Latest News Roundup - April 2009
Thursday, April 30, 2009

You can't make this stuff up

A hoax, my good woman?  No, no, no.  
A 60% off DKNY sale is a hoax.  
Kelly McGillis' love scenes with Tom Cruise were a hoax.  
"Compassionate conservatism" is a hoax.  
Jessica Simpson's singing career is a hoax.  

No, what happened to Matthew Shepard was not a hoax.  It was a horror, one we'd very much like to prevent from ever happening to anyone else again.  

Hate crime legislation sends the message that violent crime against gay, lesbian and transgender people will be taken seriously.  If conservatives have a philosophical difference with that, well, all this could have been avoided if such crimes had been taken seriously in the first place.

 

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Switch hitter

While Alberta slowly, painfully shuffled its way into the 20th century yesterday, the big story was the defection of five-term Republican Senator Arlen Specter to the Democratic party. Apparently, his man-crush on Barack Obama proved irresistable.  I smell a bromance!

There were, of course, other theories.  Lots of them.  All day.  How, how, they cried, could Specter abandon his conservative principles?  Well, here's three reasons:

1)  Republicans are out-of-touch

A new CBS poll reveals that 42% of Americans approve of same-sex marriage -- an increase of nine points in just one month!  Republicans can cry all they want but the majority of the US public likes the gays:

2)  Republicans are dumb

How else to explain a study that found conservatives believing that satirist Stephen Colbert is only pretending to pretend to be conservative?  Apparently, Colbert's celebrations of FOX News designed to mock FOX News are secretly celebrating FOX News!

3) Republicans are absolutely full-on batshit insane

Their "arguments" against gay marriage...

 
...can only remind one of this:
 

So if you want to know why Specter jumped ship, there it is -- he knows he will never be elected again so as long as he's teamed up with the kind of people who think two men at a wedding will bring about the coming of the Sumerian shape-shifting god of destruction Gozer the Traveler

But yes, that is of course insane!  No real Republican is going to make such a wild leap between hypothetical disasters and US politics, right?

Oh.  Nevermind.


Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Classy!

As discussed yesterday, we mourned the death of Bea Arthur because she was one of the great comedians and a classy dame!  But what is this "classy?"  Like pornography, do we only know it when we see it?  Well, here's a handy guide:

CLASSY!
Journalist Rex Wockner, who sat down (in a church!) with Miss USA pageant contestant Carrie Prejean to discuss her opposition to gay marriage.  Watch Wockner display the patience of, well, a saint as Prejean blames her blissfully unthinking bigotry on judge Perez Hilton's "hidden agenda."  Umm...have you seen that guy?  There's nothing hidden about him!

NOT CLASSY!
Francis Begbie, the violent thug in "Trainspotting," who actor Robert Carlyle now says he played as a repressed homosexual.  Great -- a movie that features Ewan McGregor and Jonny Lee Miller and the gay character is Begbie?  There really is no justice!

CLASSY! 
Neil Patrick Harris
, the hilarious and hot host (literally!) of last Sunday's TV Land Awards.  Let him host the Oscars already!

NOT CLASSY! 
The vaguely creepy but hilarious website Heavypetting, which features amateur porn photos (made colourfully PG-13) that accidentally include the family pet.  Inappropriate!

 

CLASSY! 
The students and teachers at Walt Whitman High School in Bethesda, Maryland, who staged a counter-protest against the odious Fred Phelps clan (or is it 'klan?').  Phelps was protesting the school being named after a homosexual. Wow -- Whitman died in 1892. We knew Phelps' people hated the 21st century but we had no idea they still think it's the 19th!

CLASSY/NOT CLASSY/I'M NOT SURE 
Larry Kramer
, gay visionary and self-described "famous big deal loudmouth activist" uses an award acceptance speech to deliver a long-deserved "fuck you" to Yale University.

NOT CLASSY! 
Fans of the online 'Star Wars' roleplaying game discovered that the words "homosexual," "lesbian" and "gay" are blocked from any kind of use.  Players argued about this in the game's forum until "community manager" Sean Dahlberg bluntly wrote:

"As I have stated before, these are terms that do not exist in Star Wars. Thread closed." 

Ouch! But no gays in 'Star Wars?'  I've got three letters, one number saying otherwise (figure it out, nerds!) and the lads at 'Robot Chicken' revealed what bounty hunter Boba Fett gets up to when he's alone:

CLASSY! 
The people of Iceland, who elected Johanna Sigurdardottir as the country's first female prime minister and the world first openly gay leader!  Of course, since the country's bankrupt, they may not have been doing her a service but it's still a great thing to see.

But a final NOT CLASSY! for the hideous Tiffany Wellsley, who -- despite her born-to-drag name -- penned the disgusting editorial:

SWINE FLU: GOD’S LATEST PUNISHMENT OF IDOL-WORSHIP


I deliberately left the font big from the 'Republican Faith Chat' website because of its awe-inspiring evil!  You see, when natural disasters strike, gay people don't blame conservative Christians.  We don't say tornados are God's punishment for the priests who raped all those children.  We don't say that people get sick because God disagrees with their pious, cruel and judgmental lifestyle.  We don't say any of that.  It wouldn't be classy!

 


Monday, April 27, 2009

Pour the lady another drink, Walter

The downside to doing a weekday blog is that if something big happens on the weekend, a Monday post on it arrives pretty late to the party.  So it is with the news that Bea Arthur died in her sleep on Saturday at the age of 86 but hey, she was a remarkable lady, I'm a fan and maybe you'll see a clip here today that wasn't passed to you on Facebook yesterday.

In their obit, wisecracking gossip site Defamer said, "She will be loudly mourned by the gays."  Well of course. As Arthur herself would joke, a 5'10" woman with a deep voice made for a natural gender nonconformist and she was an early and vocal friend of gay rights.  She was also the kind of old-school brassy dame, cracking wit and Broadway baby that gay men have always adored.  Perhaps too much:


Okay, that image might be a teensy bit over the top but here's a look back at a career that makes a case for it.  First, her Broadway career -- this relatively recent clip shows how smooth she could be:

And for drag queens, her "Mame" duet with Angela Lansbury is legendary:

I hope people will check out the recently released DVDs of "Maude." Although "The Golden Girls" is the superior sitcom, Maude was an incredible character and a perfect fit for Arthur's whiplash comic timing. She was introduced on "All in the Family" and immediately made a big impression:

She talked about "Maude" with the charming Bob Costas in 1989. If you can get past the tedious opening credits, the interview is Bea Arthur at her classiest:

Her trip to Canada to become the Shopper's Drug Mart spokesperson was not Bea Arthur at her classiest -- but she could fly!  How cool is that?

She could do it all!  Did you know she ran the alien cantina in "Star Wars??" (Okay, it's from the banned-but-bootlegged "Star Wars Holiday Special" in 1978 but still...)

And how about this frankly jawdropping duet with Rock Hudson, singing about doing drugs in the '70s (Rock mentions poppers twice -- coincidence?):

For a lady who carried herself with such effortless dignity, Arthur was always ready to humilate herself for a joke, like in this notorious "Sex and the City" parody:

But, like I said, it's "The Golden Girls" that truly made her beloved among just about everyone.  Here's a sample:

And when she got be funny and sing?  Pure gold:

And for the final clip, I couldn't decide between her musical manifesto on "Maude" or the sweetly silly final moments of the last-ever "Golden Girls" episode -- but why choose?  Say goodbye to a great lady twice:

 

 

Friday, April 24, 2009

Who's your tribe?

Here at the Roundup, I usually try to leaven the daily "wow-can-you-believe-this-homophobic-crap?" stories with silly videos and snarky wisecracks.  In life, as always, you gotta laugh.

But there's been two unpleasant stories this week that have distracted me during other columns and blocked me altogether on Wednesday -- begging your indulgence, here comes a rant:

First, there's this month's wave of gay murders in Iraq, notable for their swiftness and sickening cruelty. An unnamed Sadr City official explained to Reuters:

"They were sexual deviants. Their tribes killed them to restore their family honor."

Six years of US war with Iraq and that democracy thing is really coming along, no?  These guys put the "evil" in medieval and the...oh forget it.  See?  I can't bring the funny on this.

Especially as the story feeds into the second nightmare this month: while it's all-too-easy to decry this stone-age religious fundamentalist tribal barbarism in Iraq, in 21st century North America this month, we've seen the suicides of not one but two 11-year-old boys:

On April 16, ten days after Carl Walker-Hoover killed himself in Springfield, Massachusetts, another 11-year-old boy -- Jaheem Herrera of DeKalb County, Georgia -- also hung himself after months of enduring anti-gay bullying.  His mother told CNN how the boy would say:

"Mom, they keep telling me this...this gay word, this gay, gay, gay. I'm tired of hearing it, they're telling me the same thing over and over."

Similar bullying in 2007 drove 13-year-old Shaquille Wisdom of Ajax, Ontario to hang himself and 17-year-old Eric Mohat of Mentor, Ohio to shoot himself.  In Mohat's class alone, there were three other students who killed themselves.

 

(from left: Herrera, Walker-Hoover, Mohat and Wisdom)

But here's the extra part that's bugging me:  while the news reports take time to ponder whether or not any of these kids actually were gay (does it matter?) or speak of bullying as some inescapeable force of nature or rite of passage, they ignore the wider issue.

In the wake of Shaquille Wisdom's suicide, Helen Kennedy, executive director of Egale Canada, told the press about a high school in Ottawa:

"A mother called me. Her son came out. He was 16. The gym teacher made fun of how he ran...The mother went to the principal but he washed his hands of it. The boy dropped out, four credits short of graduation."

This is the real problem. In each of these stories, the parents kept insisting the school intervene but nothing ever changed.  It's not hard to see what that neglect would do to the kids under attack. They didn't kill themselves because of a few thugs; they killed themselves because, to them, everyone else was siding with the bullies.  These kids were alone.  Like Herrera's mother says:

"...she thinks her son felt like nobody wanted to help him, that nobody stood up and stopped the bullies."

Mohat's parents have now decided to sue the school -- not for money, but to force change: 

"The lawsuit -- filed March 27, alleges that the quiet but likable boy, who was involved in theater and music, was called "gay," "fag," "queer" and "homo" and often in front of his teachers. Most of the harassment took place in math class and the teacher -- an athletic coach -- was accused of failing to protect the boy." 

See, we look upon the tribal killings of gay men in Iraq with horror and condescension but how is a group urging someone to kill himself much different? High schools are nothing but tribes -- jock, nerd, art fag, rich girl, you know them all -- and these cliques protect their own and banish the Other. 

Dan Hughes pulled his bullied son out of Mohat's high school, saying:

"What it boils down to is the football players, cheerleaders and kids with money have a different set of rules than everybody else."

Of course the gym teacher isn't going to defend a sissy boy against jock bullies. Those jocks are his people. They don't run funny.  I doubt his thinking is so cruelly overt, of course, but more of an unconscious tribal affiliation that carries on all through adulthood unless challenged.  It's up to all of us to challenge our own biases and examine both the tribes and cliques we belong to and the people we shun.

And hey, I can find a silly angle on this!  Here's the great big trailer for a new TV show from Ryan Murphy, the gay creator of "Nip/Tuck."  It looks like high school tribes were on his mind as well and, in his silly, snappy TV way, he hopes to shake them up a bit.  Good luck!

 


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The Roundup

Xtra.ca's Roundup
blog is your source
for news and
analysis that has
queer people
talking.

The Roundup is
written by Xtra's
staff reporters:

Andrea Houston
andrea.houston@xtra.ca

Natasha Barsotti
natasha.barsotti@xtra.ca

 


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