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Walton family sets up $1M fund for LGBT groups in Arkansas – KY3

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Family members of Walmart founder Sam Walton on Thursday launched a $1 million fund for groups assisting LGBT people in the retail giant’s home state of Arkansas, which has enacted measures restricting transgender people’s rights.

The new fund is being established with support from the Alice L. Walton Foundation and from Olivia and Tom Walton through the Walton Family Foundation. The fund will distribute grants of $25,000 and more for groups that offer legal, health, education and advocacy services, along with other high-demand needs.

Arkansas Community Foundation will oversee the fund.

The initiative was launched following a legislative session in Arkansas that was marked by new laws restricting the rights of transgender people. The state is being sued over one of those measures, which bans gender confirming treatments for transgender youth. Unless blocked by a federal judge, the ban will take effect July 28.

“Our state is in a moment of reflection where each of us must send a message of acceptance to the LGBTQ community that says ‘You belong here,’” Olivia and Tom Walton said in a statement. “It is also a time for action by recognizing LGBTQ Arkansans face growing challenges that need community-driven solutions.”

To report a correction or typo, please email digitalnews@ky3.com

Copyright 2021 KY3. All rights reserved.

Chiefs LB Willie Gay Jr. at ‘100%’ after injury – KSHB

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — After a year of virtual introduction to the NFL, a rookie season ruled by mandates and a season-ending injury, linebacker Willie Gay Jr. is ready for year two.

Gay Jr. missed Super Bowl LV due to a meniscus tear. He said on Thursday that he’s ready for the upcoming season.

“During this offseason period, man, with this training staff, we’ve been working non-stop. Me and Miss Julie (Frymyer) and all her help that she has, it’s been a real grind. That’s why I’m here today 100%,” he said.

Gay Jr. looks to improve from his first season and plans on helping the younger guys like second-round draft pick Nick Bolton.

“I’m not a rookie but this is my second year and this is his first year. We’re both still fresh in this thing,” Gay said. “I tell him I’ll teach him the game as much as I can because I’m still learning from guys like Hitch (Anthony Hitchens) and Ben (Niemann) and Dorian (O’Daniel) and all those older guys. So whatever I learn I pass it down to him, whatever I’ve been through I pass it down to him.”

Donovan cross-endorsement of Cabrera draws L.G.B.T. ire – The Village Sun

BY GERARD FLYNN | When it comes to making homophobic remarks, City Councilmember Fernando Cabrera has few peers — outside of maybe, state Senator Ruben Diaz.

To an interviewer in Uganda in early 2014, the pious Democrat representing District 14 in the Bronx, spoke in halo terms of the African nation’s homophobic government — “godly people in power,” as he put it — because of their opposition to gay marriage and abortion.

Meanwhile, going farther back than that are Cabrera’s links to the Family Research Council, a conservative group known for spreading “false claims about the L.G.B.T.Q.+ community,” in the words of the Southern Poverty Law Center, which deems it a hate group.

News of Cabrera’s cross-endorsement on May 21 by mayoral candidate Shaun Donovan continues to shock many, including his old compadres like Allen Roskoff, president of the Jim Owles Liberal Democratic Club.

If Donovan is under the “mistaken impression that receiving Cabrera’s endorsement will help his campaign, it won’t,” Roskoff stated, adding, “Any hope Shaun had of getting votes from the L.G.B.T.Q.+ community is now lost.”

Fernando Cabrera. (Twitter)

That Donovan did not reply, Roskoff said, to a request to rescind the endorsement and apologize to the L.G.B.T.Q.+ community has only angered the community more.

During the Democratic primary race, Donovan — Obama’s crisis manager after Hurricane Sandy — has touted his track record of being the go-to guy during major crises. But the Cabrera endorsement has left many wondering if alienating a powerful block of voters to bolster Donovan’s campaign with Hispanic voters will come back to bite him.

Donovan declined to be interviewed for this article. But his campaign spokesperson Jeremy Edwards wrote that the candidate was “proud to have the endorsement.”

Edwards stressed that “Shaun was the first Cabinet secretary in American history to endorse marriage equality and has a long record of fighting against L.G.B.T.Q.+ discrimination” as President Obama’s Housing secretary.

According to Edwards, Fernando Cabrera is no longer that bigoted, smiley, wily Brylcreem politician, because his views on L.G.B.Q.T.+ have, like those of President Biden and President Obama, “positively evolved,” a word a devout Christian may not have chosen. And not just that, but Cabrera, “currently enjoys the support of L.G.B.T.Q.+ leaders in his community.”

Cabrera’s seismic shift from far-right rhetoric and activism to L.G.B.T.Q.+ love appeared in an op-ed in the February edition of the Bronx Times. The piece assured that Pastor Cabrera — a “dedicated pastor, father, husband and public servant whose values and beliefs are deeply rooted both in faith and love” — would represent all constituents fairly, providing he beats front-runner Vanessa Gibson for the Bronx borough president seat.

On top of his reputation for homophobic remarks, in 2013 as a councilmember, Cabrera reportedly tried to shake down hockey Hall of Famer Mark Messier and others for millions of dollars over the 99-year lease for the Kingsbridge National Ice Center, in his district.

In true Bronx-politics machine style, Cabrera met with project representatives behind closed doors and offered his nod for the ice rink, allegedly, in exchange for the developers sending $100,000 a year to a little-known organization, Community Action Unlimited, associated with Cabrera’s church, currently nestled inside Kingsbridge’s first luxury building. His request was refused.

Mayoral contender Andrew Yang has also drawn the ire of the L.G.B.T.Q.+ community, with the Stonewall Democratic Club rejecting his recent remarks to the club, pitching for the club’s endorsement, as “pandering and tone deaf.”

Donovan cross-endorsement of Cabrera draws ire in L.G.B.T. circles – The Village Sun

BY GERARD FLYNN | When it comes to making homophobic remarks, City Councilmember Fernando Cabrera, has few peers — outside of maybe, state Senator Ruben Diaz.

To an interviewer in Uganda in early 2014, the pious Democrat representing District 14 in the Bronx, spoke in halo terms of the African nation’s homophobic government — “godly people in power,” as he put it — because of their opposition to gay marriage and abortion.

Meanwhile, going farther back than that are Cabrera’s links to the Family Research Council, a conservative group known for spreading “false claims about the L.G.B.T.Q.+ community,” in the words of the Southern Poverty Law Center, which deems it a hate group.

News of Cabrera’s cross-endorsement on May 21 by mayoral candidate Shaun Donovan continues to shock many, including his old compadres like Allen Roskoff, president of the Jim Owles Liberal Democratic Club.

If Donovan is under the “mistaken impression that receiving Cabrera’s endorsement will help his campaign, it won’t,” Roskoff stated, adding, “Any hope Shaun had of getting votes from the L.G.B.T.Q.+ community is now lost.”

Fernando Cabrera. (Twitter)

That Donovan did not reply, Roskoff said, to a request to rescind the endorsement and apologize to the L.G.B.T.Q.+ community has only angered the community more.

During the Democratic primary race, Donovan — Obama’s crisis manager after Hurricane Sandy — has touted his track record of being the go-to guy during major crises. But the Cabrera endorsement has left many wondering if alienating a powerful block of voters to bolster Donovan’s campaign with Hispanic voters will come back to bite him.

Donovan declined to be interviewed for this article. But his campaign spokesperson Jeremy Edwards wrote that the candidate was “proud to have the endorsement.”

Edwards stressed that “Shaun was the first Cabinet secretary in American history to endorse marriage equality and has a long record of fighting against L.G.B.T.Q.+ discrimination” as President Obama’s Housing secretary.

According to Edwards, Fernando Cabrera is no longer that bigoted, smiley, wily Brylcreem politician, because his views on L.G.B.Q.T.+ have, like those of President Biden and President Obama, “positively evolved,” a word a devout Christian may not have chosen. And not just that, but Cabrera, “currently enjoys the support of L.G.B.T.Q.+ leaders in his community.”

Cabrera’s seismic shift from far-right rhetoric and activism to L.G.B.T.Q.+ love appeared in an op-ed in the February edition of the Bronx Times. The piece assured that Pastor Cabrera — a “dedicated pastor, father, husband and public servant whose values and beliefs are deeply rooted both in faith and love” — would represent all constituents fairly, providing he beats front-runner Vanessa Gibson for the Bronx borough president seat.

On top of his reputation for homophobic remarks, in 2013 as a councilmember, Cabrera reportedly tried to shake down hockey Hall of Famer Mark Messier and others for millions of dollars over the 99-year lease for the Kingsbridge National Ice Center, in his district.

In true Bronx-politics machine style, Cabrera met with project representatives behind closed doors and offered his nod for the ice rink, allegedly, in exchange for the developers sending $100,000 a year to a little-known organization, Community Action Unlimited, associated with Cabrera’s church, currently nestled inside Kingsbridge’s first luxury building. His request was refused.

Mayoral contender Andrew Yang has also drawn the ire of the L.G.B.T.Q.+ community, with the Stonewall Democratic Club rejecting his recent remarks to the club, pitching for the club’s endorsement, as “pandering and tone deaf.”

Willie Gay Jr. is ‘catching on’ more than last offseason, adds he’s 100% – Arrowhead Pride

There’s a long list of negatives from the week of Super Bowl LV for the Kansas City Chiefs, but one storyline that got buried was rookie linebacker Willie Gay Jr.’s knee injury during practice week. It required surgery, and there hadn’t been an official update all offseason on Gay’s recovery.

That was true until Thursday when Gay spoke to media members following the team’s ninth organized team activity (OTA) practice. He was able to calm the worries of Chiefs fans but didn’t exactly set the record straight on how his injury occurred.

“I don’t even know what really happened with it,” Gay admitted. “I tore my meniscus; I don’t know if it was at practice or if it happened walking around after. All I know is that during this offseason period with the training staff, we’ve been working nonstop. Me, [assistant athletic trainer Julie Frymyer] and all her help, it’s been a real grind. It’s why I’m here today, 100%.”

100% is a strong description to use, and it is hard to imagine a player would throw it out at this point of the offseason unless he truly believed it.

It was good to hear that Gay is feeling better physically, but it’s not just the knee that’s feeling better. He happened to enter the NFL during one of its most unique seasons due to COVID-19, and there was a clear disadvantage for rookies given last year’s virtual offseason.

This year, he’s noticing the benefits of normal, in-person practices and meetings.

“Of course it was tough for us that came in last year,” he confirmed. “To only see the playbook for the first time during training camp, it was hard. To get this head start right now in OTAs and minicamp, it’s definitely helping a lot. I’m catching onto things that I didn’t catch onto last year. I learned the basics, now it’s the small details that make good great. It’s coming on pretty good.”

NFL: Kansas City Chiefs at Miami Dolphins Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports

Gay isn’t the only young and talented linebacker on the Chiefs. A year after selecting Gay in the second round of the 2020 NFL Draft, the team used its second second-rounder to take another SEC linebacker: Missouri’s Nick Bolton.

They may be competing with each other for snaps in 2021, but their position gives them the chance to play alongside each other in the long term. They’ll need to build a good relationship to make it work at its best, and they’re off to a good start in that respect.

“We talk everyday,” Gay said about his and Bolton’s relationship. “I’m not a rookie, but it’s my second year and it’s his first year; we’re both still fresh in this thing. I tell him I’ll teach him the game as much as I can, cause I’m still learning from guys like Hitch, Ben, Dorian, and all those older guys. Whatever I learn, I pass it down to him; whatever I’ve been through, I pass it down to him, and we continue to stay close… it’s a good connection we have.”

The hope is that Gay and Bolton can translate their new friendship into an effective, on-field linebacker duo. It’s been the weakest position on the defense in recent seasons, and the Chiefs’ draft strategy reflects their acknowledgment.

The defense needs his athleticism for more than the 25% of snaps he played last season. Ideally, he’s on the field more in 2021 — and this update on how he feels physically and mentally is a great start for that.

Chiefs lose OL Kyle Long to knee injury in voluntary workout – WPLG Local 10

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The offensive line that the Kansas City Chiefs aggressively overhauled this offseason has taken a hit with a knee injury to veteran Kyle Long during voluntary workouts that could require surgery and keep him out of training camp.

The 32-year-old Long came out of a one-year retirement designed largely to get him healthy to sign a one-year contract with the Chiefs, who completely recast their offensive line after it was decimated by injuries and opt-outs last season. But he failed to make it through three weeks of workouts before another injury sidelined him.

“We’ll just see how he does here. It doesn’t look like it’s ligaments, but we’ll see,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said following the last of the workouts Thursday. “There’s a chance he has to have surgery on it, but we’ll see where it’s at.”

The Chiefs begin a three-day mandatory minicamp Tuesday, then are off until reporting to training camp in late July.

Long has spent most of his career at right guard, but he also was a Pro Bowl selection at right tackle, and the Chiefs were keen to see him play both positions. Now, they are looking at former starter Laurent Duvernay-Tardif returning from his opt-out to play right guard and veteran Mike Remmers or 2020 draft pick Lucas Niang to play right tackle.

The Chiefs are also high on Trey Smith, who fell to the sixth round of April’s draft due to his medical history.

“We’re lucky that we have some good players in there,” Reid said, “and then Larry is coming back. You add all of that in there with (Andrew) Wylie, who has a couple years of starting under his belt, and we should be OK.”

Duvernay-Tardif is expected at the mandatory minicamp, despite travel concerns due to COVID-19. He has been in his native Canada, where the trained physician spent last year helping people who contracted the coronavirus.

Despite the injury to Long, the Chiefs appear to be pleased with the work they put in the past three weeks, when several teams opted to skip voluntary workouts altogether. It was especially valuable for the past two crops of rookies, those who missed the entire offseason program last year because of COVID-19 and those just learning the NFL ropes.

“Of course it was tough for those guys that came in last year, to get their heads started in OTAs and minicamp,” said Chiefs linebacker Willie Gay Jr., who returned from a torn meniscus suffered in late January that kept him out of the Super Bowl.

“I’m catching onto things that I wasn’t catching onto last year,” he said. “It’s the basics that make good become great.”

WARD SIGNS

Chiefs cornerback Charvarius Ward signed his restricted free agent tender, which means he will earn about $3.4 million for the coming season. The 25-year-old Ward was traded to the Chiefs just before the start of the 2018 season and has been a valuable contributor in the secondary, starting 31 of 43 games over the past three seasons.

The Chiefs put an original-round tender on Ward in mid-March. That meant any other team could sign him, but the Chiefs would have had the right to match any offer.

VACCINATION QUESTION

Reid has indicated that the majority of players and staff have been vaccinated, though he has not gone out of his way to encourage players to get immunized. Rather, the Chiefs have provided information from the league and made physicians available to answer any questions.

“I’m doing what’s best for me: I’m getting vaccinated,” Gay said, “but it’s to help me to focus on things that are important, not worry about masks and having to catch COVID or anything like that. I’m just taking the information given.”

OVERLOOKED MOVE

While the Chiefs were busy rebuilding their offensive line, they quietly added defensive tackle Jarran Reed to fortify their defensive line. The move could have even more of an impact than expected because the Chiefs are toying with using incumbent defensive tackle Chris Jones as an occasional edge rusher.

“Chris is a great guy. You can tell this is his team and we’re following suit,” Reed said. “He’s a great player, real funny. A real cool dude. It’s self-explanatory how he plays. One of the best in the league.”

___

More AP NFL coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/NFL and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL

Chiefs lose OL Kyle Long to knee injury in voluntary workout – WJXT News4JAX

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The offensive line that the Kansas City Chiefs aggressively overhauled this offseason has taken a hit with a knee injury to veteran Kyle Long during voluntary workouts that could require surgery and keep him out of training camp.

The 32-year-old Long came out of a one-year retirement designed largely to get him healthy to sign a one-year contract with the Chiefs, who completely recast their offensive line after it was decimated by injuries and opt-outs last season. But he failed to make it through three weeks of workouts before another injury sidelined him.

“We’ll just see how he does here. It doesn’t look like it’s ligaments, but we’ll see,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said following the last of the workouts Thursday. “There’s a chance he has to have surgery on it, but we’ll see where it’s at.”

The Chiefs begin a three-day mandatory minicamp Tuesday, then are off until reporting to training camp in late July.

Long has spent most of his career at right guard, but he also was a Pro Bowl selection at right tackle, and the Chiefs were keen to see him play both positions. Now, they are looking at former starter Laurent Duvernay-Tardif returning from his opt-out to play right guard and veteran Mike Remmers or 2020 draft pick Lucas Niang to play right tackle.

The Chiefs are also high on Trey Smith, who fell to the sixth round of April’s draft due to his medical history.

“We’re lucky that we have some good players in there,” Reid said, “and then Larry is coming back. You add all of that in there with (Andrew) Wylie, who has a couple years of starting under his belt, and we should be OK.”

Duvernay-Tardif is expected at the mandatory minicamp, despite travel concerns due to COVID-19. He has been in his native Canada, where the trained physician spent last year helping people who contracted the coronavirus.

Despite the injury to Long, the Chiefs appear to be pleased with the work they put in the past three weeks, when several teams opted to skip voluntary workouts altogether. It was especially valuable for the past two crops of rookies, those who missed the entire offseason program last year because of COVID-19 and those just learning the NFL ropes.

“Of course it was tough for those guys that came in last year, to get their heads started in OTAs and minicamp,” said Chiefs linebacker Willie Gay Jr., who returned from a torn meniscus suffered in late January that kept him out of the Super Bowl.

“I’m catching onto things that I wasn’t catching onto last year,” he said. “It’s the basics that make good become great.”

WARD SIGNS

Chiefs cornerback Charvarius Ward signed his restricted free agent tender, which means he will earn about $3.4 million for the coming season. The 25-year-old Ward was traded to the Chiefs just before the start of the 2018 season and has been a valuable contributor in the secondary, starting 31 of 43 games over the past three seasons.

The Chiefs put an original-round tender on Ward in mid-March. That meant any other team could sign him, but the Chiefs would have had the right to match any offer.

VACCINATION QUESTION

Reid has indicated that the majority of players and staff have been vaccinated, though he has not gone out of his way to encourage players to get immunized. Rather, the Chiefs have provided information from the league and made physicians available to answer any questions.

“I’m doing what’s best for me: I’m getting vaccinated,” Gay said, “but it’s to help me to focus on things that are important, not worry about masks and having to catch COVID or anything like that. I’m just taking the information given.”

OVERLOOKED MOVE

While the Chiefs were busy rebuilding their offensive line, they quietly added defensive tackle Jarran Reed to fortify their defensive line. The move could have even more of an impact than expected because the Chiefs are toying with using incumbent defensive tackle Chris Jones as an occasional edge rusher.

“Chris is a great guy. You can tell this is his team and we’re following suit,” Reed said. “He’s a great player, real funny. A real cool dude. It’s self-explanatory how he plays. One of the best in the league.”

___

More AP NFL coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/NFL and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL

LGBT advocate discusses importance of respecting pronouns, names preferences – KTXL FOX 40 Sacramento

LGBT advocate discusses importance of respecting pronouns, names preferences




























Star Wars: ‘Luke and Han Solo were gay and a couple all along’ says screenwriter – Express

But, on screen at least, it has always appeared to be poor old Luke who was the loser in the intergalactic love stakes.

Leia and Han end up together in Return of the Jedi and eventually have a son, Ben Solo, aka Kylo Ren.

When The Force Awakens reintroduced the original trio in the Sequel Trilogy, it is revealed that Leia and Han have separated after their only child turned to the Dark Side.

Before her death, actress Carrie Fisher gave a hilarious interview explaining that a lack of sex had been the problem – and why Leia was doing just fine without the smuggler.

Take part in the virtual Philly Pride Run 5K race from anywhere – PhillyVoice.com

The Philly Pride Run 5K is a virtual event this year. Everyone is invited to lace up their sneakers and complete 3.1 miles between Sunday, June 13 and Sunday, June 20.

Participants can complete the miles anywhere and are encouraged to dress in colorful Pride Month apparel. Runners can submit their festive selfies through an Instagram direct message to @phillypriderun for a chance to win a prize for best dressed.


RELATED: Outdoor workout ends with drag show, brunch from Michael Solomonov | New cafe in Northern Liberties serves Brooklyn-style bagels | Franklin Institute hosting family-friendly Pride Day later this month | 14 studios to offer discounts on classes during Philly Fitness Week


All proceeds from the race will support key services for the William Way LGBT Community Center.

Registration is open online. The fee to participate is $30.

If you’re looking for somewhere to celebrate after finishing your run, there are several different restaurants in Philly offering colorful cocktails for Pride Month with a portion of proceeds going to William Way LGBT Community Center, Attic Youth Center, Philly Asian Queer and Galaei.


Philly Pride Run 5K

Sunday, June 13 through Sunday, June 20
Virtual event

Grayson Pride highlights inclusiveness, acceptance with 2021 event – Sherman Denison Herald Democrat

Nearly 40 community groups, businesses and other organizations came together to share a message of love and acceptance in Pecan Grove Park in 2019 as Grayson Pride held its first festival in Grayson County.

Grayson Pride hopes to bring a message of inclusion, acceptance and fellowship for the LGBT community when the organization holds its second Pride event this weekend at Pecan Grove Park in Sherman. 

The free event will run from 10 a.m. through 5 p.m. Saturday at Pecan Grove Park. Organizers will be raising funds in memory of Sammi Mitchell-Henderson, a transgender woman who was struck and killed by a motor vehicle in Denison last month. These funds will be used to support transgender youth in the area.

The event is one of countless other Pride events that is taking place across the country throughout June aimed at increasing awareness and acceptance of the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people within the community.

“The event on Saturday is going to be Grayson County’s second Pride, “Pride 2021″ and will serve the LGBTQ+ community in Grayson County,” said Kodi Miller, vice president and co-founder of Grayson Pride. “It will also serve to bring together the community and let people know that we are here for inclusiveness and fellowship.”

This year’s festivities will include food trucks, vendors and entertainment throughout the day. Beyond this, Miller said she wanted to use the event to share information on the LGBT community not only to those outside it, but also those who may be struggling with with their identity or being accepted for it.

“We are just trying to get resources out there for people — everything from inclusive and reaffirming wedding venues to health care providers that are inclusive,” she said. “We are just trying to make sure people know we have those local resources for them.”

The Pride movement started in response to a police raid of the Stonewall Inn — a gay bar that served the gay community of New York — in 1969.  The bar was raided in the early morning hours of June 28, 1969. Crowds of estimated hundreds to thousands began to grow around the bar as patrons, staff and suspected members of the mafia were taken from the bar and loaded into patrol wagons. 

Hostility and frustration about the raid continued to grow until the crowd began to riot against the arresting officers. The riots and following protests led to the first gay pride events and parades in various cities across the country the next year. 

The moment has growth over the years, with many large cities holding events in recognition throughout June.

“Pride started in New York City and other major cities as a riot,” Miller said. “There were people in the LGBTQ+ community that were being harassed, arrested, just for walking down the streets or eating in restaurants.”

The local efforts started when Miller and Grayson Pride President and Co-found Valerie Fox were working together on advocacy work for a transgender student in Oklahoma. This work led to discussions about bringing this same support closer to home. 

This ultimately led to the first pride event in Grayson County in 2019. The event was cancelled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Despite the fact that there are many people, ranging from business and restaurant owners to community members, who are LGBT, Miller said it can be difficult for some people to find the acceptance and support that they need. NBC News reported in 2020 that 40 percent of LGBTQ youth “seriously considered” suicide in the past year.

Miller said the past year was difficult for many LGBT youth who do not have a strong support network at home. Some spent the year away from school, a place that they find acceptance, and at home with an unsupportive family due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Miller said that she hopes that this year’s festivities will help these youth and others see that they are are not alone and there are people out there willing to accept them for who they are.

Pasadenas Only Gay Bar Fights For Its Life – Patch.com

PASADENA, CA — Like the rest of the nation, COVID-19 upended life across Pasadena. Many businesses in the city shut down for good or have struggled to stay afloat. Now, the city’s only gay bar is fighting for survival after being closed for more than a year, according to a new report from the Los Angeles Times.

In its nearly 40-year history, the Boulevard has never closed its doors — that changed in March 2020 when the coronavirus brought life to a standstill. While restaurants and bars were able to adapt to the pandemic by offering to-go service for food and cocktails, the bar remained quiet.

The Boulevard didn’t offer food and wasn’t equipped to offer to-go cocktails, according to The Times report. Bills began piling up for the business.

Steve Terradot, the bar’s owner, told the paper a PPP loan he received last year has long been used up, and he’s had to pay the bar’s bills with his unemployment checks.

Facing an uncertain future for the bar, a pair of regular customers came to Terradot with an idea — to start a GoFundMe campaign.

He initially balked at the idea.

“My ethos is you get out, you work and you do things,” Terradot told the Times. “It was also embarrassing for a guy my age to collect unemployment.”

He eventually relented and the Boulevard’s GoFundMe campaign launched in April with the hopes of raising $50,000 to help pay for repairs at the bar and for some remodeling work.

A little more than $20,000 has been raised by the campaign, as of Thursday morning.

“This is the last true safe haven for the LGBTQ community within 20 miles of the Pasadena area and home to so many drag performers from all over the country,” Mark Lanza, the campaign’s organizer, said on the GoFundMe page. “This place means so much to so many of us and has served the gay community and its allies for almost 40 years.”

Read the rest of the Los Angeles Times’ story on the Boulevard by visiting the paper’s website.


GoFundMe is a Patch promotional partner.

BU researchers create novel curriculum assessment tool to improve medical education about sexual and gender minority (LGBTQI) populations – EurekAlert

(Boston)–Medical education aspires to mitigate bias in future professionals by providing a robust curriculum that includes perspectives and practices for caring for sexual and gender minority (SGM) populations, including lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTQI) persons. To provide medical schools with a more systematic, uniform approach to teaching these topics in their curriculum, the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) in 2014 published 30 SGM competencies and topics that curricula should address. However, implementation of these ideals remains challenging.

Building off the AAMC’s comprehensive resource guide, medical education leaders at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) have developed a curriculum assessment tool to efficiently assess whether a medical school adequately incorporates recommended SGM core competencies.

“Medical schools vary in how they cover SGM topics and to what extent graduating students feel prepared to meet the needs of these populations. Medical school leaders motivated to improve curricula on caring for SGM populations must survey their school’s current curricula to identify their school’s strengths and opportunities for improvement,” said corresponding author Ann Zumwalt, PhD, associate professor of anatomy and neurobiology at BUSM and chair of the Gender and Sexual Diversity Vertical Integration Group (GSD VIG).

In 2018, the school convened the GSD VIG, comprising a group of BUSM faculty and students with experience and expertise regarding SGM health, to examine the state of BUSM’s curriculum on SGM health. The group distilled the 30 AAMC competencies into 12 SGM topic areas that should be addressed in any medical school curriculum. They then developed the SGM Curriculum Assessment Tool (SGM-CAT), which employs targeted curriculum assessment questions to assess whether these topic areas are addressed within the curriculum–and, if they are, how and where.

This tool was distributed to all course and clerkship directors responsible for the required curriculum at BUSM to investigate where these core topics are addressed. The curriculum assessment tool identified several strengths in the pre-clerkship and clerkship curricula, including faculty willingness and enthusiasm to include SGM topics, but also revealed that some SGM topics are underrepresented in the BUSM curriculum.

“What is exciting about our tool is that we used our proficiency to distill the 30 AAMC competencies into 12 easily understandable topics that should be taught in any curriculum. We then surveyed all course and clerkship directors on whether they teach any of those 12 topics. The process/tool we developed is a straightforward way to get a snapshot of what is being taught where across the entire curriculum,” added Zumwalt.

“As it is still not a requirement of medical training, identifying where SGM content even exists in medical schools is extremely difficult. This tool aims to easily and quickly reveal where SGM content is addressed in undergraduate medical education, thereby allowing for more rapid and comprehensive interventions to improve training,” explained co-author Carl Streed, Jr., MD, MPH, FACP, assistant professor of medicine at BUSM and a primary care physician and research lead in the Center for Transgender Medicine & Surgery at Boston Medical Center (BMC).

According to the researchers, many faculty may miss opportunities to teach about SGM health because they do not recognize how the material fits with their topic. “The tool was designed to be used by individuals who are less familiar with SGM health and makes curricular change easier by helping users understand how SGM health is incorporated into existing curricula,” added Jenny Siegel, MD, assistant professor of medicine at BUSM and medical director, Center for Transgender Medicine & Surgery at BMC.

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These findings appear online in the journal Academic Medicine.

Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.

Opinion: Pride isn’t just an aesthetic for companies to capitalize on – The Reveille, LSU’s student newspaper

Pride month is a beautiful thing.

It’s a celebration of visibility and representation for members of the LGBTQ+ community. During June, members of the community and their allies seek to educate and advocate for a world where “love wins.”

In an attempt to capitalize on Pride month, however, companies use the aesthetic of the LGBTQ+ community as a mere publicity stunt. In quite a few cases, the groups that change their logos to rainbows during June either have a history of suppressing LGBTQ+ voices the rest of the year or represent groups instrumental to the oppression of the community in the fight for equality.

Once May ticks over into June, entertainment companies like Disney flood their social media feeds with posts overwhelmingly in support of the LGBTQ+ community. Representation like this, while a nice sign of solidarity, is often counter to the rest of a company’s actions.

Let’s start with Disney.

The company’s Twitter tweeted an image of their popular characters walking in front of a rainbow flag in solidarity of the LGBTQ+ community on June 1. It’s incredible to see Mickey, Donald and Goofy proclaim “there’s room for everyone under the rainbow,” but Disney’s past actions make the gesture seem like nothing more than a marketing aesthetic.

After Disney bought 20th Century Fox and shuttered their animation department, Blue Sky, they cancelled what was to be the first LGBTQ+ led animated feature, “Nimona.” The film was ten months away from being complete.

Disney, the supposed ally of the LGBTQ+ community, also moved “Love, Victor,” a teenage romantic comedy series about a gay man’s self-discovery of his sexuality, from Disney+ to Hulu. The show was moved because it “would not fit in with the family-friendly content on Disney+.”

If everyone can fit under the rainbow like Disney proclaimed at the start of June, then why were these projects shifted or cancelled to align with a “family-friendly” brand, when stories of straight self-discovery have been the company’s bread and butter for years?

While Disney, an entertainment company, capitalizing on a trend with their adoption of pride imagery is just bad optics given their past, other organizations using pride’s aesthetic during June is much more troubling.

Take Raytheon Technologies, for example.

A major defense contractor for the United States’ government, the brand recently changed their logo to a rainbow version of its previously red branding. While the company was deemed the safest work environment for LGBTQ+ employees, their presence in pride’s festivities is problematic, nonetheless.

Raytheon isn’t the only company dealing in weapons that rebranded themselves during June. Taser and body cam producer Axon also changed their logo to a vibrant rainbow during pride month.

For companies like Raytheon and Axon who sell weapons to various military and police forces, pride isn’t exactly the most appropriate rebranding.

The history of pride is one of riots and a fight against police for basic rights. Generally agreed upon by historians as the first modern pride was actually the Stonewall riot in 1969 when gay rights activists responded to a police raid on the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in New York City’s Greenwich Village.

A notorious and historic antagonistic force to the LGBTQ+ community, police have been banned from many recent pride events, including events in New York. After years of antagonism by police with weapons provided by companies like Raytheon and Axon, it’s understandable why it’s not the most appropriate sign of solidarity for a weapon’s manufacturer to support a community they played a part in oppressing.

Pride has been criticized in the past few years for becoming too cooperate, with companies like Target using pride merchandise to sell more t-shirts. But for all its missteps with the occasional military contractor expressing inappropriate solidarity, pride still provides a spotlight for LGBTQ+ voices.

More artistic branches of companies like Disney and Warner Brothers are able to spotlight their LGBTQ+ creators. Take Marvel and DC Comics, who both recently released massive anthology books celebrating their stable of LGBTQ+ creators and characters.

Sure, it’s all still cooperate, but seeing heroes who identify a certain way goes a long way in inspiring the next generation of LGBTQ+ youth to be comfortable in their own skin.

Representation matters and that’s what pride should be about.

It’s not about silencing LGBTQ+ voices, invalidating them with a company that makes the tasers that police have used to oppress members of the community and its definitely not about passing anti-transgender legislation on the first day of June like Governor DeSantis did in Florida.

It’s about love.

Domenic Purdy is a 20-year-old journalism junior from Prairieville. 

Trans woman attacked, stabbed at DC laundromat – Washington Blade

Some owners of D.C. gay bars have said Mayor Muriel Bowser’s announcement on May 10 that the city’s restaurants and bars could resume operations at full capacity and return to pre-pandemic operating hours on May 21 caught them by surprise.

After several months of business shutdowns followed by a partial reopening with strict limits of only 25 percent of the normal number of customers inside bars and restaurants, a ban on standing in bars or being served while sitting at a barstool, the mayor’s reopening order left many bars and restaurants short on servers and bartenders.

But nearly everyone associated with D.C. gay bars who spoke with the Washington Blade — including owners, employees, and customers — have said they were ecstatic to see a full reopening after more than a year of COVID-related restrictions and hardship.

“We didn’t really open at a 100 percent capacity,” said John Guggenmos, co-owner of the D.C. gay bars Trade and Number 9, immediately after Mayor Bowser issued her full reopening order. Like other bar owners, Guggenmos said Trade and Number 9 had to bring back employees who had to be let go due to the shutdowns and operating restrictions over the past year.

“But you know, seeing people again, hearing the stories of some of the struggles they went through, and our customers just talking to each other and saying how glad they are to be back gave us a sense of our community and how much we are more than just four walls and some chairs and music,” Guggenmos said.

Dito Sevilla, who works as bar manager at the 17th Street restaurant Floriana, and as longtime host of the restaurant’s lower-level space known as Dito’s Bar, said the May 21 lifting of COVID restrictions has returned business to pre-pandemic levels.

“We were not fully staffed on day one either,” Sevilla told the Blade. “Everyone had to work a little extra,” he said. “And that was OK with them because they had gone without working for so long that working some extra shifts that week wasn’t going to hurt anyone. They were thrilled to do it.”

Doug Schantz, owner of the U Street, N.W. gay sports bar Nellie’s, said he too was caught off guard by the short advance notice of the mayor’s May 21 full reopening of restaurants and bars but like other bar owners said he is pleased that the full reopening has come to D.C.

He said Nellie’s put in place a “soft” reopening on May 21, with operations limited to his second-floor space that has a roof deck and he continued to close at midnight instead of the resumption to normal closing times with the mayor’s order at 2 a.m. on weekdays and 3 a.m. on weekends.

Schantz said he timed his full reopening to take place this weekend to coincide with the kickoff of the city’s LGBTQ Pride events. And by July 1, he said, Nellie’s will resume its popular drag brunch.

“We’re taking it one step at a time, but so many people were happy to be back,” he said. “They want to be back to normal.”

David Perruzza, owner of the Adams Morgan gay sports bar Pitchers and its adjoining lesbian bar A League of Her Own, said he and his regular customers, many of whom continued to show up at the two bars during the height of the pandemic restrictions, are delighted over the full reopening. Like several of the other bar owners, Perruzza said he will continue to operate outdoor seating under the “streetery” program the city established when indoor seating was initially banned and later resumed at just 25 percent capacity.

One COVID-related rule remaining in place for bars and restaurants, which is expected to be lifted soon, is the requirement that bars and restaurants obtain a name and phone number for at least one person entering as part of a group and for each individual entering for contact tracing purposes in the event someone tests positive for COVID on the day the customer was present. The city’s Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration, which initiated the requirement during the height of the pandemic, was expected to end the requirement in the next few weeks, according to sources familiar with ABRA.

In addition to the full reopening of bars and restaurants on May 21, the city has cleared the way for the full resumption of large indoor and outdoor events on June 11, including parades and sports stadiums. That development has prompted D.C.’s Capital Pride Alliance, the group that organizes the city’s LGBTQ Pride events, to add to this week’s Pride events a June 12 Pride Walk, which will begin at Dupont Circle at noon and travel to Logan Circle before heading south to Freedom Plaza, where a rally will take place.

“The excitement has been palpable since bars and restaurants in D.C. recently reopened at full capacity and without limit or activity restrictions,” said Mark Lee, coordinator of the D.C. Nightlife Council, a local trade association representing bars, restaurants, and nightclubs.

“The enthusiasm is especially evident at LGBT venues, with long lines common after a long period of shutdowns and slowdowns,” Lee said. “The celebration will expand on June 11 when nightclub-licensed dance clubs fully reopen, and large music venues begin hosting tour acts and special shows in the coming days.”

But Lee said a “flip side” to the reopening celebrations is the reality that many bars, restaurants, and nightclubs must grapple with a massive debt burden of back-rent owed to landlords that threatens their survival.

Lee and others point out that the forced shutdowns and capacity restrictions that these mostly small businesses have faced during the pandemic resulted in a drastic reduction in revenue that forced them to rely on local D.C. and federal COVID moratoriums on evictions for commercial and residential tenants. With the moratoriums ending, the businesses must now repay the back rent owed that Lee says often exceeds $100,000 or more.

“That’s why the D.C. Nightlife Council and the Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington are urging Mayor Bowser and the D.C. Council to utilize a small portion of the city’s federal relief monies to create a Rent Relief Fund for local establishments facing unsustainable past-due lease obligations,” Lee said.

Perruzza said that in addition to facing back rent payments related to the pandemic, he and other bar and restaurant owners had to pay D.C. property taxes under their lease agreements at a time when their revenue was greatly suppressed from the pandemic. He said he believes he will be able to cope with the rental payoff, but the relief fund proposed by Lee and others would be immensely helpful for his and other struggling small businesses.

Bowser and members of the D.C. Council have said they were considering the relief proposal.

“We’re thankful for the support the community showed throughout the pandemic and the eagerness to want to get back to us,” said Guggenmos of Trade and Number 9. “We are thrilled and it’s great seeing everyone, but it doesn’t mean the sleepless nights are over,” he said in referring to the rental debt and other COVID-related expenses that his clubs continue to face.

Among the other D.C. gay bars whose representatives or customers said they are pleased over the reopening at full capacity include Uproar, Dirty Goose, JR.’s, Larry’s Lounge, Window’s, Annie’s Paramount Steakhouse, Duplex Diner, and Freddie’s Beach Bar in Arlington, Va.

Lee said the downtown D.C. nightclub Sound Check at 1420 K St., N.W., was scheduled to resume its weekly Avalon Saturday “gay” nights on June 12. Before being put on hold during the pandemic, the event featured drag shows and dancing.