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Peppermint Talks to Elite Daily About Her Fave Season 9 Moments and What’s In Store for Her

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With just TWO DAYS UNTIL DRAGCON NYC the media frenzy has officially begun. It’s queens, queens, queens, wherever you look! Today, beloved fan favorite Peppermint sits down with Elite Daily to discuss her favorite moments from season 9, whether or not we can expect to see her on All Stars anytime soon, and what’s next for her. You DON’T want to miss this interview!

On which of her fellow cast mates she’s closest with:

Honestly, it was a close-knit cast… I don’t think there’s a single girl that I don’t like on the season. The one that I’ve grown the closest with is Sasha; she honestly was very integral in creating a safe space for me to feel like I could come out to the rest of the girls as trans, and we participated in a lot of conversations on and off camera about gender and the world of drag. The person I was next to in The Werk Room most was Trinity, so she and I became extremely close and I love her to death.

On whether or not she’s on All-Stars 3:

I don’t know, I guess we’ll have to see. I love AS, it’s one of my fave versions of Drag Race where we get a chance to see some of our favorites, so yea I’d love to do it.

On what her next big plans are:

I have an album that just dropped, which is called Black Pepper, and also I have a new documentary coming out in 2018; the working title is “Precious Peppermint,” and I think that should be the main title, but I’m not in charge of that… also, in 2018, Sasha and I are planning a college speaking tour, so people can keep their eyes peeled for that.

And that’s just a tiny portion of the interview. Read it all here.

The post Peppermint Talks to Elite Daily About Her Fave Season 9 Moments and What’s In Store for Her appeared first on The WOW Report.


There’s a New George Michael/Nile Rodger’s Dance Track – and It’s Amaaaaaazing

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Well. My goodness. You simply MUST stop everything you’re doing and listen to this NOW.

Apparently, the foot-stomping George Michael dance track “Fantasy”was originally intended for 1990’s Listen Without Prejudice, Vol. 1  but ended up as the B-side of the single “Waiting for That Day. ” Now, it’s been remixed by the incomparable Nile Rodgers and will be released as a single from the upcoming Listen Without Prejudice Vol.1/MTV Unplugged.

Listen to it below. My GOD, what a song. What a star. What a loss.

Via The Guardian via Towleroad:

Where the original is driven by a 90s breakbeat and some even more 90s horns, this new version has been pioneered by Nile Rodgers, who George apparently commissioned before he died. “I hope we make the fans proud of the amount of love we put into it,” Rodgers has said, tweeting to those who expressed mixed feelings about the posthumous nature of the work, “You SHOULD have mixed feelings. No one’s heart was dragged through emotional ambiguity more than mine. Tears, uncertainty, happiness & love”.

A classic Rodgers choppy guitar line sits under a freshly minted pop-house rhythm, as Michael’s voice is pleasantly – and quite radically – mangled, before segueing into the original’s top line. Its status as a B-side rather undersells it – Michael’s secret weapon is a half-sung style of rapping that gets a good airing here, and the “if you ain’t got time for me, I’ll find another fantasy” pay-off is suitably fabulous. The sigh that closes the chorus remains a glorious bit of petulance.

Perhaps there isn’t a Prince-style vault waiting to be raided, and there needn’t be, given the strength of his existing work. Fantasy meanwhile is a reminder that George Michael could invest a dancefloor with sex and wit like few other pop stars.

The post There’s a New George Michael/Nile Rodger’s Dance Track – and It’s Amaaaaaazing appeared first on The WOW Report.

#DownInTheDM: Mx Qwerrrk Q&A w/ MICHAEL MUSTO, Where To Get Yr Geish On in NYC!!!

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As RuPaul’s DragCon takes ovaaah NYC this weekend (September 9&10), and queens from all over the world come to congregate and carry with their chosen, respective tribes, who better than native New Yorker and pop culturalist Michael Musto to give his top picks on where to go for a REALNESS NYC kiki! WOWlebrity MX Qwerrrk did a hilarious #DownInTheDM Q&A, on QwerrrkOut, with the author/columnist. Check it out below! (Musto pic by Andrew Werner, Mx Qwerrrk pics by Santiago Felipe)

 

Mx Qwerrrk: Best weekly party?

Michael Musto: Battle Hymn at Flash Factory (229 W. 28th Street). The Ladyfag-hosted bash was Sundays, then Saturdays, then Fridays, then no days, but the buzz is that it’s coming back as a Sunday sometime very soon. It’s friendly, upbeat, and very dancey, with non-gays allowed too!

Best drag bar?

Boots & Saddle (100A 7th Avenue South). The raucously fun hangout is a shrine to drag queens, from up-and-coming to down-and-going. You never know quite what you’ll get here, which is part of the fun. And some of the performers are tops, like RuPaul’s Drag Race, season 9 contestant Alexis Michelle (who’s singing with me at Club Cumming, 505 E. 6th Street, on September 23).

Best place to kiki with Amanda Lepore?

On TopSusanne Bartsch’s weekly summertime party at the Standard Hotel (happening this Tuesday) usually attracts Amanda as a host. The two-level soiree (848 Washington Street) spans both the Le Bain area and the roof, and is the perfect al fresco way to examine Amanda’s attributes up close.

Best place to meet Michael Musto?

Marie’s Crisis– the long running piano bar at 59 Grove Street, is my favorite place to kick off my surgical shoes and sing the entire score of Chicago with a bunch of inebriated strangers. This is the ultimate house party in the body of a bar.

 

Kenny Kenny, Mx Qwerrrk, Michael Musto (pic by Santiago Felipe)

 

Best old school gay bar?

Industry Bar (355 W. 52nd) is a flashy Hell’s Kitchen attraction that by now is old school in the way it presents fairly traditional drag, at its most polished and fun. Among the drag stars there are Monet XChangeSherry Vine, and Kizha Carr.

Best nu school gay bar?

Brooklyn is where so much of the nightlife has moved…so, anything Brooklyn is automatically nu school! Macri Park (462 Union Avenue) is a cool hangout with drag shows, a back garden, and lots of drinking.

Best sex clubs/video stores?

Bianca Del Rio’s hotel room!

Best cheap eats?

I live in Murray Hill, which is delightfully near the Indian neighborhood, ‘Curry Hill’. Of the many restaurants there, Haandi (113 Lexington Avenue) is possibly the dumpiest, but for $9, you get two meats, rice, a veggie, a salad, and nan bread! And it’s delicious.

Best tea house/cafe?

The Cloister Cafe (238 E. 9th Street) is quiet, sequestered, and utterly charming. I go there anyway.

Best art exhibits?

The Museum of the City of New York (1220-5th Avenue) always has stimulating exhibits zeroing in on NYC’s most fascinating qualities. Right now, they have exhibits dealing with AIDS, activism, salsa, patriotism, and history. Your price of admission gets you into all of them.

Best place to get geish?

Ricky’s are all over the city, and are a great place for your henna, lipstick, and other gels. For clothes, try Screaming Mimi’s (240 W. 14th Street) and Reminiscence (74 Fifth Avenue)…two vintage stores where only the best has been culled (usually from my own closet).

Best place to buy a last minute wig?

At Halloween Adventure (104 Fourth Avenue), every day is Halloween. You’ll never go bald again.

 

The post #DownInTheDM: Mx Qwerrrk Q&A w/ MICHAEL MUSTO, Where To Get Yr Geish On in NYC!!! appeared first on The WOW Report.

Sarah Paulson to Star in Nurse Ratched Origin Story on Netflix – Good Idea or Nah?

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Nurse Ratched, of course, is one of the nastiest characters in cinema history, iconically played by Louise Fletcher in 1975 classic One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest. A twisted, mean-spirited tyrant,

she exercises near-absolute power over the mental patients’ access to medications, privileges, and basic necessities such as food and toiletries. She capriciously revokes these privileges whenever a patient displeases her. Her superiors turn a blind eye because she maintains order, keeping the patients from acting out, either through antipsychotic drugs or her own brand of psychotherapy, which consists mostly of humiliating patients into doing her bidding.

Over the years, “being a Nurse Ratched” has become a popular metaphor for the corrupting influence of authority in bureaucracies such as the mental institution in which the novel is set.

But why was she such a stone-cold bitch? The movie (and book) never really explains. She merely exists to thwart the patients at every turn.

Now Ryan Murphy (collective groan) (and biiiiiiig red flag) has decided to give her a backstory. Sarah Paulson (who else?) will star as the nasty nurse in the new Netflix series, Ratched. It will trace her origin story starting in 1947 from nurse to full-fledged monster. The series will track her murderous progression through the mental health care system. Two seasons (eighteen episodes) have already been ordered and production begins next year. Michael Douglas (who produced the original movie, remember) is executive producing. Which is vaguely promising.

Will you be watching?

(Top photo: Pacific Coast News; Nurse Ratched description via Wikipedia)

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“Big Freedia Bounces Back” Season 6 is Arriving to Your Television This Tuesday!

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Big Freedia Bounces Back (AKA season 6) is back on your television screens next week and we are LIVING! 

Big Freedia is back and ready to sit in the “Queen Diva” throne of bounce music including her first trip to the Grammy’s, adventures in downtown Las Vegas and making a splash during her live show appearances!

Season 6 is all about vindication and redemption where Big Freedia will have to re-assess her support circle, staff 7 friends on her journey to be the best Queen Diva she can be.

Are your ready for Big Freedia Bounces Back? YOU ALREADY KNOW we are! Check out the trailer:

Don’t miss out! September 12, 10PM on FUSE!!!!

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16-Year-Old Pro Surfer Zander Venezia Killed Catching Hurricane Irma’s Waves

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16-year-old professional surfer Zander Venezia died in Barbados Tuesday while surfing the monster waves generated by Hurricane Irma.

Just before his death, Venezia told a fellow surfer that he had just caught “the best wave of my life.”

Via HuffPo:

A number of pro surfers who traveled to Barbados for the hurricane-generated high surf were reportedly in the water when the accident occurred, and tried to come to Venezia’s rescue.

“Nathan Florence got to him first, then shouted for the other guys and started to perform CPR,” Burke told Surfline. “Zander was bleeding, and he wasn’t moving. They tried to get him to the beach quickly, which was difficult.”

Some media reports have said Venezia likely sustained a broken neck. However, Burke told Surfline that an autopsy showed no fractures and that Venezia drowned after being knocked unconscious.

Poor little guy. Sixteen is way too young. And too young to understand the life-and-death implications of what he did.

A little more about him:

Venezia started getting attention on the competitive circuit at age 11, when he was crowned the U-12 national champion, according to Surfer.com. He had recently won the Rip Curl Gromsearch 16-U division in Nags Head, North Carolina, and was scheduled to compete at the national final at Steamer Lane in October.

Video compilation of Zander doing his thing, below.

Im still In shock. What an absolute pleasure it was meeting you earlier this year @zandervenezia I didn’t know you long but you seemed like the nicest kid. And you were charging so hard your last session! I was so impressed. My deepest condolences to the Venezia family. Hats off to @louis_venezia who kept his cool during a critical time of Zander’s rescue, I can only imagine what you were going through in that moment and now 😔. Also to everyone of the crew who was out surfing and helped get him in. The conditions were extremely challenging. You all know who you are and each and everyone gave it there all in giving Zander his best chance to live 🙌🏼may we all find peace in that. RIP @zandervenezia see you on the other side my friend 📷 @slashsmash

A post shared by Dylan Graves (@dylangraves) on

(Featured image via Zander’s Instagram)

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Oscar De La Hoya on Those Infamous Lingerie Pics: “Just a Bad Time in My Life”

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FINALLY, after a decade of denying that those infamous (and frankly rather hot) lingerie photos were him, boxing legend Oscar De La Hoya admitted during an interview on “The Breakfast Club” that they were real, but taken during a low point in his life.

When Charlamagne Tha God asked about the real story behind the pics of Oscar dressed up in fishnets, he merely replied:

“Just a bad time in my life,” Oscar said … “That’s it.”

Via TMZ:

Oscar didn’t expand on why it was a bad time — but noted the pics were taken 10 years ago … before his 3 stints in rehab for substance abuse.

De La Hoya was asked if the pics have hurt his career as a boxing promoter — but he shot that down saying he’s only gotten “better” in his personal and professional life since the photos were taken.

“In America, you have the opportunity to rise and shine and get better and be better … and that’s exactly what I’ve done.”

Watch the interview below.

All well and good, Oscar, but why you gotta downplay it, and attach some sort of negative connotation to dressing in ladies underwear and fishnets. It’s fine, honey. Enjoy it. Explore different sides of yourself. Celebrate how great you looked! Nobody’s judging. And if they are, screw them. It’s 2017, and “fetish” is just an archaic word for “fabulous.”

(Top image via YouTube)

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RuPaul, Bob the Drag Queen, & Randy Barbato on What to Expect at DragCon NYC (and What Panels are MUST-SEE!)

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Saturday morning, the throngs will begin surging into the Javitt’s Center in New York, ready to parade around in their finest frippery and meet some of the most legendary queens on the scene today. The two-day convention promises panels, parties, and plenty of vendors (which you can check out here and here).

“Show up early,” advised season eight winner Bob the Drag Queen to AM New York. “A lot of your favorite queens will have their schedules posted on Instagram.”

Good advice, thank you, Bob!

Another tip: Go for the drag queen march, but STAY for the must-see panels, where topics range from discussions on makeup and fashion or the history of drag, to queer pop culture or political issues facing the LGBTQ community.

Via AM New York:

“Our panels can have incredible depth,” explained Randy Barbato, co-director and producer of World of Wonder Entertainment, the production company behind the television series and convention. “That’s kind of the irony of drag. On the one hand, it’s fun and a real hoot, but on the other hand, it’s incredibly smart artists and activists.”

For Barbato and his World of Wonder co-founder Fenton Bailey, the decision to bring the massively popular L.A. convention to New York is a desire to return to their roots. In the 1980s, they met RuPaul in NYC and have been working with the icon ever since.

“It’s like coming home for a lot of us,” Barbato said. “Drag has such a rich tradition in New York. It’s been our inspiration for the past 20 years.”

RuPaul was quick to echo Barbato’s sentiment. “What made New York so fabulous was this incredible tapestry of different cultures, but the one thing we had in common was our openness and our open hearts,” Mamma Ru said, remembering the start of his career. “We’re coming to New York to remind her who she really is.”

If you attend, here are a few of the panels you won’t want to miss.

“The Real Drag Queens of New York: Drag in the City”
Hometown heroes and “Drag Race” contestants Acid Betty and Peppermint, and Bushwig founder Horrochata discuss the life and hustle of performing in the city. Saturday, 11 a.m.

“WOWPresents: Bobbin’ Around”
The aforementioned Bob the Drag Queen premieres her new show about her travels with assistant Luis Alvarez Schacht. Saturday, 4 p.m.

“Judge Judies: Behind the Judging Bench”
The glamorous, hilarious judges of “RuPaul’s Drag Race” — Michelle Visage, Carson Kressley, Jeffrey Bowyer-Chapman and Todrick Hall — dish about their favorite moments. Saturday, 5 p.m.

“Herstory of Downtown: Manhattan Nightlife Icons”
Learn about the legendary drag and cabaret performers that influenced today’s culture with panelists Amanda Lepore, James St. James, and John Simone. Saturday, 6 p.m.

“Paris is Still Burning: Ballroom Takes the Floor”
The city’s best voguers from the early ‘90s and today discuss New York’s ball scene and how it’s changed since the revolutionary documentary was filmed. Michelle Visage leads the talk with Jack Mizrahi, Mariah Balenciaga, Twiggy Pucci Garçon, Tyra Allure Ross, and Vivacious. Sunday, 2 p.m.

“Glitter and Be Gay: Broadway Queens”
Musical theater queens Ginger Minj and Alexis Michelle join Broadway stars J. Elaine Marcos and Sheryl Lee Ralph to talk about their influences and the connection between theater and drag. Sunday, 3 p.m.

RuPaul’s DragCon comes to the Jacob Javits Center Sept. 9 and 10. Visit rupaulsdragcon.com for more information.

*FREAKING OUT* only two more days til #DragCon NYC! @kimchi_chic 😱

A post shared by World of Wonder (@wowreport) on

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#BornThisDay: Country Music Star, Patsy Cline

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From Decca Records

 

September 8, 1932– Patsy Cline:

“I recorded a song called, I Fall To Pieces, and I was in a car wreck. Now I’m worried because I have a brand-new record, and it’s called Crazy!”

On a spring evening in 1963, Patsy Cline boarded a small airplane to take her from Kansas City, where she had performed at a benefit concert, back home to Nashville. She told her concerned friend Dottie West:

“Don’t worry about me, hoss. When it’s my time to go, it’s my time.”

She never arrived. The airplane re-fueled at Dyersburg, Tennessee, but then crashed after take-off, leaving a hole so huge it is still there in the Tennessee woods. Cline, along with her manager and Country Music stars Cowboy CopasHawkshaw Hawkins were killed on impact. Her funeral brought a crowd of 25,000 mourners.

But, Patsy Cline the industry is alive and well. In 2016, Cline sold more than a million records. Like Buddy HollyJimi Hendrix, Kurt Cobain, Prince or Janis Joplin, death has not curtailed Cline’s earning power.

Two films from three decades ago, Coal Miner’s Daughter (1980), with Beverly D’Angelo doing her own singing, and Sweet Dreams (1985) featuring Jessica Lange in an Academy Award nominated turn, brought the struggle that was much of Cline’s life to a new audience. Both movies portray Cline as a woman who was forced to fight for her art. She fought the agents who exploited her, she fought the misogynistic Nashville establishment and, most of all, Cline fought her husband, Charlie Dick.

In Sweet Dreams, Dick is played smartly by Ed Harris, and he is shown as a drunken lout who, jealous of the attention his wife gave to her career at his expense, tries to prevent her from pursuing it, often using his fists. The film suggests that she was traumatized by him and that she spent most of her recording sessions and stage performances in tears. Dick spent the early days of his marriage trying to persuade Cline to stay at home and be a proper wife and not to pursue a music career.

Cline showed up to for a local Nashville television show appearance with a black eye after her husband had gotten drunk. Cline had had him arrested. But after Cline was gone, Dick worked the rest of his life preserving the legacy of Cline as one of the most influential singers of the 20th century.  He was very critical of the films and biographies for the way he was portrayed, and he did become very wealthy from her royalties and licensing. Dick bit the big one in 2015.

Dick:

“Movie? Book? I call them a lot of things, none of them printable. I came up with the idea of doing a video about Patsy to clarify so much of what was in the books and the movies. You see, she was just an ordinary girl. She loved home life, you know, cookin’, cleanin’, lookin’ after her family. I didn’t make her. Sure we argued, we were fightin’ all the time, we had a passionate relationship. But we didn’t do knock- down, drag-out fightin’. Not once.”

But, what about the legendary way in which Cline would break down while recording her songs or performing on stage? The essential reason that Cline is a true Gay Icon is this image of someone who overcame abuse by a brutish husband who tried to stifle her career.  Gay people can relate to the sound of disappointment and despair in her songs.

Cline has all the requisite elements for being a Gay Icon: a tragic life and early death, a catalog of dark and poignant songs and a miserable, messy personal life. Her music brings a sense of unrequited passion and of heartache, which is meaningful to gay people my age who were unable, because of outside pressures, to express our feelings openly. Plus there is also a camp component. Her clothes, her style; I don’t think you can buy into it without a sense of irony. Cline has a very big, very unabashed voice. It’s feminine without being hesitant or girlish. And she looked big. She was a forcefully featured woman.

k. d. lang had something to do with my deep affection for Cline. I was already aware of Cline’s music and life story before lang had gained her big gay following after she came out of the closet in the late 1980s and announced herself a Patsy Cline fan. She named her band The Re-Clines, and she hired Owen Bradley, Cline’s original producer. She even claimed that she took musical advice from Cline in spiritual chats. That was enough for me to begin a quest to learn all I could.

Of all the ideas my research brought me, including the rumors that she had affairs with other gals, the thing that struck me about Cline was her Dick. He is the villain of this piece, a man who is said to have spent much of his time with her objecting to her career, but who ended up making a fortune from of the very talent he tried to kill off.

Cline remains the most popular female Country Music singer ever. Loretta LynnLinda Ronstadt, and Trisha Yearwood have stated that she served as their inspirations. Her brief career produced the number one jukebox hit of all time, Crazy, written by Willie Nelson. For me, she is the quintessential torch singer.

Cline’s short life was genuinely heartbreaking. It reads like the lyrics of the ballads she recorded. She was born Virginia Patterson during The Great Depression. Her father, an accomplished amateur singer, sexually abused her as a child. The family moved 19 times before she was 15 years old. Feeling like a perpetual outsider, Cline dropped out of school to help support her family after her father walked out on them.

She sang in bars and had a cabaret act inspired by Helen Morgan, the tear-stained pop chanteuse of the 1920s. She also appeared in amateur musicals, talent shows, and on local radio.

She chose the name “Patsy” after her last name, and also a nod to singer Patsy Montana, whose cowgirl persona inspired both Cline’s moxie and costumes. She married her first husband, Gerald Cline, when she was 19-years-old, but they divorced four years later.

Cline made a big impression in the Washington D.C. music scene and appeared on the Country Music television show Town & Country before landing her first recording contract in 1954 with Four Star Records. She was with the label for four years, but they swindled her out of her record earnings and gave her crappy songs to record. Her contract was bought by Decca Records where she became the protégé of Owen Bradley, who became Cline’s guardian angel for the rest of her recording career.

Cline’s first four singles flopped, but in 1957, Walkin’ After Midnight went to number two on the Country charts, and more amazingly, number ten on the Pop charts. This is when she married that Dick who tried to get her to stay home.

Her career then stalled until 1960 when Bradley began to direct her towards becoming the leading exponent of the new Nashville Sound, beginning with her recording of I Fall To Pieces. Cline initially didn’t go for Bradley’s lush arrangements which featured back-up singing by The Jordanaires.

Cline barely survived a 1961 car accident just as I Fall To Pieces reached number one on the Country and Pop charts. She continued with Top Ten hits Crazy and She’s Got You and top albums, Patsy Cline Showcase and Sentimentally Yours. She was the first Country Music female to appear at Carnegie Hall and Hollywood Bowl, the first to headline her own Las Vegas show, and the first to appear on American Bandstand. She played the Mint Casino in Las Vegas for 35 nights.

At the Mint Casino, 1962. Photograph by Shane Collins, via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)

 

Cline was the first solo female artist inducted into the Country Music Hall Of Fame in 1973. In 2005, Patsy Cline’s Greatest Hits was certified diamond for sales over 10 million. It remains the best-selling Country Music album by a female artist and is in the Guinness Book Of Records for the most weeks on the charts by a woman in Country Music.

Cline disclosed her premonitions of an early death to her close friends Loretta LynnDottie West, and June Carter. Her singles Leavin’ On Your Mind and Sweet Dreams were both in the Top Ten on the Country and Pop charts when that airplane went down on a stormy evening. She was just 30-years-old when she left this world.

New recordings continue to be released after her death, and she remains a consistent bestseller more than 50 years later. Not bad for a girl who couldn’t read music and is quoted as saying: “I don’t know what key I sing in”. She had that rich, expressive, one-in-a-million alto voice and gay people always go for the talent.

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#OnThisGayDay: Leonard Matlovich Appears on the Cover of Time Magazine

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matlo-life

September 8, 1975– US Air Force Sergeant Leonard Matlovich, a decorated Vietnam War veteran, recipient of the Purple Heart and the Bronze Star, appeared in his Air Force uniform on the cover of Time Magazine with the headline: I Am A Homosexual.

Matlovich was awarded that Purple Heart after stepping on a Viet Cong land mine while saving members of his platoon and the Bronze Star for killing two Viet Cong soldiers who attacked his post.

Because of his regrets about his own racist attitudes, Matlovich volunteered to teach Air Force Race Relations classes, instituted after many publicized incidents against minorities in the military during the late 1960s and early 1970s. He was very effective as an instructor and the Air Force sent him to coach workshops at bases around the country.

By 1973, Matlovich was well aware of the emerging Gay Rights movement. In 1975, he volunteered to put his career on the line in order to create a test case challenging the military’s ban on gays serving openly. That challenge drew intense, widespread coverage in the media and his photo appeared on the front cover of Time Magazine, a major turning point for the Gay Rights movement both in the military and for the rest of us.

Matlovich was kicked-out of the Air Force and given a general discharge for challenging the Pentagon’s policy. Eventually, he and the US Military reached an out-of-court settlement in which he was paid $160,000 and given an honorable discharge.

When Matlovich’s photograph appeared on the cover of Time, he became a symbol for thousands of gay and lesbian service members. Matlovich was actually the very first openly gay person to appear on the cover of any American news-magazine. The late, great gay journalist Randy Shilts wrote:

“It marked the first time the young gay movement had made the cover of a major newsweekly. To a movement still struggling for legitimacy, the event was a major turning point.”

When he joined the service, Matlovich was a converted Mormon and a church elder. He found himself at odds with the always zany Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter Day Saints. He was excommunicated twice by the church for being a homo, first in 1975 and then again in 1979, after his appearance on The Donahue Show. He could have petitioned to be re-baptized, but by this time Matlovich had stopped being a believer at all.

From leonardmatlovich.com

 

Matlovich devoted the rest of his life to advocating for Gay Rights, shifting the emphasis to HIV/AIDS organizations after his own diagnosis in 1986. He died on June 22, 1988, just days before his 45th birthday. Matlovich was buried with full military honors in Congressional Cemetery, only 20 blocks from the US Capitol, in a ceremony that mixed the military pomp of a horse drawn casket and a 21-gun salute, along with eulogies from other Gay Rights activists.

Lee Jenny, the administrator for the cemetery (where many of our nation’s founders are buried):

“When Leonard lived in the neighborhood, he would come over here and walk. He loved the history. He was one of the most patriotic men I ever met.”

Jenny helped design the tombstone that Matlovich requested for his grave. It stands as a memorial to all LGBTQ Vietnam War veterans. It includes, in the top corners, pink triangles that were used by Nazis during WW II to identify homosexuals in concentration camps. The memorial does not bear Matlovich’s name. Instead, it reads:

“When I was in the military, they gave me a medal for killing two men and a discharge for loving one.”

Matlovich’s tombstone at Congressional Cemetery is in the same row as J. Edgar Hoover.

matlo-3

It’s been 29 years since Matlovich left this world and many brave gay people have served, fought and died in the US military. President Obama finally brought this battle to a just conclusion a decade ago, with honor for Leonard Matlovich at last. Who knows what the current President might do.

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EXCLUSIVE WOW INTERVIEW: JSJ Chats with Sasha Velour About Winning Season 9, Her Magazine “Velour,” and the Future of Drag

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Just in time DracConNYC tomorrow, I’m posting this absolutely fascinating interview I did Sasha Velour about a week after her historic Drag Race win, then promptly lost on my computer desktop. Whoops. In our far-ranging discussion, we touch upon her recent birthday, the multitude of projects she’s currently involved with, and most interestingly, the production of her drag ‘zine Velour. I hope you enjoy it.

James: Well, first of all, condragulations! I bow down to our new bald overlord!
Sasha: (laughs) Yes, it’s the take over of the baldies.

J:You just celebrated your 30th birthday too, didn’t you?
S: Yes, on Sunday – on Sunday of New York Pride. I was on the float waving to people.

Well that sounds like the best 30th birthday, ever. Right?!
It really was, I couldn’t think of anything better.

Then you performed that night in Brooklyn?
Yea, I put on a little “thank you” show to the whole community and used some of the performers that I’ve been working with for years. Along with Peppermint and Ongina and we kind of had a big celebration all together.

Have the other girls been just absolutely wonderful to you since your win? Is everything in the honeymoon period right now?
(laughs) Yes, it is. It’s all sunshine and rainbows.

And how do you think your life has changed since the finale?
There’s definitely been an influx of positivity and encouragement. I get the thing that people are really curious about what I’m going to create this year so I’m just driven to put stuff out there as quickly and as high quality as possible.

And speaking of high quality things you’ve put out there, there’s your magazine, Velour.
Yes, indeed. Velour, Issue 3

Issue 3. Can you believe it? I just found a copy of VYM, the first issue, on my desk the other day.
You did? Yes! We’ve been sending them to you every year.

Let’s talk a little bit about how it started as VYM and how it evolved into Velour
It started as a tiny little stapled ‘zine that we printed at a local copy shop using just the drag performers we knew and the visual artists that we knew. I’ve always kind of thought of myself as “the matchmaker” of this little project – so I try to pair up people who I think can create cool collaborative projects about drag together. And then I do all the layout and design because that’s what my day job was before I started doing drag full time. I did layout for books and magazines…

Oh! I did not know!
… but this magazine was kind of my passion project. I got to focus on this thing that I loved- drag- and I got to be a little more experimental and out of the box with the type of design I was doing instead of the kind of the corporate graphic design that I had to do for my job. And when we put together the first stapled issue, it just exploded. There was so much interest from both the drag side and the visual design side that we decided to create a fully, beautifully produced first issue. That’s the one I think you have in your office.

It is.
We ended up doing a Kickstarter for that issue. Basically, just friends and family and people in the community contributed to this really modern little publishing project and then it’s kind of grown a little bit every year. Last year, I started to learn a little bit more about my business fish qualities and I renamed it Velour. (laughs)

A little branding.
Exactly. So I think it’s just continued to a place where it is now – which I think is very… not just focused on the Brooklyn scene…. not just limited to the artists we know… but it’s a project that brings together all the people.

It seems like there is a lot of drag history in there. And a lot of just really thoughtful, interesting pieces… It’s not your usual drag fan ‘zine.
Exactly! We’ve always wanted to have something you could teach in classrooms as well as enjoy on the toilet. You know, the full spectrum.

I know that you have mentioned that (’90s-era drag ‘zines) My Comrade and Pansy Beat were real inspirations to you and that you’ve had the chance to talk to (their creator/drag legend) Linda Simpson. Tell me a little bit about that.
Yeah, I love that self-publishing and drag kind of go hand in hand because it’s the same idea of kind of creating your own world and not being limited by the financial limitations and just using what you have. Using the resources that you have to create something fabulous and treating it, perhaps, grander than it really is.

It’s also sort of a yearbook of the drag scene and in 10 years I bet you’ll be glad you have all these. I think they’ll be real collector’s editions.
Exactly. Yeah, it’s kind of cool to document drag outside of Drag Race, too. We have to write it into the history books.

So far, you’ve been publishing Velour twice yearly. Will you even have time to do it this year? I mean, I imagine things are at an accelerated pace for you right now.
I’m going to make time even if I lose sleep over it. The good thing is I’m going to meet all kinds of new people this year traveling around, so the opportunities for who can work on the next issue just multiplied overnight.

Is advertisement free? Don’t you need to compensate some of the artists? How do you subsidize it?
The good thing is costs are pretty low if you do it smartly. The sales of the issue can go directly to the artist. We take very little for ourselves just to make sure we can keep up with printing costs. The rest all goes to collaborators. You know, we have people shooting these drag performers on real film. So we pay for the development fees & all the materials. We do travel, we’ve had a couple of photo shoots where we have champagne and strawberries. We like living the full assemblance of the Vogue lifestyle for our people.

I love thinking of you as the drag Anna Wintour.
(laughs) I’ll take it!

Actually, you might be a little more Diana Vreeland…
There you go, yeah!

The theme of the current issue is “Sisters.” Tell us a little bit about the issue.
Yes! It’s about the idea of sisterhood in the drag world. I think the idea that queer people build their own families is kind of this magical bond that sustains us and helps us grow as artists and also protects us in certain ways from the kind of stresses of the world. So we looked at the way that people form those bonds. The way those bonds enrich people. The way that drag queens and drag kings and their brothers and sisters share certain things. It’s a nice entry point to talk about community.

It’s funny because when I’m doing Transformations, I start to notice little drag families around the country and how, like, there will be a little pocket of queens in Mississippi and they’ll all do their eyebrows the same way-
Yes, I love that!

I love how everyone influences everybody but it’s still kept in a tight circle of queens. That’s always so fascinating to me.
Yeah, I love that. I think they’re surface markers that you are a part of a tribe. That’s really beautiful.

One more quick question: Where do you see yourself this time next year and how are you going to change drag and what is happening with the future of drag?
Oh my God! Oh, just a small question. (laughs) I don’t know if I’m capable of changing drag but I definitely want to start some conversations about the directions that drag can go and the kind of conversations I’ve had with my people for a long time. I think that people are ready to talk and to ask questions and to argue, if need be in loving ways. I think that this magazine and the shows that I produce can help to do that and I’m excited to see how they can transform on a much larger scale.

Okay. Love it! That was very succinct!
(laughs)

Thank you, And next time you’re out here, I do want to have you in for Transformations. I would love to sit down and really noodle around in your brain
I already have, like, five sketches of your face.

Well, you basically just look in the mirror and subtract thirty years!
(laughs) I love it!

Thank you so much for giving us a little time!
It was lovely to chat!

Love you! Bye!
Sasha: Bye!

Be sure to check out Sasha’s booth at DragConNyc and pick up a signed copy of Velour!

 

 

The post EXCLUSIVE WOW INTERVIEW: JSJ Chats with Sasha Velour About Winning Season 9, Her Magazine “Velour,” and the Future of Drag appeared first on The WOW Report.

The RUNWAY at RuPaul’s DragCon NYC is Going to SLAY!

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Are you ready for THE RUNWAY at RuPaul’s DragCon NYC? Some of your favorite QUEENS are back to hold panels and stomp the runway for you all weekend long. Check out the schedule:

Sissy That Walk: Runway Walk Off – Some of your favorite queens stomp the runway and walk the children through nature in this panel both Saturday and Sunday at RuPaul’s DragCon NYC!

Are you ready to feel like a RuPaul’s Drag Race superstar yourself? Come to Lip-Sync for Your Life: Fan Edition and join your favorite queens on the runway. You better not F*CK it up and feel your oats while you slay the house down!

Calling All Milk Fans! Milk is here to give you a taste of perfection while she hosts a live edition of Milk’s LegenDAIRY Looks. Are you ready for some sickening tips for your new face!?

Did you bring your kids to RuPaul’s DragCon NYC or did your kids bring you? Either way, bring them to the runway so they can look oh so adorably fierce while they stomp down the runway to some RuPaul tunes!

On Sunday, the category is VOGUING! Bring your sickening look and some attitude in a fierce dance off! Stomp the Yard’s got nothing on the masters of VOGUE!

BOUNCE QUEEN DIVA, Big Freedia is here and she is asking you to shake that azz everywhere in this twerking master class! Join her on the runway at 2:00pm!

See you there kittens!

RuPaul’s DragCon comes to the Jacob Javits Center Sept. 9 and 10. Visit rupaulsdragcon.com for more information.

The post The RUNWAY at RuPaul’s DragCon NYC is Going to SLAY! appeared first on The WOW Report.

#RIP: French Fashion Icon, Pierre Bergé

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Photograph: Wikimedia File:Pberge01

 

Pierre Bergé was a truly great Fashion Icon and a strong advocate of LGBTQ Rights who gave away much of his fortune to HIV research. He was the main force the behind the success and image of the House Of Yves Saint Laurent.

Bergé had a huge influence on France’s cultural scene, but he is most noted as the longtime romantic and business partner of designer Saint Laurent. Their relationship was the subject of several books and films.

In 1961, Saint Laurent and Bergé founded their famous fashion house, with the bold Bergé taking care of the business side, and the quiet Saint Laurent designing clothing that defined French style in the 1960s and 1970s.

Bergé was an impassioned book and art collector, with one of the planet’s greatest private art and rare books collections. He also worked tirelessly and funded for Gay Rights and other Human Rights campaigns. He supported Act Up-Paris and helped found of the HIV/AIDS association Sidaction, becoming its president in 1996, a position he held until he passing. Sidaction is one of the main organizations fighting HIV in Europe.

Highly, unabashedly political, Bergé was an adviser and supporter of the late French Socialist President François Mitterrand and continued to back other Socialist candidates. He campaigned early for Emmanuel Macron, who was elected President in May. Bergé also expressed concern about the decline of power in the Socialist party.

Macron:

“A whole part of our collective citizen and artistic memory dies with Pierre Bergé. He had a genius for creating beauty and excellence wherever he could.”

As a rebellious youth, Bergé quit school early determined to make his mark in the cultural world. He was a totally a self-made man who, after growing up poor, ended up having the world’s most valuable art and books collections. When he moved to Paris, he found work selling antique books, scouring bookstalls along the Seine for treasures, and developing and encouraging a network of influential friends.

When he was 28-year-old, Bergé met Saint Laurent, who was six years younger. They began a relationship that would last the rest of their lives,  first as a  friendship, then a romance, then a business partnership. When Bergé met Saint Laurent, the talented young designer had been named the main designer at the House Of Dior. Saint Laurent’s first collection made him a star, but when Dior dropped Saint Laurent a few years later, Bergé decided the pair would start their own label. They made it into a Fashion Empire.

Saint Laurent suffered from profound depression and Bergé drove the business, ran the households and cared for him. Saint Laurent in 2001 wrote:

“Everything I didn’t have, he had. His strength meant I could rest on him when I was out of breath.”

In 2008, Bergé and Saint Laurent married a few days before the designer died of a brain tumor. He was 71-years-old when he was taken.

Berge decided to sell off their vast book and art collection, donating the money to the Bergé-Saint Laurent Foundation For HIV/AIDS Research.

This year, two museums dedicated to their life and work opened in Paris and Morocco, where they kept a exotic home.

In March, Berge married the American Madison Cox, one of the greatest garden designers ever, and now Vice-President of the Bergé-Saint Laurent Foundation.

Bergé was 86 -years-old when he left this word yesterday, following a long illness.

The post #RIP: French Fashion Icon, Pierre Bergé appeared first on The WOW Report.

#FashionDoesDragBall: Oh, Honey! RuPaul & Marc Jacobs Had SOME Party in Chelsea Last Night. Let’s Go Inside…

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Well kids, not that you care, but I drove in from upstate and spent an hour and a half at MAC in a makeup chair to go to RuPaul & Marc JacobsFashion Does Drag Ball at The McKittrick last night. So, I made an effort as the invition was a video of Ru INSISTING that full drag was mandatory to get in. You can see, I did the makeup part, from my pink carpet shot. (I took selfie with Ru but I looked hideous, so I reshot it adding in a less hideous one and Ru’s sweet smiling face.)

The pink carpet got started a little late. Ru came out and said hey while we waited curbside for the queens to arrive… and they FINALLY did. Milk, Detox, Kyle Farmery, Violet Chachki, BeBe Zahara Benet (Camerooon!) Fredia (whose new season premieres Tuesday!), Michelle Visage, Toddrick Hall, Countess Louanne, Parlina Poriskova and on and on…

By the time I got upstairs the joint was jumpin’ to the sounds of Ru DJing and giving us vintage dance floor burners. As you can see below, DJRu would jump out and hit the floor, so we were all just kicking our legs up and dancing like there was no tomorrow. Total fun. None of the kids were too cool for school, cause Ru kept the beats goin’. (If this drag thing doesn’t work out, he’s got somethin’ to fall back on…)

Mr. Jacobs of course was there with his bf, Charly Defrancesco and WOW founders, Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato both donned pink wigs and shook their groove thangs. Miss Fame gave some lovely face to a nasty song on the dance floor. The MAO PR brothers, Mauricio and Roger Padilha were out and Paper‘s Mickey Boardman and Page Six were there along with a few photographers but it was only about 100 people or so, and it thinned out to the hard core disco divas at the end.

Are you jealous yet? It really was FUN. DragConNYC starts tomorrow, so I’m going to take a nap now and go over to the Javitts Center while they are setting up and I’ll give a preview later. Are you coming?

There are more parties tonight and tomorrow… no full drag required for me, THANK GODDESS!

@countessluann is here at the #FashionDoesDragBall! #realhousewives

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😱😱😱😱 @kylefarmery teaching us all how to pose in pink on the #FashionDoesDragBall carpet!

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@ninaagdal got here looking absolutely stunning in stars! 😍😱😍😱😍🌟✨ #FashionDoesDragBall

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It's @marcjacobs & @chardefrancesco looking adorable on the red carpet for #FashionDoesDragBall!

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Hi @bebezaharabenet! 👋👋👋😍😍😍 #FashionDoesDragBall

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@sutanamrull & @paulinaporizkov have arrived to SLAY at the #FashionDoesDragBall

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Oh. Em. Gee. @missfamenyc looking SICKENING! 😱 #FashionDoesDragBall

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@violetchachki leaving us GAGGED for days! 😱😱😱#FashionDoesDragBall

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My stunning friend @paulinaporizkov

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We'll leave you with this boomerang of DJ @rupaulofficial absolutely LIVING! #FashionDoesDragBall

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The post #FashionDoesDragBall: Oh, Honey! RuPaul & Marc Jacobs Had SOME Party in Chelsea Last Night. Let’s Go Inside… appeared first on The WOW Report.

Watch: Ricky Rebel Sparkles with Self-Confidence in “If You Were My Baby”

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LA-based uber-glam pop rocker Ricky Rebel has just released a remix album for hit single If You Were My Baby, featuring tracks by tons of cool producers, including Tommie Sunshine & SLATIN, Hector Fonseca & Eduardo Lujan, Vito Fun, and Mr. Mig, who produced Rebel’s Billboard Top 40 hit Can I Get Your Number, when he was still part of  boyband No Authority. Watch the androgyne sparkle on stage in the vid below, singing out loud and proudly about how self-confidence is an aphrodisiac and that one should never be afraid to ask for what he or she wants from life. If You Were My Baby Remixes is available now on iTunes! (pic via Ricky Rebel’s IG)

 

Ricky Rebel:

“I want to sprinkle confidence into every club in the world. Confidence is an asset. It shows leadership and draws people in. I truly believe it is the most attractive quality a person can possess and might just help you land that special person you thought was out of reach.

I love 80’s glam pop stars like BowieGeorge MichaelMichael Jackson, and Prince, all of whom are now gone. There is a divo void that I intend to fill. It is my responsibility to carry the male glam pop torch.”

The post Watch: Ricky Rebel Sparkles with Self-Confidence in “If You Were My Baby” appeared first on The WOW Report.


WATCH: Jacquie Lawrence! Victor Corona! Josh Sabarra! Abdi Nazemian! Our Favorite WOWlebrity Authors Join Us for the WOW Report Book Report on Radio Andy!

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From Hollywood Boulevard, it’s The WOW Report for Radio Andy on SiriusXM! That’s right WOWers, World of Wonder Co-Founder Fenton Bailey, Executive VP of Development Tom Campbell, and WOW Report Editor James St. James have collaborated with reality TV guru and friend of WOW, Andy Cohen, on a weekly Top Ten Countdown of the things from the past week that make us go…WOW!

It’s a pop-culture obsessed hour complete with colorful diatribes, opposing opinions, and a dissection-like discussion that will make your drive home from work more fabulous!

You can now WATCH us recording the WOW Report in our gallery storefront on Hollywood Boulevard, just across the street from Hollywood’s oldest restaurant Musso & Frank! This week since Tom is out, Fenton & James – who have both written more than one book – invited four of our favorite WOWlebrity authors to join us! Jacquie Lawrence, Victor Corona, Josh Sabarra, and Abdi Nazemian are in the studio for our ‘Back to School Book Report’ edition of the Top Ten Things That Make Us Go WOW!

We air TODAY at 11AM EST (8AM PST) on the Radio Andy channel on SiriusXM, and again at 1PM EST (4PM PST). You can also catch the show on the SiriusXM app!

Let’s get started…

10) Different for Girls by Jacquie Lawrence

From Fenton’s review of Different for Girls:

A review of a Jackie Collins‘ novel once said it was “so hot it should be printed on asbestos”.  The same goes for Different For Girls.  Perfect summer beach reading, make sure you have quick access to the ocean – because in between chapters you will need to take a plunge to stop yourself bursting into flames.  And it’s not just packed full of delirious unashamed and unabashed and ever-inventive sex, it also has a plot with fabulous twists and turns and cliffhangers aplenty – especially the end, that will leave you panting for the sequel! Jacquie used to work at World of Wonder, and headed up the development department in the UK where she unleashed on British viewers a string of saucy same-sex docs about the secret lives of lesbians that would make ‘The L Word’ blush.

Get Different for Girls by Jacquie Lawrence on Amazon

Skip forward to 1:10

9) Jackie Under My Skin: Interpreting an Icon by Wayne Koestenbaum

From Amazon:

Jackie Under My Skin is a passionate investigation of the ways Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis transformed America’s definition of celebrity, identity, and style. In a gallery of fantasies and tableaux, Wayne Koestenbaum explains the late first lady’s hold on Americans by examining the myths and metaphors that we’ve attached to her. An exuberant paean to a great star, Jackie Under My Skin is also a meditation on fame, mortality, and the difficulty of defining desire.

Get Jackie Under My Skin: Interpreting an Icon by Wayne Koestenbaum on Amazon

Skip forward to 14:06

8) Thomas Hardy: Half a Londoner by Mark Ford

From Amazon:

Because Thomas Hardy is so closely associated with the rural Wessex of his novels, stories, and poems, it is easy to forget that he was, in his own words, half a Londoner. Focusing on the formative five years in his early twenties when Hardy lived in the city, but also on his subsequent movement back and forth between Dorset and the capital, Mark Ford shows that the Dorset-London axis is critical to an understanding of his identity as a man and his achievement as a writer.

Thomas Hardy: Half a Londoner presents a detailed account of Hardy’s London experiences, from his arrival as a shy, impressionable youth, to his embrace of radical views, to his lionization by upper-class hostesses eager to fête the creator of Tess. Drawing on Hardy’s poems, letters, fiction, and autobiography, it offers a subtle, moving exploration of the author’s complex relationship with the metropolis and those he met or observed there: publishers, fellow authors, street-walkers, benighted lovers, and the aristocratic women who adored his writing but spurned his romantic advances.

The young Hardy’s oscillations between the routines and concerns of Dorset’s Higher Bockhampton and the excitements and dangers of London were crucial to his profound sense of being torn between mutually dependent but often mutually uncomprehending worlds. This fundamental self-division, Ford argues, can be traced not only in the poetry and fiction explicitly set in London but in novels as regionally circumscribed as Far from the Madding Crowd and Tess of the d’Urbervilles.

Get Thomas Hardy: Half a Londoner by Mark Ford on Amazon

Skip forward to 18:00

7) Night Class: A Downtown Memoir by Victor Corona

From Barnes & Noble:

The playground of the rich and the beautiful, downtown New York’s nightlife spectacles and power of self-invention incubated pop icons from Andy Warhol to Lady Gaga. NYU sociologist Victor P. Corona sought a new education, where night classes held in galleries, nightclubs, bars, apartments, stoops, and all-night diners taught him about love, loss, and the living possibilities of identity. Transforming himself from dowdy professor to glitzy clubgoer, Victor immerses himself among downtown’s dazzling tribes of artists and performers hungry for fame.

Night Class: A Downtown Memoir investigates the glamour of New York nightlife. In interviews and outings with clubland revelers and influencers, including Party Monster and convicted killer Michael Alig, Night Class exposes downtown’s perilous trappings of drugs, ambition, and power. From closeted, undocumented Mexican boy to Ivy League graduate to nightlife writer, Corona shares in Night Class the thrill and tragedy of downtown and how dramatically identities can change.

Get Night Class: A Downtown Memoir by Victor P. Corona on Amazon

Skip forward to 25:20

6) The Andy Warhol Diaries by Andy Warhol

From Amazon:

This international literary sensation turns the spotlight on one of the most influential and controversial figures in American culture. Filled with shocking observations about the lives, loves, and careers of the rich, famous, and fabulous, Warhol’s journal is endlessly fun and fascinating.

Spanning the mid-1970s until just a few days before his death in 1987, THE ANDY WARHOL DIARIES is a compendium of the more than twenty thousand pages of the artist’s diary that he dictated daily to Pat Hackett. In it, Warhol gives us the ultimate backstage pass to practically everything that went on in the world-both high and low. He hangs out with “everybody”: Jackie O (“thinks she’s so grand she doesn’t even owe it to the public to have another great marriage to somebody big”), Yoko Ono (“We dialed F-U-C-K-Y-O-U and L-O-V-E-Y-O-U to see what happened, we had so much fun”), and “Princess Marina of, I guess, Greece,” along with art-world rock stars Jean-Michel Basquiat, Francis Bacon, Salvador Dali, and Keith Haring.

Warhol had something to say about everyone who crossed his path, whether it was Lou Reed or Liberace, Patti Smith or Diana Ross, Frank Sinatra or Michael Jackson. A true cultural artifact, THE ANDY WARHOL DIARIES amounts to a portrait of an artist-and an era-unlike any other.

Get The Andy Warhol Diaries by Andy Warhol on Amazon

Skip forward to 46:25

5) Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noel Harari

From Amazon:

From a renowned historian comes a groundbreaking narrative of humanity’s creation and evolution – a number one international best seller – that explores the ways in which biology and history have defined us and enhanced our understanding of what it means to be “human”.

One hundred thousand years ago, at least six different species of humans inhabited Earth. Yet today there is only one – Homo sapiens. What happened to the others? And what may happen to us?

Most books about the history of humanity pursue either a historical or a biological approach, but Dr. Yuval Noah Harari breaks the mold with this highly original book that begins about 70,000 years ago, with the appearance of modern cognition. From examining the role evolving humans have played in the global ecosystem to charting the rise of empires, Sapiens integrates history and science to reconsider accepted narratives, connect past developments with contemporary concerns, and examine specific events within the context of larger ideas.

Dr. Harari also compels us to look ahead, because, over the last few decades, humans have begun to bend laws of natural selection that have governed life for the past four billion years. We are acquiring the ability to design not only the world around us but also ourselves. Where is this leading us, and what do we want to become?

This provocative and insightful work is sure to spark debate and is essential for aficionados of Jared Diamond, James Gleick, Matt Ridley, Robert Wright, and Sharon Moalem.

Get Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noel Harari on Amazon

Skip forward to 50:50

4) Enemies Closer by Josh Sabarra

From Amazon:

Fortyish movie studio publicist Marcee Brookes feels ordinary; she’s stuck in a mid-level job, struggles to accept her size-16 figure and dreams of a man who might look past her waistline and into her heart. When Claire, the seemingly affable wife of screen legend Rox Madison, befriends her during a work project, Marcee’s life instantly turns from drab to dazzle. She zooms into the Los Angeles fast lane with Claire’s circle of glamorous pals who, until now, were merely faces on the pages of People magazine.

Marcee’s tight relationships with her sometimes overbearing mother, Rhonda, and her gay BFF, Jordan, provide a support system that helps her navigate her improbably fabulous new status and a potential romantic relationship with up-and-coming movie star Brent Wetherley. Their counsel becomes even more important as Marcee starts to see her fantasy life unravel and gets wise to the duplicitous nature of her “clique.” She quickly finds that all that glitters isn’t gold and that when Hollywood heavy-hitters give you a pat on the back, they’re looking only for a place to stick the knife.

Get Enemies Closer by Josh Sabarra on Amazon

Skip forward to 55:56

3) Advanced Style by Ari Seth Cohen

From Amazon:

Advanced Style is Ari Seth Cohen’s blog-based ode to the confidence, beauty, and fashion that can only be achieved through the experience of a life lived glamorously. It is a collection of street fashion unlike any seen before—focused on the over-60 set in the world’s most stylish locales. The (mostly) ladies of Advanced Style are enjoying their later years with grace and panache, marching to the beat of their own drummer. These timeless images and words of wisdom provide fashion inspiration for all ages and prove that age is nothing but a state of mind.

Ari Seth Cohen started his blog inspired by his own grandmother’s unique personal style and his lifelong interest in the put-together fashion of vibrant seniors. Each of his subjects sparkles like a diamond after long years spent refining and perfecting their individual look and approach to life. The Advanced Style book will showcase, in luscious full-color, the best of the blog, but will also act as a true guidebook with all-new material featuring wardrobes, interviews, stories, and advice from a cadre of his most chic subjects, along with a large selection of never-before-seen photography—fresh off of sidewalk catwalks around the world!

Get Advanced Style by Ari Seth Cohen on Amazon

Skip forward to 1:14:47

2) I’ll Take Manhattan by Judith Krantz

From Amazon:

Here is Judith Krantz’s greatest triumph–I’ll Take Manhattan.  In the high-stakes world of magazine publishing, she weaves a dazzling tale of love and betrayal, and creates her most joyous character–sensational Maxi, an uninhibited woman who unexpectedly discovers that her talent for life is matched by a hunger to succeed.

Gorgeous, flamboyant Maxi Amberville is twenty-nine and has already discarded three husbands on two continents.  Life is a stream of endless pleasure in her lavish Trump Tower apartment–until her widowed mother married a man who plots to sell her father’s magazine empire.  And Maxi turns her incredible lust for living into a passionate quest for power.

Maxi takes over the small weekly Buttons And Bows. She gathers her hot-blooded ex-husband, sassy daughter and a coterie of the powerful elite.  Then, risking all, Maxi creates B&B –the glitziest, ritziest, most successful fashion magazine in the country.  Here is a dramatic, sizzling story of love, family, ambition and one unforgettable woman who gives life and love everything she has.

Get I’ll Take Manhattan by Judith Krantz on Amazon

Skip forward to 1:17:20

1) The Authentics by Abdi Nazemian

From Amazon:

The Authentics is a fresh, funny, and insightful novel about culture, love, and family—the kind we are born into and the ones we create.

Daria Esfandyar is Iranian-American and proud of her heritage, unlike some of the “Nose Jobs” in the clique led by her former best friend, Heidi Javadi. Daria and her friends call themselves the Authentics, because they pride themselves on always keeping it real.

But in the course of researching a school project, Daria learns something shocking about her past, which launches her on a journey of self-discovery. It seems everyone is keeping secrets. And it’s getting harder to know who she even is any longer.

With infighting among the Authentics, her mother planning an over-the-top sweet sixteen party, and a romance that should be totally off limits, Daria doesn’t have time for this identity crisis. As everything in her life is spinning out of control—can she figure out how to stay true to herself?

Get The Authentics by Abdi Nazemian on Amazon

Skip forward to 1:24:39

Listen in at 11AM EST (8AM PST) and again at 1PM EST (4PM PST) on SiriusXM! Or listen whenever you want on the SiriusXM App!

And be sure to give your ears the gift of THE WOW REPORT on Radio Andy SiriusXM EVERY Friday.

Do something this weekend that makes YOU go WOW!!!

The post WATCH: Jacquie Lawrence! Victor Corona! Josh Sabarra! Abdi Nazemian! Our Favorite WOWlebrity Authors Join Us for the WOW Report Book Report on Radio Andy! appeared first on The WOW Report.

September 9th: It’s YOUR Birthday, Bitch!

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#BornThisDay: Olympic Champion Ice Skater, John Curry

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Photograph from International Olympic Committee (IOC) Archives, 1976

 

September 9, 1949– John Curry:

“With my medal, it seemed that I had acquired all the trappings that went with it, the chains as well as the ribbons.”

On a winter evening in 1976, millions of people watched gorgeous John Curry skate to Olympic glory. Overnight he became one of the most famous men on our pretty planet and he changed ice skating from negligible sport to high art.

The Husband and I have been fans of figure skating, watching on television for decades. We have our favorites, and we also get chuckles watching ice skating’s insular world, with all of its rules, regulations, and costumes, along with the denial that there is anything intrinsically gay about figure skating.

I enjoy a good game of inventing names for the various positions and skating moves: The Double Nipple Of The Party BoyThe Death Spiral Camel ToeThe Triple Axle RoseThe Fruit LoopThe Lose Your CherryKiss The Nun, and The Hair Bending Junior Swish Swizzle. Whenever I have put on a pair of skates and hit the ice, I have looked just like a newborn fawn standing up for the very first time.

We always admired the good-looking, charismatic Curry, an especially elegant British Olympic Champion who infused figure skating with the possibilities of dance. As an athlete, he was visionary, defining the sport with balletic sophistication. He became one of the first athletes to speak openly of being Gay and HIV Positive.

Dick Button, the Men’s Olympic Champion in 1948 and 1952:

“Curry was the finest and most intelligent all-around skater I’ve ever seen. He skated with a combination of superior athleticism, solid technique, classical line and musical sensitivity. He was choreographically inventive.”

Curry was born in 1949, in Birmingham, England. He wanted to become a ballet dancer, but that was forbidden by his abusive, alcoholic father. He turned to the expressiveness of ice skating, which came close to being dance.

By 1970, he had become the British National Champion. Curry found the training facilities inadequate in England, and in 1973 he moved to Colorado to train with Carlo Fassi who had coached Peggy Fleming to her 1968 Olympic championship.

At the 1976 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck, Curry faced tough competition from Vladimir Kovalev of the USSR and Canadian Toller Cranston, along with skepticism from the Eastern Bloc judges who always preferred athleticism over artistry.

In the short program, Curry removed a planned spread-eagle flourish from his approach to a double-axel jump. The East European judges apparently appreciated that he did not embellish on what was required. In the long program, Curry balanced his refined style with vaulting jumps to receive higher marks than Kovalev, the silver medalist, from eight of the nine judges.

Peggy Fleming:

“I think he brought the purest form of ballet to the ice. He was a real purist, totally devoted to the art of skating. He also had the technique and athleticism to make that art look effortless. It was a wonderful blend of art and sport.”

Just hours after receiving his 1976 Olympic Gold Medal, Curry inadvertently disclosed his gayness to a reporter, thinking he was speaking off the record:

“I just accept being gay as the way I am. I don’t think of it as being bad or wrong or to do with any form of illness. I never pretended not to be gay, ever. I think the more open people are, the easier it gets for everybody else because it demystifies it. I don’t want others to be frightened like I was…”

After the Olympic Games, no longer bound by amateur rules, the professional Curry continued to explore different forms of skating, bringing his acclaimed Ice Dancing show to Broadway in 1977-78 and later touring with his own John Curry Skating Company. He did not go for glitzy Ice Capades shows. Curry:

“I never could see the point of spending 12 years training to go dress up in a Bugs Bunny suit. I was brought up on the Royal Ballet, and I hope it shows in my work.”

Curry directed a 1980 West End revival of the Lerner and Loewe musical fantasy chestnut Brigadoon and he also found work as an actor, appearing in the Roundabout Theatre’s 1989 revival of Privates On ParadePeter Nichols‘ 1977 farce about a fictional, mostly gay, WW II military entertainment troupe.

Actor Alan Bates had seen Curry on stage and he became a big fan. A married father of teenage twin boys, Bates was at the height of his own fame. He was famous for that notorious hot scene in Ken Russell‘s film Women In Love (1969) where wrestles naked with an equally hunky Oliver Reed. Secretly, Bates had enjoyed many liaisons with other men for decades. Curry was just one of them. But, for 20 years. they shared an intense and intriguing romance.

In 1987, Curry was diagnosed with HIV. He later stated that he felt “ashamed” for having contracted any STD. His first lover, skating coach Heinz Wirz claims Curry sought out extreme, sometimes violent sexual experiences, but his affair with Bates seems to have been tender and genuine.

During a 1993 vacation, Curry confided in Bates that he never had wanted to have a long life, or to grow old. What mattered to him was a life lived well in the present and to have mattered somehow. He told Bates that he was ashamed of being broke and was afraid that he had accomplished too little during his life.

On a spring day in 1994, Curry left this world while being held in the arms of Bates. He was just 44-years-old. Curry’s athleticism and aesthetic grace had thrilled audiences. He transformed skating into a dazzling art.

The post #BornThisDay: Olympic Champion Ice Skater, John Curry appeared first on The WOW Report.

September 10th: It’s YOUR Birthday, Bitch!

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#BornThisDay: Canine Movie Star, Rin Tin Tin

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Rin Tin Tin with Lee Duncan (center), photograph from Warner Bros. Archives

 

September 10, 1918– Rin TinTin:

“Arf!”

In late summer of 1918, US Army Corporal Lee Duncan discovered a bombed out German War-Dog station while on a scouting mission. Inside he found a shell-shocked mother German Shepherd along with her five puppies.

Not wanting to leave them alone and helpless, Duncan brought them back to his base camp where he took care of them. When he returned home to California, Duncan brought one little puppy with him. He named him Rin Tin Tin after the small dolls that French soldiers carried with them for good-luck.

Duncan settled into his home in L.A. and he became interested in the fledgling film industry. Knowing his dog was mighty special, he made the rounds to the studios, but they foolishly showed little interest in the idea of a canine movie star.

Duncan and Rin Tin Tin finally caught their big break when they came upon a crew shooting a scene with a wolf while they were hiking around the Silverlake reservoir. Asking for the chance to show what he had, Rin Tin Tin performed a stunt in a single take that had frustrated the director and crew trying to make the scene work with the real wolf. The stunt proved to be his big break.

In 1922, Rin Tin Tin (his friends called him “Rinty”) made his debut in a low-budget western titled The Man From Hell’s River. He did all his own stunt work, and he learned his dialogue phonetically.

Rinty’s charisma, good-looks, athleticism, fearless stunt abilities and considerable acting talent attracted the attention of the struggling Warner Bros. Studios. Together they made 24 films that helped reestablish the studio and made Rin Tin Tin a household name, a fashion icon and magazine cover boy.

In 1929, Rin Tin Tin received the most votes for the first ever Academy Award for Best Actor, but the Academy determined that a stupid human should win. Usually stoic in matters of showbiz disappointments, Rinty was so disappointed he threw-up a large hairball on the sidewalk in front of the Roosevelt Hotel.

At the height of his celebrity, Rinty earned a salary of $1000 a week, had his own production unit, a chauffeur driven limousine, a personal chef, a Pilates teacher, a lawyer, a life-coach, and a diamond studded collar. Not much is known about his personal life, but Rinty was spotted at several underground gay spots around Hollywood and was known to attend director George Cukors infamous male-only Sunday afternoon pool parties, until one Sunday when he tragically ate the entire buffet and humped hunky Forrest Tucker’s leg. Although he was quite a stud, siring 48 pups, including a favorite named Junior, Rin Tin Tin was known to lick the butt of male stunt dogs and was very probably bisexual. Despite a series of rumors, there is no definitive proof that he ate poop.

Warner Bros. Archives

In 1930, in an ungrateful gesture, Warner Bros. released Rinty from his contract. He was forced to work low budget serials. He admitted to a Milk Bone addiction and went into rehab. After 40 films, Rin Tin Tin retired in 1931. It was sad really; what he always wanted was to direct.

Surrounded by family and friends, human and canine, Rin Tin Tin took his final bow-wow in winter 1932. Millions of fans grieved at his passing. Rumors abounded when the fan magazines reported that Rinty died on the front lawn and in the arms of blond bombshell Jean Harlow who lived on the same street.

In a private ceremony, Duncan buried Rin Tin Tin in a bronze casket in his own backyard with a plain wooden cross to mark the location. Duncan suffered the financial effects of The Great Depression and could not afford a better burial. Eventually Duncan grew unable to even keep his own house, which he sold, and he quietly arranged to have Rinty’s body returned to the country of his birth for re-burial in the Cimetière des Chiens et Autres Animaux Domestiques, the famous pet cemetery in the Paris neighborhood of Asnières-sur-Seine.

Rin Tin Tin’s son Junior continued to work in serials and radio. Junior made just a single film, playing opposite a young butt-sniffing Robert Blake in The Return Of Rin Tin Tin (1947). Junior also assisted Duncan in the training of more than 5,000 dogs for the Canine Corps in WW II.

Rin Tin Tin’s grandson, Junior Jr., appeared on a television series in the 1950s, The Adventures Of Rin Tin Tin, where I first fell in love with him, and I fell hard. I had a Rin Tin Tin lunch box and a series of Rin Tin Tin adventure books.

Several of Rin Tin Tin’s children and grandchildren were adopted by films stars including Greta GarboKatharine Hepburn and Clark Gable.

Rin Tin Tin is the subject of an excellent biography, Rin Tin Tin: The Life And Legend (2011) by Susan Orlean, but his story really deserves its own film treatment. Won Ton Ton, The Dog Who Saved Hollywood (1976) is a spoof of Rinty’s story starring Bruce DernMadeline Kahn and over 100 Golden Era movie stars in cameo roles, but honestly, we pee on it.

No other canine star ever again matched Rin Tin Tin’s very special magical brand of screen charisma, star power, or talent, especially that bitch Lassie.

The post #BornThisDay: Canine Movie Star, Rin Tin Tin appeared first on The WOW Report.

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