Tag Archives: Hayley Kiyoko

The GLAAD Wrap: ‘Hocus Pocus 2’ trailer out, trailer out for season three of ‘Harley Quinn,’ new music from Hayley Kiyoko, Rina Sawayama, Willow, and more!

The GLAAD Wrap: ‘Hocus Pocus 2’ trailer out, trailer out for season three of ‘Harley Quinn,’ new music from Hayley Kiyoko, Rina Sawayama, Willow, and more!


www.glaad.org/blog/glaad-wrap-hocus-pocus-2-trailer-out-trailer-out-season-three-harley-quinn-new-music-hayley

The GLAAD Wrap: New trailer for ‘Schitt’s Creek’; ‘Special’ and ‘David Makes Man’ renewed; new music from Hayley Kiyoko and Dearly; and more!

The GLAAD Wrap: New trailer for ‘Schitt’s Creek’; ‘Special’ and ‘David Makes Man’ renewed; new music from Hayley Kiyoko and Dearly; and more!

Photo Credit: Hayley Kiyoko

Every week, The GLAAD Wrap brings you LGBTQ-related entertainment news highlights, fresh stuff to watch out for, and fun diversions to help you kick off the weekend.

1) As press launches for Mavel’s The Eternals, confirmation has come out of the CCXP 2019 expo that Phastos, played by Brian Tyree Henry, will by gay, as early footage showed him with a male partner and kids. The film will be released November 6, 2020. In more Disney-adjacent news, out actor and writer Lena Waithe announced that she will be in the new Disney and Pixar film Onward, playing the Role of Specter. The film will be in theaters March 6, 2020.

So excited to announce that I’m part of Disney and Pixar’s Onward as Specter. Cannot wait for you all to see it in theaters on March 6, 2020! #PixarOnward @Disney @Pixar pic.twitter.com/a3vVz1flR6

— Lena Waithe (@LenaWaithe) December 16, 2019

2) Out actor and comedian Jaboukie Young-White has been cast in Dating in New York, a new comedy that explores modern dating tropes in New York City. The film follows Wendy (Francesca Reale) and Miles (Young-White) who are thrown together to navigate the city and each other’s dating lives. In more film news, out filmmaker Nisha Ganatra will be directing an upcoming feature about and Indian boy band for Universal Pictures.

Francesca Reale & Jaboukie Young-White Star In ‘Dating in New York’; Terry Moore, Isabella Blake-Thomas Topline ‘Evie Rose’ t.co/5KdIx4m162 pic.twitter.com/Cv7zyq6Bzq

— DEADLINE (@DEADLINE) December 14, 2019

3) Emmy and GLAAD Media Award-nominated comedy Schitt’s Creek has released the first trailer for it’s sixth and final season, which includes the wedding of queer character David and Patrick. Watch the trailer below. In more TV news, Fox has picked up Housebroken, a new comedy from written by and starring out actress Clea DuVall, among others. The show will follow neighborhood animals in the suburbs exploring their human’s neurosis.

The full trailer is here.

And we wouldn’t trade our stay in #SchittsCreek for anything.

The final season premieres January 7th on @CBC. pic.twitter.com/1qXkLa7VBR

— Schitt’s Creek (@SchittsCreek) December 20, 2019

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4) Netflix has renewed comedy series Special for a second season. Created by and starring Ryan O’Connell, the show follows O’Connell’s character navigating the world as a gay man with cerebral palsy and going after the life that he wants. The first season is available to stream on Netflix. OWN’s David Makes Man, from out creator Tarell Alvin McCraney, has also been renewed for a second season.

5) Chilling Adventures of Sabrina has cast three new actors for part three of the series. This includes Jonathan Whitesell as Robin, a young man who comes to down with the carnival and develops feelings for Theo. Part three will premiere January 24 on Netflix. In other Netflix news, the trailer for the third season of Anne With an E which features gay character Cole, has been released. The third and final season will be released on January 3.

6) Apple has picked up docuseries Visible: Out on Television from filmmakers Ryan White and Jessica Hargraves, and executive produced by Wanda Sykes and Wilson Cruz. The series will investigate the history and importance of LGBTQ representation on television. Janet Mock, Margaret Cho, Asia Kate Dillon, Neil Patrick Harris, and Lena Waithe are among the narrators of the show.

Apple Sets LGBTQ Docuseries ‘Visible: Out On Television’, Wanda Sykes And Wilson Cruz Producing t.co/EYR6lpCjv5 pic.twitter.com/E83D7XxkhQ

— DEADLINE (@DEADLINE) December 17, 2019

7) Out signer Hayley Kiyoko released a new single “Runaway” last Friday. The song, off of her upcoming album I’m Too Sensitive For This Shit. Listen to the song here, and by tickets for her tour here.

8) Nashville artist Dearly, a.k.a Amanda Jones, came out as gay with the release of her single “Forget Your Love.” The singer tells Billboard, “It’s taken a while to learn how to really love myself, to be really proud of who I am as a person and as an artist, but I’m so thankful for where I am now.”

9) Out bisexual actress Tessa Thompson is starring and producing in a new podcast The Left Right Game, where she will place Alice, a journalist who tries to make a name for herself by following a group paranormal explore explorers. The 10-episode series will premiere in February.

10) Fraud is a film that is currently funding that tells the story of a trans woman who commits identity theft to pay for her surgery. The film wants to move past the all too common coming out or transition narratives, and too show a trans woman in all the complexity that stories give to cis people. Click here to learn more and contribute to the project.

December 20, 2019

www.glaad.org/blog/glaad-wrap-new-trailer-schitts-creek-special-and-david-makes-man-renewed-new-music-hayley

Guys like Liam Payne need to stop writing songs about bisexual people

Guys like Liam Payne need to stop writing songs about bisexual people

This article was previously published on Medium under a different headline.

Monosexuals (people attracted to one gender), it’s time to talk about the songs you’ve been writing about bi people. More specifically, it’s time to admit that you need to stop writing songs about us. You’ve proven too many times that you are simply not up to the task.

As far as I can tell, people who aren’t bi have only even written two types of songs about bi people:

  1. “My partner (usually girlfriends because bi men barely exist in mainstream consciousness) is bi, it’s so hot, we’re gonna have a threesome!”
  2. “The person I like/have been flirting with got a boy/girlfriend (which ever would make them in a “straight passing” relationship) instead of being with me, so they must be a fake gay!”

This week, #LiamPayneIsOverParty was trending on Twitter because of the biphobic song on his new album, LP1. “Both Ways” is supposedly a song about Payne’s bisexual girlfriend and includes such romantic lines as “My girl, she like it both ways/She like the way it all taste/Couple more, we’ll call it foreplay/No, no, I don’t discriminate/Bring it back to my place/Yeah, she like it both ways (Both ways).”

Payne is not the first straight man to use the fetishization of bi women as a catchy hook in his music. Other examples include the Weekend’s “Lost in the Fire” (You said you might be into girls/Said you going through a phase/Keeping your heart safe/Well, baby, you can bring a friend/She can ride on top your face/While I f*ck you straight) and even one of my guilty-pleasures, Tinie Tempah’s “Miami to Ibiza” (I’ll wake up in the morning with a/Mild case of amnesia/With a girl that like a girl/Like Lindsay Lohan and Queen Latifah(. Th)se songs and the many others like them perpetuate the dangerous stereotype of bi women as hyper-sexual, sex toys for straight couples, or down for anything.

These stereotypes are one reason why bi women face such high rates of sexual violence, with research showing that up to 66% or even 75% of bi women have experienced sexual violence. We can no longer tolerate fetishization in pop culture like music or TV, especially when the sexual violence it leads to is then completely either completely erased or ignored. At current, my organization the Bi Survivors Network, is the only resources specifically for bi survivors in the UK, with many bi survivors reporting they have had negative experiences when attempted to access help or support.

Bi people also have to deal with the second type of invalidating songs, often from gay or lesbian artists (I’ve personally come across a lot more from lesbians than gay men). Examples include GRLWood’s “Bisexual” (Every time we talk, it’s about your boyfriend/I don’t really wanna hear anymore about him/Can you talk about anything besides your boyfriend?/Good goddamn, I don’t wanna hear about your boyfriend), Hayley Kiyoko’s “Curious” (Calling me up, so late at night/Are we just friends?/You say you wanted me, but you’re sleeping with him) and Tegan and Sarah’s “Boyfriend” (You treat me like your boyfriend/And trust me like a like a very best friend/You kiss me like your boyfriend/You call me up like you want your best friend/You turn me on like you want your boyfriend/But I don’t want to be your secret anymore).

All of these songs rely on the biphobic stereotypes that bi women are just straight women looking for a bit of adventure, unwilling to leave their boyfriends, cheaters, and just all-round bad or unreliable partners.

(Side note; I’ve always wondered why the women who write these songs think they are better for the women they’re writing about than their boyfriends, when they seem so generally resentful of them and hung up on bisexual stereotypes.)

While these songs aren’t as damaging as those written by straight men, mainly because queer artists will never been given as much mainstream attention or clout, they do contribute to the “bad partner” narrative that makes bi people more vulnerable to jealousy-based abuse and to the double discrimination that causes bi people to have worse mental health outcomes than gay men or lesbians.

As if these tropes being so common in songs wasn’t bad enough, the frequent backlash against bisexual artists for creating songs about our experiences salts the wounds. As I wrote about earlier this year, when female musicians such as Demi Lavato, Rita Ora, or Ariana Grande who have up until now been assumed straight release songs about their multi-gender attraction, they are often accused of queerbaiting or ‘doing it for attention’ because bi people face a higher burden of proof when it comes to our queer credentials than other members of the LGBT community.

So monosexuals, it’s time to stop writing songs about us. You’ve done a pretty terrible job so far. Might I suggest taking a step back and letting us create our own music about our experiences (and in turn accepting that it’s okay if we’re queer in a way that’s different to you). After all, which some many amazing bi/pan/queer artists out there such as Janelle Monea, Christine & The Queens, Frank Ocean, and Harry Styles churning out bop after bop, we’ve got it covered. Thanks.

Lois Shearing is a bisexual activist, freelance writer, and content marketer. They founded the Bi Survivors Network and the anti-biphobia campaign DoBetterBiUs.

www.queerty.com/guys-like-liam-payne-need-stop-writing-songs-bisexual-people-20191214?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29