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Pose Watch Party at Divino Tasting Room in Newark | Out In Jersey – Out In Jersey

Pose Watch Party flyer
Pose Watch Party

Date/Time
Date(s) – 05/08/2021
6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Location
Divino Tasting Room, Eatery & Lounge

Categories LGBT New Jersey events

May 8, 2021 – 6:00PM to 8:00PM

One of television’s most dramatic and beautiful television shows about the LGBTQ experience is back on for its final season!

Come relax and watch the first two episodes at Newark’s newest lounge.

Free: Limited seating

Complimentary wine (while supplies last).

Food will be available for sale and non-alcoholic and artisanal beverages.

*Temperatures will be taken at the door and masks are required to be worn when not eating.

RSVP to Noelle nlw2211@yahoo.com

www.facebook.com/divinotastingroomtv

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Spurs hold off Kings 113-104 to end five-game slide – Minneapolis Star Tribune

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Dejounte Murray scored 10 of his 22 points in the fourth quarter and the San Antonio Spurs beat the Sacramento Kings 113-104 on Friday night to end a five-game losing streak and strengthen their hold on the final playoff spot in the West.

DeMar DeRozan had 25 points, Murray added seven assists and six rebounds, and Keldon Johnson scored 16 for San Antonio.

The Spurs (32-34) were coming off back-to-back losses to Utah in a skid that knocked coach Gregg Popovich’s team down to 10th place in the West — the final spot for the play-in tournament — before holding off a pesky Kings team that had won its last four.

“They know very well that at both ends of it, it’s 48 minutes in a game and there’s ebbs and flows. They kept their composure and stuck with it,” Popovich said. “We turned it over at certain times for basically no reason but our defense sustained us. We hung in there and got it done.”

San Antonio has some breathing room now. New Orleans (30-37) lost to Philadelphia earlier Friday, while Sacramento (29-38) fell 3 1/2 back of the Spurs.

“Guys are disappointed,” Kings coach Luke Walton said. “We wanted it. All losses hurt. That was a big one tonight.”

DeRozan had 18 in the first half to pace San Antonio early but the Spurs trailed 81-78 going into the fourth.

Murray had six points as part of an 18-6 run to start the final quarter and put the Spurs ahead for good. Walker scored eight points in the final 3 1/2 minutes to help San Antonio close it out after the Kings pulled within 100-99.

“We just kept at it,” DeRozan said. “We held our composure. We buckled down when we needed to, got some scores, and we took off from there.”

Popovich moved within 27 games of breaking Don Nelson’s record for career coaching victories in the NBA.

Terence Davis scored 24 points for the Kings. Sacramento missed a chance to move into a tie with the Pelicans for 11th place in the West.

“Hate that we didn’t get it done,” Davis said. “Everyone knew it was a big game, that (the Spurs) were going to come out and play their best.”

GOOD NEWS FOR FOX

Kings point guard De’Aaron Fox, who hasn’t played since April 21 while in the NBA health and safety protocols, was cleared to return to the team, although no timetable has been set for him to play again.. Fox made his first appearance at Golden 1 Center since going out and sat alongside some teammates on Sacramento’s bench. Delon Wright had 17 points, nine assists and seven rebounds in his third start in place of Fox.

TIP-INS

Spurs: Rudy Gay had 14 points in 24 minutes against his former team. Gay played with Sacramento from 2013-17.

Kings: Tyrese Haliburton, who has been ruled out for the remainder of the regular season because of a hyperextended left knee, watched the game from the bench. … Harrison Barnes (left adductor) missed his sixth consecutive game.

UP NEXT

Spurs: Play the Trail Blazers on Saturday night. San Antonio blew a 16-point lead in the third quarter and lost when the two teams played in mid-April.

Kings: Host the Thunder on Sunday in the first half of a back-to-back. The two teams will also play in Sacramento on Tuesday.

__

More AP NBA: https://apnews.com/tag/NBA and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

Spurs hold off Kings 113-104 to end five-game slide – CBS sports.com

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) Dejounte Murray scored 10 of his 22 points in the fourth quarter and the San Antonio Spurs beat the Sacramento Kings 113-104 on Friday night to end a five-game losing streak and strengthen their hold on the final playoff spot in the West.

DeMar DeRozan had 25 points, Murray added seven assists and six rebounds, and Keldon Johnson scored 16 for San Antonio.

The Spurs (32-34) were coming off back-to-back losses to Utah in a skid that knocked coach Gregg Popovich’s team down to 10th place in the West – the final spot for the play-in tournament – before holding off a pesky Kings team that had won its last four.

”They know very well that at both ends of it, it’s 48 minutes in a game and there’s ebbs and flows. They kept their composure and stuck with it,” Popovich said. ”We turned it over at certain times for basically no reason but our defense sustained us. We hung in there and got it done.”

San Antonio has some breathing room now. New Orleans (30-37) lost to Philadelphia earlier Friday, while Sacramento (29-38) fell 3 1/2 back of the Spurs.

”Guys are disappointed,” Kings coach Luke Walton said. ”We wanted it. All losses hurt. That was a big one tonight.”

DeRozan had 18 in the first half to pace San Antonio early but the Spurs trailed 81-78 going into the fourth.

Murray had six points as part of an 18-6 run to start the final quarter and put the Spurs ahead for good. Walker scored eight points in the final 3 1/2 minutes to help San Antonio close it out after the Kings pulled within 100-99.

”We just kept at it,” DeRozan said. ”We held our composure. We buckled down when we needed to, got some scores, and we took off from there.”

Popovich moved within 27 games of breaking Don Nelson’s record for career coaching victories in the NBA.

Terence Davis scored 24 points for the Kings. Sacramento missed a chance to move into a tie with the Pelicans for 11th place in the West.

”Hate that we didn’t get it done,” Davis said. ”Everyone knew it was a big game, that (the Spurs) were going to come out and play their best.”

GOOD NEWS FOR FOX

Kings point guard De’Aaron Fox, who hasn’t played since April 21 while in the NBA health and safety protocols, was cleared to return to the team, although no timetable has been set for him to play again.. Fox made his first appearance at Golden 1 Center since going out and sat alongside some teammates on Sacramento’s bench. Delon Wright had 17 points, nine assists and seven rebounds in his third start in place of Fox.

TIP-INS

Spurs: Rudy Gay had 14 points in 24 minutes against his former team. Gay played with Sacramento from 2013-17.

Kings: Tyrese Haliburton, who has been ruled out for the remainder of the regular season because of a hyperextended left knee, watched the game from the bench. . Harrison Barnes (left adductor) missed his sixth consecutive game.

UP NEXT

Spurs: Play the Trail Blazers on Saturday night. San Antonio blew a 16-point lead in the third quarter and lost when the two teams played in mid-April.

Kings: Host the Thunder on Sunday in the first half of a back-to-back. The two teams will also play in Sacramento on Tuesday.

More AP NBA: https://apnews.com/tag/NBA and https://twitter.com/AP-Sports

Copyright 2021 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

San Antonio 113, Sacramento 104 | Sports | titusvilleherald.com – Titusville Herald

FG FT Reb
SAN ANTONIO Min M-A M-A O-T A PF PTS
DeRozan 36:14 7-14 11-13 0-6 3 4 25
Johnson 27:15 6-12 3-3 2-5 2 2 16
Poeltl 35:00 5-7 1-1 3-10 4 3 11
Murray 35:09 11-22 0-0 1-5 7 1 22
Walker IV 32:51 7-14 2-2 0-1 2 0 16
Gay 23:30 6-11 0-0 0-5 1 1 14
Mills 21:58 1-2 0-0 0-3 1 0 2
Vassell 15:09 2-5 0-0 0-2 0 1 5
Eubanks 12:54 1-2 0-0 1-7 0 0 2
Totals 240:00 46-89 17-19 7-44 20 12 113

Percentages: FG .517, FT .895.

3-Point Goals: 4-22, .182 (Gay 2-5, Johnson 1-3, Vassell 1-4, Murray 0-5, Walker IV 0-5).

Team Rebounds: 7. Team Turnovers: None.

Blocked Shots: 7 (Poeltl 4, Gay 2, DeRozan).

Turnovers: 13 (Murray 6, DeRozan 2, Gay 2, Johnson, Poeltl, Vassell).

Steals: 8 (Vassell 2, DeRozan, Gay, Mills, Murray, Poeltl, Walker IV).

Technical Fouls: None.

FG FT Reb
SACRAMENTO Min M-A M-A O-T A PF PTS
Bagley III 18:53 1-5 2-6 0-2 1 2 4
Harkless 38:59 5-9 0-0 0-5 4 0 12
Holmes 32:43 7-12 1-1 1-5 5 6 15
Hield 38:54 5-14 2-2 0-5 6 2 17
Wright 38:58 8-16 0-0 2-7 9 4 17
Davis 32:35 10-16 0-0 0-3 1 2 24
D.Jones 15:11 2-3 2-4 1-7 0 2 6
Metu 11:46 1-5 0-0 0-1 0 0 2
Guy 10:53 2-4 2-2 0-0 1 1 7
James 1:08 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Totals 240:00 41-84 9-15 4-35 27 19 104

Percentages: FG .488, FT .600.

3-Point Goals: 13-32, .406 (Hield 5-12, Davis 4-8, Harkless 2-5, Guy 1-2, Wright 1-3, Bagley III 0-1, Metu 0-1).

Team Rebounds: 8. Team Turnovers: None.

Blocked Shots: 3 (Holmes 2, D.Jones).

Turnovers: 16 (Hield 6, Wright 4, Davis 3, D.Jones 2, Holmes).

Steals: 10 (Davis 3, Harkless 2, Hield 2, D.Jones, Holmes, Wright).

Technical Fouls: None.

San Antonio 25 27 26 35 113
Sacramento 21 28 32 23 104

A_0 (17,608). T_2:10.

New HIV cases fall, but epidemic ‘far from over’ in Aotearoa – RNZ

The HIV epidemic is far from over, despite a decline in the number of diagnoses, says University of Auckland researcher Peter Saxon.

double exposure of a rainbow flag and the hands of a young man put together like praying

Photo: 123rf

University of Otago has just released research showing the number of people diagnosed in New Zealand with HIV halved between 2016 and 2020.

Last year, 95 people were first diagnosed with the sexually transmitted disease in New Zealand, compared with 196 in 2016.

Gay Men’s Sexual Health Research director Peter Saxon from the University of Auckland said prevention could get that number to zero – so the fight against HIV continues.

The Covid-19 pandemic might have led to a drop in testing last year, revealing fewer positive cases, Saxon said.

The AIDS Epidemiology Group at the University of Otago said it was encouraging to see the number of people diagnosed with HIV in New Zealand fall in 2020 to the lowest level in 20 years.

Figures released this week show 65 people were reported to have acquired HIV locally last year, of a total of 162 notified cases.

AIDS Epidemiology Group leader Sue McAllister said gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (MSM) were most affected by HIV in New Zealand.

Of the 95 people first diagnosed in 2020, 62 were MSM, 26 were heterosexually infected (16 men and 10 women), while the means of infection was not reported in some cases.

Condom use and early testing and treatment were contributing to the drop in case numbers, McAllister said.

HIV infection rates among heterosexuals have remained low and stable over the past 10 years.

However, about half of heterosexual men and women were diagnosed with HIV late and had not had antiretroviral treatment to control progression of their infection, she said.

“It is important for people who consider they may have been at risk to be tested for HIV and other sexually transmissible infections without any stigma or discrimination, regardless of sexual orientation,” McAllister said.

“Of equal importance is for clinicians to recognise HIV as a possibility in people who present with compatible clinical signs.”

The number of New Zealand HIV cases previously diagnosed overseas has increased from 34 in 2016 to 61 in 2020.

Some are New Zealanders and their partners returning home, while others are long-term visitors.

“It is important for these people to be engaged in care and treatment to ensure good health outcomes and prevent further HIV transmission locally,” McAllister said.

Bill Maher blasts Democrats’ new ‘morality’ kick: ‘We suck the fun out of everything’ – Fox News

“Real Time” host Bill Maher closed his show Friday night by complaining that the Democrats have become a “no fun” party in comparison to the Republicans.

“Once upon the time, the right were the ones offended by everything,” Maher said. “They were the party of speech codes and blacklists and moral panics and demanding some TV show had to go.

“Well, now that’s us. We’re the fun-suckers now. We suck the fun out of everything: Halloween, the Oscars, childhood, Twitter, comedy. It’s like woke kids on campus decided to be all the worst parts of a Southern Baptist.”

He continued: “If Democrats had always policed morality as hard as they do now, they’d be down a lot of heroes. No FDR, JFK, RFK, LBJ, Clinton, Martin Luther King.

“Democrats are now the party that can’t tell the difference between Anthony Weiner and Al Franken.”

BILL MAHER NOW ADMITS RUSSIAGATE WAS ‘REPORTED ERRONEOUSLY’ AFTER YEARS OF PUSHING TRUMP COLLUSION NARRATIVE

“We need to restore the natural order of things,” Maher told viewers at another point. “I don’t want to live in a world where liberals are the uptight ones and conservatives do drugs and get laid.

“I don’t want to live in a world where liberals are the uptight ones and conservatives do drugs and get laid.”

— Bill Maher

He also complained that former U.S. Rep. Katie Hill of California, once a rising star among liberals, was forced out of Congress for being in a “throuple” and having nudes photos leaked with her holding a bong, saying “that was too much for our puritanical Democratic Party.” 

“We’re the throuple people! The bong people, the tantric sex gurus, not f—in’ Matt Gaetz! Us!” Maher shouted. “We did f—ing in the mud and bra burning and ‘Turn On, Tune In, and Drop Out.’ They’re the party who can’t bake wedding cakes for gay people! It’s time to switch back because, frankly, you’re not good at being us and being you sucks.” 

Earlier in the monologue, Maher had pointed to recent stories about Republicans appearing to be a wild bunch.

He spoke about U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., and cited a report that alleged the congressman had used drugs “like cocaine and ecstasy.”

“Wild hotel suite parties? That’s our thing,” Maher reacted. “Democrats are the party of free love and fun and forgetting where you parked your car. Republicans cannot be the conservative, stick-up-your-ass party and then take our drugs and f— our women.

Bill Maher sees U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., as the face of a more free-wheeling Republican Party. (HBO/Stefani Reynolds/CNP/ABACAPRESS.COM)

Bill Maher sees U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., as the face of a more free-wheeling Republican Party. (HBO/Stefani Reynolds/CNP/ABACAPRESS.COM)

“JFK used to have nude pool parties in the White House. Now the politician who comes closest to carrying on that legacy is Matt Gaetz? No,” Maher told viewers. 

“JFK used to have nude pool parties in the White House. Now the politician who comes closest to carrying on that legacy is Matt Gaetz? No.”

— Bill Maher

The HBO star then listed several other high-profile Republicans linked to drug and sex scandals, including former House Speaker John Boehner, who famously entered the marijuana business, the reported polyamorous relationships of U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., the sex scandals that removed Jerry Falwell Jr. from Liberty University, and former President Trump’s alleged extramarital affair with Stormy Daniels. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“What happened?!?” Maher exclaimed. “You can always count on Republicans to be the fuddy-duddies, the wet blankets, the bores. They were the Moral Majority, ‘The Book of Virtues.’ Nixon — NIXON! — started the ‘war on drugs’ and [Nancy Reagan] never stopped spinning her catchphrase about it. … Her husband had a commission to root out pornography.

“If it was fun, Republicans were against it. They got apoplectic over Bill Clinton getting a b——.”

Abilene Wylie baseball takes care of Plainview in bi-district playoff sweep – Abilene Reporter-News

Wylie baseball

The Wylie baseball team took care of business in both games on Friday to sweep Plainview in the best-of-three Region I-5A bi-district playoff series in Lamesa.

Behind a pair of strong pitching performances from Dash Albus and Brooks Gay, the Bulldogs (22-7) won 9-1 and 5-1.

In the opener, Albus went 6⅓ innings, allowing an unearned run on four hits with two walks and four strikeouts. Gay followed with a complete-game victory, giving up a run on five hits with a walk and five strikeouts. Grayson Bearden got the final two outs in Game 1.

While the pitchers were dealing, the offense got going. In Game 1, Balin Valentine and Jaxon Hansen had three hits each. Valentine hit a solo home run and scored three runs while Hansen had two RBIs and two runs scored. Landon Williams added two RBIs and Riley Hood scored twice in the 9-1 victory.

Wylie's Balin Valentine

It took a little longer for the offense to come in Game 2. Wylie took a 1-0 lead in the fourth on a Reed Hughes RBI single. But Plainview answered in the bottom of the fifth to tie the game.

With the game tied 1-1 in the seventh, Wylie scored four runs in the final inning and held on to win.

Hood scored on an error and Hansen drove J.T. Thompson home. Garrett Graham then delivered an RBI triple and Williams capped it off with a sacrifice fly.

Gay got into a little bit of trouble in the seventh, with runners on first and third with one out, but a Thompson to Valentine to Hood double play ended the threat and the game.

Wylie will face the winner of the El Paso Andress and Del Valle bi-district series in the area round. The series is tied 1-1 heading into Saturday’s Game 3.

This story will be updated.

Jordan Hofeditz covers Abilene high schools and colleges, Big Country schools and other local sports. Follow him on Twitter at @jhofeditz. If you appreciate locally drive news, you can support local journalists with a digital subscription to ReporterNews.com.

Central Victorian footy clubs push for LGBTQI+ inclusion to tackle rising mental illness – ABC News

Mateship and inclusion.

These are two things footy offers, particularly in small towns when it comes to bringing communities together.

But a rise in mental illness among the LGBTQI+ community is leading two Central Victorian clubs and a community health service to accept the sporting codes’ faults.

Today the Kyneton and Eaglehawk football clubs are taking to the Kyneton Showground and netball courts with one thing in mind: to create a place for queer people to feel proud.

Alex Summerfield plays for Eaglehawk’s women’s football team and said she was sure there were men and women playing in Central Victorian clubs that were yet to come out as gay.

“We’ve got a lot of work to do in the men’s division and this is a great start,” Ms Summerfield said.

“It really does come down to some of those traditional values and morals that we’re trying to break down.

Eaglehawk's Alex Summerfield
Eaglehawk’s Alex Summerfield says more needs to be done by league players to break down stigma and promote more inclusive attitudes.(

Supplied: Kyneton FNC

)

Ms Summerfield said she believed women were more open to talking about sexuality and gender issues than men, and more needed to be done to break down the stigma around gender and sexual diversity.

Mistreatment at the centre of problem

The 2019 Healthy Heart of Victoria Active Living Census found that people who identified as LGBTQI+ were less likely to participate in sport and activities.

Sunbury and Cobaw Community Health’s Country LGBTQI+ Inclusion Program co-ordinator Belinda Brain said the lower participation rate led to poorer health outcomes.

She said poorer health, including mental illness, was not because of a person’s gender or sexuality, but due to the discrimination and marginalisation many people in the LGBTQI+ community still faced.

After the majority of the nation voted ‘yes’ to legally allowing same-sex marriage, it paved the way for other facets of society to become more inclusive, and tackle areas where same-sex and gender-diverse people continue to feel unsafe or uncomfortable, such as on the sporting field.

It will be Central Victoria’s second Pride Cup after the nearby Castlemaine Football Netball Club held one in 2019.

Changing the game and attitudes

Kyneton Football Netball Club president Hayden Evans said holding the Pride Cup event was not just about changing traditional values and morals, it was about changing the traditional attitudes that many sporting clubs were founded on.

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Ms Summerfield said she didn’t know a team in the league that didn’t have a queer female player.

A study by Monash University found more than 80 per cent of people had witnessed or experienced homophobia in sport, and 87 per cent of gay males, and 75 per cent of lesbians were completely or partially in the closet while playing youth sports.

It’s these statistics that led Kyneton and Eaglehawk to tackle the stigma.

Ms Summerfield said the Pride Cup showed there were at least two clubs in the Bendigo region where young queer people could walk in and feel welcome.

In the federal electorate of Bendigo, 82.7 per cent of people participated in the same-sex marriage vote, with the remainder not responding.

Of those who voted, 68.7 per cent approved of same-sex marriage, while 31.3 per cent disapproved of it.

Monterey edges No. 6 Amarillo in bi-district series opener – LubbockOnline.com

Nick Zarate, pictured here in a game earlier this season, capped a four-run inning with an RBI single that helped Monterey beat No. 6 Amarillo 6-5 Friday night in the first game of a best-of-three Class 5A bi-district baseball series.

Cross Stephens delivered a tie-breaking three-run triple in the fifth inning, then scored on a Nick Zarate single as Monterey beat No. 6 Amarillo 6-5 Friday night in a Class 5A bi-district baseball series opener at Moegle Field.

With the score tied 2-2, Monterey loaded the bases with walks to Jaxson Aleman and Andrew Garcia sandwiched around a single by Jerimiah Villarreal. Stephens’ triple to left came with two outs, and Zarate’s base hit made it 6-2.

Amarillo rallied in the seventh with a run-scoring single by Bryson Slaughter, a sacrifice fly by Davien Berry and a two-out RBI triple from Cayden Phillips. But Monterey reliever Ivan Munoz got Tristan Curless on a groundout to first to end it.

Jackson Jolly worked the first six innings for the Plainsmen, allowing two runs on four hits and five walks. He struck out four.

Ryan Quintanilla singled twice and scored in Monterey’s two-ru

Amarillo hosts the remainder of the series beginning at 1 p.m. Saturday.

Lubbock-Cooper 13-16

Amarillo Tascosa 3-3

WOODROW — Jude Cook struck out 11 over six innings and No. 2 Lubbock-Cooper erupted for 13 unanswered runs in the last three innings to beat Amarillo Tascosa and sweep a Class 5A bi-district series in two games.

Teige Mitchell went 2 for 5 with two runs batted in and two scored for the Pirates (28-4), and Cutter Douglas went 2 for 5 with two RBI and a run scored. Trevor Browning had two hits and Kaleb Scull scored three times.

It was 3-3 before Cooper put together a six-run fifth, touched by an RBI triple by Mitchell and a run-scoring single from Holt Gibson. Cook had a two-run single in the inning.

Cooper won the opener 13-3 with leadoff batter Cade Bingham going 3 for 4 with four RBI and Kyler Jordan going 3 for 4 and scoring twice. The Pirates got two RBI apiece from Cook and Gibson.

Cooper will play El Paso Hanks in the area round.

Frenship 11

EP Americas 7

FORT STOCKTON — Frenship broke open a tie game with a seven-run fourth inning, highlighted by a pair of bases-loaded walks and Coldon Kiser’s two-run single, and held on to beat El Paso Americas in a Class 6A bi-district series opener.

Brock Rogers and Evan Johnson drew bases-loaded walks, breaking a 3-3 tie, and Kiser’s base hit increased the Tigers’ lead to 7-3. Barrett Workman added a run-scoring infield single and later scored on a wild pitch, making it 10-3.

Johnson scored three runs and Jake Sherrard two.

The series concludes beginning at noon Saturday.

Randall 16

Coronado 14

A.J. Lucero and Kaleb Dudding drove in three runs apiece and Randall outlasted Coronado in a back-and-forth Class 5A bi-district series opener at O’Banion Field.

Randall rallied from a 6-1 deficit to a 13-7 lead, and then answered after Coronado cut it to 13-12. Dudding’s three-run double put the Raiders ahead 7-6 in a seven-run third.

Coronado’s Layden White went 3 for 4 with a home run and five runs batted in, and Ben Tadlock drove in three runs with a triple and an RBI groundout.

With Coronado trailing 13-7 in the fifth, White unloaded a three-run homer, Jett Carroll came home on a balk and Tadlock’s groundout made it 13-12. With the Mustangs down 16-12 in the seventh, Sawyer Robertson and White delivered RBI doubles.

Randall hosts the remainder of the series beginning at noon Saturday.

Shallowater 12

Dalhart 1

SHALLOWATER — Huston Briseno had a pair of run-scoring singles and a sacrifice fly and Shallowater scored in all five innings to run-rule Dalhart in the opener of a best-of-three Class 3A bi-district baseball series.

Shallowater's Beau Brockman, at left in a game earlier this season, helped the Mustangs run-rule Dalhart 12-1 Friday in a Class 3A bi-district series opener.

Chase Blackburn went 3 for 4, scoring twice, and Beau Brockman went 2 for 3, scored three runs and hit a game-ending two-run double in the bottom of the fifth. Kohle Kerin came through with a two-run single that made the score 5-0 in the second inning.

The Mustangs lofted four sacrifice flies, two by Brooks Carter.

Shallowater starting pitcher Breken Ramos went four innings, allowing a run on four hits and striking out five.

The series’ second game is scheduled for noon Saturday at Dalhart with a third game, if necessary, to follow. 

Abernathy 12

River Road 0

LOCKNEY — Abernathy scored eight runs in the first inning, capped by a two-run double from Jaden Zavala and a three-run homer from Kaeleb Carrillo, and rolled over Amarillo River Road in a Class 3A bi-district series opener.

Jess Hoel pitched a five-inning complete game for Abernathy, striking out six and allowing five hits. He singled home two runs in the third inning, making the score 10-0, and the Antelopes added two in the fourth on a Landry Thornton sacrifice fly and a Levi Carrillo RBI single.

Game 2 of the series is scheduled for noon Saturday with a third game, if necessary, afterward.

Denver City 10, Presidio 2

MONAHANS — Taylor Sellers threw a two-hit complete game with 12 strikeouts and Eric Estrada drove in four runs as Denver City won its Class 3A bi-district series opener with Presidio.

Estrada cracked a three-run double in the third inning that gave Denver City a 4-0 lead and had an RBI groundout in the fourth.

Game 2 in the best-of-three series is scheduled for 5 p.m. Saturday.

Lamesa 9, Alpine 3

ALPINE — Christian Ruiz struck out 10 in a complete game and Lamesa rallied for five runs in the fifth inning and four in the seventh to win its Class 3A bi-district series opener with Alpine.

Bucks pitcher Brady Crump had a 2-0 shutout through four innings before Lamesa broke through in the fifth. Noah Vera drew a bases-loaded walk, Joshua Marquez hit a go-ahead two-run single and Dylan Lozano followed with a two-run double.

Lozano doubled home the first of the four runs in the seventh.

Lozano finished 3 for 4. Cam Diaz and Marquez had two hits apiece.

Ruiz limited the Bucks to five hits and walked four.

Lamesa hosts the remainder of the series beginning at 3:30 p.m. Saturday.

Abilene Wylie 9-5

Plainview 1-1

LAMESA — Brooks Gay threw a five-hit complete game and Abilene Wylie broke a tie with four runs in the seventh inning to beat Plainview 5-1 and sweep a Class 5A bi-district series.

Jackson Hansen, Garrett Graham, Landon Williams and Reed Hughes drove in a run apiece for Wylie, which went into the seventh tied 1-1.

Gay struck out five and walked one. Plainview got two hits from Caleb Lusk, and Kylar Blankenship drove in the lone run with a double that tied it 1-1 in the fifth.

Abilene Wylie advances to the area round to face the winner of El Paso Andress and El Paso Del Valle.

In Friday’s series opener, Dash Albus and Grayson Bearden combined on four-hit pitching and Hansen went 3 for 4 with two runs batted in and two scored as Abilene Wylie beat Plainview 9-1.

Wylie leadoff batter Balin Valentine went 2 for 3 with a solo homer and three runs scored.

Albus struck out four over 6 1/3 innings, allowing one run on four hits. Bearden got the last two outs.

Ralls 10, Ropes 7

Sergio Salinas went 3 for 4 with an inside-the-park home run and three runs batted in, leading Ralls past Ropes in a bi-district series opener at Lubbock High’s Westerner Field.

Steven Salazar broke a 1-1 tie in the fourth with an RBI single. Salinas delivered Salazar with his inside-the-park homer on a ball to right field. 

Michael Salazar and Ryan Garcia touched off a six-run fifth with RBI doubles, the outburst also including run-scoring singles from Sergio Salinas, Kutter Bartlett and Kaden Laminack.

Kaden Bryan, Branson Beck and Logan Delgado had two hits apiece for Ropes, and Garrett Gilliam hit a two-run double in a six-run sixth.

The series resumes with Game 2 at 11 a.m. Saturday and a third game would follow if necessary.

‘Star Trek’ Writer David Gerrold Talks ‘Blood and Fire’ – Heavy.com

Intro sequence for "Star Trek: The Next Generation"

YouTube Intro sequence for “Star Trek: The Next Generation”

Though “Star Trek” fans may not recognize the name David Gerrold, they definitely recognize his contributions to the Trekverse. Gerrold wrote one of the most popular episodes of “Star Trek: The Original Series” — “The Trouble With Tribbles.” He also created the TOS episode “The Cloud Minders” and wrote the “Star Trek: The Animated Series” episodes “More Tribbles, More Troubles” and “Bem.”

When work began on “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” Gerrold was personally invited to write for the series by Gene Roddenberry, “Star Trek’s” creator. He came on board excited to work on a new “Star Trek” universe.

Gerrold was also excited because he’d been told that since the show was going straight to syndication, the creative team wouldn’t have a network constantly looking over their shoulders. They would have the freedom to do things that they hadn’t been able to do on “The Original Series.”

When Gerrold submitted his script “Blood and Fire,” an allegory for the AIDS epidemic that featured two gay crewmen, the script was vehemently rejected. In the process, he discovered that he would not have the freedom to address serious social issues on TNG.

In an exclusive interview with Heavy this week, Gerrold told his whole story about the “Blood and Fire” script and what it taught him about working for “Star Trek.”


The Promises of a New ‘Star Trek’

gene roddenberry

YouTube“Star Trek” creator Gene Roddenberry.

Before production on the series even started, Gerrold accompanied Roddenberry to a “Star Trek” convention in Boston. The convention took place soon after “The Next Generation” was publicly announced. So, according to Gerrold, the attendance was much higher than a typical convention.

During a question-and-answer session attended by more than 3,000 people, a gay fan frankly asked Roddenberry if there would be gay crew members in the new show. According to Gerrold, Gene answered, “Yes, it’s time.”

Gerrold said he immediately made note of Roddenberry’s answer because he was actively working with one of the other writers, Robert Justman, to come up with ideas for the new show. He wanted to be sure that he told Justman they could include a gay character.

Gerrold told Heavy that the topic came up again during one of the early TNG staff meetings. He said that Roddenberry was clear that he wanted to include a gay character on the show. When one of the writers made a derogatory joke about a gay crewman, Gerrold said Roddenberry read him the riot act. He reiterated that “it was time” to introduce a gay crew member in the “Star Trek” universe.

Gerrold emphasized that the timing was very important. It was the late 80s, at the height of the AIDS epidemic. The crew of “Star Trek” had even lost a colleague to AIDS. Including a gay character in a television show, even a syndicated one, was a bold move. However, Gerrold insisted it was a move Roddenberry was ready to make.

According to Gerrold, shortly after that, Paramount assigned Rick Berman to work on the show. Gerrold claimed that the studio sent Berman to TNG essentially to babysit Roddenberry and that Roddenberry was not pleased about the decision.

Gerrold said that shortly after Berman arrived, he wrote a memo about the topics that the studio was okay with covering in “Star Trek” episodes. Among those approved topics was the AIDS epidemic. Gerrold said he took note of that immediately because he wanted to write something about the topic.

So, Gerrold went into his first script assignment with the understanding that Roddenberry himself wanted to include a gay crew member and that the studio approved of an episode about the AIDS crisis.


Writing For a Cause

David Gerrold speaks onstage at Engadget Expand NY 2013 at Jacob K. Javits Convention Center on November 10, 2013 in New York City

Craig Barritt/Getty ImagesDavid Gerrold speaks onstage at Engadget Expand NY 2013 at Jacob K. Javits Convention Center on November 10, 2013 in New York City

Gerrold decided that he wanted to write a script about blood donation. A good friend of his, the famous science fiction writer Robert A. Heinlein, underwent major surgery, which required multiple blood transfusions. After that, Heinlein became a vocal advocate for blood donation, as did Gerrold.

He decided that he wanted to honor Heinlein by doing an episode of “Star Trek” about blood donation.

“I came up with this idea about a disease so bad that you’re supposed to destroy the ship and not attempt to rescue. So right there you have tension for the crew. And it turns out the only way we can save them is blood tranfusions. And then it turns out that we don’t have enough artificial blood so we have to have people donate blood. And I wanted to put a card at the end of the episode ‘you too can donate blood.’ Because of the AIDS crisis we were having a critical shortage of blood donors. People were afraid to donate blood, and I wanted to address that. That was the goal of that. And I thought, this is a totally perfect ‘Star Trek’ story, a totally perfect ‘Star Trek’ goal. And it would demonstrate the power of ‘Star Trek’ because… if the episode were broadcast on a Thursday night and on Friday a million people donated blood that would demonstrate the power of ‘Star Trek.’ And it would do enormous good all over the nation, maybe all over the world.”

With that goal in mind, Gerrold started work on “Blood and Fire.”


The ‘Blood and Fire’ Controversy

Gerrold told Heavy that the outline for his “Blood and Fire” episode was approved without issue. When he started working on the script, he realized that he could easily include two gay characters. He didn’t plan on putting gay crew members in the script, but he realized the episode would be a great opportunity to follow through on Roddenberry’s promise of queer inclusion.

So, he wrote a very simple scene that featured a gay couple. In the scene, two crewmen were working with Commander William Riker, who asked one of them, “How long have you two been together?” The crewman replied, “Since the Academy.”

Gerrold emphasized, “And that’s it. Now if you’re under 12, they’re friends… and if you’re over 12 you get it. They’re boyfriends. And that was it.”

He submitted the script on a Thursday and left for a Star Trek cruise the next day. While he was on the cruise, he got a note from Roddenberry saying that everyone loved his script and that he should have a good time on the cruise.

However, when he returned Gerrold found out that everyone did not, in fact, love his script. As soon as he walked into his office, he saw a note from fellow Trek veteran writer Dorothy Fontana. The note warned him not to speak to anyone on staff until he’d talked to her. When Gerrold found her, she gave him the rundown. Half the staff hated his script and half the staff loved it. They were deadlocked about moving forward.

Gerrold said that one of the lead writers was very concerned about the gay characters and that Berman had written a whole memo about how they couldn’t move forward with the episode. According to Gerrold, Berman’s argument was that “mommies will write letters.” Gerrold said that Berman emphasized that the show would be on during family hours on some networks and the content of the episode was not family-friendly.

Gerrold told Heavy that he was livid about the reaction to the script. He insisted that the writers had been promised that TNG would “do issues shows.”

“Gene had been telling people ‘What’s that story you want to tell that sticks in your craw, that nobody else is going to let you tell?’ And this was the one! You know, I got excited. This was the chance. Nobody else on television was even addressing gay characters at the time… If you saw a gay character on TV usually it was to make fun of them. There were only two ways you saw gay people on movies or TV, that they were going to commit suicide… or they were an object of ridicule… and I wanted to change that conversation. I thought ‘Star Trek’ is the perfect place to do it… Gay people were saying ‘We’re not invisible. Please include us too.’ And so I was appalled at the fact that we had Rick Berman and a couple of other [people] writing these memos.”

Gerrold decided to respond with his own memo. He emphasized that Roddenberry had promised the fans a gay character and insisted that now was the time to fulfill that promise. He also reminded the staff that “Star Trek” was supposed to be “an issues show” tackling the tough topics. Additionally, Gerrold pointed out that “if mommies write letters… it shows they’re watching the show.”

Gerrold said that one of the producers told him the memo was wonderful. Then he promptly informed him that he still had to take the gay characters out of the script. Reluctantly, Gerrold agreed.

The rewrite got assigned to another writer, even though Gerrold offered to do it. Gerrold claimed that Roddenberry asked the writer to lie to him and say that he wasn’t okay with Gerrold doing the rewrite. The writer told him the truth instead. That lie was the beginning of the end of Gerrold and Roddenberry’s professional relationship and their friendship.

After much controversy, Gerrold said the script was permanently shelved. He blamed this mostly on Berman and Roddenberry’s lawyer Leonard Maizlish. Gerrold also claimed Maizlish was largely behind the toxic work environment that forced him to leave the show.

Though he started working on TNG with much excitement, Gerrold left before the show even aired. He didn’t even want a producer credit because he was so upset with how the first season was turning out.


‘Blood and Fire’ Lives On

VideoVideo related to interview: ‘star trek’ writer david gerrold dishes about the aids episode tng rejected2021-05-07T23:20:59-04:00

Though “Blood and Fire” never became a canon episode of “Star Trek,” it lived on in a few different ways.

After Gerrold left TNG, he still regularly attended Star Trek conventions. During those conventions, he started selling autographed copies of the rejected “Blood and Fire” script directly to fans. He donated half of the profits to the AIDS Project of Los Angeles. Gerrold continued to sell the scripts at conventions for years. He donated about $30,000 to the AIDS Project of Los Angeles during the years he was selling the scripts.

Since he left writing for television, Gerrold has been a novelist. In the early 2000s, he decided to write a novelization of his infamous “Blood and Fire” script. The book became the final chapter of his Star Wolf series.

A few years later, James Cawley, the producer of the “Star Trek” fan series “Star Trek New Voyages: Phase II,” contacted Gerrold and said that he wanted to make “Blood and Fire.” Though the episode was originally written by another “Star Trek” fan, Cawley asked Gerrold to do a rewrite. They ended up having some amazing conversations about what they wished “Star Trek” had been, and the two decided to make the “Star Trek” they wanted to see. Gerrold decided to rewrite the script entirely.

While he was working on the rewrite, Cawley asked him to expand on the gay characters to make them a significant part of the episode. One of the gay characters became Kirk’s nephew. During the episode, he came out to Kirk by asking him to perform his wedding ceremony.

The single episode became two episodes, which basically turned into a feature film. Gerrold decided to direct the episodes as well, which can be viewed in the video above.

Gerrold told Heavy that the fan series allowed him to make the kind of “Star Trek” he’d always wanted to make. It gave him the opportunity to do what he’d never been allowed to do when he was actually writing for “Star Trek.”

These days, Gerrold is still steadily cranking out science fiction novels and he’s preparing to work on his memoir. Though he wishes things had worked out with “Star Trek,” Gerrold admitted that leaving the industry was the best decision he ever made.

Follow the Heavy on Star Trek Facebook page for the latest breaking news, rumors and content!


Trending News: Global RUM Market Updates, Dynamics, Competitive Landscape (Suntory Holdings, Halewood International, Bacardi, Hampden Estate Rum Tours) – The Courier – The Courier

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Titans Giani Wimbish-Gay heading to California – Crossroads Today

Wimbish-Gay signs to play at Masters University

VICTORIA,Texas–East Titans point guard Giani Wimbish-Gay is heading to California in the fall.

Senior Wimbish-Gay played her final game as a player for her mom, Victoria East head basketball coach, Yulanda Wimbish-North this past season. Wimbish-Gay will be taking her talents to Masters University in Santa Clarita, California to play basketball.

Wimbish-Gay said she had other offers to play other places but after praying about it and see how much interest, and Faith Masters showed in her, she decided to commit to them.

“It means a lot. I honestly didn’t think I would make it here. I was just a little girl with a basketball. For me to follow my sisters foot steps, and continue playing basketball out of state, it means so much to me and my family to take it seriously,” said Wimbish-Gay.

Wimbish-Gay would like to become a middle school teacher/ coach or continue her basketball career and play overseas.

Hearing on proposed Nebraska health standards that teach gender identity goes almost 4 hours – Lincoln Journal Star

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The draft standards include teaching students respect for people of all genders, gender expressions and gender identities.

Members of the Nebraska State Board of Education got an earful on Friday from opponents of draft health standards that would teach students as young as first grade about gender identity and gender stereotypes.

But the board also heard from advocates of the LGBTQ community and parents of gender-nonconforming children who backed the standards and spoke of the alienation their children feel.

Opponents outnumbered supporters about 2-to-1 at a hearing in Kearney that lasted almost four hours. About 70 people testified.

The meeting room erupted in applause several times after opponents stepped to the podium and delivered their objections, prompting decorum warnings from the board president and the commissioner of education.

“I do have authority to end public comment,” President Maureen Nickels told them.

A substantial number of opponents said they were appearing on behalf of the Protect Nebraska Children coalition, which they said has 11,000 members.

Opponents said introducing young children to sexual topics would sexualize them, encourage promiscuity, confuse them and leave them vulnerable to sexual predators.

​”I don’t think think we as citizens, parents and educators should take a chance on being seen as grooming young people for predators,” said Duane Lienemann, a retired educator from Blue Hill. “That may sound out there, but is it? Can you guarantee it can’t and won’t happen?”

Supporters of the standards argued the opposite, saying that educating children about proper terms for body parts and consent would arm them to fend off abuse.

Teaching kindergartners correct names for body parts instead of nicknames would help in investigations of child abuse, providing clarity to a child’s testimony, they said.

But an opponent who identified herself as a paralegal said California experienced just the opposite after adopting similar standards.

Judy Karmazin of Gibbon, who said she did pro bono work in California, said it became difficult to prepare children for court because they had come to believe that the abuse was their fault and normal and children didn’t think anything was wrong.

“This is why I oppose it, because I witnessed the damage that could be done, she said.

Doane taps college football coach, Crawford native as next president

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Abbi Swatsworth, executive director of OutNebraska, told the board to “listen to science over fear.”

OutNebraska is a nonprofit that advocates for Nebraskans who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or queer.

“Young people are increasingly telling us who they are,” Swatsworth said, and parents, educators and faith leaders must “honor their truth.”

Excluding LBGTQ students from the standards sends the message that they’re not worthy of an education, she said.

The draft released in March calls for teaching children as young as first graders about gender identity and gender stereotypes.

Kindergarteners would be taught about different kinds of family structures, including “cohabitating” and same-gender families.

Fourth graders would be taught the difference between sex assigned at birth and gender identity. Fifth graders would be taught that gender expression and gender identity exist along a spectrum.

Sixth graders would learn what sexual identity is and learn about a range of identities related to sexual orientation, among them heterosexual, bisexual, lesbian, gay, queer, two-spirit, asexual and pansexual.

They would learn the differences between cisgender, transgender, gender nonbinary, gender expansive and gender identity.

Compromise on committee makeup allows school finance study to move forward

After taking testimony, several board members said that some members of the public had misconceptions about the standards and that the board or the Department of Education needed to address those misconceptions by publicizing what’s actually contained in the standards.

Responding to what it called misconceptions, the department made public a list of “clarifications,” saying that the standards were not written by activists, or with funding or assistance from Planned Parenthood or Black Lives Matter, and that critical race theory was not used to develop the standards.​

Gov. Pete Ricketts has called for scrapping the sex-ed topics in the standards.

Ricketts has said that the standards were authored with the help of what he sees as political action groups, like OutNebraska, while leaving out groups he considers mainstream, like the Nebraska Catholic Conference.

Twenty-eight of Nebraska’s 49 state senators joined Ricketts in asking the Board of Education to remove all sex education and other “ideologically motivated content” from the standards.​

Nebraska currently has no state health standards. The standards, if approved, would only be recommended for adoption by local districts.

joe.dejka@owh.com, 402-444-1077

In California: Palm Springs’ historic gay bars see light at end of tunnel – AZCentral.com

I’m Kristin Scharkey, features editor for The Desert Sun in Palm Springs, wishing you a happy Friday and sincere apologies for missing our Thursday edition. The news cycle never sleeps!

Josh Snyder, left, and Alex Ordoubegian of San Diego share a kiss at QuadZ Palm Springs on Arenas Road in Palm Springs, Calif., on Friday, April 30, 2021.

‘We’re still here’: Palm Springs’ historic gay bars see light at the end of the tunnel. Despite more than a year of pandemic-related closures, many of the bars located in the Southern California destination are open again.

The city has long been one of the most popular LGBTQ destinations in the country.

“These bars are more than just drinking places,” Rob Giesecke, owner of Chill Bar Palm Springs, told Desert Sun reporter Amanda Ulrich. “This is where the community comes together.”

In other parts of California, some gay bars haven’t been as lucky. San Francisco and Los Angeles, for example, have seen several famed establishments go under. The Stud, San Francisco’s oldest LGBTQ bar, was one of the first to announce it was shuttering last May.

Bartender Masio Winston prepares a drink at Chill Bar in Palm Springs, Calif., on Friday, April 30, 2021.

Giesecke partially credits his business’ survival to the tight-knit community that came together and “formed ranks” around the historic street. Customers sat in outdoor patios in 120-degree heat when they could have stayed home. Some started GoFundMe pages for Arenas bars. 

“We’re like a gay community center bar. Local gay men treat this as their living room,” said David Farnsworth, the co-owner and general manager of nearby Streetbar. “It’s been ground zero for them for forever.” 

Have a friend who wants California news delivered to their inbox? Let them know they can sign up via this link. It’s 100% free.

Here’s some more news you may want to know ahead of the weekend:

California’s population falls for first time ever

Nearly 200,000 people left the Golden State last year, “marking the first population decline ever recorded in the state and underscoring larger trends that recently led to the loss of a Congressional seat,” according to the Los Angeles Times.

Soumya Karlamangla and Thomas Curwen report that “a major force in California’s declining population has been the exodus to other states. The state has seen more people leave than move in from other states for much of the last three decades.” 

For 40 years, this victim of rape and murder had no name; genetic genealogy gave it back

Genetic genealogy has identified Shirley Soosay as the rape and murder victim in Kern County. Her body was found in July 1980 but she remained nameless until investigators used genetic genealogy. Soosay's killer was also connected to a Ventura County murder case.

Thanks to genetic genealogists’ use of historical records, social media and DNA, the public can now call Kern County Jane Doe by her true name: Shirley Ann Soosay. 

For 40 years, Soosay was an unidentified woman known to the public only as a victim of a brutal rape and murder. During the perpetrator’s 2018 trial in Ventura County, jurors and attorneys referred to her based on where her body was found on July 15, 1980: Kern County Jane Doe.

Ventura County Star reporter Megan Diskin details how investigators used genetic genealogy to identify Soosay. 

Mosey on down to the Cactus Ranch

No ifs, ands or buts about it: California Nursery Specialties Cactus Ranch is a super cool place. The Los Angeles Times got an inside look at the San Fernando Valley hot spot, just northwest of downtown Los Angeles.

Reporter Jeanette Marantos said the nursery “feels secret and special because as nurseries go, it’s relatively unknown, and thus uncrowded. That’s because, during the week, the Cactus Ranch is a wholesale nursery business, closed to the public, but on weekends it’s open to anyone from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. (5 p.m. in winter.)” 

I, for one, am thirsting after these photos by Calvin B. Alagot.

No fireworks this year?

Palm Springs Power baseball hosted Independence Day festivities at Palm Springs Stadium on Fourth of July 2019 with baseball and fireworks.

The city of Palm Springs won’t host a fireworks show for the Fourth of July this year — and the reason isn’t COVID-19. 

Citing concerns for the negative impacts of fireworks on pets, veterans and people with post-traumatic stress disorder, the Palm Springs City Council this week rejected an agreement with a fireworks company to provide the annual show in 2021. 

“We’re coming out of COVID and it seems like a perfect time for a paradigm shift,” Councilmember Dennis Woods said.

Desert Sun reporter Erin Rode has the details on the city’s pivot for the patriotic holiday.

In California is a roundup of news from across USA Today network newsrooms. Also contributing: Los Angeles Times, VC Star. We’ll be back in your inbox Monday with the latest headlines.

As the features editor at The Desert Sun, Kristin Scharkey oversees a team of reporters covering beats ranging from health to business. Reach her at kristin.scharkey@desertsun.com.

In California: Palm Springs’ historic gay bars see light at end of tunnel – USA TODAY

I’m Kristin Scharkey, features editor for The Desert Sun in Palm Springs, wishing you a happy Friday and sincere apologies for missing our Thursday edition. The news cycle never sleeps!

Josh Snyder, left, and Alex Ordoubegian of San Diego share a kiss at QuadZ Palm Springs on Arenas Road in Palm Springs, Calif., on Friday, April 30, 2021.

‘We’re still here’: Palm Springs’ historic gay bars see light at the end of the tunnel. Despite more than a year of pandemic-related closures, many of the bars located in the Southern California destination are open again.

The city has long been one of the most popular LGBTQ destinations in the country.

“These bars are more than just drinking places,” Rob Giesecke, owner of Chill Bar Palm Springs, told Desert Sun reporter Amanda Ulrich. “This is where the community comes together.”

In other parts of California, some gay bars haven’t been as lucky. San Francisco and Los Angeles, for example, have seen several famed establishments go under. The Stud, San Francisco’s oldest LGBTQ bar, was one of the first to announce it was shuttering last May.

Bartender Masio Winston prepares a drink at Chill Bar in Palm Springs, Calif., on Friday, April 30, 2021.

Giesecke partially credits his business’ survival to the tight-knit community that came together and “formed ranks” around the historic street. Customers sat in outdoor patios in 120-degree heat when they could have stayed home. Some started GoFundMe pages for Arenas bars. 

“We’re like a gay community center bar. Local gay men treat this as their living room,” said David Farnsworth, the co-owner and general manager of nearby Streetbar. “It’s been ground zero for them for forever.” 

Have a friend who wants California news delivered to their inbox? Let them know they can sign up via this link. It’s 100% free.

Here’s some more news you may want to know ahead of the weekend:

California’s population falls for first time ever

Nearly 200,000 people left the Golden State last year, “marking the first population decline ever recorded in the state and underscoring larger trends that recently led to the loss of a Congressional seat,” according to the Los Angeles Times.

Soumya Karlamangla and Thomas Curwen report that “a major force in California’s declining population has been the exodus to other states. The state has seen more people leave than move in from other states for much of the last three decades.” 

For 40 years, this victim of rape and murder had no name; genetic genealogy gave it back

Genetic genealogy has identified Shirley Soosay as the rape and murder victim in Kern County. Her body was found in July 1980 but she remained nameless until investigators used genetic genealogy. Soosay's killer was also connected to a Ventura County murder case.

Thanks to genetic genealogists’ use of historical records, social media and DNA, the public can now call Kern County Jane Doe by her true name: Shirley Ann Soosay. 

For 40 years, Soosay was an unidentified woman known to the public only as a victim of a brutal rape and murder. During the perpetrator’s 2018 trial in Ventura County, jurors and attorneys referred to her based on where her body was found on July 15, 1980: Kern County Jane Doe.

Ventura County Star reporter Megan Diskin details how investigators used genetic genealogy to identify Soosay. 

Mosey on down to the Cactus Ranch

No ifs, ands or buts about it: California Nursery Specialties Cactus Ranch is a super cool place. The Los Angeles Times got an inside look at the San Fernando Valley hot spot, just northwest of downtown Los Angeles.

Reporter Jeanette Marantos said the nursery “feels secret and special because as nurseries go, it’s relatively unknown, and thus uncrowded. That’s because, during the week, the Cactus Ranch is a wholesale nursery business, closed to the public, but on weekends it’s open to anyone from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. (5 p.m. in winter.)” 

I, for one, am thirsting after these photos by Calvin B. Alagot.

No fireworks this year?

Palm Springs Power baseball hosted Independence Day festivities at Palm Springs Stadium on Fourth of July 2019 with baseball and fireworks.

The city of Palm Springs won’t host a fireworks show for the Fourth of July this year — and the reason isn’t COVID-19. 

Citing concerns for the negative impacts of fireworks on pets, veterans and people with post-traumatic stress disorder, the Palm Springs City Council this week rejected an agreement with a fireworks company to provide the annual show in 2021. 

“We’re coming out of COVID and it seems like a perfect time for a paradigm shift,” Councilmember Dennis Woods said.

Desert Sun reporter Erin Rode has the details on the city’s pivot for the patriotic holiday.

In California is a roundup of news from across USA Today network newsrooms. Also contributing: Los Angeles Times, VC Star. We’ll be back in your inbox Monday with the latest headlines.

As the features editor at The Desert Sun, Kristin Scharkey oversees a team of reporters covering beats ranging from health to business. Reach her at kristin.scharkey@desertsun.com.