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My Transsexual Summer Coming To US Television?

My Transsexual Summer, UK's first Doc/Reality Show based on Transgendered.On channel 4 UK this past summer a reality TV doc show called “My Transsexual Summer” aired. How this great show got past us we’ll never know.

The show explores what it’s like to change gender. No cliches just the true grit of what it’s like to be transgendered. A great review on the Guardian.co.uk site was posted, which prompted us to look into it a little further.

Woah! what a great concept for TV. A Big Brotherish type setting with observation style footage. The show follows seven participants ranging in age and gender. In the first episode they play a transgendered drinking game. It’s silly but fun.

Helen Boyd the show consultant and Author of “My Husband Betty” says. It’s also the first major piece of trans-themed output since Channel 4 signed a Memorandum of Understanding with my campaign group, Trans Media Watch. The document suggests treating trans people with accuracy, dignity and respect. Pretty radical, huh? Apparently, I’ve been “a pain in the arse” to work with. Good. I’d be astonished if a team of all-white film-makers, runners, producers and researchers felt they had a God-given right to make TV about ethnic minority issues. Nothing about us without us, as they say.

Wow, so if a program like this can exist in the UK. Why they heck have they not brought it to the US yet? Maybe the producer’s of Big Brother should consider putting a Transgendered person on it. Maybe then the we can all learn a thing or two.

Would you watch a show like this in America?

Stonewall Riots: 40 Years Ago This Month

Stonewall Riots: 40 Years Ago This Month

The Stonewall Inn as it looks today

The Stonewall Inn as it looks today

It is important for the LGBT community of today to understand how the gay rights movement began, and to realize that 1969 was only four decades ago. Since then our country has made some huge strides, but that’s not to say there have not been setbacks along the way as well.

Picture it, June 28, 1969 (I was only a year old then) at 1:20 a.m. This is when eight New York City police officers raided the Stonewall Inn and little did they know at the time, would ultimately give birth to the gay rights movement.

It is 40 years later. Take a look back with me at the historical significance of the Stonewall Riots.

Since the end of World War I, the Greenwich Village area of New York had been home to a sizeable gay and lesbian population. By the 1960s the city had instituted laws against homosexuality in public and private businesses, and a campaign was in effect by order of the current mayor to rid the city of gay bars. Undercover officers entrapped as many homosexual men as possible, and bars with gay customers were stripped of their liquor licenses.Stonewall20pic.14071430

Other than bars in Greenwich Village, very few places existed at the time where gays and lesbians were able to socialize in public. One of these places was the Stonewall.  The only bay for gay men in New York City where dancing was allowed.

It was a common occurrence for police to raids gay bars in the ‘60s, but the raid of the Stonewall Inn in the Greenwich Village of New York City was not as routine as the police would find out.

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Stonewall Inn in 1969

On Saturday, June 28, 1969, eight police officers showed up at the Stonewall’s entrance and announced they would be raiding the bar. Once inside, it was standard procedure to line everyone up to check their identification, and any men dressed as women were to be arrested.  But, on this night, however, a stand was finally taken when those men who were dressed as women refused to go with police or refused to show their identification. The police quickly lost control of the situation, causing the crowd to riot.  Within minutes, many people had met outside the bar.  Most of them were gay and lesbian residents of the village.  Chaos ensued, and when the streets were finally cleared around 4 a.m. , 13 people had been arrested, some in the crowd were hospitalized, and four police officers were injured. The next night there was more demonstrations ensued. Many returned from the previous night, joined by onlookers and tourists. One witness described how remarkable it was to see public homosexual affection: “From going to places where you had to knock on a door and speak to someone through a peephole in order to get in. We were just out. We were in the streets.” Once again, a street battle ensued until 4 a.m. Yet another riot took place, after the Village Voice had run unflattering reports of the riots, mentioning “limp wrists” and “Sunday fag follies.” A mob of people took over once again and threatened to burn down the publication’s offices. This  incident lasted around an hour.  Activist groups were organized by the area’s residents within a matter of weeks, and The Gay Liberation Front was officially created within a month. Three newspapers were also founded shortly after to promote gay and lesbian issues.stonewall-riot

By 1970, simultaneous gay pride marches took place in New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago. In 1971, Boston, Dallas, Milwaukee, London, Paris, Berlin, and Stockholm followed suit. Within two or three years, cities throughout the world celebrated gay liberation.

On June 1, 2009, President Barack O’Bama declared June 2009 Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Pride Month, citing the riots as a reason to “commit to achieving equal justice under law for LGBT Americans”.

Well, I am certain that somehow, someway, someday, gays, lesbians, bisexuals, and transgender individuals will have equal rights.

Until Next Time!

Michael Queenstown

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Remembering Judy Garland

JUDY

June 10, 1922 - June 22, 1969

Forty years ago on July 22, 1969, one of the world’s brightest stars went dim and the  LGBT community lost one of its most cherished  icons when Judy Garland passed away.

Born Frances Ethel Gumm on June 10, 1922, and through a career that spanned 45 of her 47 years, Garland attained international stardom as an actress in musical and dramatic roles, a recording artist, and on the concert stage. Respected for her versatility, she received a Juvenile Academy Award, a Golden Globe Award, received the Cecil B. DeMille Award for her work in films, as well as Grammy Awards and a Tony Award.

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After appearing in vaudeville with her sisters, Garland was signed to MGM as a teenager. There she made more than two dozen films, including nine with Mickey Rooney, and of course, the film with which she would be most identified, 1939′s The Wizard of Oz.  It took 15 years, but Garland was released from the studio and gained renewed success through record-breaking concert appearances, including a critically acclaimed concert at the legendary Carnegie Hall, a well-respected but short-lived series on television , and a triumphant return to the silver screen beginning with 1954′s A Star is Born.

Despite her professional triumphs, Garland battled personal problems throughout her life. Insecure about her appearance, her feelings were compounded by film executives who told her she was unattractive and overweight. Plied with drugs to control her weight and increase her productivity, Garland endured a decades-long struggle with addiction. Garland was plagued by financial instability, often owing hundreds of thousands of dollars in back taxes, and her first four of five marriages ended in divorce. She attempted suicide on a number of occasions. Garland died of an accidental drug overdose at the age of 47, leaving children Liza Minnelli, and Lorna and Joey Luft.

JUDY4The Grammy Awards posthumously awarded Garland the Lifetime Achievement Award in 1997 Garland was posthumously awarded and several of her recordings have been inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame. and in 1999, the American Film Institute (AFI)  placed her among the ten greatest female stars in the history of American Cinema.

Garland always had a large fan base in the gay community. The reasons often given for this status (especially by gay men) are her ability as a performer, the way her personal life struggles mirrored those of gay men in America during the peak of her fame and her value as a camp figure.  Also, coincidental or not, the timing of her death and funeral in June of 1969 and the Stonewall Riots (which for most marked the starting point for the modern day Gay Liberation movement) has become a part of LGBT lore.

Of an up-coming feature film based on the life of Judy Garland (who would have turned 87 on June 10) called “Get Happy: The Life of Judy Garland” and starring Anne Hathaway in the leading role, Garland’s daughter, the equally as legendary Liza Minnelli has urged the makers of the film to not just depict the dark side of her mother’s life by focusing primarily on her drug addiction phase, and though Minnelli has no problems with Hathaway playing the role of her mother in the movie, her mother’s talent and virtues should be highlighted.

“Well, I love Anne Hathaway. And I hope it’s a good movie and I hope that it’s true.  You know, they just don’t concentrate on crap like they used to”, says Minnelli.  People usually end up talking about her mother’s problems and forget to talk about the real Judy Garland, like her doting mother quality and how wonderful a human being she was.

“I Hope”, says Minnelli, “that they talk about her the way she should be talked about which was she was a fabulous entertainer, a great mother and just a wonderful human being.”


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We ALL hope for the same thing, Liza. And we STILL love and miss you Judy!!

Until Next Time,

Michael Queenstown

Follow me on twitter at www.twitter.com/MQueenstown


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