Home Blog Page 99

‘In the Heights’ Is the Perfect Start to the Year of the Movie Musical – Thrillist

Entertainment

You are going to want to see it on a big screen.

in the heights

Warner Bros.

After the year we had in 2020, it makes sense that 2021 is shaping up to be the year of the movie musical. At least five major movie musicals are on the calendar, and the all-singing, all-dancing cinematic extravaganza kicks off with the exuberant, joyous, and enervating In the Heights, adapted from Lin-Manuel Miranda’s first Broadway outing and directed by Crazy Rich Asians‘ Jon M. Chu. 

There arguably has not been a great stage-to-screen translation of a musical since Chicago in 2002. It’s not as if there has been a complete deficit of characters breaking into song—La La Land shut down a Los Angeles freeway and won a bunch of Oscars; Lady Gaga belted her guts out in A Star Is Born—but those were entirely cinematic outings engineered for that medium. To take something that worked well in the confines of a theater and translate it on screen is an often fraught endeavor, but Chu is more than up to the task and In the Heights is the perfect material. 

Chu has created a spectacle that uses all the tools film has to offer, and fills every inch of the screen. Though In the Heights is being released on HBO Max at the same time it hits theaters on June 10, it practically demands to be viewed on as large a screen as possible. If you’re squinting at a TV set or a computer, you might miss some of the details painted on the walls of the bodegas or the dancers tucked into the corner. Chu successfully blends the heightened reality that the genre requires with the energy of shooting on location in the streets of Washington Heights. A veteran of the Step Up franchise, Chu treats every extra walking the streets of upper Manhattan as a member of his chorus. 

in the heights
Warner Bros.

Miranda, now best known for his Pulitzer Prize-winning Hamilton, began working on In the Heights when he was still in college, and it’s as much a raw storytelling endeavor as an act of preservation, documentation, and homage. There isn’t much to the plot itself: Through Miranda’s songs and a script by playwright Quiara Alegría Hudes, In the Heights is a portrait of a community over a couple of blisteringly hot summer days as its members reconcile their own aspirations with encroaching gentrification. 

At the center of this narrative is Usnavi, a role originated by Miranda and now played by Hamilton veteran Anthony Ramos, in a star-making performance. The minute he utters the words, “Hey y’all, good morning,” in the opening number with a raspy voice and bedroom eyes, he puts the audience under his spell. Usnavi runs the corner bodega, passed down from his now deceased parents, and dreams of going back to the Dominican Republic and reviving his father’s beachside bar, all while pining after Vanessa (Melissa Barrera), who works at the nail salon across the street but wants to move downtown and become a fashion designer. Usnavi lives with Abuela Claudia (Olga Merediz), the matriarch for the entire block, and supports his teenage cousin Sonny (Gregory Diaz IV).

The rest of the characters all rely on Usnavi’s cafe con leche: There’s Kevin Rosario (Jimmy Smits), who runs the local cab company but has recently sold half his building to pay Stanford tuition for his daughter Nina (Leslie Grace). She’s home for the summer, but harboring the feeling that she can’t cut it at the prestigious university after being on the receiving end of a series of microaggressions. At the same time, she’s rekindling her romance with Benny (Corey Hawkins), an employee of her dad’s. (Don’t worry: Miranda does show up as a piragua vendor who gets into a fight with the Mister Softee man portrayed by original cast member Chris Jackson.) 

Miranda, Hudes, and Chu have made only a few alterations, most notably the introduction of a framing device in which Usnavi, on a beach (implied to be in the Dominican Republic) from sometime in the future, tells the story of Washington Heights to a group of children. It’s a convention that eases the audience into fourth wall-breaking that would be natural in the confines of a Broadway house. Initially, it seems like a bit of a labored addition until it pays off beautifully in the final act.

in the heights
Warner Bros.

One of the reasons that the cuts to Usnavi on the beach initially seem out of place is that they are static compared to what Chu captures on 175th Street and Audubon Avenue. Too many modern movie musicals are plagued by inertia; that’s not the case with In the Heights. When the characters open their mouths to sing the vibrancy pops off the screen. Instead of using green screens or CGI wizardry to make Miranda’s metaphors literal, Chu decided to rely on the magic of New York City streets. There are occasional moments of animation, but they never overtake the performances or the surroundings. During Nina and Benny’s “When You’re Home,” pickup basketball players are the backdrop for their duet, and an argument over dominos turns into a ballet. Dance is frequently almost diegetic in Chu’s world, often blending seamlessly with the action. In “96,000”—arguably the most thrilling sequence—the choreography emerges from pool revelry as the crowd learns that Usnavi’s bodega sold a winning lottery ticket. 

I’ve already mentioned how Ramos instantly secures his future as a leading man, but every single member of the cast is giving it their all, infusing their vocals and movements with life. Merediz, the one person who resumes her role from the Broadway production, makes astounding work of her solo “Paciencia y Fe,” which also features some of the movie’s most revelatory choreography. 

In the Heights is celebratory from beginning to end. It’s a celebration of the sheer talent on screen, of the Latinx experience, of the power of its genre. If this is the way the year of the musical begins, it’s a perfect start.

Want more Thrillist? Follow us on Instagram, Twitter, Pinterest, YouTube, TikTok, and Snapchat.

Esther Zuckerman is a senior entertainment writer at Thrillist. Follow her on Twitter @ezwrites.

Our Newsletter

Florida reverses itself, will allow rainbow bridge lighting – WDIV ClickOnDetroit

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Florida reversed itself Wednesday and said a downtown Jacksonville bridge can be decorated in rainbow lights to celebrate gay rights, one day after it had ordered them doused.

Taryn Fenske, a spokeswoman for Gov. Ron DeSantis, told The Florida Times-Union that she didn’t know why the Florida Department of Transportation had ordered the state-owned Acosta Bridge returned to its normal blue lighting Tuesday night, but said the rainbow colors will be back Wednesday night.

The Jacksonville Transportation Authority had planned to use rainbow lighting on the Acosta throughout the week in honor of Pride Month, which commemorates the struggle for gay rights. The state has allowed numerous celebratory lighting displays on the bridge to honor patriotic holidays, celebrate the Jacksonville Jaguars football team and raise disease awareness.

It had been the second time this month the state rejected a rainbow lighting display for a bridge.

“The bottom line is, (the rainbow) lights will be back” on the Acosta, Fenske told the paper.

The state transportation department said on Tuesday that its original decision to shut off the rainbow lights was not motivated by anti-gay animus but because the display violated regulations. It said the Jacksonville authority’s permit for lighting the Acosta requires it to maintain a certain color scheme unless it receives state permission for a temporary change.

DeSantis, a Republican, was criticized last week when, on the first day of Pride Month, he signed a law banning transgender athletes from participating in school sports.

The state had earlier rejected Sarasota’s request to light its John Ringling Causeway Bridge with rainbow lights this month despite also permitting other displays there. The governor’s office did not immediately respond to a Wednesday email from The Associated Press asking whether that display will also now be allowed.

According to the state’s bridge lighting policy, the transportation department can reject any temporary color scheme it deems offensive or not in the public’s best interest. It also says special lighting displays should be limited to federal or state holidays or celebrations and “events of broad community interest and significance approved by local governments.” Fenske said those policies will be reviewed.

The Times-Union reports that the Acosta is frequently lit in different color schemes. Last month, it was lit in teal to honor the Jaguars for drafting star quarterback Trevor Lawrence; green for mental health month; blue and green to raise awareness of neurofibromatoses, a neurological disorder that causes tumors; light blue for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, the fatal condition commonly called Lou Gehrig’s disease; purple for lupus awareness; and red, white and blue for Memorial Day.

Sports betting analyst Kelly Stewart’s firing by ESPN sparks controversy – Salina Journal

Stewart

MANHATTAN — When ESPN announced plans to hire Kelly Stewart as a sports gambling analyst last month, the network did so with excitement and enthusiasm. It promoted her as an up-and-coming talent in a news release, saying she would be “an important asset to all that we are doing in the space,” as well as someone who would help position ESPN to “expand our sports betting content going forward.”

It sounded like a perfect partnership.

But it dissolved in a less than a month. Stewart’s career at ESPN ended before it even began.

Who is Kelly Stewart?

Stewart, known by many simply as @kellyinvegas on social media, broke into the sports betting scene over the last decade while living in Las Vegas. She has most recently been an analyst for Bleacher Report and for WagerTalk.com. She has also appeared across multiple other platforms over the years including ESPN Radio in Las Vegas and the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

At ESPN, she was expected to appear on TV programs, podcasts and radio shows.

Before all that, she grew up in Manhattan and attended K-State, where she earned a degree in business administration and a minor in leadership studies. Her passion for her alma mater has shined through in much of her work.

You could say watching K-State football games got her started on her professional path.

“As a kid from small town Kansas,” she said last month, “I grew up watching Kansas State teams during the Bill Snyder era and was immediately hooked on sports.”

What went wrong?

ESPN confirmed on Friday that it had parted ways with Stewart, but a company spokesperson declined to provide further details. Stewart issued a statement on social media explaining that she was let go because of tweets she wrote and later deleted nine years ago, which contained anti-gay slurs.

She apologized for using homophobic language in those tweets, writing that “I know the words I used are unacceptable and hurtful” but explained they were in response to hurtful attacks she received on social media.

As a woman working in a male-dominated industry, she did not apologize for standing up for herself against “vile, threatening and misogynistic attacks from men.” She said she wished ESPN had opted to stand by her, particularly because she had previously been suspended at a previous job because of those tweets.

“I can only say I’m sorry,” she wrote,” for the person I was and some of the mistakes I made in my youth.”

Controversial reaction

When ESPN parted ways with Stewart last week, her dismissal quickly became national news.

It sparked conversations on social media about how long someone should be punished for old, inappropriate tweets, how difficult it can be for a woman to work in a male-dominated industry and whether ESPN made the correct move by ending her contract.

The sports website Outkick called ESPN a group of cowards for firing Stewart over tweets she sent nearly a decade ago. Its founder Clay Travis, who also appears on the gambling show “Fox Bet Live,” sent Stewart a reply on Twitter suggesting she should be working for his media company.

Others who know Stewart and have enjoyed her work at previous jobs also lobbed criticism at ESPN for not supporting her under the circumstances.

Though her tweets did contain anti-gay slurs, they were only shared as replies on Twitter that the majority of her followers would not have seen without going out of their way to search her posts. Female journalists and analysts typically face more online harassment than their male counterparts, and newsrooms have not really figured out a good way to support them.

There have been other high-profile instances recently of young women reporters losing their jobs over social media posts. The Associated Press fired Emily Wilder because of pro-Palestinian tweets that violated its social media policy.

ESPN also recently fired former KU men’s basketball player Paul Pierce as a NBA analyst two months ago when he shared a video on social media that showed him at a party that appeared to include marijuana and strippers.

In 2017, ESPN unveiled a new social media policy for its employees that read: “our engagement on social platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram should be civil, responsible and without overt political or other biases that would threaten our or your credibility with the public. Do nothing that would undercut your colleagues’ work or embroil the company in unwanted controversy. Apply to social platforms the same high standards, sound logic and common sense you employ on ESPN’s platforms. We reserve the right to take action for violations of these principles.”

Ghana court denies bail for 21 detained LGBT activists – CNN

CNN —  

A Ghanaian court on Tuesday denied bail to 21 gay rights activists arrested nearly three weeks ago for what police described as an unlawful gathering, their lawyer said.

The 16 women and five men were told to reappear in court on June 16 for their next hearing. Some were seen weeping after the ruling in the southeastern city of Ho.

LGBTQ people face widespread persecution in the West African nation, where gay sex is punishable with up to three years imprisonment. Ghana has not prosecuted anyone for same-sex relations in years, but the LGBTQ community has reported a crackdown by authorities in recent months.

The activists were arrested on May 20 at a hotel, police said in a statement at the time of their arrest. The statement accused them of having advocated LGBT activities with books and flyers with titles including “Coming out” and “All about Trans.”

The organization LGBT+ Rights Ghana said there was no lawful reason for the arrests, and that the activists had met for a workshop on how to document and report human rights violations. Promoting LGBT rights is not illegal in Ghana.

Julia Selman Ayetey, a lawyer for the defendants, told Reuters that they were denied bail, without giving further details. The activists had already been denied bail at the Ho High Court before taking their application to the Circuit Court.

This gaming tech company just said ‘gay rights’ with a $25,000 donation to an LGBT+ charity – Yahoo Eurosport UK

StreamElements is partnering with the It Gets Better Project on charity projects this Pride season.

They are a popular provider of streaming tools and services for streamers across Twitch, YouTube and Facebook Gaming.

The partnership will be focused on fundraising, with StreamElements donating $25,000 to the It Gets Better Project.

In addition, they’re launching a new merch store with all proceeds going to the project.

The merch has been designed by LGBT+ artists Jaime Hayde and Andrea Marroquín, with clothing, mugs and cushions all available.

Streamers can also use these designs on their own merch too, sold on their individual StreamElements stores.

In addition, the designs will be available for streamers to use as overlays and graphics on their own streams, and StreamElements will provide assistance in conducting fundraisers.

Lastly, StreamElements will be highlighting the work of LGBT+ streamers on their social channels throughout June.

“Pride has always been an important part of my life. Seeing StreamElements partner with LGBTQ+ content creators and the highly impactful It Gets Better Project to drive social change is a significant milestone, especially for myself and many other members of our staff who are part of the community we’re celebrating,” said Sean Horvath, CRO at StreamElements.

“Our goal with this campaign is to not only shine a light on all the amazing things Pride represents, but to continue our previous commitment to supporting diversity by ensuring the efforts we put forward are prominent year-round.”

Ross von Metzke, director of the It Gets Better Project, also noted the importance of gaming for LGBT+ youth.

“This is why it is vital we work to ensure that gaming platforms and streamers offer spaces where young people can find community and explore their journey to self-affirmation in a supportive and empowering environment. We look forward to working toward this shared goal with StreamElements during Pride Month and throughout the year,” he said.

You can check out the StreamElements merch store here.

For more information on the work of the It Gets Better Project, see their website.

For more gaming news, follow Gaymeo on Facebook. You can also email us with any news or tips on Gaymeo@pinknews.co.uk

Man suffers horrific homophobic abuse from screaming yobs outside his flat – My London

A man from East London was subject to vile homophobic abuse from a group of boys after they spotted a Pride flag flying outside his flat.

Gregory Gaige, 32, from Ilford was up in his flat which overlooks Ilford station when he heard screaming and shouting from below yesterday afternoon (Tuesday, June 8).

He went outside on his balcony to inspect the commotion and received hateful comments from the boys, Greg told My London.

“They were saying things like f*** LGBT, f*** the gays and you’re f****** gay – stupid, silly stuff really,” Greg said.

It is currently Pride Month in the UK and Greg was proudly flying his rainbow flag on his balcony.

“It was a hot day and I had my doors open whilst I was working from inside my flat. I was shocked at what I heard and decided to record them.”



Greg was shocked and angry by the experience

For more news and features about London directly to your inbox sign up to our newsletter here .

He felt deeply shocked and angered by the incident.

“I should be able to sit in my home without someone shouting abuse through my balcony doors so I’m shocked and angry from it.”

Greg went to the police straight away and reported the incident as a hate crime.

“Usually people say to ignore it but if you don’t report it, then at the end of the year when the police say hate crime is going down it’s because people aren’t reporting these instances.

“If they’re shouting out f*** LGBT then that’s a hate crime so I had to report it.”

He hopes the police can find them and wants them to be named and shamed.

“That will teach them a lesson,” he said.

Greg moved to Ilford in December 2019 from Chingford and described the area as “rough”.

“The community is not as accepting here compared to Chingford. There is also a lot of crime here in this area,” he said.

“You walk down the street and see pimps, prostitutes, professional beggars and the number of muggings is ridiculous.”

He added: “I don’t ever really feel unsafe here but that’s because I don’t pay too much attention to what’s around me but if I were to do so then I would.”

Gay couple in Wisconsin bypass flag rules with rainbow floodlights – Yahoo News

The house in Racine, Wisconsin, belonging to Memo Fachino and his husband Lance Mier

The house in Racine, Wisconsin, belonging to Memo Fachino and his husband Lance Mier

A gay couple in the US state of Wisconsin have created an online buzz with a social media post explaining why they lit up their home with rainbow-coloured floodlights.

Memo Fachino, 35, and his husband Lance Mier, 36, were told to remove a Pride flag from their porch after new rules were introduced in their neighbourhood.

In a post on Reddit last week, the couple said they took advantage of a loophole to then install the lights.

Their post has since gone viral.

In it they explain that their local housing association in the city of Racine recently imposed restrictions on displaying flags outside homes “due to some neighbours flying BLM [Black Lives Matter] flags, thin blue line flags [often used to show support for the police], and other opinion flags”.

The new rule, the couple write, permits residents to fly only the US flag.

The couple said they received an email informing them they had to remove the rainbow flag – which had been displayed on their porch for the past five years – after it was reported to authorities ahead of Pride month, an annual celebration that supports the LGBT community.

The couple with the original rainbow flag

Mr Fachino (L) and Mr Mier with the original rainbow flag on display before being asked to remove it

“Looking through our new rules, we noticed that removable lights are permitted without restriction,” the post reads, adding that the couple bought six coloured floodlights and “we washed our house in Pride colours”.

After receiving thousands of responses, the couple updated the original post thanking Reddit users for their “amazing support”, adding that they were surprised by the amount of attention it was getting and that they “just can’t keep up with the comments”.

Mr Fachino, who sits on the board of the housing association, told the BBC on Wednesday that he was aware of plans to change the guidance on flags in the neighbourhood, and understood why the new rule was introduced. He said the email about removing the couple’s rainbow flag arrived a day after the change was voted on.

“The board passed this rule trying to be proactive, and to prevent friction between neighbours who may be flying opposite political or opinion flags,” he said, adding that he felt in no way targeted. “It’s a simple rule that applies to all of us equally.”

Mr Fachino said the change would have been implemented regardless of the time of year. “We don’t feel like it was created to prevent us from flying our flag or trying to have it removed ahead of Pride month.”

How the couple's house looked before the floodlights were changed

How the couple’s house looked before the floodlights were changed

He said the idea to use multi-coloured floodlights came from the couple using different coloured lights previously on occasions such as Christmas, “so we knew we could make it work”.

More than 6,000 users have so far commented on the Reddit post, offering support and thanking the couple while questioning the decisions of housing associations.

“The lighting is much better than a simple flag,” one user commented. “Never remove the lights, they’re fabulous,” wrote another.

Mr Fachino said the colourful lights would “stay up throughout June at least”. The couple have been together for almost eight years, and married for five.

As well as celebrating the LGBT community, Pride month also commemorates the Stonewall riots – the protests that changed gay rights for a lot of people in America and beyond.

The Stonewall riots in June 1969 were prompted by a police raid on a gay bar in New York that led to widespread demonstrations.

You may also be interested in:

Gay couple in Wisconsin bypass flag rules with rainbow floodlights – BBC News

Mr Fachino, who sits on the board of the housing association, told the BBC on Wednesday that he was aware of plans to change the guidance on flags in the neighbourhood, and understood why the new rule was introduced. He said the email about removing the couple’s rainbow flag arrived a day after the change was voted on.

Jalen McKee-Rodriguez Makes History As First Openly Gay Black Man To Be Elected To Office In Texas – Because of Them We Can

He’s bringing change to Texas!

26-year-old Jalen McKee-Rodriguez defeated the incumbent and his former boss, Jada Andrews-Sullivan, to represent District 2 for the San Antonio City Council. McKee-Rodriguez received 63% of the vote compared to Andrews-Sullivan’s 37%, making history as the first openly gay Black man to be elected to any office in the history of the state of Texas, Kens5 News reports.

He took to social media to thank everyone for their support, saying, “We did it! Thank you to my wonderful and supportive husband and family, the amazing team that had my back every step of the way, every friend who supported me, and every voter who placed their trust in me. Thank you.”

McKee Rodriguez received support from the LGBTQ Victory Fund and the Texas Freedom Network (TFN) Pac, a political sect of the Texas Freedom Network who spoke about the significance of his election.

“Jalen and Teri represent a new generation of leaders that have been making gains across the state. They ran bold, unapologetic campaigns based on progressive values, and they won. We are excited to see Jalen and Teri take their seats on the council and to see them deliver for San Antonians on issues like the climate crisis, police accountability, housing, and much more. We congratulate them both on their empathetic victories tonight,” the TFN PAC said via statement.

A former math teacher, McKee-Rodriguez’s first order of business is creating a more equitable budget for the district. He hopes that his election opens doors for many others and is proof that everyone deserves representation.

“A lot of people said that District 2 wouldn’t be ready for a candidate like me. Would District 2 be ready for a young gay candidate? Is Texas ready for a gay Black man to be elected anywhere and to any position? And so I think what we proved and what the community proved is that everyone deserves representation, and if you have the right motives and if you have the right passions and if you’re a good listener, the people will trust that. I hope this opens doors for a lot of people,” McKee-Rodriguez said.

Congratulations, Jalen! We know you’re going to do great things!

Photo Courtesy of Jalen McKee-Rodriguez/Twitter

Gay reverend devastated after Pride flag set on fire in suspected hate crime – Yahoo Eurosport UK

Police are investigating after someone burned an LGBT+ Pride flag flying from church led by a gay reverend.

Reverend Matthew Woodward, the dean of Trinity Cathedral in Sacramento, California, had decorated his church for Pride month, to “communicate the love of God for all”.

But on Saturday morning (5 June), he realised that someone had burned the flag.

Shared photos of the charred remains on Instagram, he wrote: “So today I awoke to the news that our Pride flag has been taken down from in front of the Cathedral and burned.

“I went out to explore and found the remnants in front of a neighboring building. It saddened me, as we were communicating the love of God for all with our flag.”

Speaking to The Sacramento Bee, Woodward, who is openly gay, added: “It made me sad this morning to see that somebody wanted to take down what we think was a sign of love and burn it.

“But, you know, love isn’t that easily defeated.”

The reverend reported the incident to police, who confirmed that it is being investigated.

Sacramento Police Department spokesperson Karl Chan told the publication: “We do have detectives assigned to the incident.

“A report is on file and the case is being investigated as a potential hate crime.”

Although the culprit has not yet been identified, Woodward said his congregation had been “very supportive and kind”, and he refused to let the act of hate dampen his Pride spirit.

On the day he found the burned flag, he had been intending to go to a “Pride puppy parade” with his dog, River.

He added on Instagram: “I decided to still go, but upgrade my outfit. I wore my collar and my Pride cape.

“I had great conversations there with members of the Sacramento LGBT center.

“River was the star of course. It was a great moment after a distressing morning.”

Barack Obama addresses anti-trans bills and LGBT legacy – PinkNews

Former president Barack Obama spoke out against the Republican war on trans people (Getty Images for EIF & XQ)

Barack Obama shared his heartache at seeing the surge of anti-trans legislation across the US, saying: “This is not who we are.”

The former president was largely silent during the anti-LGBT+ crusade of Trump’s presidency, having learned that you “never looked as smart as the ex-president on the sidelines”.

But as Republicans target the basic rights and freedoms of transgender youth in a record-breaking year for anti-trans legislation, Obama spoke out.

“It breaks my heart. This is not who we are,” he told the Advocate.

“America has always been at its best when we open our arms wider and help more people feel like they belong – not treat them like second-class citizens because they’re different.”

So far a total of 33 states have introduced more than 100 anti-trans bills in 2021 alone as Republican lawmakers seize upon transgender issues to drive a cultural wedge.

Asked whether he thinks these bills are actually winning over voters, Obama noted that, in many ways, their discriminatory campaign is nothing new.

“For many years now, we’ve seen some Republicans seek political advantage by pitting us against one another, often by going after certain groups of people who just want equal treatment,” he said.

“These bills are doing real harm – especially to young people – whether they end up passing or not. Growing up is hard enough, and at some point we all struggle to find our place in the world.

“I can’t imagine how difficult it is for young people to know that some leaders – including people who are supposed to be representing you – don’t think they deserve equal rights.”

The huge strides for equality during Obama’s tenure in the White House mean he’s often remembered as the most LGBT-friendly president in history – but he’s more than happy for someone else to take the title.

“I would love my legacy to be overshadowed, because it would mean another president was doing even more to protect LGBTQ rights,” he said.

“It’s why I was so happy to see President Biden sign an executive order on his first day in office directing federal agencies to prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

“He also rolled back the previous administration’s ban on transgender Americans serving in the military, and took other steps to support and protect LGBTQ communities here around the world.”

He continued: “Now, we obviously have more work to do. We need to do even more to guarantee basic rights and protections for every American. My hope is that whatever success we had while I was president proves that progress is possible.”

Realtor website names Pittsburgh top city for LGBTQ homebuyers – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

MENU

ACCOUNT

SECTIONS

OTHER

CLASSIFIEDS

CONTACT US / FAQ













The new film ‘Sublet’ explores the US-Israel identity divide from a queer lens – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

0

(JTA) — Eytan Fox’s new film “Sublet” opens with a slow fade-up on travel photographs of Israel: red rocks in the desert, a young woman smiling with the mud of the Dead Sea on her face, two paddleboarders on clear turquoise water. As the image comes into focus, it becomes clear that we’re actually looking at tourism ads in an airport. The film’s protagonist, Michael (John Benjamin Hickey), glides past with a vague look in his eyes. He does not look at the images.

Exploring this cultural gap between Israelis and American Jews is new territory for Fox, who has been a major queer voice in Israeli cinema for nearly two decades. His films usually capture identity crises within Israelis: what who they love and how they choose to live says about them. This time he’s casting his gaze wider, across the ocean — even as most of the action unfolds in a single Tel Aviv apartment.

The protagonist is American, a travel writer for The New York Times. His arrival in Tel Aviv provides a chaotic first impression: His sublet is still occupied and messy due to a date mix-up. Its occupant, Tomer (Niv Nissim), a young film student who makes campy, awkward horror, is desperate for the money that Michael’s stay will provide. He pitches the neighborhood, bragging about its “sexiest” qualities, and convinces Michael not to switch to a hotel.

Through a chain of events Michael, who was supposed to have the place to himself, ends up sharing it with Tomer, and the two men forge a tenuous bond, trading their queer Jewish worldviews across generations and nations.

Fox’s landmark 2002 film “Yossi & Jagger” tells the story of two Israeli soldiers who fall in love during their mandatory military service. His 2006 film “The Bubble” also explores a gay relationship, this time across the Israeli-Palestinian divide.

“Sublet,” Fox’s eighth feature, represents a new chapter: It’s his first film in which the protagonists speak primarily in English. Hickey, the star, is a Tony Award-winning American actor.

Unlike in “Yossi & Jagger” and “The Bubble,” the aspects of gay identity that have historically anchored queer movies — coming out and societal rejection — are not the focus of the plot here. Instead, Fox has crafted a pensive, dialogue-driven movie about different modes of moving through the world as a gay Jewish man: American and Israeli, early 20s and middle age.

“Once every few years when I get a chance to make a film or a television show, I think, OK, what are the issues that have piled up on the desk in my soul? What needs understanding, examining, processing?” Fox told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

When he began writing “Sublet,” he said, “I had just turned 50 and I was thinking, how did I come to be the man that I am: Jewish, Israeli, gay, filmmaker, husband to my husband, childless? How do we take all these issues and put them into characters? I realized I needed an American 50-something man who tries to understand what Tel Aviv is all about through meeting this young guy.”

Fox said that as a younger man, he felt more like Tomer than Michael: He was known for documenting “young Israel.”

“When I did ‘Florentine’ [a TV show from the late ’90s about young Israelis living in Tel Aviv], I was one of the gang; the actors and I were [close to] the same age,” Fox said. “But making ‘Sublet,’ I’m not 20-something anymore. I really had to learn about young people and their lives, and try to understand it, and not be judgmental about it.”

Fox channeled his musings on aging as a gay Jewish Israeli into the rapport between his two leads, who debate each other on their respective places within the country and the Jewish world. It’s a dynamic that’s on the minds of many cosmopolitan Jews these days whether or not they are Israeli.

“We are in the Middle East,” Tomer tells Michael, “but we want to be treated like we are in the West.”

Tomer’s relationship to Israel, and Judaism, is fraught at times. When his bike is stolen, he doesn’t call the cops because “the police in this area are racist.” (The 2019 Oscar-nominated Israeli short film “White Eye,” directed by Tomer Shushan, coincidentally tells a similar story.) Side characters also discuss moving to Berlin, where they feel they have more freedom to protest and make art following a common modern narrative of Jews and Israelis reclaiming Berlin as a Jewish space that’s also present in the popular Netflix series “Unorthodox.”

Tomer also rebels against more “traditional” models of gayness in a challenge to Michael’s lifestyle. Michael is married, while Tomer claims never to want to be tied down to just one person. Tomer considers the AIDS crisis a depressing bit of ancient history, while Michael lived through it.

Queer life and cinema in Israel have changed drastically since Fox’s first film. When the director made “Yossi & Jagger” in 2002, the Israeli military did not support the film.

“They knew it wasn’t politically correct to say they wouldn’t support a gay film,” he said. “So they used this lame excuse: We can’t support a film that endorses relationships between soldiers of different ranks. After the film became the success it did worldwide, they came to me and said let’s show your film to soldiers.”

Thus, a film the Israel Defense Forces wouldn’t support was subsequently screened on army bases, and when Fox made the sequel “Yossi” in 2012, it was the army who approached him offering help. The change in attitudes mirrors a broader cultural acceptance of the LGBT+ community in Israel, which Fox is only too happy to witness.

“If you had told me in the early ’80s growing up in Jerusalem that one day we’d have openly gay members of Knesset — that we’d have a transgender woman as a referee in the tough, macho world of Israeli soccer — I wouldn’t have believed you,” he said. “It’s wonderful that we have this openness because there are other ways we’re far from being open enough.”

Israel has been accused of using this one brand of openness as a way to avoid discussing darker, more difficult subjects: publicizing LGBT+ acceptance in order to divert attention from the plight of Palestinians, a strategy often referred to as “pinkwashing.” And with his films so prominent in global queer culture, Fox is closer to those accusations than most.

“I can understand people accusing the Israeli government of using my films for pinkwashing — saying we’re so wonderful, we have a gay film director, gay films, everything you can dream of, so people don’t ask us questions about the Palestinians,” he said. “But that doesn’t take away from the fact that Israel, and Tel Aviv more specifically, have become the most loving and accepting cities for the gay community.”

Despite their generational and cultural differences, Michael and Tomer’s relationship develops into something meaningful and memorable. Their encounter helps both characters achieve some clarity. It resembles Michael’s ultimate description of Tel Aviv: “full of contradictions. Chaotic and tense, but at the same time completely laid-back.”

“Sublet” opened in Israel last week — the first Israeli film to play in cinemas since the coronavirus pandemic began.

“The film is about coming back to life,” Fox said. “And I think all of us are in the midst of coming back to life after this crazy year. I felt that in the theater: People from all over the country were coming to the premiere, and they wanted to be in a theater with other people to enjoy the film together.”

“Sublet” opens in theaters on June 11, followed by an on-demand release on July 9.

Austin: Proud every month to call LGBT teammates – Bradford Era

Bradford, PA (16701)

Today

Partly cloudy skies in the morning will give way to cloudy skies during the afternoon. Slight chance of a rain shower. High near 80F. Winds SE at 5 to 10 mph..

Tonight

Partly cloudy skies in the evening, then becoming cloudy overnight. Low 59F. Winds light and variable.

Updated: June 11, 2021 @ 3:14 am

Austin: Proud every month to call LGBT teammates – Yahoo News

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin says he is proud to call the LGBTQ members of the Armed forces his “teammates” every month. (June 9)

Video Transcript

LLOYD AUSTIN: I know that you’re especially proud this month, and rightfully so. I’m proud too. Proud every month and every day to call you my teammates and to serve alongside you. Because your lives and your careers and your service and your stories are living proof that we are stronger and more effective together.

And so today, we commemorate 10 years since the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” And we welcome your new generation of soldiers, sailors, airmen, guardians, and Marines openly and proudly serving their country. And today, we can recognize and honor their contributions rather than questioning their ability to serve.

And today, we reaffirm that transgender rights are human rights. And that America is safer and better when every qualified citizen can serve with pride and dignity. Now, that’s real progress.

It was hard fought and hard won. But we’ve got more work to do. And our work isn’t done until we create a safe and supportive workplace for everyone, free of discrimination, harassment, and fear. Because nobody should have to hide who they love to serve the country that they love. And no service member who is willing to put their life on the line to keep our country safe should feel unsafe because of who they are.