Home Blog Page 1480

ON TOP OF IT! “Adam Rexx”, “Where The Bears Are”, “Quinn Engaged!” & “Devon Hunter Marries… HIMSELF!”

Adam Rexx @ Arch Noble

HOMORAZZI:
WHERE THE BEARS ARE follows three gay bear roommates living together in LA, as they attempt to solve the murder of a party guest that turned up dead in their bathtub. Part “Golden Girls” and part “Murder, She Wrote,” the series consists of 26 four-minute episodes, and is a romp through L.A.’s trendy neighborhood of Silver Lake, and whose mystery eventually reaches it’s climax in the desert outside of Palm Springs.

“Where the Bears Are” comedy, mystery web series to premiere online on August 1, 2012. For now, check out the trailer below.

Quinn Christopher Jaxon engaged to a woman! via THE SWORD

Go-go boy, dancer, gay underwear model, gay indie film actor, gay tickling video performer, and owner of one of the world’s greatest asses (and cocks) Quinn Christopher Jaxon (a.k.a. Randy Blue solo jerk-off hunk “Kurt Madison“) is getting married. To a woman.

Gay porn star Devon Hunter Gets Self-Gay Married, To Himself! via THE SWORD

“I have placed a diamond band on my finger…  I plan to court myself; I will take solemn vows before a spiritual  mentor (as well as family and friends) to love, honor, and cherish  myself; and I will take myself on a honeymoon. I do all this for a very practical reason: I have chosen my  boyfriends very poorly. I had no ability to be successful in a  relationship. I gave until my integrated wellness was bankrupt. […] By  going through this structured ritual of falling in love with myself,  testifying before witnesses to honor myself, and beginning a new life as  a person empowered to command respect, I am forcing myself to abide by  the vows I will make.” – Devon Hunter

HOT Pics of Derek Parker & Shay Michaels @ FURBOI

TORONTO PRIDE! (via Xtra)


Squirt SEaMEN photos by Andrew Tran

Coverage of Toronto Pride with Trevor Boris. Hot weather, sexy men and hot women.

XTRA:

Toronto can lay claim to another successful Pride parade. The dykes were on bikes, the boys took off their shirts and the sequins stayed on the drag queens’ outfits. Despite competition from Canada Day, the crowd numbered more than one million strong, and the party is expected to go late into the night. Below are our video highlights of this year’s Pride parade, at which Trevor Boris played host.

Anderson Cooper: “The Fact Is, I’m Gay.”

Anderson Cooper: “The Fact Is, I’m Gay.”

via THE DISH

 

Last week, Entertainment Weekly ran a story on an emerging trend: gay people in public life who come out in a much more restrained and matter-of-fact way than in the past. In many ways, it’s a great development: we’re evolved enough not to be gob-smacked when we find out someone’s gay. But it does matter nonetheless, it seems to me, that this is on the record. We still have pastors calling for the death of gay people, bullying incidents and suicides among gay kids, and one major political party dedicated to ending the basic civil right to marry the person you love. So these “non-events” are still also events of a kind; and they matter. The visibility of gay people is one of the core means for our equality.

All of which is a prelude to my saying that I’ve known Anderson Cooper as a friend for more than two decades. I asked him for his feedback on this subject, for reasons that are probably obvious to most. Here’s his email in response which he has given me permission to post here:

Andrew, as you know, the issue you raise is one that I’ve thought about for years. Even though my job puts me in the public eye, I have tried to maintain some level of privacy in my life. Part of that has been for purely personal reasons. I think most people want some privacy for themselves and the people they are close to.

But I’ve also wanted to retain some privacy for professional reasons. Since I started as a reporter in war zones 20 years ago, I’ve often found myself in some very dangerous places. For my safety and the safety of those I work with, I try to blend in as much as possible, and prefer to stick to my job of telling other people’s stories, and not my own. I have found that sometimes the less an interview subject knows about me, the better I can safely and effectively do my job as a journalist.

I’ve always believed that who a reporter votes for, what religion they are, who they love, should not be something they have to discuss publicly. As long as a journalist shows fairness and honesty in his or her work, their private life shouldn’t matter. I’ve stuck to those principles for my entire professional career, even when I’ve been directly asked “the gay question,” which happens occasionally. I did not address my sexual orientation in the memoir I wrote several years ago because it was a book focused on war, disasters, loss and survival. I didn’t set out to write about other aspects of my life.