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Ewan McGregor defends playing gay fashion designer in Netflix’s ‘Halston’ – Metro Weekly

Ewan McGregor, Halston, Netflix, gay
Ewan McGregor in Netflix’s Halston — Photo: Netflix

Amid the ongoing debate in Hollywood over straight actors taking LGBTQ roles, Ewan McGregor has defended his casting as gay fashion designer Halston in an upcoming Netflix miniseries.

Produced by Ryan Murphy, Netflix’s Halston follows the internationally renowned fashion designer as he “skyrockets to fame” in the ’70s “before his life starts to spin out of control,” per Netflix.

The series, which releases on May 14, will portray Roy “Halston” Frowick’s relationship with Victor Hugo, played by Gian Franco Rodriguez. It will also show the business decisions that led to Halston losing control of his fashion empire in the ’80s. Halston died in 1990 from an AIDS-related illness.

Speaking to the Hollywood Reporter, McGregor justified his casting, saying that the miniseries isn’t all about Halston’s sexuality.

He was reminded of a quote Pose star Billy Porter gave to the Hollywood Reporter 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.”

“I hear the discussion and I respect both sides of it, I really do,” McGregor responded. “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.”

McGregor said if the story had been “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,” he continued.



McGregor threw himself into the role, including learning to sew in order to portray Halston as accurately as possible.

“There are people I met who do not have nice things to say about [Halston],” McGregor said. “And there are people who love him and are unbelievably loyal to this day. I was excited to play that. To go to the extremes of his temper. But behind it all — this drive, this creative drive. And this desire to be grand. Everything had to be the best.”

Halston isn’t McGregor’s first time taking on a gay role. He starred in 2006 ensemble comedy Scenes of a Sexual Nature as a gay man who enjoys cruising for anonymous sex with his partner, and in 2009 black comedy-drama I Love You Phillip Morris as a gay man who falls in love with a con artist (portrayed by Jim Carey) while in prison.

Murphy, who also wrote Halston, has defended casting McGregor in the role. Interview by designer Tom Ford for Vogue, Murphy said that McGregor was “the only choice” to portray Halston.

“The thing that Ewan got about Halston was that Halston had a vision in mind of who he wanted to be in life,” Murphy said. “He was self-created.”

LGBTQ representation has been an ongoing and sometimes heated debate in Hollywood. Both LGBTQ activists and those working in Hollywood have been urging greater representation in front of and behind the camera.

In September, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced major changes for the annual Academy Awards, requiring increased representation both in the narratives depicted and in those working in front of and behind the camera.

However, Kristen Stewart, who is bisexual, recently said that only requiring LGBTQ actors to take LGBTQ roles was a “slippery slope.”



“That means I could never play another straight character if I’m going to hold everyone to the letter of this particular law,” she told Variety last week. “I think it’s such a gray area.”

Halle Berry recently said she would no longer consider a role as a trans man in an upcoming film, saying “the transgender community should undeniably have the opportunity to tell their own stories.”

In 2018, Scarlett Johansson pulled out of biopic Rub and Tug after backlash over her casting as its trans male lead — criticism that heightened after she initially dismissed the controversy.

And Darren Criss, who won an Emmy for playing a gay spree killer in The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, said he would no longer play gay characters “to make sure I won’t be another straight boy taking a gay man’s role.”

Read More:

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New Releases Tuesday: Books Out This Week To Add To Your TBR – Book Riot

It’s Tuesday, which means it’s time for a new batch of book releases! Here are a few of the books out today worth reading. This is a very small percentage of the books out this week, though, so stick around until the end for some more Book Riot resources for new releases, including our YouTube channel, where I talk about each of these! The book descriptions listed are the publisher’s, unless otherwise noted.

Half of this week’s picks I read in preparation for today’s All the Books podcast, so I can personally vouch for how amazing they are! You can listen to today’s episode to hear my full thoughts on those.

The Secret to Superhuman Strength book cover

The Secret to Superhuman Strength by Alison Bechdel

Comics and cultural superstar Alison Bechdel delivers a deeply layered story of her fascination, from childhood to adulthood, with every fitness craze to come down the pike: from Jack LaLanne in the ’60s (“Outlandish jumpsuit! Cantaloupe-sized guns!”) to the existential oddness of present-day spin class. Readers will see their athletic or semi-active pasts flash before their eyes through an ever-evolving panoply of running shoes, bicycles, skis, and sundry other gear. But the more Bechdel tries to improve herself, the more her self appears to be the thing in her way. She turns for enlightenment to Eastern philosophers and literary figures, including Beat writer Jack Kerouac, whose search for self-transcendence in the great outdoors appears in moving conversation with the author’s own. This gifted artist and not-getting-any-younger exerciser comes to a soulful conclusion. The secret to superhuman strength lies not in six-pack abs, but in something much less clearly defined: facing her own non-transcendent but all-important interdependence with others.

Reasons to read it: From the author of Fun Home comes her first new book in almost a decade! This is a chronicle of the cultural obsession with exercise, told through Bechdel’s lifelong love affair with exercise trends. If you’re familiar with this author, you’ll know to expect a lot of philosophical diversions and fascinating asides, with an honesty and depth to her personal anecdotes.

Sorrowland by Rivers Solomon

Sorrowland by Rivers Solomon

Vern ― seven months pregnant and desperate to escape the strict religious compound where she was raised ― flees for the shelter of the woods. There, she gives birth to twins, and plans to raise them far from the influence of the outside world.

But even in the forest, Vern is a hunted woman. Forced to fight back against the community that refuses to let her go, she unleashes incredible brutality far beyond what a person should be capable of, her body wracked by inexplicable and uncanny changes.

To understand her metamorphosis and to protect her small family, Vern has to face the past, and more troublingly, the future ― outside the woods. Finding the truth will mean uncovering the secrets of the compound she fled but also the violent history in America that produced it.

Reasons to read it: This promises to be a “genre-bending work of Gothic fiction” that outlines America’s dark history of how it treats Black people. It’s an ambitious and harrowing read that comes highly recommended by Roxane Gay! Rivers Solomon is an author like no other, so expect a singular and memorable narrative.

Meet Cute Diary cover

Meet Cute Diary by Emery Lee

Noah Ramirez thinks he’s an expert on romance. He has to be for his popular blog, the Meet Cute Diary, a collection of trans happily ever afters. There’s just one problem — all the stories are fake. What started as the fantasies of a trans boy afraid to step out of the closet has grown into a beacon of hope for trans readers across the globe.

When a troll exposes the blog as fiction, Noah’s world unravels. The only way to save the Diary is to convince everyone that the stories are true, but he doesn’t have any proof. Then Drew walks into Noah’s life, and the pieces fall into place: Drew is willing to fake-date Noah to save the Diary. But when Noah’s feelings grow beyond their staged romance, he realizes that dating in real life isn’t quite the same as finding love on the page.

Noah will have to choose between following his own rules for love or discovering that the most romantic endings are the ones that go off script.

Reasons to read it: I really enjoyed this one. Noah is mixed race (his mom is white and Japanese and his dad is Afro-Caribbean) as well as being trans and bi, which isn’t something we’ve seen represented much until recently! I appreciated how flawed Noah was. He’s a bit of a snob and makes snap judgements, but he grows over the course of the novel. There’s also a charming side character who is questioning eir gender label and pronouns who steals the show (e is also asexual and androsexual).

Arsenic and Adobo by Mia P. Manansala

Arsenic and Adobo by Mia P. Manansala

When Lila Macapagal moves back home to recover from a horrible breakup, her life seems to be following all the typical romcom tropes. She’s tasked with saving her Tita Rosie’s failing restaurant, and she has to deal with a group of matchmaking aunties who shower her with love and judgment. But when a notoriously nasty food critic (who happens to be her ex-boyfriend) drops dead moments after a confrontation with Lila, her life quickly swerves from a Nora Ephron romp to an Agatha Christie case.

With the cops treating her like she’s the one and only suspect, and the shady landlord looking to finally kick the Macapagal family out and resell the storefront, Lila’s left with no choice but to conduct her own investigation. Armed with the nosy auntie network, her barista best bud, and her trusted Dachshund, Longanisa, Lila takes on this tasty, twisted case and soon finds her own neck on the chopping block…

Reasons to read it: This is the first book in a new culinary cozy mystery series. It promises humor as well as food descriptions that will make your mouth water. It even includes recipes! As for the cute dog on the cover, the author has the answer to the most important book question of all: the dog will never die in these books.

Luck of the Titanic cover

Luck of the Titanic by Stacey Lee

Valora Luck has two things: a ticket for the biggest and most luxurious ocean liner in the world, and a dream of leaving England behind and making a life for herself as a circus performer in New York. Much to her surprise though, she’s turned away at the gangway; apparently, Chinese aren’t allowed into America.

But Val has to get on that ship. Her twin brother Jamie, who has spent two long years at sea, is there, as is an influential circus owner Val hopes to audition for. Thankfully, there’s not much a trained acrobat like Val can’t overcome when she puts her mind to it.

As a stowaway, Val should keep her head down and stay out of sight. But the clock is ticking and she has just seven days as the ship makes its way across the Atlantic to find Jamie, perform for the circus owner, and convince him to help get them both into America.

Then one night the unthinkable happens, and suddenly Val’s dreams of a new life are crushed under the weight of the only thing that matters: survival.

Reasons to read it: This was a fascinating historical YA about mixed race Chinese-British twin acrobats on board the Titanic. The first page that prefaces the story is a historical fact: six of the eight Chinese passengers on board the Titanic survived — a much higher rate than the rest of the ship, despite being on the lower decks. We then go on to meet all eight Chinese passengers, which sets a countdown clock for readers even as the plot for most of the book has nothing to do with the ship’s eventual sinking, which was a great way to add tension. I won’t spoil it, but I get the feeling that the ending of this book will be one people either love or hate!

Stranger Care by Sarah Sentilles cover

Stranger Care: A Memoir of Mothering What Isn’t Ours by Sarah Sentilles

After their decision not to have a biological child, Sarah Sentilles and her husband, Eric, decide to adopt via the foster care system. Despite knowing that the system’s goal is reunification with the birth family, Sarah opens their home to a flurry of social workers who question, evaluate, and ultimately prepare them to welcome a child into their family — even if it means most likely having to give them back. After years of starts and stops, and endless navigation of the complexities and injustices of the foster care system, a phone call finally comes: a three-day old baby girl, named Coco, in immediate need of a foster family. Sarah and Eric bring this newborn stranger home.

“You were never ours,” Sarah tells Coco, “yet we belong to each other.”

A love letter to Coco, and to the countless children like her, Stranger Care chronicles Sarah’s discovery of what it means to mother — in this case, not just a vulnerable infant, but the birth mother who loves her, too. Ultimately, Coco’s story reminds us that we depend on family, and that family can take different forms. Sentilles lays bare an intimate, powerful story, with universal concerns: How can we care for and protect each other? How do we ensure a more hopeful future for life on this planet? And if we’re all related — tree, bird, star, person — how might we better live?

Reasons to read it: This is a beautiful, vulnerable, heart-wrenching story — one of the most emotionally affecting books I’ve ever read. I do want to say that anyone interested in this topic should also read accounts from adoptees and people who have gone through the foster system, especially stories from Indigenous people and people of color. My other hesitancy about this book is that although it changes her name, it does refer to personal aspects of the biological mother’s story. It is, however, an empathetic, melancholy, painfully tender story that explores and critiques the foster system, how we take care of each other, and what family looks like.

Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir cover

Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir

Ryland Grace is the sole survivor on a desperate, last-chance mission — and if he fails, humanity and the earth itself will perish.

Except that right now, he doesn’t know that. He can’t even remember his own name, let alone the nature of his assignment or how to complete it.

All he knows is that he’s been asleep for a very, very long time. And he’s just been awakened to find himself millions of miles from home, with nothing but two corpses for company.

His crewmates dead, his memories fuzzily returning, Ryland realizes that an impossible task now confronts him. Hurtling through space on this tiny ship, it’s up to him to puzzle out an impossible scientific mystery — and conquer an extinction-level threat to our species.

And with the clock ticking down and the nearest human being light-years away, he’s got to do it all alone.

Or does he?

Reasons to read it: Do I really need to convince you of this? It’s an alone in space survival story from the author of the The Martian. It’s supposed to be a science-based thriller, and Brandon Sanderson calls it “Weir’s finest work to date.”

Last Gate of the Emperor cover

Last Gate of the Emperor by by Kwame Mbalia and Prince Joel Makonnen

Yared Heywat lives an isolated life in Addis Prime — a hardscrabble city with rundown tech, lots of rules, and not much to do. His worrywart Uncle Moti and bionic lioness Besa are his only family…and his only friends.

Often in trouble for his thrill-seeking antics and smart mouth, those same qualities make Yared a star player of the underground augmented reality game, The Hunt for Kaleb’s Obelisk. But when a change in the game rules prompts Yared to log in with his real name, it triggers an attack that rocks the city. In the chaos, Uncle Moti disappears.

Suddenly, all the stories Yared’s uncle told him as a young boy are coming to life, of kingdoms in the sky and city-razing monsters. And somehow Yared is at the center of them.

Together with Besa and the Ibis — a game rival turned reluctant ally — Yared must search for his uncle…and answers to his place in a forgotten, galaxy-spanning war.

Reasons to read it: This is fast-paced fantasy-meets-sci-fi Afrofuturist Ethiopian middle grade book that gave me Star Wars vibes. Also, the main character’s best friend is a bionic lioness, which was honestly already enough to sell me on this book. Prince Joel Makonnen is the great-grandson of the last Emperor of Ethiopia, and in an afterword, he explains how the story was inspired by his own family history. This is a cinematic read that is begging to be adapted into a movie!

Other Book Riot New Releases Resources

This is only scratching the surface of the books out this week! If you want to keep up with all the latest new releases, check out:

  • Book Riot’s YouTube channel, where I discuss the most exciting books out every Tuesday!
  • All the Books, our weekly new releases podcast, where Liberty and a cast of co-hosts (including me!) talk about eight books out that week that we’ve read and loved.
  • The New Books Newsletter, where we send you an email of the books out this week that are getting buzz.
  • Finally, if you want the real inside scoop on new releases, you have to check out Book Riot Insiders’ New Releases Index! That’s where I find 90% of new releases, and you can filter by trending books, Rioters’ picks, and even LGBTQ new releases!


Marvel gives first look at Richard Madden and Angelina Jolie in gay superhero film Eternals – Yahoo Eurosport UK

Marvel has given a first look at its upcoming film Eternals, which will see Brian Tyree Henry play openly gay superhero Phastos.

The hotly-anticipated film is based on the Marvel Comics series of the same name, which tells the story of a race of humanoids who serve as defenders of Earth. The feature film will follow the Eternals as they reunite to protect humanity from the Deviants, their evil counterparts.

There was much excitement among Marvel fans when the film was first announced in 2018, but a cinema release has been postponed twice due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The studio finally gave fans a first glimpse of the film in a YouTube video uploaded on Monday (3 May).

The video – titled “Marvel Studios Celebrates The Movies” – kicks off with clips from the studio’s past blockbusters, including Avengers: Endgame, before moving on to upcoming releases such as Black Widow, Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, and Eternals.

The brief clip of Eternals gives fans a first look at Salma Hayek as the Eternals’ spiritual leader Ajak, and also introduces Angelina Jolie as Thena, a fierce warrior who can form weapons out of cosmic energy.

The clip also introduces Marvel fans to Richard Madden as Ikaris and Kumail Nanjiani as Kingo – but sadly, Brian Tyree Henry’s Phastos is nowhere to be seen.

Queer fans will be ‘proud’ of same-sex relationship in Marvel’s Eternals

The film, helmed by Oscar-winning director Chloé Zhao, was originally scheduled for release in November 2020, but it was pushed back to February 2021 due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

The film’s release was later rescheduled for a third time and is now due to hit cinema screens in November of this year.

Actor Haaz Sleiman previously confirmed that he will play Phastos’ husband in the upcoming film.

“My gut feeling is you’ll be so proud,” Sleiman told NewNowNext in January.

“What Marvel has been able to accomplish, I’m so proud of them because they approached it in a very thoughtful way, and Phastos is one of the biggest superheroes in the film. I’m his husband, an architect; we have a child.”

Meanwhile, Zhao told SiriusXM’s Jess Cagle in February that Marvel has taken a “big risk” with Eternals, saying the film has a distinct visual style.

“I think this is where Marvel really took the risk that we knew we wanted to shoot on location because by shooting wide-angle lenses on locations, it’s going to affect how you do visual effects,” Zhao explained.

“It’s going to affect how you do the action. There’s a lot that will feel and look differently.”

Uganda passes sexual offences bill, further criminalising LGBT people – PinkNews

Uganda is one of around 70 countries where being gay is punishable by imprisonment. (ISAAC KASAMANI/AFP via Getty Images)

Uganda’s parliament has passed a bill that further outlaws same-sex relations, anal sex and sex work – doubling down on a penal code that already makes being LGBT+ illegal.

The parliament of Uganda confirmed Monday (3 May) on Twitter that the Sexual Offences Bill had passed its third reading, ending its years-long passage through the chamber.

Much of what the Sexual Offences Bill criminalises is already illegal in Uganda. Those caught engaging in same-sex relations already face life imprisonment, and some of the wording of the Sexual Offences Bill is ripped from the Penal Code Act 1950.

A 2000 amendment to the code meant that sex acts between women were also criminalised, with both oral and anal sex between same-sex and mixed-sex couples carrying a seven-year-long prison sentence for “gross indecency“.

First tabled in 2015, the Sexual Offences Bill was sold as a hardline effort to stamp out sexual violence by addressing “defects” in the penal code.

But in plugging the gaps of the penal code, the law also further criminalises being LGBT+ and mounts sweeping restrictions on the sexual lives of everyday Ugandans.

Under Clause 11, “unnatural offences” will include both bestiality and those who “perform a sexual act with another person contrary to the order of nature”.

The Committee of the Whole House, composed of all sitting MPs, also added in a “ban on sexual acts between persons of the same gender”, The Independent reported.

Lawmakers also passed the committee’s recommendations that, “for completeness”, to “penetrate another person’s anus with that person’s sexual organ or any object” be added to the list of “unnatural offences”.

The wide-ranging law includes introducing a sex offenders registry and making it an offence to use date rape drugs or to release a tape or recording of a sex act without that person’s consent. Although, during committee scrutiny, a vital clause was scrapped that would have allowed the withdrawal of consent before or during sex acts.

Other new measures include tougher safeguarding measures to protect children from sexual harassment in schools.

Lawmakers also expanded a clause to not only consider sex work an offence but criminalises those who pay for sex as well.

As much as lawmakers were divided along gendered lines about some of the bill’s clauses, such as the withdrawal of consent, the House was in agreement about clauses that criminalise homosexuality.

In Uganda, the mood has long been one of rising fear and anger for LGBT+ residents.

After all, the bill comes more than a year after lawmakers did an abrupt about-turn on the so-called “Kill the Gays” bill that sought to introduce the death penalty for “aggravated homosexuality”.

This wasn’t the first time the greatly feared legislation came close to becoming a reality. It was first passed by parliament in 2014, only to be thwarted by the constitutional court amid seismic international backlash.

In Texas, Many Companies Are Silent on Voting Restrictions—At Least in Public – The Pew Charitable Trusts

AUSTIN, Texas — When much of the Texas business community rallied against a polarizing “bathroom bill” four years ago, Brett Hurt, a prominent chief executive officer in the Austin tech world, was on the front lines. He fired off dozens of social media posts, engaged in conference call strategy sessions and never missed an opportunity to strike out against the Republican-backed legislation, which would have restricted transgender people’s access to bathrooms.

Now the 49-year-old creator of six tech startups is re-engaged against another GOP priority: legislation, which might be voted on as early as this week, that would impose new election restrictions like those advancing through legislatures in more than 40 states.

“This is much bigger than the bathroom bill,” said Hurt, CEO of data.world, a data cataloguing service. “This is fundamentally attacking democracy.”

Architects of the Republican-crafted measures describe them as improvements to prevent voter fraud. But opponents say they are designed to suppress voting by Democratic-leaning constituencies, especially communities of color.

Voting rights activists have called on major corporations to speak out against the legislation, but American Airlines in Fort Worth and Dell Technologies in Austin appear to be the only major corporate entities in Texas that have done so—at least so far.

However, others in the business community who oppose the legislation have been discussing it in private and may be poised to take a more pronounced stand.

The delicate dance in Texas is emblematic of the conundrum corporations are facing around the country as they try to preserve their relationships with business-friendly GOP state lawmakers while heeding the calls of many shareholders, employees and customers to publicly support voting rights.

Stateline Story

Lawmakers Push to Preserve Pandemic Voting Access

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In Texas, the corporate reticence might be at least partly explained by the lashing that GOP Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick gave American Airlines after it spoke up.

“Voter security, not suppression,” Patrick, who presides over the Texas Senate, said in defense of the legislation’s intent. He mocked American Airlines’ government affairs representative for having “the audacity” to call his office to inform him of the company’s position while declaring, “This isn’t personal.”

“Well, let me tell you what, Mr. American Airlines, I take it personally,” Patrick said during a news conference in the Texas Capitol. “You were in essence, between the lines, calling us racist. And that will not stand.”

Patrick called on corporations to stay out of politics, and in a separate press release said that Texans “are fed up with corporations that don’t share our values trying to dictate public policy.”

Harris County a Target

The Texas legislation would outlaw drive-thru voting and prohibit local officials from sending out unrequested mail-in ballot applications, measures that local officials implemented in predominately Democratic Harris County (which encompasses Houston) during the 2020 elections to ease voting access. Other provisions would standardize voting hours statewide, give poll watchers more freedom to move within a polling place and require live video of counting stations in large counties.

“This bill makes it harder for Texans to vote, plain and simple,” said former Harris County Clerk Chris Hollins, who left office in November and is now helping lead Democratic opposition to the legislation. “That’s bad law and bad policy.”

Hollins clashed with Gov. Greg Abbott and Attorney General Ken Paxton, both Republicans, over his election initiatives in Harris County. He said corporate leaders fear the new restrictions would make it more difficult for their employees to vote and could lead to a costly backlash against Texas.

Hollins and other opponents also maintain that the proposed voter integrity legislation is a solution in search of a problem, since studies show that voter fraud is exceedingly rare. From 2015 to 2020, the Texas attorney general’s office received 197 election fraud complaints out of tens of millions of votes cast across the state, according to KHOU, a Houston-based outlet.

Last week, 10 members of the Greater Houston Partnership, the region’s largest chamber of commerce, sent a letter to the president of the group calling for a public statement against the legislation, the Houston Chronicle reported.

“New election legislation in Texas should expand, instead of limit, options for civic participation,” reads a proposed statement included in the letter. “Certain provisions of these bills are contrary to these objectives and should be eliminated or modified.”

At the national level, hundreds of corporate chieftains, including dozens of prominent Black CEOs, have taken a united stand against states imposing new voting restrictions, signing onto a statement in a two-page ad in The New York Times, The Washington Post and other news outlets. The top executives from more than 100 companies participated in a mid-April conference call to discuss strategy, including curbing investments in states permitting the legislative changes, according to news reports.

The approval of new voting restrictions in Georgia prompted Major League Baseball to relocate its All-Star Game from Atlanta to Denver. Georgia-based companies such as Coca-Cola and Delta Airlines also denounced the bill, prompting conservative supporters of the law to threaten boycotts.

Quiet Talks

In 2017, Texas corporations were outspoken in their opposition to the so-called bathroom bill. But the state’s business community has declined to take a similar stand against the election legislation—at least publicly.

The Texas Association of Business, which led the charge against the bathroom bill, has not taken sides in the current confrontation beyond a noncommittal statement issued by Glenn Hamer, the organization’s CEO.

“Texas is focused on ensuring access to voting, while at the same time, maintaining the integrity of the ballot box,” Hamer said. “As state leaders work to achieve even greater security and participation in the electoral process, the Texas business community encourages the legislature to work in a bipartisan fashion to meet these goals.”

Stateline Story

Republican Wave of Voting Restrictions Swells

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But some Texas CEOs told Stateline that behind the scenes, they are busy organizing in hopes of unifying behind a stronger public stance, perhaps as soon as this week. They declined to be named for this story, however.

Chambers of commerce in the Black, Hispanic and LGBT communities in Texas strongly oppose the measures, and supporters hope to further expand business opposition in the closing weeks of the legislative session.

American Airlines announced its opposition hours after a late-night Senate vote on one of the two major voting bills, asserting that the legislation contains provisions that would “limit voting access.”

“We are strongly opposed to this bill and others like it,” the company said in a news release.

Patrick accused the company of failing to read the legislation. American Airlines communications manager Stacy Day said that wasn’t true, and that the company “is engaged to ensure that Texas state lawmakers understand our concerns.”

American’s position also sparked grumbling among Republican lawmakers who noted that the airline, like other companies, often lobbies lawmakers on behalf of its legislative priorities and for favorable tax and budget policies.

“These companies … darken our doors all the time, asking for this special treatment or that special perk or exemption or grant, and it’s supposed to be all about business development,” said state Rep. Tom Oliverson, a Republican from the Houston area.

“So, they’re willing to punch us in the stomach publicly, but then privately, they come and they ask for all the same things they’ve always asked.”

Stateline Story

Nation Has Georgia on Its Mind, but Many States Are Making Voting Easier

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As the Texas House debated a $247 billion two-year state budget on April 22, Oliverson offered an amendment that would have barred companies that oppose voting restrictions such as those pending in the legislature from receiving state grants. He withdrew the measure before it came to a vote, later saying he wanted to send American and other companies “a wake-up call and a warning.”

State Sen. Bryan Hughes of Tyler in East Texas, who is sponsoring one of the voting bills, said he’s invited anyone with concerns about the legislation to work with him and his staff, but that he only learned of American’s opposition when it issued its statement after Senate passage.

“I think if folks look at what’s in the bill, they’ll see it’s common-sense reforms to make the system better,” he said. “And we’re going to listen to everybody. But ultimately, if these companies don’t like the policies in Texas, there’s plenty of vacancies in California.”

Economic Backlash?

Opponents of the legislation have been spotlighting a study by Texas economist Ray Perryman, president and CEO of the Perryman Group, a Waco-based economic research and analysis firm.

The report suggests that passage of the measures could tarnish the state’s image, resulting in economic losses of at least $31.4 billion through 2025, including a decline in tourism and the cancellation of showcase events. Texas could sustain a $3.8 billion hit if Dallas or Houston lose their bids to host World Cup soccer events in 2026, according to Perryman.

Democrat Mike Collier, a Houston-area accountant and former oil company executive who is gearing up for a run against Patrick in the 2022 lieutenant governor’s race, said many corporate bosses think the legislation is “terrible” and bad for business but are hesitant to speak out.

“I think it’s just a political calculation,” said Collier, who ran and lost against Patrick in 2018. “There [are] a thousand ways state government can frustrate the ambition of an investor or business leader.”

Collier said he plans to speak out against the legislation on the campaign trail. “I’m going to make sure it’s a big part of my campaign,” he said in a recent interview before speaking at a Democratic-sponsored political event at the Texas Capitol.

Hurt, whose company is a Certified B Corporation that seeks to advance the social good as well as maximize profits, said he is reaching out to thousands of followers on social media as well as to friends and colleagues in the tech and business worlds to denounce the legislation as “fundamentally undemocratic.”

“I’m very opposed to these laws being proposed right now because they’re based on fear and not based on any rational need to ‘make elections more secure,’” he said. Hurt said he’s talking with “a lot of fellow CEOs and investors, and my hope is to get people to realize that these laws, if they’re passed, will hurt businesses.”

Stateline Story

Republicans Target Ballot Access After Record Turnout

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Kosovo Police Investigate Threat to LGBT Activist – Balkan Insight


Pride parade in Pristina in October 2018. Photo: EPA-EFE/VALDRIN XHEMAJ.

Kosovo Police said on Tuesday that they are looking into allegations that the life of a well-known LGBT activist, Lend Mustafa, was threatened at the weekend.

“We are currently working on an investigation of circumstances of the incident and in coordination with the prosecutor have initiated an investigation into the intimidation,” police told BIRN in a written answer.

On Sunday, Mustafa said in a post on Facebook that he was threatened in Pristina’s main square.

“It is noon in the square and a bearded boy spat in my face and shouted ‘I will kill you’,” Mustafa wrote.

“I have been insulted before, I was threatened and someone tried to run over me with a car [in the street] but nothing has been more humiliating and disgusting so far,” he added.

Mustafa vowed not to give up his activism.

“I will still fight as I have always fought and I will remain here [in Kosovo],” he said.

The Centre for Equality and Liberty, a local organisation which advocates for the rights of the LGBT community in Kosovo, condemned the threat and urged the police to bring the perpetrator to justice.

“The motive of this threat is believed to be gender identity and sexual orientation, which is punishable according to Kosovo’s laws,” the Centre for Equality and Liberty said.

“We stand behind Lend [Mustafa] and anyone who is a victim of discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation,” it added.

A number of peaceful Pride parades have been held in Kosovo in recent years with the participation of main political leaders, suggesting that progress is being made on LGBT rights in the country.

In January 2020, a Pristina court gave Blert Morina, a transgender man from Kosovo, the right to officially change his first name in his ID documents from female to male after years of his struggle with justice system.

But discrimination remains and social media users often use hate speech against the LGBT community.

Hollywood star Rupert Everett moves to Carlow – Independent.ie

A Hollywood star is now living in Carlow.

ctor and author Rupert Everett has relocated to the county, and is staying close to the medieval village of Borris which has seen numerous 1980s British bands such as Frankie Goes to Hollywood, The Thompson Twins and Howard Jones living in Borris House for a time.

Everett is in Carlow to work on his fourth novel and is also gearing up for the Borris Festival of writing and ideas Spring Series.

The 61-year-old shot to fame in 1984, playing a leading gay role in Another Country, which earned a BAFTA nomination and shot him to international attention. He is also known for his roles in The Madness Of King George, My Best Friend’s Wedding and The Happy Prince, in which he played Oscar Wilde.

Everett became one of England’s hottest crossover stars as he was also known for this TV and stage acting.

On Wednesday next, May 12 he will join fellow actor Simon Callow to host a talk online at 6.30pm for which bookings are underway. Callow is best known for his parts in movies Four Weddings and a Funeral, A Room With A View and Shakespeare In Love.

Hugo Jellett, festival founder and organiser, speaking on local radio station KCLRfm said: “The programme starts with the brilliant Rupert Everett who has just moved to our parish, he’s talking with fellow actor Simon Callow.

“Simon Callow is the, I suppose, the guy that everyone would know for his Orson Welles work whereas Rupert Everett is more an Oscar Wilde man.

“They talk so openly and freely, these two about their lives, Rupert’s obviously published three memoirs and the fourth one is on its way, that’s what he’s doing in Ireland, and then Simon Callow’s been over with us in Borris before so they’ll be talking about their Hollywood lives and their Westend lives.”

Transhealth Northampton opens as first ‘independent, comprehensive’ transgender health center – MassLive.com

NORTHAMPTON — Dallas Ducar, founding chief executive officer of Transhealth Northampton, which officially opens Tuesday, May 4, says the health care center’s name speaks “loud and proud about who and what we are.”

“We are the first independent, comprehensive transgender health care center in the nation,” Ducar said. “We are led by the trans community, which is really unique, and we are for the trans community. We are really built to empower people. We are empowering trans- and gender-diverse adults, children, families.”

There are other health care systems regionally and statewide that incorporate care to those who are lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender, but Ducar said Transhealth Northampton is alone in its mission of “committing 100 percent of our budget to transgender health care.”

“We don’t know of any other place like this in the country,” Ducar said. “We are a majority trans identified and LGBTQ. We are really by and for our community which is a very exciting thing. We are really constructing this from the wisdom of the community.”

Transgender health care involves addressing the needs of individuals whose gender identity differs from their biologically assigned sex at birth.

Ducar, who began transitioning from male to female in 2016, said understanding based on this definition often narrows down to thinking about such care in terms of “hormones and surgery.” She added gender identity needs to also address feelings that can be experienced and expressed early in life.

“One of the wisdoms from the trans community is that gender-affirming care is not just hormones and surgery,” said Ducar who, by training, is a psychiatric-mental health nurse practitioner. “One of the most gender-affirming things that happened to me is when my grandmother took me to buy my first dress. I will not forget that. That was not something that could happen in a clinical encounter. That was so much more.”

The center offers primary care for adults, pediatric primary care, hormonal care, as well as mental health care and “also lots of non-critical services,” including patient advocacy, legal and community services, Ducar said.

She added that the “majority of our staff are trans- or gender-diverse identified and a very strong number are LGBTQ identified, too,” and that individuals can schedule appointments with more than one provider during a visit.

“What we are trying to do here is really center the conversation around whatever the patient needs,” Ducar said. “It is really complex to be aware of someone’s identity, their individual identity, their gender identity, their gender expression. It is something that takes an effort and oftentimes one not seen in health care. It is a humanistic approach to getting to know someone, their story, their identity and what brings them there.”

The center’s website advises how to request an appointment and states that it specializes “in services for transgender, gender-diverse (non-binary, gender-queer, gender-nonconforming), those questioning and exploring their gender, others for whom gender identity provides a barrier to accessing quality health care, and their loved-ones.”

A need assessment study known as the PATH (Plan and Act for Transgender Health) Project was undertaken prior to the center’s establishment to determine what would make such care more accessible in Central and Western New England.

The project involved a partnership among the Fenway Institute, Cooley Dickinson Health Care, and researchers from Harvard Medical School as well as gender-diverse community members. Its findings helped form the mission of the center founded by Northampton resident Perry Cohen who was instrumental in Harvard Medical receiving funding in 2019 to incorporate transgender-affirming health care into its curriculum.

Cooley is an affiliate of Massachusetts General Hospital, the largest teaching hospital for Harvard Medical, and the institute is part of Boston-based Fenway Health whose population served includes the LGBTQIA+ community.

Ducar said the PATH study found pediatric care to be “one of the starkest needs to be addressed” in terms of transgender care.

It also found the center could potentially draw a significant pool of patients from parts of upstate New York as well as areas of New Hampshire, Vermont and Connecticut in addition to Central and Western Massachusetts. Ducar said staff, which currently includes a pediatrician, two family nurse practitioners, a psychiatric nurse practitioner and clinical social worker among others, would expand to meet patient growth.

She said a nurse care coordinator is available to patients to help navigate any insurance issues and access other resources.

“We have invested in having full-time staff members in every discipline,” Ducar said. “We will be seeing folks across the lifespan from babies to kids to teens to older adults. We are also here to provide consults.”

Ducar said that the center could be particularly helpful to pediatricians interested in prescribing hormone blockers for a patient who may want to delay physical changes of puberty that do not match their gender identity.

She added funding for the stand-alone clinic’s launch in the Pioneer Valley has come from private sources, including from Cohen, who serves as board chair and brought on the senior staff as well as founding board members, and who is raising twins with co-parent Brooks Bull.

“I could not be more proud of the work we are doing at Transhealth to bring even more gender affirming care to the Valley,” said Cohen who is founder and executive director of the Venture Out Project that offers backpacking and adventure trips for members of the LGBTQ+ community, and a former member of the executive leadership team at C&S Wholesale Grocers.

“Every person deserves to be seen and cared for as their truest self. I am grateful to be able to support that for my family and for so many people in the Valley and beyond.”

Ducar holds an undergraduate degree in philosophy and cognitive science, a master’s degree in clinical nurse leadership, and is a board-certified registered nurse and psychiatric-mental health nurse practitioner.

Her prior employment was as clinical lead for mental health services at the Massachusetts General Hospital Transgender Health Program. She feels her personal and professional experience make her “uniquely posed to be aware of the mental health concerns and needs of the community” that she serves.

“I started transitioning in a very different political environment in 2016,” Ducar said. “There was a lot of fear at the time and there is a lot of fear that is happening now on a state-by-state basis, especially in the South, with anti-trans legislation.”

Her hope is for Transhealth Northampton, whose building space includes one floor with seven exam rooms and another floor with therapy offices and community space, to become a “really bright light” in the life of those it serves and that eventually such care will be integrated into all medical practices.

“It feels like I have lived multiple lives at age 28, especially with transitioning,” Ducar said. “My life as student, patient and professional has been a really opportunity for me to see other perspectives and I am really grateful for the lessons I have learned and they feel intensely human. The trans community has so much to share with folks and should not be demonized. There is a lot of wisdom there.”

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The G.O.P. Won It All in Texas. Then It Turned on Itself. – The New York Times

Abbott knows better than anyone that this is not how it typically works; as governor, he has involved himself in Republican primaries down to the state House level in attempts to knock off legislators who’ve spurned him. And so it is telling that an official like Paxton won’t commit to support Abbott against even a hypothetical challenger. Indeed, the accumulating tumult of the virus, the election and the storm has resulted in some Texas Republicans deciding that the 2022 gubernatorial primary represents a critical juncture in the fight for the future of the party. Primary speculation has been so rampant that Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, with whom Abbott has endured intermittent friction, recently felt compelled to take himself out of the running. At a recent dinner for the Texas Young Republicans, according to a Texas Tribune reporter, the lieutenant governor emphasized his “hope” that no one would primary Abbott, “because he’s done a hell of a job, and we need to re-elect him again.”

Sid Miller, however — Sid Miller would respectfully disagree.

On the morning of March 11, Sidney Carroll Miller, the Texas agriculture commissioner, was riding a horse named Big Smokin Hawk at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. Big Smokin Hawk, known outside the show ring as Mini Pearl, is a sorrel mare on whose left hindquarter the letters S, I and D are branded. It was Day 9 of the rodeo, which in normal times features a panoply of attractions and performances — in 2019, Cardi B, clad in a pink-and-blue-sequined cowgirl get-up, drew a record 75,000-plus people — but this year it was significantly downsized. As ever, Miller had trailered his horses the four and a half hours from his farm in Erath County to compete.

Miller is a 65-year-old lifelong rancher and Republican who served 12 years in the Texas House before running successfully in 2014 for ag commissioner, his campaign co-chaired by one Ted Nugent. Some highlights of his tenure since then include charges of using state funds to travel to a rodeo in Mississippi (for this, the Texas Ethics Commission fined him $500); overturning the ban on deep fryers and soda machines in public schools; posting an image on his Facebook page that endorsed nuking “the Muslim world” (his spokesman at the time blamed an unnamed staff member for the post but clarified that he would not be apologizing for it and in fact had found its message “thought provoking”); and sharing, as part of a 2018 Facebook post condemning ABC for canceling the sitcom “Roseanne,” a doctored photo of Whoopi Goldberg wearing a shirt that showed Donald Trump shooting himself in the head. (Spokesman: “We post hundreds of things a week. We put stuff out there. We’re like Fox News. We report, we let people decide.”)

Donald Trump, as it happened, quite liked Sid Miller. He first appeared to notice him when, while Miller was on a Trump-campaign advisory board in 2016, his account posted a tweet calling Hillary Clinton what was reported as the “C-word,” then quickly deleted and replaced it with a claim that the account had been hacked. (Via a spokesman, Miller later said his staff “inadvertently retweeted a tweet” but finally just apologized.) Shortly thereafter, at a rally in Tampa, while talking about his campaign’s strength in Texas, Trump name-checked Miller and his “big, beautiful white cowboy hat.” Later, Miller interviewed to be Trump’s first secretary of agriculture, though the position ultimately went to Sonny Perdue. So when activist types recently began floating Miller as a challenger to Abbott, the idea did not seem entirely ludicrous.

“You know,” he said, not five minutes into our interview, “if I was governor. …” We were sitting in a room off the arena along with Miller’s wife of 40 years, Debra, Miller still wearing his spurs and cowboy hat. “I think the governor’s got some problems,” Miller went on. He had attended the protest in front of the governor’s mansion in October. In his view, the recent move to lift all pandemic-related restrictions was beside the point. “I mean, I haven’t seen anything lifted. I’m having to wear my damn mask here, you know, in Houston, everywhere else I go.” (When I asked if a private business should be able to require a mask if it so wanted, Debra looked at her husband and nodded. “They can, they can, yeah,” Miller said.)

I noted that even as a vocal subset of Republicans had become disenchanted with Abbott, he and Trump seemed to get along well (“my best guy, best governor,” as Trump once called him). But Miller demurred. “Abbott wasn’t his biggest fan,” he claimed. “I would say they tolerated each other. They weren’t — they weren’t enemies.”

Miller said he hadn’t yet made a final decision about running. He would say, however, that he has received a lot of encouragement from others to do so. “I’ve had five people stop me here, and this is not even a political event. Just pulled me off the side and said, we really appreciate what you’re doing, and we hope you run for governor, and hang in there. And so there’s something building out there. People aren’t happy — ” He turned to Debra, who had just nudged him quietly. “You go to several events. …” she offered in a low tone. “Oh, yeah,” he said, turning back to me. “When I go to events, it’s overwhelming, the response we get at the Republican events.”

Sir Elton John’s fitness focus | Entertainment | nbcrightnow.com – NBC Right Now

Sir Elton John has “really gotten fit” in lockdown.

The ‘Rocket Man’ hitmaker has spent the last 14 months focusing on his fitness as he wants to “be the fittest he has ever been” when he goes back out on tour following the coronavirus pandemic.

He shared: “In lockdown I’ve really gotten fit. I walk in the pool, I play tennis. I wanted to come out the other side not overweight. When I go back on tour I am going to be the fittest I have ever been. A lot of shame comes from the way I’ve put on weight. It’s been with me all my life.

“I am Type B diabetic so I have to watch what I eat. I have two kids I want to see and be around as much as possible. You have to do something about [weight gain] and sit down with a doctor or nutritionist and say, ‘How do I do it?’ It comes down to, what do you want for the rest of your life? I have had a lot of help. My doctor said, ‘Elton, get yourself together, do as you’re told’ and you will see the benefits of it.”

Whilst the 74-year-old singer has had a positive lockdown experience, he slammed those who use social media to make derogatory marks towards other, admitting it has become rife in the pandemic.

Speaking on the Deeney Talks podcast, he added: “During lockdown, we’ve seen social media being used to abuse people racially. Not just being gay, but racially as well. People are so cruel to each other and it’s because they hide behind their social messaging or whatever they do. If they had to write their names on it, they wouldn’t do it. And I just think it’s just awful that people can write anonymous things about people being gay, being of another political persuasion, religious persuasion, or just plain racial.”

Sir Elton John’s fitness focus | Arts & Entertainment | timesnews.net – Kingsport Times News

Sir Elton John has “really gotten fit” in lockdown.

The ‘Rocket Man’ hitmaker has spent the last 14 months focusing on his fitness as he wants to “be the fittest he has ever been” when he goes back out on tour following the coronavirus pandemic.

He shared: “In lockdown I’ve really gotten fit. I walk in the pool, I play tennis. I wanted to come out the other side not overweight. When I go back on tour I am going to be the fittest I have ever been. A lot of shame comes from the way I’ve put on weight. It’s been with me all my life.

“I am Type B diabetic so I have to watch what I eat. I have two kids I want to see and be around as much as possible. You have to do something about [weight gain] and sit down with a doctor or nutritionist and say, ‘How do I do it?’ It comes down to, what do you want for the rest of your life? I have had a lot of help. My doctor said, ‘Elton, get yourself together, do as you’re told’ and you will see the benefits of it.”

Whilst the 74-year-old singer has had a positive lockdown experience, he slammed those who use social media to make derogatory marks towards other, admitting it has become rife in the pandemic.

Speaking on the Deeney Talks podcast, he added: “During lockdown, we’ve seen social media being used to abuse people racially. Not just being gay, but racially as well. People are so cruel to each other and it’s because they hide behind their social messaging or whatever they do. If they had to write their names on it, they wouldn’t do it. And I just think it’s just awful that people can write anonymous things about people being gay, being of another political persuasion, religious persuasion, or just plain racial.”

Sir Elton John’s fitness focus | Entertainment | insidenova.com – Inside NoVA

Sir Elton John has “really gotten fit” in lockdown.

The ‘Rocket Man’ hitmaker has spent the last 14 months focusing on his fitness as he wants to “be the fittest he has ever been” when he goes back out on tour following the coronavirus pandemic.

He shared: “In lockdown I’ve really gotten fit. I walk in the pool, I play tennis. I wanted to come out the other side not overweight. When I go back on tour I am going to be the fittest I have ever been. A lot of shame comes from the way I’ve put on weight. It’s been with me all my life.

“I am Type B diabetic so I have to watch what I eat. I have two kids I want to see and be around as much as possible. You have to do something about [weight gain] and sit down with a doctor or nutritionist and say, ‘How do I do it?’ It comes down to, what do you want for the rest of your life? I have had a lot of help. My doctor said, ‘Elton, get yourself together, do as you’re told’ and you will see the benefits of it.”

Whilst the 74-year-old singer has had a positive lockdown experience, he slammed those who use social media to make derogatory marks towards other, admitting it has become rife in the pandemic.

Speaking on the Deeney Talks podcast, he added: “During lockdown, we’ve seen social media being used to abuse people racially. Not just being gay, but racially as well. People are so cruel to each other and it’s because they hide behind their social messaging or whatever they do. If they had to write their names on it, they wouldn’t do it. And I just think it’s just awful that people can write anonymous things about people being gay, being of another political persuasion, religious persuasion, or just plain racial.”

Call for inquiry into NSW gay hate crimes – Yahoo News Australia

A judicial inquiry to investigate unsolved gay or transgender hate crimes should be established by the NSW government, a parliamentary inquiry has recommended.

The inquiry heard months of testimonies from victims, their families and legal representatives about suspected hate crimes against 88 men between 1970 and 2010.

Some 23 of the cases remain unsolved.

Findings of the bipartisan inquiry’s final report, which was was handed down on Tuesday, include that the NSW Police Force had historically failed in its responsibility to properly investigate cases.

The report also noted the acknowledgement by those who failed to protect and deliver justice for LGBTQI people is necessary for healing, but stopped short of recommending NSW Police issue a public apology.

The judicial inquiry recommended by the report would be run by a judge and have the power to investigate unsolved cases, including that of Wollongong newsreader Ross Warren and barman John Russell.

Warren disappeared after a night out drinking with friends in July 1989. His body was never found, but his keys were found at the bottom of cliffs at Tamarama beach.

Four months later Russell’s body was found in the same spot after a similar night out with friends.

In 2002 another gay man, French national Gilles Mattaini, was reported to have gone missing while walking near the Tamarama cliffs in 1985.

Committee chair and Liberal MP Shayne Mallard said the heartbreaking stories aired during the inquiry necessitated a call to action.

“For too long these deaths have remained unresolved and unanswered for, leaving a hole in the lives of victims’ families and loved ones,” he said in the report’s foreword.

“The committee believes that now is the time to act before the receding window of opportunity to obtain evidence relating to these decades old crimes closes.”

Greens MLC Abigail Boyd, who took part in the inquiry, said a judicial inquiry is long overdue.

“The NSW Police failed the queer community,” she wrote on Twitter.

“They blocked victim-survivors of hate crimes from seeking justice and failed to properly investigate these murders.”

“These wrongs must be undone.”

‘I’ve had to delete vile comments, people think there are no consequences’ – Inside the Premier League’s LGBT+ fan groups – Goal.com

Goal has spoken exclusively to supporters’ groups representing gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender fans, and we start at Manchester City…

David Alvarado, chair of the official Manchester City LGBT+ supporters’ group, Canal Street Blues, recalls the moment when it truly hit him how disconnected the gay community was with football.

“Football and the LGBT community has never been mixed that much,” he tells Goal as part of an exclusive interview, “but we are just trying to show people you can be LGBT and a football fan.

“Even some of my close mates who are now members, one of them, when we turned up to Canal Street one night for a few drinks, said: ‘Are you guys football fans?’.

“He whips his top off and he has a City top underneath. He didn’t think you could do that sort of thing around the Village.”

Canal Street Blues were one of the first LGBT+ supporters’ clubs associated with a Premier League side after being founded in 2014, with Alvarado serving as chair since 2019.

During that time, City have embarked on the most successful period in their history, and shared a little of that with Canal Street Blues, who brought the four trophies City won in 2018-19 to their home at Bar Pop for display – a sign of the link the organisation has with the Citizens.

While there is some disjunct between LGBT+ supporters and City, with the club’s owners being the royal family of a nation – the United Arab Emirates – where homosexuality is illegal, at the local level Alvarado can only praise the outreach work being done by the club, even if they need their hand held to go in the right direction.

“They always want to help, but they’re not always sure how to do it,” he says. “That’s something that reflects across all Premier League clubs, from speaking to other supporters’ groups, the clubs want to do the right thing, and that’s where we come in.

“City have appointed an equality and inclusion lead, he’s our direct contact. We’re looking forward to working with him, because the individuals who often work in clubs have never been exposed to this sort of work before, so they are learning as well.

“The Canal Street Blues flag is one of the most prominent at Etihad Stadium, and that’s great to see, but we’ve all seen disparaging comments when the club tries to promote anything to do with LGBT.

“We’ve got our own development as a society in the UK, but clubs have fans across the world where attitudes are different, so there is a role for clubs to play, similar to racism.”

The issue of homophobia closer to home, Alvarado says, is its prevalence on social media.

A season ticket holder at Etihad Stadium, he says the atmosphere at the ground when fans can attend is perfectly fine – but the atmosphere online is often toxic.

“The sensible majority is the overwhelming majority. Yes, I’ve heard the odd throwaway comment, but the real issue these days is social media. The actual matchday experience, most people would generally not tolerate it.

“I can’t remember the last time I heard a homophobic chant, but on our Canal Street Blues Facebook page, I’ve had to delete comments with some pretty vile stuff, because people think there are no consequences.

“In the ground, there are consequences: you’ll be chucked out, have your season ticket taken off you. Online, it is not a safe space.”

What can be done to improve matters? In football, Alvarado feels it has to be the players who drive change – not necessarily through a player coming out, but more footballers of all sexualities becoming more comfortable talking about the issue publicly and condemning abuse the way racism has been.

He says: “We all know there is bound to be homosexual male players, but it’s going to take time for one of them to feel comfortable coming out while playing. When they do, that will change attitudes. For kids, it will provide role models.

“We see the odd player make comments supporting equality, but it is quite rare. There is still stigma. All the clubs and the FA and fans can do is create an environment where being gay is ok.

“I don’t think there is an issue of people turning a blind eye, but in terms of the general feeling around homophobia in football, yes it is still there. The big driver will be if players lead.

“Coming out, at the end of the day it is a personal choice. I believe fans, the vast majority, will be hugely supportive.”

Ultimately, he thinks the game is heading in the right direction, but a more consistent strategy needs to be employed  – not just a week or month of action here and there.

“What we don’t want is a box-ticking exercise, that doesn’t achieve anything and can be patronising.

“That’s why I’m really pleased City have employed their inclusion lead, his passion comes through about the issues. It’s an important role and it’s across the worldwide City group, which to me shows they want to take it seriously.

“If clubs just do the minimum the Premier League tell them and it’s just sporadic and tied to publicity, rather than getting their hands dirty, I can relate to that. Sometimes the fans have to push this.

“In Manchester, we have a really strong cultural link in the city to LGBT causes, it is part of the fabric of the city. Clubs should reflect that.”

ACON supports calls for judicial inquiry into historical gay and transgender hate crimes in NSW – Mirage News

ACON Health

The final report of the parliamentary inquiry into historical gay and transgender hate crimes in NSW, which recommends the establishment of a judicial inquiry into unsolved murders, has been welcomed by the state’s leading LGBTQ health organisation, ACON.

ACON CEO Nicolas Parkhill said a judicial inquiry will shed further light on a dark chapter in NSW’s history and help with healing the pain and trauma experienced by many people as a result of these events.

“The attacks committed against sexuality and gender diverse people in NSW over decades have left a painful legacy for the loved ones of victims, survivors, their families, and the entire community, which was compounded by the slow and inadequate responses to many of these crimes,” Parkhill said. “ACON strongly supports a further judicial inquiry, as recommended in the final report into the inquiry.”

The inquiry into Gay and Transgender Hate Crimes between 1970 and 2010 was launched in 2018 by the NSW Legislative Council’s Standing Committee on Social Issues. It sought to look into institutional responses to violence carried out against people in sexuality and gender diverse communities in NSW during this period. The second and final report, tabled today, includes a range of findings and recommendations that aims to foster healing and deliver justice for loved ones of victims and survivors of these historical crimes.

In its findings, the report stated the NSW Police Force failed in its responsibility to properly investigate historical hate crimes. It also found that victims carry enduring physical, mental and emotional trauma as a result of their experiences, and that acknowledging past wrongs by those who failed to protect and deliver justice is a necessary step towards healing.

As well as the establishment of a judicial inquiry into unsolved cases of suspected gay and transgender hate crime deaths, the report also recommended:

  • The NSW Government provides a comprehensive update on the implementation of the recommendations in NSW Police Strike Force Parrabel
  • The NSW Government ensures that adequate victim support services are made available to those impacted historical gay and transgender hate crimes
  • The NSW Government provide further funding to ensure the completion of the Bondi Memorial in Marks Park in Bondi, in honour of the victims and survivors of LGBTIQ hate crimes
  • The NSW Police Force ensure that its computerised operational policing system adequately captures LGBTIQ hate crimes

Parkhill said: “This report is an important document that acknowledges the suffering and trauma many people from sexuality and gender diverse communities in NSW have experienced,” Parkhill said. “It makes clear the steps the NSW Government and NSW Police Force need to undertake to properly address this and ensure that healing and justice can begin.

“ACON strongly supports all the recommendations outlined in the report and stands ready to work with the government and other agencies to ensure they are actioned.”

Nicholas Stewart, Senior Partner at Dowson Turco Lawyers, said: “Dowson Turco Lawyers have been working hard with ACON and range of other partners to ensure that the pain and injustice many victims and survivors have endured are known and are never repeated again. We are heartened by the release of the final report and support all of its recommendations.”

ACON provided a comprehensive submission and gave evidence during hearings and Parkhill said he was pleased to see many of ACON’s submission points were considered and responded to in the final report. However, other key areas in ACON’s submission were not addressed such as the establishment of an office for equity, support for a government-funded mainstream education campaign and a public apology by the NSW Government and the NSW Police Force. ACON will continue to advocate for these ommissions through other policy settings and opportunities.

Parkhill said: “Nevertheless, this report builds on our ongoing work that supports people impacted by historical hate crimes and is an important next step in the journey towards achieving justice for the loved ones of victims and survivors.”

Parkhill acknowledged the strong support the inquiry received from parliamentarians across the political spectrum and commended them for their efforts.

“ACON extends our warmest thanks to the members of the NSW Legislative Council Standing Committee on Social Issues for their contributions to the inquiry, which was conducted with respect and compassion,” Parkhill said. “We particularly thank Shayne Mallard MLC for his work in ensuring the voices and stories of those impacted by historical LGBTIQ violence were heard.”

Parkhill also thanked the many organisations, partners and other stakeholders for their contribution to this historic inquiry.

“And of course, we thank all the community members who provided submissions and gave evidence at hearings for the inquiry. Their bravery, strength and resilience inspires and propels us in our continued efforts to fight for justice, heal and eradicate homophobia and transphobia in NSW,” Parkhill said.

Read the NSW Parliamentary Inquiry into Gay and Trans Hate Crimes Final Report here.

/Public Release. This material comes from the originating organization and may be of a point-in-time nature, edited for clarity, style and length.