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WOW Presents Clips: Say Goodbye to Britney’s Vegas Residency with These “I Am Britney Jean” Clips

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Oh, it’s too sad. What on earth will we do without Britney Spears and her “Piece of Me” Vegas show? The town will NEVER BE THE SAME AGAIN. Yes, after three fantastic years Britney says goodbye TONIGHT at her final show.

To celebrate the wonder and glory of all things Brit-Brit, we thought we’d leave you with these two snippets from our 2013 E! documentary I Am Britney Jean.

First up: Britney shoots footage for her concert in a beautiful Angel costume!

Next: Britney leaps off a three story tree during the rehearsals for her tour 2 weeks before opening night!


#RIP: Artist, Tim Rollins

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TIM ROLLINS and K.O.S., Amerika IX, 1987

Sad news to report. Artist Tim Rollins, according to the gallery Lehmann Maupin, which showed his work in New York and Hong Kong, has died.

Much of Rollins’s work was produced under the name, Tim Rollins and K.O.S. which was the “Kids of Survival”. Rollins began collaborating with youth from the South Bronx in 1981, when he helped develop a curriculum for Intermediate School 52 that combining making art with reading and writing. He had been recruited by the school’s principal, George Gallego and Rollins reportedly told his middle-school students on day one of the program,

Today we are going to make art, but we are also going to make history.

They did. Tim was just 26 at the time.

Rollins and his students took pages from various books arranged in grids, and painted forms—many times abstractions—would be placed on top of them. Prints, photographs, and sculptures were also produced by the group, whose art has since entered the collections of museums around the world.

In ’84, Rollins launched the Art and Knowledge Workshop, an after-school program for students who were particularly dedicated to his unusual methods, and K.O.S. was formed. The group entered the art-world two years later in the midst of a NYC art boom with a solo show at Jay Gorney Modern Art. The work quickly was a hit with both blue-chip collectors and art activists alike.

Their work appeared at the Whitney Biennials in ’85, ’91, and ’06 Whitney Biennials as well as the 1988 Venice Biennale, Documenta 8 that same year.

In 1997, the documentary, Kids of Survival: The Art and Life of Tim Rollins and K.O.S. was widely received at the London Film Festival; Cinéma du Réel, France; and the Hamptons International Film Festival, New York.

Rollins was born in 1955 in Pittsfield, Maine, into a working-class family. In 1988, he told the New York Times in that living in a relatively poor household grounded him and made him empathetic to

the struggles of the kids’ families.

Rollins said on the occasion of a survey show at the Frye Art Museum in 2010, about the beginnings of his collaboration with K.O.S…

To dare to make history when you are young, when you are a minority, when you are working, or nonworking class, when you are voiceless in society, takes courage. Where we came from, just surviving is ‘making history.’ So many others, in the same situations, have not survived, physically, psychologically, spiritually, or socially. We were making our own history. We weren’t going to accept history as something given to us.

He studied at the School of Visual Arts starting in 1975 and conceptual art pioneer Joseph Kosuth was a teacher. He said this was formative to his own later practice.

Rollins tirelessly continued to find ways of engaging various communities over the course of his four-decade career. Speaking to Artspace about his work with K.O.S. in 2012, Rollins said,

I’m very corny, and it’s really about building some new kind of cultural democracy, and I think it’s really, really important. I think what we’ve done is that we have challenged elite notions of fine art that put boundaries on who can appreciate art, who can make art, and who can feel the impact of that art. I think that is our biggest collective achievement.

I agree with that and although I was lucky enough to know Tim through mutual friends, we rarely talked about art. He had a big interest in music (he dated the B-52s, Kate Pierson years ago, which is how we first met) as well as and literature and politics and he was engaged in NYC culture in many forms.

His work makes him sound like a super-serious guy, and he was, about the work, but he was an energetic, fun person too, that was smart and always fun to chat with. He loved a good party. I remember three things about him, primarily his innate intelligence, his boundless enthusiasm and keen appreciation of life. He left it too soon and will be missed by those lucky to have crossed paths.

K.O.S’s current members said in a statement to Hyperallergic,

Tim was a friend, mentor and father to the surviving members of the KOS collective. We are in mourning and in the process of making personal arrangements in conjunction with Tim’s wishes and deep religious faith. We want to let the many people who have come to know Tim personally or from his inspirational work as an artist, educator, and community activist to respect that services will be private. But, there will be a public memorial to celebrate his life at a later time, an announcement will be made once arrangements have been settled. Please know that we are greatly moved by the tremendous outpouring of your love and kind thoughts. We want to let you know that with your help and continuing support, we do plan on continuing Tim’s visionary work.

Tim Rollins was 62.

Tim Rollins and KOS at Lehmann Maupin in 2016 (courtesy Lehmann Maupin)

TIM ROLLINS and K.O.S.
A Midsummer Night’s Dream (after Shakespeare and Mendelssohn), 2009

TIM ROLLINS and K.O.S.
The River – Meander II (after Edward “Duke” Ellington) (detail), 2011

TIM ROLLINS and K.O.S.
Animal Farm (After George Orwell) – McCain and Palin, 2008

TIM ROLLINS and K.O.S.
By Any Means Necessary (after Malcolm X), 2008

TIM ROLLINS and K.O.S.
Slave Girl, 2008

TIM ROLLINS and K.O.S.
Invisible Man (after Ralph Ellison), 2008

(via ArtNews, Hyperallergic)

#LGBTQ: ”I Have So Many Fabulous Friends Who Happen to Be Gay, but I Am a Traditionalist.”- POTUS, Year One

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Photo via YouTube

 

What does that quote even mean?

Minutes after Donald John Trump was sworn into office, all mentions of the LGBTQ Community were erased from White House, State Department, and Department of Labor websites.

Trump became the first sitting president to address an anti-LGBTQ event.

Trump excluded LGBTQ people from his World AIDS Day proclamation.

Months after a half-dozen members of the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS resigned in protest, saying that POTUS ”has no interest on HIV/AIDS”, the White House fired the remaining members through a form letter this week. The council, whose members are not paid, advised the White House on HIV/AIDS policies for more than two decades, specifically offering recommendations on the National HIV/AIDS Strategy, a five-year plan responding to the epidemic.

Trump joked of Mike Pence when asked about LGBTQ rights:

“Don’t ask that guy—he wants to hang them all!”

The Trump Administration’s National Park Services withdrew its sponsorship of NYC’s first permanent Pride Flag, located outside of the historic Stonewall Inn, which became a National Monument under Barack Obama, and dropped out of its pre-scheduled participation in the flag dedication ceremony.

The Department of Justice issued a sweeping “religious exemptions” guidance which invites taxpayer-funded federal agencies, government employees, and government contractors to legally discriminate against LGBTQ employees if they cite a religious belief as the reason for doing so.

The Trump Administration reversed a policy that provided non-discrimination protections for transgender people in the workplace under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

The Department of Health and Human Services erase dall mentions of the LGBTQ community and their health needs in its strategic plan for the  years 2018-2022.

Trump officially directed the Pentagon to move forward with his ban on transgender service members openly serving in the U.S. Military. The discriminatory policy is due to take effect take effect March 23, 2018.

The official White House webpage directs readers to an article published by the anti-LGBTQ Heritage Foundation that calls being transgender a “psychological disorder.”

Trump banned transgender servicemembers from serving in “any capacity” in the U.S. military, threatening to fire 15,000 currently serving troops, and he did it on Twitter, of course.

The Trump Administration canceld plans to add the LGBTQ community to its upcoming 2020 U.S. Census, a survey conducted every decade by the federal government to help collect data about living Americans. Now that’s proof he wants us dead!

Trump appointed anti-LGBTQ activist and former Heritage Foundation staffer Roger Severino to lead the Health and Human Services Civil Rights Office, putting the LGBTQ community at risk of losing access to critical and affordable health care.

The Trump Administration erases the LGBTQ community from The National Survey of Older Americans Act Participants and the Annual Program Performance Report for Centers for Independent Living, important surveys that are used to help provide care to American seniors, including disability, transportation, and caregiver support needs.

With help of Attorney General Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III, Trump rescinded protections for transgender students in our nation’s schools.

via YouTube

 

POTUS (not a parody):

 

 “Happy New Year to all, including to my many enemies and those who have fought me and lost so badly they just don’t know what to do. Love!”

#IfUHad2Pick1?: A New Social Media Game You Can Play in the New Year…

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I don’t know what impulse made me do it, but several months ago I posted a meme with the hashtag #IfUHad2Pick1. The first was Edith Piaf OR Judy Garland? Wildly thought to be two of the greatest female vocalists of the 20th century if not all-time, the idea isn’t who is better, but rather, given those two options which do you pick.

The criteria is your own, but my intention isn’t that one is more important but just the simple idea of if offered two greatest hits CDs (remember those?) which would you choose? I started with singers and bands and a few great albums or songs. You can play it on your own Facebook or Twitter. You can make it into a poll on either, but I’ve never kept track of who “won” so I usually create a meme. Usually, the “winner” is the coolest/ most beloved but a few are REALLY tough to choose. (I tended to use older more iconic artists, when you venture into newer artists don’t have the clout yet. Plus it depends on your own age and audience, mine is older, and more knowledgeable about the history of music.)

You may think it’s silly or unnessecesary to pit artists against one another but the real goal is fun and appreciation. If you just say who is your favorite, it’s a bit dull, but the either OR choice sets up a fun dynamic. (Madonna gets a lot of both love and hate so I chose to put her against Yoko and then Elton, just for fun…)

Sometimes it’s two very similar artists that are contemporaries, like Mavis Staples and Gladys Knight and other times it’s fun to cross generations like Janis Joplin and Amy Winehouse.

I’m finishing out the year with music and starting the new one with actors, directors, movies and TV shows. But it works for theater, fashion designers, authors, artists, architects and anything you can think of really.

If you play, please use the hashtag #IfYouHad2Pick1 so we all can search and see who is playing.

Thanks to all my Facebook pals for playing along every day, it’s been a lot of fun, even when those choices and comments got heated.

#ArtDept: Parties in Paintings, Happy New Year From the Art Department!

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The Youth of Bacchus (1865) by William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825-1905)

 

Revelers by Jacob Jordaens (1593-1678)

 

A Club of Gentlemen (1730) by Joseph Highmore (1692-1780) Note: since the early 1600s, a round of drinks has meant “a quantity of liquor served to a company at one time”; probably because it was customary for gentlemen to drink at these round tables in a circle facing one another.

 

A Midnight Modern Conversation (1732) by William Hogarth (1697-1764)

 

Figures Eating and Drinking Around a Table (1634) by Theodoor Rombouts (1597-1637)

 

Working Class by Norman Cornish (1919-2014)

 

Nightlife (1943) by Archibald John Motley, Jr. (1891-1981)

 

Le Moulin de la Galette (1900) by Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)

 

Untitled (1882) by Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-1988)

 

The Charleston (1926) by Frank Harmon Myers (1889-1956)

Roppongi Nightclub (2013) by Carl Randall (born 1975)

#HappyFreakingNew Year!: Helen Horbath is SUPER-EXCITED About NYE… Watch

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I posted Helen Horbath‘s Christmas morning gone wrong and now you’ve had a few days to recover. I guess it’s no big surprise that she’s being SUPER-negative about New Year’s Eve this year.

If I wanted to see balls drop, I’d walk in on Grandpa in the shower…

Speaking of balls, wonder what STEEEVEN’s plans are…?

Watch.

#BornThisDay: Writer, E.M. Forster

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January 1, 1879 E.M. Forster:

”How can I tell what I think till I see what I say?”

Most of the film adaptations of Edward Morgan Forster’s work are first-rate and faithful in style and spirit to the great Edwardian writer, but the Merchant/Ivory production of A Room With A View (1985) is possibly my favorite movie of all time, and the film adaptation of his great posthumous novel, Maurice (1987), is way up on that list also.

It seems to not matter that much anymore; coming out of the closet has never been easier with gay celebs doing it as a little mention in the seventh paragraph of an interview. But, no other piece of 20th century gay fiction paints a more authentic picture of how a coming-of-age gay man torn between his sexuality and the need to assimilate to social and cultural constructions of what is “normal” than Forster’s Maurice. Because it was written prior to any sort of Gay Rights activism makes it even more important. Forster does not offer any explanation or justification for his protagonist’s gayness. The result is an honest, often heartbreaking, poignant look at the inner-workings of a tortured gay man’s mind in an era where being out of the closet was nearly impossible.

Forster was ahead of his time, or, at least he was better suited to take on certain topics like homosexuality that couldn’t be written about with honesty during his own era. Although he always remained a true Edwardian, Forster embodied the modern gay male spirit more fully than any other writer of his era.

A champion of Liberal Humanism, Forster, in his later years, became a significant moral conscience for young gay writers in the 1930s like Christopher Isherwood, W. H. Auden, and J. R. Ackerley.

He summed up his beliefs in as essay, What I Believe (1938), in which he explained his faith in personal relations and individualism.

Forster:

“If I had to choose between betraying my country and betraying my friend, I hope I should have the guts to betray my country. I hold the belief in an aristocracy of the sensitive, the considerate and the plucky, who represent the true human condition, the one permanent victory of our queer race over cruelty and chaos.”

Forster deserves an honored spot as a Gay Icon. He was not only one of the finest novelists of 20th century but he was also a tireless defender of humane values.

Forster had two great loves in his life. Remember, homosexuality in Britain was illegal and punishable with a prison sentence in that era. Like other Edwardians, Forster found a sort of freedom exploring the far-flung spots of The British Empire like Egypt and India (odd, now that both countries are so repressive in their policies towards gay people). Foster ‘s first great love was Muhammad el-Adl, a young Egyptian tram conductor.

Forster:

”I have plunged into an anxious but very beautiful affair. It seemed to me, and I proved right, that something precious was being offered me and that I was offering something that might be thought precious. I should have been right to take the plunge, because if you pass life by its jolly well going to pass you by in the future. If you’re frightened it’s all right, that’s no harm; fear is an emotion. But by some trick of the nerves I happen not to be frightened.”

The second great love of his life was an English policeman, Bob Buckingham, who he met in 1930. Their love affair continued, perhaps even intensified, after Buckingham got married. The Buckinghams accommodated Forster in their relationship, with May Buckingham, the wife, enjoying his company before handing off the writer to her husband for the weekends. Only someone with Forster’s skill and imagination could have maintained such a daring, yet sweet, relationship over so many years. Forster died of a stroke in 1970 at 91-years-old, at the Buckinghams’ home in Coventry. His ashes, mingled with those of Buckingham, were later scattered in the rose garden of Coventry’s crematorium, near Warwick University.

After he published his acclaimed A Room With A View, Howard’s End and Where Angels Fear To Tread in his 20s, he did not complete a single novel in the second half of his life. After suppressing his sexuality as a young man, Forster, who was known to his friends as Morgan, lost his virginity to a wounded soldier in 1917 while working for the Red Cross in Egypt. That sexual awakening in his late 30s led to his series of romances before he met Buckingham.

After publishing A Passage To India, arguably his greatest work, in 1924, Forster spurned the novel and most creative endeavors for the rest of his life, publishing only occasional short stories, essays and a few plays.

Although Maurice was published shortly after his death, it had been written nearly 60 earlier.

Rupert Graves, Helen Mirren, Giovanni Guidelli in “Where Angels Fear To Tread”, Fine Line Features via YouTube

 

His first novel, Where Angels Fear To Tread (1905), is the story of Lilia, a young English widow who falls in love with an Italian, and the efforts of her bourgeois relatives to get her back from Monteriano (based on San Gimignano). Where Angels Fear To Tread was adapted as a 1991 film directed by Charles Sturridge. It stars Rupert Graves, Helen Mirren, Helena Bonham Carter, and has a fearless performance by Judy Davis. I was so obsessed with this novel and film that in 1991, I felt that I simply must travel to the town where the story, took place and where the film had been shot. I even found the Hotel La Cisterna where much of the action was set (and this was before that Internet thing).

Julian Sand and Bonham Carter in “A Room With A View”, Sony Classics via YouTube

 

Forster stayed at Pensione Simi, now Hotel Jennings Riccioli in Florence, in 1901. Forster took inspiration from this journey for his third novel, A Room With A View (1908), is his lightest and most optimistic work. It was started in 1901, before any of his others; its earliest versions were titled Lucy. The book explores the young Lucy Honeychurch’s trip to Italy with her cousin, and the choice she must make between the free-thinking George Emerson and the repressed aesthete Cecil Vyse. George’s father Mr. Emerson quotes the great thinkers who influenced Forster. The film version stars Helena Bonham Carter as Lucy, Julian Sands, Maggie Smith, Denholm Elliott, Daniel Day-Lewis, Judi Dench and Simon Callow. It was a box-office hit as well as receiving universal critical acclaim. It was nominated for eight awards including Best Picture, winning three; Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Art Direction and Best Costume Design. It also won five BAFTAs and a Golden Globe Award.

Where Angels Fear To Tread and A Room With A View both concern narrow-minded middle-class English tourists abroad.

Thompson in “Howards End”, Sony Classics via YouTube

 

Howards End (1910) is an ambitious novel concerned with different groups within the Edwardian middle-class, represented by the Schlegels, bohemian intellectuals; the Wilcoxes, thoughtless aristocrats; and the Basts, members of the struggling lower middle-class. Howards End was adapted as a film in 1992 by Merchant-Ivory. The film received nine Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture for Ismail Merchant and Best Director for James Ivory, starring Anthony Hopkins, Vanessa Redgrave, even more Helena Bonham Carter, Emma Thompson, and James Wilby. The film won three Academy Awards including Art Direction, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala’s screenplay, and Emma Thompson for Best Actress.

A Passage To India (1924) is about the relationship between East and West, seen through the lens of India in the later days of the British Raj. Forster connects personal relationships with the politics of colonialism through the story of the Englishwoman Adela Quested, the Indian Dr. Aziz, and the question of what did or did not happen between them in the Marabar Caves. A Passage To India was adapted to a play in 1960, and as a film in 1984, directed by the great David Lean. It was his final film and the first film he had directed in 14 years, since Ryan’s Daughter in 1970. A Passage To India received 11 Academy Awards nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director for Lean, and Best Actress for Judy Davis. Peggy Ashcroft won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress making her, at 77-years-old, the oldest to win the award, and Maurice Jarre won his third Oscar for Best Original Score.

Maurice (1971) was published posthumously. It is one of the great gay love stories and it also returns to the theme of clashes of the classes from Forster’s first three novels. The novel was controversial, given that Forster’s gayness had not been previously acknowledged. Maurice was adapted as a film in 1987 by the Merchant-Ivory. The film stars James Wilby, Hugh Grant, Rupert Graves, Denholm Elliott, Simon Callow, and Ben Kingsley.

Forster had based the characters in Maurice on real people, and he was keen that it should have a happy ending. The author did not want to publish the novel while his mother was alive, but he showed the manuscript to Christopher Isherwood. Even after his mother had passed away, Forster resisted publication because of public and legal attitudes about homosexuality. He was also ambivalent about the merits of the novel. A note found on the manuscript read: “Publishable, but worth it?”

James Ivory was interested in making a screen adaptation after the critical and box office success of A Room With A View. He read all of Forster’s books, and eventually cameback to Maurice. Ivory, who is openly gay, said:

“It was interesting material and would be enjoyable to make, and also something we could make in that it wouldn’t require too much organization and wouldn’t cost all that much. People’s turmoil and having to decide for themselves how they want to live and what their true feelings are and whether they’re going to live honestly with them or deny them. That’s no different. Nothing’s any easier, for young people. I felt it was quite relevant.”

Following Forster’s death, King’s College at Cambridge inherited the rights to his books. They were initially reluctant to give permission to film Maurice, not because of the subject matter, but because it was considered an inferior work. Ismail Merchant, Ivory’s partner in life and art, was very persuasive and won them over.

Forster was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 16 different years.

January 1st: It’s YOUR Birthday, Bitch!


#QueerQuote: “Hangovers Are Another Bad Sign, and You Should Not Expect To Be Believed If You Take Refuge In Saying You Can’t Properly Remember Last Night. (If You Really Don’t Remember, That’s an Even Worse Sign.)” – Christopher Hitchens

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via YouTube

 

Christopher Hitchens (1949-2011) was a polymath, a charmer, and a bisexual troublemaker. He had wit and a keen appetite for verbal combat. Hitchens was in demand as a speaker on television talk shows, radio and stage, where he offered his controversial opinions in a sonorous, plummily accented voice that seemed at odds with his disheveled appearance.

He was a writer, columnist, essayist, orator; a religious, literary, and social critic; and an aggressive journalist. Hitchens was the author, and/or editor of 33 books, including five collections of essays on politics, literature and religion. His confrontational style of debate made him both a celebrated intellectual and a contentious public figure. He contributed to The Nation, The Atlantic, London Review of Books, The Times Literary Supplement, Slate, and Vanity Fair.

In his writings, he took on public figures such as Bill Clinton, Henry Kissinger, Mother Teresa and Princess Diana.

As an antitheist he regarded the concept of a god or supreme being as a totalitarian belief that impedes individual freedom. He argued that free expression and scientific discovery should replace religion as a means of informing ethics and defining codes of conduct for human civilization. His assertion: “What can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence” became known as “Hitchens’s Razor”.

Hitchens’s political perspectives also appear in his wide-ranging writings. He said of Libertarianism:

“I have always found it quaint, and rather touching, that there is a movement in the USA that thinks Americans are not yet selfish enough.”

Hitchens led a life filled with heavy drinking and smoking. He died from pneumonia, a complication of esophageal cancer. He learned he had cancer while on a publicity tour in 2010 for his memoir Hitch-22, and he began frequently writing and speaking on television about his cancer.

“In whatever kind of a ‘race’ life may be, I have very abruptly become a finalist.”

He emphasized that he had not revised his position on atheism, articulated in his best-selling book, God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything (2007), although he said he had an amused appreciation at the hope, among concerned Christians, that he might undergo a late-life conversion. It didn’t happen.

Hitchens died on December 15, 2011. According to gay writer Andrew Sullivan, his last words were: “Capitalism. Downfall.”. In accordance with his wishes, his body was donated to medical research. Of course, Hitchens wrote a book about his cancer. Mortality was published in 2012.

#Happy2018!: The World Celebrates the New Year in 39 Different Time Zones. Watch

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Contrary to the U.S.-Centric idea that New Year’s starts when the ball drops in Times Square, other parts of the world have their own celebrations. So, get over yourself New York, Samoa is always the first to ring in the New Year. (American Samoa, just 101 miles away, has to wait a full day.)

You can thank time 39 different zones for that, which means it took 26 hours for the entire world to enter 2018. (You can watch Hong Kong‘s massive celebration below.)

If you’re REALLY adventurous (and if you happen to have a private plane), you can fly from Sydney to Honolulu and enjoy the celebrations twice in one day!

Here’s how the time zones celebrated, courtesy CNN:

Sunday, December 31, 2017
5 a.m. Samoa and Christmas Island/Kiribati
5:15 a.m. Chatham Islands/New Zealand
6 a.m. New Zealand with exceptions and five more locations/islands
7 a.m. Small region of Russia and six more locations
8 a.m. Much of Australia and eight more
8:30 a.m. Small region of Australia
9 a.m. Queensland/Australia and six more
9:30 a.m. Northern Territory/Australia
10 a.m. Japan, South Korea and four more
10:15 a.m. Western Australia/Australia
10:30 a.m. North Korea
11 a.m. China, Philippines and 10 more
Noon Much of Indonesia, Thailand and seven more
12:30 p.m. Myanmar and Cocos Islands
1 p.m. Bangladesh and six more
1:15 p.m. Nepal
1:30 p.m. India and Sri Lanka
2 p.m. Pakistan and eight more
2:30 p.m. Afghanistan
3 p.m. Azerbaijan and eight more
3:30 p.m. Iran
4 p.m. Moscow/Russia and 22 more
5 p.m. Greece and 31 more
6 p.m. Germany and 43 more
7 p.m. United Kingdom and 26 more
8 p.m. Cabo Verde and two more
9 p.m. Regions of Brazil and South Georgia/Sandwich Is.
10 p.m. Argentina, regions of Brazil and nine more
10:30 p.m. Newfoundland and Labrador/Canada
11 p.m. Some regions of Canada and 29 more
10 cities that always throw a great New Year’s Eve show

Monday, January 1, 2018
Midnight US (East Coast), regions of Canada, Colombia and 11 more
1 a.m. US (Central), Mexico and eight more
2 a.m. US (Mountain) and two more
3 a.m. US (Pacific) and four more
4 a.m. US (Alaska) and regions of French Polynesia
4:30 a.m. Marquesas Islands/French Polynesia
5 a.m. US (Hawaii) and two more
6 a.m. American Samoa and two more
7 a.m. Much of US Minor Outlying Islands

(via CNN)

DragCon LA Single Day Tickets Are On Sale Now!

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Happy New Year, hennies!

We know you’re probably at home recovering from New Year’s Eve and that’s totally okay, don’t even worry about it. This news will bring your hungover self from sadness and despair to happiness and elation!

Single day tickets for RuPaul’s DragCon LA 2018 are OFFICIALLY on sale. Like, right now! They’re up for sale on our Eventbrite page!

Sure, you want to experience the FULL weekend of events at DragCon, but sometimes you just can’t. We totally get it. It happens.

For those of you who can’t snatch up weekend or VIP tickets, you can now officially purchase a single day ticket for Saturday or Sunday.

Sadly, single day passes will not be sold for Friday’s Preview night. The only way to get in to that fabulous shindig is to buy a weekend or VIP ticket. But, anyway, we digress. The time has come for you to…

Go off into the night and purchase those single day tickets for your LIFE!

To make an informed decision, here’s the details on the ticket levels that are on sale in addition to single day tickets!

Weekend Tickets

Now 3 days instead of 2! Not only does the weekend ticket get you in Saturday and Sunday, it gets you into our expanded Preview Night on Friday! Get the new extended Weekend ticket for the same price as DragCon LA 2017 until the end of the year.

Doors open for Preview Night at 4pm and goes until 8pm. Access Saturday and Sunday to RuPaul’s DragCon Los Angeles starts at 10am.

Kids Tickets – Free!

All are welcome at RuPaul’s DragCon. Kids 10 and under on the day of DragCon are free with an adult with a ticket. When purchasing your ticket, make sure you add a free kids ticket. The kids ticket will grant them the same access to DragCon as the adult’s ticket level, but does not include VIP perks or access to the parties. Kids will be let in during VIP hours if the adult has a VIP ticket.

VIP Experience

The biggest VIP experience yet. No other DragCon ticket required because the VIP Experience gets you in early Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.   Get Your Tickets.

VIP Perks:

  • Extended VIP hours gives holders 3 extra hours!
  • 10% off merch at the World of Wonder booth
  • Priority seating for panels
  • A special acoustic performance on the Runway by Trixie Mattel during Preview Night’s VIP hours
  • Exclusive VIP Lounge with a cash bar and food, open Saturday and Sunday
  • Special Collector’s Edition Badge
  • VIP Line for Meeting RuPaul
  • Exclusive DragCon LA tote bag, hoodie, enamel pin, button, lanyard, and patch (picked up during registration at the Los Angeles Convention Center)
  • Autographed picture of RuPaul, with a certificate of authenticity, included in the VIP Merch Bag that is picked up during registration.

The VIP Experience does not include entrance to the separate DragCon Parties.

#NYE2018: Mariah Has Another New Year’s Eve “Disaster” on Live TV!? (NO HOT TEA?!)

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We all remember Mariah‘s live performance fiasco last New Year’s Eve. Well, this year, she’s back for more. According to her,

It’s a disaster!

We’re just kidding, but she was not. It’s &*%$#! cold! Diva wants her HOT TEA!

Watch.

She went on to give us some love & unite us with Hero.

Before Google: Ask the Librarian, Recently Discovered Cards Reveal How It Was Done

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Believe it or not, there was once a time without the Internet. If you needed an answer to a question, you asked a librarian.  Beginning in the 1940s, the NY Public Library started taking questions via telephone, and those would take the call typed the query onto a reference card and filed it away.

Recently, while cleaning out a desk, a library staff member found a recipe box labeled ”Interesting Reference Questions” with hundreds of cards with question asked. NYPL has been posting pictures of its contents to Twitter and Instagram using the hashtag #LetMeLibrarianThatForYou. They wrote:

”People came to the library for reference, but also for info on buying and selling, looking for inspiration, crafty project ideas, and even to find photos. In a world pre-Google, librarians weren’t just Wikipedia, they were people’s Craiglist, Pinterest, Etsy, and Instagram all rolled into one.”

The library said they always tried to answer inquiries right away, but the ones in the box might have been those for which they didn’t have an immediate response. Some are humorous: ”Is it possible to keep an octopus in a private home?”, while others are heartbreaking: ”Is it proper to go to Reno alone to get a divorce?”. Yet, they all are examples of human’s best quality, our endless curiosity.

Images courtesy of the New York Public Library

Does This Photo from 1970 Show a Young Madonna Crushing on Elvis Presley?

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Photograph from Detroit Press Archives

Taken September 11, 1970 in front of the Olympia Theatre in Detroit, many people believe that this photograph shows a 12-year-old Madonna Louise Ciccone in her native city, crazy to get close to The King.

Elvis Presley arrived in Detroit the day before his Olympia Theatre concert performance with all the enigmatic excitement of a Royal visit. His presence was electric.

That afternoon. Presley left his limousine and headed for the service entrance of the Detroit Hilton, where he had rented 75 rooms for his band, crew and entourage. His dark hair and dark outfit, along with and his cool, sly, sullen look behind those silver-rimmed blue sunglasses had the crowd of about 50 fans, mostly young and female, pushing and screaming as they surged around him.

Presley’s security team tried to clear a path, but he stopped and signed autographs. He didn’t talk to the girls. He didn’t have to. By the mid-1980s Madonna would be in the same situation, complete with practiced sneer-smile.

 

#BornThisDay: Filmmaker, Todd Haynes

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Photograph via YouTube

 

January 2, 1961Todd Haynes:

”In the quiet darkness of cultural learning, there are also little patches of the illicit. I hope that’s still true in academic or cultural life. It was a factor for me.”

Controversial among my ardent film fan friends, I think Hayne’s Carol is a masterpiece, and one my favorite films of 2015, but then again, I thought that it was a weird year. Something was in the air. That first whiff of Fascism? Maybe that’s why it resonated for me. The film received critical acclaim and many accolades including six Academy Award nominations, five Golden Globe Award nominations, and nine BAFTA Award nominations.

Directing Cate Blanchett in “Carol”, photo via YouTube

 

In 1987, when Haynes was 26-years-old, he began the first film that the public really noticed, though he had been making films since grade school. It was a film about Karen Carpenter titled Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story, with Barbie and Ken dolls playing siblings Karen and Richard Carpenter. The mock documentary was made while Haynes was working on his M.F.A. at Bard College (his undergraduate degree is from Brown, where he studied Art and Semiotics). To represent Karen’s anorexia, Haynes carved away the doll’s face as the film unfolded. Superstar is an intellectual exercise about roles and societal pressures. The critical reaction was characteristic of all Haynes’ films. Academics and critics loved it. But, it received a cease-and-desist notice from Richard Carpenter’s people and it was withdrawn from circulation in 1990 after Haynes lost a copyright infringement lawsuit.

Superstar became an underground hit, shown in museums, film festivals and clubs. The Husband saw it as a ”secret feature” at the Seattle International Film Festival in 1988 and raved about it. That cease-and-desist order from Richard Carpenter, ended up being a legal move that helped put Superstar on Entertainment Weekly’s Top 50 Cult Films Of All Time.

Around that time, Haynes was living in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, and he had been a founding member of Gran Fury, the artists’ collective within Act Up, the AIDS activist group. With Christine Vachon, his Brown classmate, he ran Apparatus Productions, a set up for short independent films that eventually produced Haynes’ first feature film Poison (1991). This film established Haynes as a leader of something called the New Queer Cinema, a movement that is as significant for the gay themed stories it told as for the way in which it told them from a gay point of view. Poison is a film with three interwoven stories: an AIDS-inspired horror film, a mock television documentary and a Jean Genet-ish story about a homoerotic experience at a French prison. It won the grand jury prize at that year’s Sundance Festival. More infamously, because Haynes had received a National Endowment for the Arts grant, it was taken up by Congressional Republicans and priggish Conservative commentators, who called it ”filthy gay porn”. Haynes’ little art film helped put a stop to federally funded films forever.

Haynes’ next film was the brilliant Safe (1995). Julianne Moore stars as a suburban woman with an undiagnosable environmental illness. It’s partly a horrifyingly intense study of suburbia and partly a comedy of manners. Wes Craven called it the scariest film of 1995. It also works as a metaphor for the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Unlike Poison, Safe tells a straight-ahead story. At the time, Haynes’ lover was sick from HIV, and Haynes visited him in the hospital in the mornings before going to the set.

Haynes first visit to Portland, where his sister lives, was to write Far From Heaven (2002) my favorite of his films, one of my favorites period, and his first box-office success. The film was nominated for four Oscars. Far From Heaven is a tribute to Douglas Sirk’s melodramas of the 1950s and early 1960s. Moore stars again, this time as a perfect 1950s housewife who discovers that her husband, played by Dennis Quaid, is gay; she then falls in love with a black man, played by Dennis Haysbert. I am just crazy for this flick.

I have spotted Haynes around Portland. He has come into my husband’s shop in downtown. This town is a lo-fi, a do-it-yourselfer’s paradise, and a place where, your career is not necessarily your entire identity. I have known people for weeks that never asked me what I did for a living. Haynes:

”When I moved to Portland, I was more social and productive than I’d ever been in my entire life. I remember being at an opening, talking to Gus, and people were just saying: ‘Hey Todd! Hey Todd!’ I just felt available, and I loved that feeling. In New York, if someone came and knocked on your door without telling you, you ‘d be like: ‘Get out’.”

This ”Gus” dude he mentions is Gus Van Sant, who directed me in Drugstore Cowboy (1989). Van Sant also lives in Portland.

Haynes, who is openly gay, bought an old Arts and Crafts bungalow not that far from my place. He planted a garden that is just nutty. But, the house is just a regular Portland Four-Square. You would never know it is the home of a man that directs Academy Award nominated films.

Original Cinema Quad Poster – Movie Film Posters

I am a big fan of his work. I always watch his homage to Glam Rock, Velvet Goldmine (1998) whenever I happen upon it while channel hopping. I have yet to sit down for his eight-hour version of Mildred Pierce (2011). Have you? I did really dig his enigmatic Bob Dylan story, I’m Not Here (2007), although it is all rather fuzzy; I was quite high when I saw it. But, I was cognizant for his contribution to the HBO documentary Six By Sondheim (2013).

This year, Haynes’ Wonderstruck was premiered at the Cannes Film Festival and opened in theatres in October. It is an adaptation of Brian Selznick’s children’s book of the same name. Wonderstruck stars Julianne Moore and is produced by Haynes’ frequent collaborator Vachon. The film looks at two deaf children, one in 1927 and the other in 1977, who embark on separate quests to find themselves. When asked why he’d made a children’s film, Haynes explained to NPR:

“I felt like it spoke to something indomitable about the nature of kids and the ability for kids to be confronted with challenges and the unknown and to keep muscling through those challenges.”

Haynes is set to direct an untitled Peggy Lee film based on a screenplay by Nora Ephron, starring Reese Witherspoon. He is also developing an HBO television series based on the documentary The Source Family (2012) about a utopian commune, and he is currently working on a documentary about the seminal band, Velvet Underground. Haynes:

”It will rely certainly on Andy Warhol films but also a rich culture of experimental film, a vernacular we have lost, and we don’t have, and that we increasingly get further removed from.”

Haynes has stated that the challenge has been that there is so little documentation on the band. However, there will be interviews with the surviving members and others from the 1960’s arts scene:

”They’re the most influential of bands, as Brian Eno said, everybody who bought Velvet Underground & Nico started a band. Their influence has nothing to do with sales or visibility or the ways we portion ideas of success.”

The Velvet Underground was formed in 1964 and they were one of the first bands to a mix the Avant-Garde with Rock ‘N’ Roll. The band was briefly managed by Warhol himself. The band’s 1967 debut album featured German model Nico. Commercially unsuccessful at the time, The Velvet Underground are now considered an iconic band and an inspiration for several generations of musicians. With Haynes track record, I just know this documentary will be totally amazing.

I sometimes ride my bicycle past his house, hoping he will look up from his gardening and say :”Hey, I need to have an old man on a bike in all my future films!”.

Thinking of Haynes on his birthday, I am reminded of a line from Poison:

”I can hear the angels farting on the ceiling.”


January 2nd: It’s YOUR Birthday, Bitch!

#QueerQuote: “Winter Walks Up and Down the Town Swinging His Censer, but No Smoke Or Sweetness Comes From It, Only the Sour, Metallic Frankness Of Salt and Snow.” – Mary Oliver

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Photograph by Rachel Giese Brown, Poetry Foundation via YouTube

 

Mary Oliver (born,1935) is an American gay writer. She has won the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize. The NY Times describes her as “far and away, this country’s best-selling poet”.

A prolific writer of both poetry and prose, Oliver publishes a new collection every year or two.

In the late 1950s, Oliver met photographer Molly Malone Cook, who became her partner of more than four decades. Oliver wrote “I took one look and fell, hook and tumble”. Cook worked as Oliver’s literary agent. The couple lived in Provincetown until Cook’s passing in 2005. Greatly valuing her personal privacy, Oliver has given very few interviews, saying she prefers for her writing to speak for itself. Of Provincetown she wrote:

“I too fell in love with the town, that marvelous convergence of land and water; Mediterranean light; fishermen who made their living by hard and difficult work from frighteningly small boats; and, both residents and sometime visitors, the many artists and writers. M and I decided to stay.”

#TransformationTuesday: QWERRRKOUT feat. LukesLyka

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Transformation Tuesday just got a whole lot QTer…New queers featured every week! Tag us, take a pic of us and follow us on Instagram at QWERRRKOUT, and you too could be the next QT! YOU BETTA QWERRRK! (Mx Qwerrrk pic by Santiago Felipe, illustration by Piepke)

LukesLyka

Age: 27

Location: London, England

About:

 

“My two aesthetics…Baldemort is a self-taught MUA with menswear degree and knack for creation…LukesLyka is a weird/twisted club kid, host and ‘perfomer’.

My obsession with costume and dressing up was put properly into practice when, at 20, alopecia happened and I started painting my head. I took these looks to clubs and was welcomed into the London scene when our club kid culture was just blossoming, eventually building up a good enough repertoire to be trusted enough to try my hand at transforming others.
I’ve since collaborated with some amazing people creating amazing work. The opportunities have taken this pale being to sunnier places. There are talks that I’ll be sunburnt hosting in San Paulo next year.”

Instagram: lukeylah

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Paris Hilton Is Engaged! Again! (And Check Out that ROCK!)

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Condragulations, Paris Hilton!

The perennially blonde heiress/perfume mogul/DJ announced her engagement to actor Chris Zylka over the weekend. You know Chris’ face. He’s been in a gazillion teen TV shows (Twisted! The Secret Circle! The 90210 reboot! The 10 Things I Hate About You TV series!), usually playing a dickwad of some sort. He’s currently starring on The Leftovers, which I don’t watch but I’ve seen the GIF so I’m a bit of an expert.

“I said Yas!” Hilton gushed Tuesday on Instagram. “So happy & excited to be engaged to the love of my life. My best friend & soulmate. Perfect for me in every way. So dedicated, loyal, loving & kindhearted. I feel like the luckiest girl in the world! You are my dream come true! Thank you for showing me that fairytales do exist.😍

via Page Six:

Before going public with the exciting news, Hilton was seen flashing her engagement bling to pals at Aspen’s 1Oak pop-up Friday night.

“Paris was running around with her ring, telling everybody they are engaged. She looked really happy,” a witness told Page Six at the time.

Hilton, 36, and Zylka, 32, who first met eight years ago at an Oscar party at LA’s famed Chateau Marmont, made their romance Instagram-official last February.

Pics from her instagram below.

On her magnificent glacier-like diamond, she tells People:

“The ring was so gorgeous and sparkling. I was shaking as I put it on. It is the most beautiful ring that I have ever seen!”

I’ll say!

Paris, of course, has been engaged before. First to model Jason Shaw in 2002 and then Greek shipping heir Paris Latsis in 2005 (I still mourn the loss of that relationship – Ah, what could have been). Here’s hoping third time’s a charm!

(Photos: Media Punch and Instagram)

Logan Paul Apologies (Twice!) Over Dead Body Video, but Twitter Isn’t Having It

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Lots to unpack here. Have you been following the story?

Sunday afternoon, famous YouTuber Logan Paul uploaded a 15-minute video showing him and his friends going to the Suicide Forest at the base of Japan’s Mount Fuji – named for the high number of self-inflicted deaths that happen there.

In the extremely graphic video – which he says he filmed to call attention to the issue of suicide – he stumbles upon a dead body hanging from a tree. He giggles uncomfortably, and zooms in while police are called.

“Yo, are you alive?” he says in the video. “Are you fucking with us?”

He has since deleted it and offered multiple apologies.

The first:

And later had this to say:

Twitter, though, was positively apoplectic, as you can imagine, with celebrities like Aaron Paul, Game of Thrones’ Sophie Turner, 13 Reason’s Why Christian Navarro, Jeffree Star, Andy Richter and others weighing in on the controversy.

As many people have pointed out, his apology has a lot of holes in it. First of all, he should have just known better, period. If his intention was to shed light on suicide, he could have simply spoken about his experience in the forest and what he saw. That he filmed it, showed the body, zoomed in on it, then edited it – keeping the laugh in!– and STILL SAW NOTHING WRONG with anything he did, shows a serious lack self-awareness, integrity, and moral principals. His apology is no better, riddled, as it is, with self-aggrandizing statements that are all very strange and disturbing.

What do you think? Did you watch it? Will you accept his apologies? What should be the ramifications for something like this?

(Photo: MediaPunch)

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