries? The wacky brainchild of out gay actor Leon Accord, the Old Dogs & New Tricks web series is now in its third season of whimsical comedic melodrama following the lives of four fifty-something Hollywood industry gays played by Accord, Jeffrey Patrick Olson, Curt Bonnem and David Pevsner. Revolving mainly around their lives as actors, agents, etc. the show includes a steady stream of amusing guest stars like this past week’s drop-in sub-lebrity Rutanya Alda (yes, she played the housekeeper Carol Ann in Mommie Dearest) and over-the-top actor Bruce L. Hart. And yes, parts of the plot involve these older dogs dating some younger tricks — but all in the most wholesome gay comedy context. Catch up on the first two episodes of this season now (last week’s season premiere co-stars comedian Mo Gaffney) and tune in for the special Thanksgiving episode this coming Wednesday. You can also find the first two seasons on Hulu or WolfeOnDemand.

Jenni

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/8zqTUqE2qNU/older-gay-guys-are-looking-for-love-but-sometimes-just-younger-tricks-20141125

Arizona Lesbian Couple Nelda Majors, Karen Bailey Marry After 57 Years Together: VIDEO

Arizona Lesbian Couple Nelda Majors, Karen Bailey Marry After 57 Years Together: VIDEO

Majors

When they met in their college dorm in Texas in 1957, Nelda Majors and Karen Bailey never dreamed of telling anyone they were gay — let alone getting married. 

In fact, Majors and Bailey didn’t come out publicly until they’d been together for 50 years — when they were inadvertently outed by lesbian Houston City Councilwoman Sue Lovell during an inauguration ceremony. 

After almost 57 years together, Majors and Bailey finally celebrated their marriage at the Orpheum Theater in downtown Phoenix on Sunday.

Majors and Bailey, who have two daughters, spent most of their lives in Houston, but retired to Arizona.  

They were among the plaintiffs in a federal lawsuit challenging Arizona’s marriage bans, which were struck down in October. They also were among the first couples to receive marriage licenses

Majors and Bailey invited the public to the ceremony on Sunday, and hundreds showed up. 

From AZfamiliy.com

“They feel that 56 and a half years together is a long engagement, but today they now have 1,134 federal laws on their side to protect their relationship,” the officiant said. … 

“Oh it’s much more than what we envisioned,” Bailey said. “I don’t think we could have ever imagined the people that have helped us, the vendors that have helped us. Our wedding assistant was unbelievable and we could have never imagined that it would be as wonderful as it’s been.”

Watch the report, along with a 2012 video of the couple talking about their relationship, AFTER THE JUMP … 


John Wright

www.towleroad.com/2014/11/arizona-lesbian-couple-nelda-majors-karen-bailey-celebrate-marriage-after-57-years-video.html

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