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In challenging season, Spurs’ Rudy Gay has persevered – San Antonio Express-News

When/where: 8 p.m. Wednesday; Vivint Arena, Salt Lake City

TV/radio: Bally Sports Southwest, NBA TV; WOAI-AM 1200, KXTN-AM 1350 and FM 107.5 (Spanish)

PROBABLE STARTERS

Spurs: PG Dejounte Murray (6-4, 4th year), SG Devin Vassell (6-5, 1st), SF DeMar DeRozan (6-6, 12th), PF Keldon Johnson (6-5, 2nd), C Jakob Poeltl (7-1, 5th)

Jazz: PG Joe Ingles (6-8, 7th year), SG Royce O’Neal (6-6, 4th), SF Bojan Bogdanovic (6-8, 7th), PF Georges Niang (6-7, 5th), C Rudy Gobert (7-1, 8th)

RESERVES

Spurs: G Patty Mills (6-1, 12th year), F Rudy Gay (6-8, 15th), G/F Lonnie Walker IV (6-4, 3rd), F/C Drew Eubanks (6-9, 3rd), C Gorgui Dieng (6-10, 8th), G Tre Jones (6-1, 1st), F Keita Bates-Diop (6-8, 3rd), F Cameron Reynolds (6-7, 2nd), G Quinndary Weatherspoon (6-3, 2nd). Inactive: Derrick White (right ankle sprain), Trey Lyles (right ankle sprain)

Jazz: G Jordan Clarkson (6-5, 7th year), G Trent Forrest (6-5, 1st), F/C Derrick Favors (6-10, 11th), G Matt Thomas (6-4, 2nd), F Ersan Ilyasova (6-9, 13th), F Jarrell Brantley (6-6, 2nd), G Elijah Hughes (6-6, 1st), F Juwan Morgan (6-8, 2nd), G Miye Oni (6-3, 2nd). Inactive: Udoka Azubuike (right ankle sprain), Mike Conley (tight right hamstring), Donovan Mitchell (right ankle sprain)

COACHES

Spurs: Gregg Popovich

Jazz: Quin Snyder

STAT LEADERS

Spurs: Points, DeRozan, 21.3 per game; rebounds, Poeltl, 7.9; assists, DeRozan, 7.3; steals, Murray, 1.6; blocks, Poeltl, 1.7

Jazz: Points, Mitchell, 26.4 per game; rebounds, Gobert, 13.4; assists, Conley, 6.0; steals, Conley 1.4; blocks, Gobert 2.8

NOTABLE

Through 65 games, the Jazz have hit a franchise-record 1,095 3-pointers, eclipsing their previous record of 993 in 2018-19. The total ranks eighth in NBA history. The 2018-19 Houston Rockets top the chart with 1,323.

The Jazz and Spurs feature two of the most efficient scorers in the league. Gobert ranks No. 1, hitting 67.9 percent of his shots from the field. Poeltl ranks fourth, sinking 62.8 percent.

Vassell ranks sixth among rookies in 3-point field goal percentage. He’s shooting 37.7 percent on 2.3 attempts per outing.

Tom Orsborn

Star Wars’ Ewan McGregor defends playing gay role in new Ryan Murphy Netflix show – Digital Spy

Star Wars actor Ewan McGregor has defended taking on the role of gay fashion designer Halston in Ryan Murphy’s new Netflix miniseries.

In Halston, McGregor plays the mononymous designer who built up a fashion empire in the 1970s while also living a hedonistic lifestyle at legendary New York City nightclub Studio 54.

However, McGregor’s casting in the series has caused more discussion about the subject of straight actors taking on LGBTQ+ roles.

ewan mcgregor in netflix drama halston

Netflix

During an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, McGregor was reminded of a quote from Pose actor Billy Porter who said in 2019: “If ‘flamboyantly’ wasn’t in the description of the character, no one would see me ever for anything.

“Straight men playing gay – everyone wants to give them an award.”

Addressing Porter’s comments, McGregor said: “I hear the discussion and I respect both sides of it, I really do.

“I haven’t walked in Billy Porter’s shoes. I don’t know what it’s like to lose out parts when you might feel it’s to do with your sexuality. So I can only respect his point of view.”

ewan mcgregor in netflix drama halston

Netflix

McGregor went on to say he decided that “if it had been a story about Halston’s sexuality more, then maybe it’s right that gay actors should play that role.

“But in this case – and I don’t want to sound like I’m worming out of this, because it’s something I did think a lot about – I suppose ultimately I felt like it was just one part of who he was.”

Halston premieres on May 14 on Netflix.



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Two Ohio bills would ban transgender girls from girls’ sports – WJW FOX 8 News Cleveland

Transgender athletes Ohio: Two Ohio bills would ban transgender girls from girls’ sports






























Carolyn Sue Moore Gay – WDTV

Carolyn Sue Moore Gay, 82, of Fairmont, passed away on Sunday, May 2, 2021, at United Hospital Center in Bridgeport. She lived most of her life in Weston. She was born in Petersburg, WV, on February 1, 1939, a daughter of the late Walter Hubert Moore and Delma Arena Sholes Moore. On September 7, 1957, Carolyn married Jerry Lee Gay, whom she missed dearly after his passing on September 27, 2017. In addition to her husband and parents, Carolyn was preceded in death by two brothers: John and Jack Moore. Her creative nature will be carried on by her four children: Steve Gay and wife, Lisa, of Phoenix, AZ, Terri Linger and husband, Bill, of Fairmont, Sherri Trefz and husband, Scott, of Fairmont, and Jenifer Maczka and husband, Derek, of Hawaii; nine grandchildren: Nicole Gray, Wesley Gray, Jessica Tacy, Alyssa Hodge, Zachary Linger, Nicolas Trefz, Andrew Trefz, Sydney Maczka, and Nathan Maczka; two great-grandchildren, Wyatt Tacy and Timmy Hodge; two sisters: Marsha Cullen of Clarksburg, and Pat Mason of Fairmont; and several nieces, nephews and cousins. Carolyn spent most of her years as a self-employed seamstress. She also enjoyed painting, drawing, macrame, and crocheting beautiful one-of-a-kind rag rugs. For many years, Carolyn taught painting classes at the Lewis County Senior Center. Carolyn’s request for Cremation has been honored at Pat Boyle Funeral Home’s On-Site Crematory. We, at Pat Boyle Funeral Home and Cremation Service located at 144 Hackers Creek Rd. in Jane Lew, are honored to serve the family of Carolyn Sue Moore Gay. Online condolences may be expressed at www.PatBoyleFuneralHome.com.

BRIDGEPORT, W.Va (WDTV) –

Copyright 2021 WDTV. All rights reserved.

Uganda strengthens anti-gay laws, brands gay sex an “unnatural offense” – Metro Weekly

uganda, gay news, metro weekly
A 2018 protest against Uganda’s anti-LGBTQ oppression — Photo: Alisdare Hickson

Uganda has further strengthened its anti-gay laws with new legislation that brands gay sex an “unnatural offense.”

The African nation already criminalizes same-sex sexual relations, with Uganda’s Penal Code outlawing “carnal knowledge against the order of nature” and gay people facing up to life in prison if convicted.

But that wasn’t sufficient for lawmakers in the Ugandan parliament, who passed the Sexual Offences Bill on Monday, May 3, two years after it was formally introduced.

Among its various sections, the bill criminalizes “unnatural offenses,” including sexual acts “contrary to the order of nature” and bestiality.

But the Bill also builds on language in the country’s Penal Code by specifically banning “sexual act[s] between persons of the same gender.”

Those convicted under the “unnatural offenses” clause would be subject to imprisonment for five years, Uganda’s Independent reports.

Lawmakers told the Independent that the new law would not be thrown out in court, like the country’s infamous “Kill the Gays” bill. Introduced in 2013, it proposed the death penalty for same-sex sexual relations.



That was later reduced to life in prison and the bill was signed into law in 2014, drawing international condemnation. However, it was short-lived, as Uganda’s Constitutional Court subsequently annulled the law on a technicality.

The Ugandan government had flirted with the prospect of reviving the “Kill the Gays” bill in 2019 and expanding it to include punishing those accused of “promoting” homosexuality.

A government minister at the time claimed there had been “massive recruitment” of young people into homosexuality, and that defenders of variant sexual orientations deserved to be criminalized.

In the wake of suggestions that the “Kill the Gays” bill would be revived, human rights activists said that attacks on LGBTQ Ugandans increased, alongside reports that gay men were being arrested, detained, interrogated, and subjected to forced anal examinations under the guise of collecting “proof” of homosexuality.

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Lawsuit filed over ‘gay’ attack in Virginia GOP race – Associated Press

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — A Republican candidate for Virginia lieutenant governor is going to court in an effort to find out who is responsible for an anonymous attack that called him “a Gay Democrat” while supporting one of his opponents.

Del. Glenn Davis announced Tuesday that he had filed a defamation lawsuit against an unknown defendant over a text message sent to voters registered for the GOP’s unassembled convention, which is being held Saturday to choose the party’s nominees for statewide offices.

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The message criticized Davis’ voting record, called him gay and said, “Help Glenn come out of the closet by not ranking him on May 8th.”

“These unethical, illegal, and scandalous tactics are detrimental to our party, civil discourse, and the efforts underway to win back Virginia for Republicans in November,” Davis, a moderate who represents Virginia Beach and is married to a woman, said in a statement. “I want it to be very clear that we will soon discover which campaign and bad actors were behind this text and they will be sued to the full extent allowed by Virginia law.”

The text message also said that former Del. Tim Hugo, one of Davis’ opponents in the six-way race, was the “only conservative” running. Hugo, a longtime delegate from northern Virginia, has said his campaign did not send the text.

“We condemned the text when it was sent and we condemn it now. It was wrong. We hope the Davis campaign is able to find out who was behind it,” Dustin Rhodes, Hugo’s campaign manager, wrote in an email.

A call Tuesday to the number that sent the text went to a pre-recorded message that offered a chance to “unsubscribe from future calling campaigns” before disconnecting.

The role of the lieutenant governor is mostly ceremonial in Virginia. Besides being second in line to the governor’s office, it involves overseeing the daily work of the state Senate and is often a stepping stone to higher office.

Davis has a big fundraising lead on the GOP side of the race, followed by Hugo, according to the latest filings available from the nonpartisan Virginia Public Access Project.

There are also six candidates competing for the Democratic nomination. Democratic voters will choose their nominee in a primary in June.

LGBTQ+ teens, 20-somethings share pandemic mental health struggles, post-pandemic plans – Washington Blade

WASHINGTON, D.C. – People around the world have struggled for more than a year while stuck at home for school and work. But this physical and social isolation has taken a particularly tough toll on LGBTQ+ youth, data and interviews show. 

That’s because the pandemic cut many gay and transgender youth off from the places and spaces where they feel free to be themselves and forced them to spend a lot more time with family members who may not accept them.

“A lot of my friends are in the closet…and being stuck at home, they can’t really get out into the world,” said K.C. Elowitch, a 14-year-old transgender student in Rockville, Md. “At school, they were able to do whatever they wanted and be whoever they wanted. Now being stuck at home with [their families] is a lot more stressful.”

Elowitch was one of 11 young people, ages 14 to 22, who participated in a recent LGBTQ+ youth mental health focus group hosted by the Urban Health Media Project, a Washington-area nonprofit that trains diverse high school students from under-resourced communities to do multimedia health and social issue journalism. 

Elowitch’s experience was echoed by others in the focus group. 

“I was in a bad place when I was closeted,” said Wendy Nichols, a 22-year-old trans woman who began transitioning last summer. “Not just mentally, but literally and physically.” 

Living with transphobic parents made it “hard to be comfortable with myself,” said Nichols. 

Wendy (left) is shown with her twin brother (right)

Focus group members honed in on topics that make it hard to be LGBTQ+, including: 

  • A lack of positive and realistic representation of LGBTQ+ youth in media;
  • Being misdiagnosed in doctor’s offices and being treated unfairly due to sexuality, along with other health inequities; and
  • The impact of strict religious beliefs about sexual orientation and gender identity.

Participants were encouraged to share openly, and were led through the 90-minute discussion by professionals, and fellow members of the LGBTQ+ community. The focus group was co-moderated by Heidi Ellis and Josh Rivera. Ellis, who identifies as lesbian, was a senior adviser at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in the Obama administration and now runs her own advocacy and consulting company. Rivera, Money & Consumer Editor at USA TODAY, is gay and chairs the newspaper’s diversity committee.  

The focus group participants talked about what they would like addressed by the media and what they would like to see change. They emphasized topics such as safety, gender identity, and safely coming out to others.

Roman Sardo-Longo, a 16-year-old trans male who joined the virtual focus group from Cleveland, said having more LGBTQ+ representation in the media could help other young people more easily accept peers like him.

“It took me a while to come out [as trans] because I was terrified that my friends would not understand, that they weren’t gonna get it, that they would think it was a weird thing they would have to accommodate for,” he said.

Others shared their experiences with religious beliefs that oppose  LGBTQ+ identity and sexuality. 

Tris Buchanan, a DC high school senior, is shown in a recent selfie.

Tris Buchanan, 17, lives in Washington, D.C., and identifies as gender-fluid. Buchanan’s parents’ Christian religion played a big role in their struggle to come out.  

“Some die-hard Christians…say God does not like gays, God doesn’t like anyone who’s part of the LGBTQ community,” said Buchanan. “Homophobes use the Bible and use God as excuses.”

Nichols, who also grew up in a conservative Christian household in Texas, said the concept of “toxic masculinity” also greatly affected her as she was growing up. 

“I was told, ‘Men don’t cry,’ ” said Nichols. “I grew up with that and it skewed my views.” 

When Nichols was 16, she finally decided to tell her family she identified as a woman. Her late mother, who had struggled with mental illness since a serious brain injury in a car crash, took Nichols for a drive and threatened to drive them both into the river if her daughter didn’t retract the statement. So Nichols did. 

But last June at 21, Nichols began transitioning to a female by taking hormones she got off the Internet. She didn’t have health insurance and lived nearly five hours from the nearest health care provider who would treat her.  After her father died of cancer last August, she moved to the Washington, D.C., area to live with a friend she met online. 

When that didn’t work out, Nichols became homeless and called the LGBTQ+ youth shelter Casa Ruby. There, she found comfort with others like her and within two months, was connected to the transitional housing where she can now live for the next 18 months, if needed. She begins a new job as a receptionist in early May. 

Nichols, who struggles with substance use and what she believes is depression, said she’s feeling more hopeful than ever that “one day I can overcome it all.” 

“The future seems so bright now,” she said. “I’m not stuck in a place where I couldn’t be myself or dreading the next bad thing as I did for most of 2020 when I was preparing for my father to pass away.” 

UHMP also just completed a workshop on the relationship between housing and health, including LGBTQ+ youth homelessness in D.C. and Baltimore. That story will run soon in the Blade. Another reporting workshop this summer will explore youth mental health, with a special focus on the LGBTQ+ and Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) communities. UHMP is seeking applications for 20 high school students to attend.

UHMP is also pursuing reporting on topics proposed by the young people who attended the focus group. Two participants are working on a story about the additional challenges faced by LGBTQ+ youth with learning disabilities. 

Jojo Brew, 18, is a DC high school senior and photographer.

Jojo Brew, an 18-year-old trans male in Washington, D.C., who participated in the focus group, believes the LGBTQ+ community should produce positive content on social media sites such as Instagram in order to raise awareness and promote understanding of gender and sexuality issues.

To that end, he’s begun interviewing and photographing other LGBTQ+ teens in the D.C. area for visual articles and social media posts and told a little of his own story for Instagram. Brew is also helping plan a June 18 LGBTQ+ event co-hosted by UHMP in Washington, where he hopes young people who may not be out can be “one with the community” even if they don’t speak publicly.  

Having that exposure to other LGBTQ+ people, they’d realize they aren’t the only ones going through a tough time,” said Brew. “They want to be heard and feel some type of love.” 

Brew was recently awarded a Children’s Defense Fund fellowship grant to chronicle the sense of community in Southeast Washington and is working with UHMP to capture and share the stories of LGBTQ+ youth in the D.C. area. 

UHMP is looking for LGBTQ+ people of all ages who are willing to be interviewed about youth mental health. We’d like to hear from youth and adults on all topics, including the impact of the reactions of community, government, parents, religious organizations and peers to youth gender and identity. What helped you weather challenges that could help the next generation?  Let us know at [email protected] 

Vanessa Falcon is a UHMP intern and senior at Miami Lakes Educational Center in Florida. Jayne O’Donnell, former health policy reporter at USA TODAY, is UHMP’s founder.

Lawsuit filed over ‘gay’ attack in Virginia GOP race – The Seattle Times

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — A Republican candidate for Virginia lieutenant governor is going to court in an effort to find out who is responsible for an anonymous attack that called him “a Gay Democrat” while supporting one of his opponents.

Del. Glenn Davis announced Tuesday that he had filed a defamation lawsuit against an unknown defendant over a text message sent to voters registered for the GOP’s unassembled convention, which is being held Saturday to choose the party’s nominees for statewide offices.

The message criticized Davis’ voting record, called him gay and said, “Help Glenn come out of the closet by not ranking him on May 8th.”

“These unethical, illegal, and scandalous tactics are detrimental to our party, civil discourse, and the efforts underway to win back Virginia for Republicans in November,” Davis, a moderate who represents Virginia Beach and is married to a woman, said in a statement. “I want it to be very clear that we will soon discover which campaign and bad actors were behind this text and they will be sued to the full extent allowed by Virginia law.”

The text message also said that former Del. Tim Hugo, one of Davis’ opponents in the six-way race, was the “only conservative” running. Hugo, a longtime delegate from northern Virginia, has said his campaign did not send the text.

“We condemned the text when it was sent and we condemn it now. It was wrong. We hope the Davis campaign is able to find out who was behind it,” Dustin Rhodes, Hugo’s campaign manager, wrote in an email.

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A call Tuesday to the number that sent the text went to a pre-recorded message that offered a chance to “unsubscribe from future calling campaigns” before disconnecting.

The role of the lieutenant governor is mostly ceremonial in Virginia. Besides being second in line to the governor’s office, it involves overseeing the daily work of the state Senate and is often a stepping stone to higher office.

Davis has a big fundraising lead on the GOP side of the race, followed by Hugo, according to the latest filings available from the nonpartisan Virginia Public Access Project.

There are also six candidates competing for the Democratic nomination. Democratic voters will choose their nominee in a primary in June.

Lawsuit filed over ‘gay’ attack in Virginia GOP race – Yahoo Eurosport UK

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — A Republican candidate for Virginia lieutenant governor is going to court in an effort to find out who is responsible for an anonymous attack that called him “a Gay Democrat” while supporting one of his opponents.

Del. Glenn Davis announced Tuesday that he had filed a defamation lawsuit against an unknown defendant over a text message sent to voters registered for the GOP’s unassembled convention, which is being held Saturday to choose the party’s nominees for statewide offices.

The message criticized Davis’ voting record, called him gay and said, “Help Glenn come out of the closet by not ranking him on May 8th.”

“These unethical, illegal, and scandalous tactics are detrimental to our party, civil discourse, and the efforts underway to win back Virginia for Republicans in November,” Davis, a moderate who represents Virginia Beach and is married to a woman, said in a statement. “I want it to be very clear that we will soon discover which campaign and bad actors were behind this text and they will be sued to the full extent allowed by Virginia law.”

The text message also said that former Del. Tim Hugo, one of Davis’ opponents in the six-way race, was the “only conservative” running. Hugo, a longtime delegate from northern Virginia, has said his campaign did not send the text.

“We condemned the text when it was sent and we condemn it now. It was wrong. We hope the Davis campaign is able to find out who was behind it,” Dustin Rhodes, Hugo’s campaign manager, wrote in an email.

A call Tuesday to the number that sent the text went to a pre-recorded message that offered a chance to “unsubscribe from future calling campaigns” before disconnecting.

The role of the lieutenant governor is mostly ceremonial in Virginia. Besides being second in line to the governor’s office, it involves overseeing the daily work of the state Senate and is often a stepping stone to higher office.

Davis has a big fundraising lead on the GOP side of the race, followed by Hugo, according to the latest filings available from the nonpartisan Virginia Public Access Project.

There are also six candidates competing for the Democratic nomination. Democratic voters will choose their nominee in a primary in June.

Public health advocate aims to be first transgender person elected to Pa. house – NorthcentralPa.com

Philadelphia, Pa. – Dr. Rachel Levine made history as the highest-ranking person of transgender origin as the Pa. secretary of health amidst a once-in-a-century pandemic. She is ultimately continuing her history-making run, promoted to U.S. Assistant Secretary of Health for the Biden administration.

Meanwhile, Pennsylvania’s house district 182, center city Philadelphia, is becoming known for its history-making state representatives.

In 2012, Brian Sims was elected to the Pennsylvania state house, becoming the first openly gay person to gain entrance to the lower legislature. 

Sims is not finished making history. In addition to his recently announced bid for the lieutenant governor’s seat, he has endorsed his choice to succeed him in Harrisburg: Deja Lynn Alvarez.

And if Deja Lynn Alvarez has her way, the history-making will continue with her as the first transgender person elected to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.

Alvarez is certain what her possible election to the house might mean.

“It will change the nature of politics in Pennsylvania by helping to inspire folks from other marginalized communities to run for public office on all levels,” she said.

“Elevating a vetted transgender candidate as a viable candidate for public office will help shift the discussion from gender politics to platform, substance, and vision,” Alvarez said on how people will get past the idea of a transgender person representing them in the state legislature.

Alvarez is no stranger to work.

“As someone who is both campaigning while also working two additional jobs, I know what it means to make every penny count and balance a budget. I bring a different approach than most in Harrisburg regarding government waste, spending, and accountability,” she said.

This particular election is unique not only because of who holds this house seat, but because of the dynamics surrounding who could hold it next.

Alvarez is not only running to replace the first openly-gay person to be in the Pa. house, but her primary election opponent for the 182nd district, is like Sims, and openly gay. 

Alvarez said it is her life experiences which separate her from her opponent, Jonathan Lovitz.

“I come from a nonprofit public health field where making the most with least is constant, with a clear understanding of the services provided by our government, and legislation,” Alvarez said.

“I’ve worked with people from all backgrounds, from the homeless, undocumented, to the small business owner, and CEO. Something I hope to bring to Harrisburg is my ability to build bridges. To not necessarily agree with every view but find commonality to get the work done,” said about her life experiences.

Alvarez anticipates some difficulty being a transgender public official.

“Getting people to move past their preconceived notions and prejudices to see us as serious candidates, instead of our identity, is an obstacle I have faced,” she said.

“Time is your biggest enemy on a campaign,” Alvarez said of her current situation.

Alvarez said that if she is to make history, it will not come without a cost. 

“The cost of running a campaign is a barrier for most, and securing funding for nontraditional candidates is a massive obstacle. I announced my candidacy early because grassroots campaigns need time to be impactful.”

 

More from this section

James Williams, Gay Activist in India, Dies at 35 – The New York Times

This obituary is part of a series about people who have died in the coronavirus pandemic. Read about others here.

James Williams was a gay man who grew up in a conservative and religious milieu in Alabama, where homophobia was rampant. But over time, he saw the United States move toward greater tolerance, which he attributed partly to nonthreatening television shows like “Will & Grace,” the long-running sitcom with an openly gay lead character.

While on vacation in India in 2017, he met Ayush Thakur and moved to India to live with him. Gay sex had been decriminalized there only in 2018, and Mr. Williams saw that persecution persisted. He thought that if Indian television shows were modeled on “Will & Grace,” they could bring gay people into Indian living rooms and help change hearts and minds.

So he spent his days meeting with producers and others trying to get such shows off the ground.

Then, last year, the coronavirus pandemic hit and halted his efforts. In recent weeks an explosion of cases has put India under siege, sapping medical systems, overwhelming crematories and leaving some people to die in lines outside hospitals.

Mr. Williams tested positive for Covid-19 on April 24 and joined the desperate scramble for a hospital bed and oxygen. He eventually found both, his brother, John, said, but to no avail: He died on April 28 in a hospital in the Delhi region. He was 35.

James Robert Williams was born on June 30, 1985, in Florence, in northwest Alabama, and grew up in nearby St. Florian. His mother, Kay (Carter) Williams, was a schoolteacher. His father, Paul Kenneth Williams, a former Marine who served in the Vietnam War, was an I.R.S. agent.

James’s mother died in a car accident in 1992, and his father committed suicide in 1995. Jim, 9, and John, 11, went to live with their father’s sister, Sharon Alexander, a volunteer for nonprofits, and her husband, Bill Alexander, a financial executive, in East Amherst, N.Y., near Buffalo.

In addition to his brother and Mr. Thakur, Mr. Williams is survived by the Alexanders and their two daughters, Christie and Jessica Alexander, and their son, Doug.

Mr. Williams majored in English at Columbia University. “He was a campus character, a big, tall, funny guy who always had a good story to tell,” Laura Kleinbaum, a former classmate and close friend, said in a phone interview. A talented writer, he loved composing observational essays and especially admired Joan Didion.

After he graduated in 2008, he became a personal assistant to the writer Daphne Merkin and began traveling the world.

“He was really into getting airline points, and he would make random trips to random cities to get them,” Ms. Kleinbaum said. “You’d be texting with him, and he’d be, like, ‘Oh yeah, I’m in Shanghai.’”

Eager to understand his boyhood and his parents, Mr. Williams had begun an oral history project by interviewing his parents’ friends in Alabama. In those interviews, John Williams said, James was characteristically blunt, typically starting by saying, “You know I’m gay, right?”

In recent months James was trying to get a visa for Mr. Thakur, who was by then his fiancé, so that they could be married in the United States. They had hoped to settle in Los Angeles and work in the entertainment industry.

John said that his brother had “really believed in the power of the media to change the way people thought about certain disfavored populations.”

World Of Wonder Unveils May Lineup Featuring ‘Freedia Got A Gun’, ‘Gay Sex Ed’ With Vanessa Vanjie Mateo & Kameron Michaels – Yahoo Eurosport UK

The Telegraph

PSG players accuse referee of swearing at them during defeat to Man City

Paris Saint-Germain players angrily accused referee Bjorn Kuipers of telling them to “f— off” during their Champions League semi-final defeat at the Etihad Stadium. Marco Verratti claimed he was sworn at by the Dutch official, while Ander Herrera claims he heard Leandro Paredes getting insulted. Kuipers sent off Angel Di Maria for kicking out at Fernandinho and booked four other PSG players as the French champions lost their heads at the end of a 4-1 aggregate defeat. “We are told about respect, about respect with the referees. He said ‘f— off ‘ to Paredes. If we say that, of course we get four matches (banned),” said Herrera to RMC Sport. Verratti added: “The referee told me ‘f— k you ‘twice, I never said that because otherwise, I’ll take ten matches! But if you’re eliminated, it’s not the referee’s fault.” Riyad Mahrez scored both goals for City in the second leg and he says PSG “lost their nerve” in the second half. “They lost their nerve and started kicking us. They got the red card and after that it was more comfortable for us,” he said. Rejoice in Man City’s historic feat – this is more than just a triumph for petrodollars PSG manager Mauricio Pochettino says the matter could now be investigated by governing body Uefa. “We need to believe what they are telling us but the most important thing is we are not in the final,” said the former Tottenham Hotspur coach. “I didn’t hear from the touchline but if something is there, maybe Uefa will investigate the situation. It is not an excuse to use and the most important thing is that we are not in the final.” Pep Guardiola: PSG win is huge step for the club Pep Guardiola hailed Manchester City reaching their first Champions League final as a huge step for the club. The City manager dedicated the semi-final victory over Paris-Saint-Germain to the club’s Abu Dhabi owners, who took over at the Etihad Stadium 13 years ago, and former players who have helped their rise to within 90 minutes of European football’s summit. Riyad Mahrez scored both goals in the 2-0 win, with PSG forward Angel Di Maria dismissed in the second half. “Definitely, it is a huge step for all of us for the club and I am incredibly proud,” said Guardiola. “I think reaching the final has made a bigger picture of what we’ve done in the last four years. It’s incredible in all the competitions. Reaching the final is so difficult, it’s the toughest one because of the quality of opponents, the suffering in tough moments. “Reaching the final is for our owners, chairman and all the people from Abu Dhabi. Also the players who played before for us, Colin Bell, Mike Summerbee. The guys that helped to take the club to another level who were here from when they took over. Joe Hart, Pablo Zabaleta, Vincent Kompany, Sergio Ageruo, David Silva, many players who helped us to be at this stage, we want to share it with them. Without them it is not possible.” City sealed their place at Istanbul’s Atatürk Olympic Stadium, against Chelsea or Real Madrid, after playing the first half in a hail storm. Ice was cleared off the pitch at half-time after Guardiola complained it was not safe for players. By then, Mahrez had given City an early lead. In the second half Ruben Dias, John Stones and Kyle Walker were celebrating blocks like they had scored goals as they kept out Neymar and Di Maria. “It’s a team game,” said Walker. “We all go and celebrate a goal and high-five but as defenders the main thing is keeping clean sheets, this season we have done tremendously well with that and have really sharpened up on our defensive duties. Blocking a shot is just like scoring a goal for me.” Mahrez tapped in his second goal and Di Maria was dismissed for kicking out at Fernandinho. “We were in the game at 1-0 down but in football you need to believe because if you can score one, you can score another two,” said PSG coach Mauricio Pochettino. “The red card changed that feeling, we were then open.” City fans have not had an easy relationship with Uefa but their fans lined the streets around the stadium to show their support to the team as they looked to secure a place in the final. They will also celebrate winning the Premier League title should they win at the weekend. “We loved it,” said Guardiola. “We lost a semi-final against Tottenham, the crowd suffered and we enjoyed it one minute and then suffered the next. It’s nice to be in a final but we missed them. “Of course, it was so weird playing in an empty stadium. This achievement requires our people there. The club belongs to the people. We are here for a period but the fans always stay. Next season the doors are open and they have to support these players, what they’ve done is incredible in the toughest year.”

World Of Wonder Unveils May Lineup Featuring ‘Freedia Got A Gun’, ‘Gay Sex Ed’ With Vanessa Vanjie Mateo & Kameron Michaels – Yahoo Entertainment

World Of Wonder, the company behind RuPaul’s Drag Race, has unveiled its latest original content lineup, with Big Freedia’s gun violence documentary Freedia Got A Gun and Drag Race alums Vanessa Vanjie Mateo and Kameron Michael’s Gay Sex Ed among the featured titles.

Freedia Got A Gun, which landed at Peacock, will debut on WOW Presents Plus Wednesday, May 19 at 9 a.m. PT. Directed b y Chris McKim, Freedia Got a Gun dives into America’s centuries-long struggle with gun violence and its ties back to race and toxic masculinity. New Orleans Bounce artist Big Freedia, a survivor of gun violence herself and whose brother was murdered, reveals the realities of urban survival and takes us into the heart of a city torn apart. The film was honored with the Award for Freedom at the 2020 Outfest film festival.

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Hosted by Vanessa Vanjie Mateo and Kameron Michaels, Gay Sex Ed features topics on all things ‘Sex Ed’ from a gay male perspective, with certified sex therapist Dr. Chris Donaghue providing his expert opinion on the topic of the week. Gay Sex Ed premieres on WOW Presents Plus Tuesday, May 11 at 12 p.m. PT.

The queen of the north, a.k.a winner of Canada’s Drag Race season 1, Priyanka will host What’s My Game? The game show will feature Drag Race contestants and special guests as they battle each other to answer a range of trivia questions. What’s My Game? premieres May 13 at 12 p.m. PT.

The World of Wonder May slate also includes three companion shows pegged to the premiere of RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under: How’s Your Head, Queen; Losing Is The New Winning: RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under and Fashion Photo RuView: RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under.

For How’s Your Head, Queen: RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under, judge Michelle Visage will chat and spill the tea with the week’s eliminated Queen. In Losing Is The New Winning: RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under, queens from RuPaul’s Drag Race UK series 1 will return to talk about their journey post show, give advice, and inspire the latest eliminated queen from RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under.Lastly, Fashion Photo RuView: RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under will see Raja and Raven return to toot or boot the latest looks from the newest Drag Race edition.

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World Of Wonder Unveils May Lineup Featuring ‘Freedia Got A Gun’, ‘Gay Sex Ed’ With Vanessa Vanjie Mateo & Kameron Michaels – Deadline

World Of Wonder, the company behind RuPaul’s Drag Race, has unveiled its latest original content lineup, with Big Freedia’s gun violence documentary Freedia Got A Gun and Drag Race alums Vanessa Vanjie Mateo and Kameron Michael’s Gay Sex Ed among the featured titles.

Freedia Got A Gun, which landed at Peacock, will debut on WOW Presents Plus Wednesday, May 19 at 9 a.m. PT. Directed b y Chris McKim, Freedia Got a Gun dives into America’s centuries-long struggle with gun violence and its ties back to race and toxic masculinity. New Orleans Bounce artist Big Freedia, a survivor of gun violence herself and whose brother was murdered, reveals the realities of urban survival and takes us into the heart of a city torn apart. The film was honored with the Award for Freedom at the 2020 Outfest film festival.

Hosted by Vanessa Vanjie Mateo and Kameron Michaels, Gay Sex Ed features topics on all things ‘Sex Ed’ from a gay male perspective, with certified sex therapist Dr. Chris Donaghue providing his expert opinion on the topic of the week. Gay Sex Ed premieres on WOW Presents Plus Tuesday, May 11 at 12 p.m. PT.

The queen of the north, a.k.a winner of Canada’s Drag Race season 1, Priyanka will host What’s My Game? The game show will feature Drag Race contestants and special guests as they battle each other to answer a range of trivia questions. What’s My Game? premieres May 13 at 12 p.m. PT.

The World of Wonder May slate also includes three companion shows pegged to the premiere of RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under: How’s Your Head, Queen; Losing Is The New Winning: RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under and Fashion Photo RuView: RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under.

For How’s Your Head, Queen: RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under, judge Michelle Visage will chat and spill the tea with the week’s eliminated Queen. In Losing Is The New Winning: RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under, queens from RuPaul’s Drag Race UK series 1 will return to talk about their journey post show, give advice, and inspire the latest eliminated queen from RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under.Lastly, Fashion Photo RuView: RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under will see Raja and Raven return to toot or boot the latest looks from the newest Drag Race edition.

RCI BANQUE : 2nd SUPPLEMENT TO EMTN PROGRAMME BASE PROSPECTUS – Yahoo Finance UK

Globe Newswire

Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market Research Report by Drug Class – Global Forecast to 2025 – Cumulative Impact of COVID-19

Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market Research Report by Drug Class (Direct Thrombin Inhibitors, Factor XA Inhibitors, Heparin, and Vitamin K Antagonists) – Global Forecast to 2025 – Cumulative Impact of COVID-19New York, May 04, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report “Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market Research Report by Drug Class – Global Forecast to 2025 – Cumulative Impact of COVID-19” – https://www.reportlinker.com/p05911850/?utm_source=GNW Market Statistics:The report provides market sizing and forecast across five major currencies – USD, EUR GBP, JPY, and AUD. This helps organization leaders make better decisions when currency exchange data is readily available.1. The Global Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market is expected to grow from USD 2,045.35 Million in 2020 to USD 2,586.89 Million by the end of 2025.2. The Global Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market is expected to grow from EUR 1,793.40 Million in 2020 to EUR 2,268.23 Million by the end of 2025.3. The Global Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market is expected to grow from GBP 1,594.34 Million in 2020 to GBP 2,016.46 Million by the end of 2025.4. The Global Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market is expected to grow from JPY 218,291.12 Million in 2020 to JPY 276,087.01 Million by the end of 2025.5. The Global Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market is expected to grow from AUD 2,970.12 Million in 2020 to AUD 3,756.51 Million by the end of 2025.Market Segmentation & Coverage:This research report categorizes the Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic to forecast the revenues and analyze the trends in each of the following sub-markets:Based on Drug Class, the Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market studied across Direct Thrombin Inhibitors, Factor XA Inhibitors, Heparin, and Vitamin K Antagonists. Based on Geography, the Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market studied across Americas, Asia-Pacific, and Europe, Middle East & Africa. The Americas region surveyed across Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Mexico, and United States. The Asia-Pacific region surveyed across Australia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Philippines, South Korea, and Thailand. The Europe, Middle East & Africa region surveyed across France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Spain, United Arab Emirates, and United Kingdom. Company Usability Profiles:The report deeply explores the recent significant developments by the leading vendors and innovation profiles in the Global Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market including Abbott Laboratories Ltd, AngioDynamics Inc., Argon Medical Devices, Inc., Arjo AB, Astellas Pharma Inc., Bayer AG, Bio Compression Systems, Inc., BioInvent International AB, Bioinvent International AB, Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH, Boston Scientific Corporation, Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, Cardinal Health, Inc., Cook Medical Inc, Daiichi Sankyo Inc, eXIthera Pharmaceuticals LLC, Johnson & Johnson, Koninklijke Philips N.V., Medtronic PLC, Merck KGaA, Sanofi SA, Stryker Corporation, and Teleflex Inc.. Cumulative Impact of COVID-19:COVID-19 is an incomparable global public health emergency that has affected almost every industry, so for and, the long-term effects projected to impact the industry growth during the forecast period. Our ongoing research amplifies our research framework to ensure the inclusion of underlaying COVID-19 issues and potential paths forward. The report is delivering insights on COVID-19 considering the changes in consumer behavior and demand, purchasing patterns, re-routing of the supply chain, dynamics of current market forces, and the significant interventions of governments. The updated study provides insights, analysis, estimations, and forecast, considering the COVID-19 impact on the market.FPNV Positioning Matrix:The FPNV Positioning Matrix evaluates and categorizes the vendors in the Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market on the basis of Business Strategy (Business Growth, Industry Coverage, Financial Viability, and Channel Support) and Product Satisfaction (Value for Money, Ease of Use, Product Features, and Customer Support) that aids businesses in better decision making and understanding the competitive landscape.Competitive Strategic Window:The Competitive Strategic Window analyses the competitive landscape in terms of markets, applications, and geographies. The Competitive Strategic Window helps the vendor define an alignment or fit between their capabilities and opportunities for future growth prospects. During a forecast period, it defines the optimal or favorable fit for the vendors to adopt successive merger and acquisition strategies, geography expansion, research & development, and new product introduction strategies to execute further business expansion and growth.The report provides insights on the following pointers:1. Market Penetration: Provides comprehensive information on the market offered by the key players2. Market Development: Provides in-depth information about lucrative emerging markets and analyzes the markets3. Market Diversification: Provides detailed information about new product launches, untapped geographies, recent developments, and investments4. Competitive Assessment & Intelligence: Provides an exhaustive assessment of market shares, strategies, products, and manufacturing capabilities of the leading players5. Product Development & Innovation: Provides intelligent insights on future technologies, R&D activities, and new product developmentsThe report answers questions such as:1. What is the market size and forecast of the Global Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market?2. What are the inhibiting factors and impact of COVID-19 shaping the Global Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market during the forecast period?3. Which are the products/segments/applications/areas to invest in over the forecast period in the Global Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market?4. What is the competitive strategic window for opportunities in the Global Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market?5. What are the technology trends and regulatory frameworks in the Global Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market?6. What are the modes and strategic moves considered suitable for entering the Global Venous Thromboembolism Therapeutic Market?Read the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p05911850/?utm_source=GNWAbout ReportlinkerReportLinker is an award-winning market research solution. Reportlinker finds and organizes the latest industry data so you get all the market research you need – instantly, in one place.__________________________ CONTACT: Clare: clare@reportlinker.com US: (339)-368-6001 Intl: +1 339-368-6001