Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Combined Gay News Headlines (T5T-1)

BRO Statement on Connecticut marriage equality ruling Statement from Jeana Frazzini, Executive Director of Basic Rights Oregon “Basic Rights Oregon has just learned that the Connecticut State Supreme Court this morning overturned a law excluding gay and lesbian couples from the right to marry as unconstitutional. “Today’s decision in Connecticut is a victory for all Americans who cherish [...]
The boycott against Bolthouse Farms, which was in direct correlation to the founder’s donation to the Protect Marriage campaign which petitioned for Proposition 8, has reached a settlement in order to cease the ongoing boycott. Californians Against Hate, who led the boycott, released a statement on Wednesday explaining that Bolthouse Farms is “committed to working productively [...]
It's been more than two years since Mark Foley garnered notoriety for sending salacious emails to congressional pages. The Floridian Congressman has since resigned, come out and been cleared of any illegal wrong-doing, which means it's a perfect time for right-leaning journalist James Kirchick to come out and blast the left for addressing Foley's misdeeds [...]
Marc Jacobs apparently still longs for his ex-love, Jason Preston, which must make things hard for the designer's current beau, Lorenzo Martone. [NY Post] Permalink | 2 comments | Add to del.icio.us | Digg Post tags: Gay, Gossip, Jason Preston, Lorenzo Martone, Marc Jacobs
Anthony Morley's murder trial took a queer turn yesterday. Morley, a cook and former Mr. Gay UK honoree (pictured), stands accused of killing and cooking his lover, Damian Oldfield, but Morley tells a different tale. According to him, he had told Oldfield that he wanted to slow the relationship down, but Olfield wasn't having it [...]
Poor Lindsay Lohan. The paps may love her, but the Sapphic-seeming actress can't catch a break with her fellow celebrities, including the far less fabulous Chace Crawford: …As super-pregnant M.I.A. performed at the Diesel XXX party in Dumbo, Lindsay Lohan desperately tried to get the attention of Chace Crawford. Lohan, who launched her 6126 line at [...]
"Fifty-three percent of Connecticut residents support Friday's historic ruling by the state Supreme Court that legalizes gay marriage, while 42 percent of residents polled said they do not. The weekend poll, taken for The Courant by the Center for Survey Research and Analysis at the University of Connecticut, showed a wide difference of opinion among [...]
We want on model Jacques' jock! Permalink | 3 comments | Add to del.icio.us | Digg Post tags: Morning Goods
We dedicate White Lion's 1989 hit "Little Fighter" to John McCain. He's just so precious! Permalink | 3 comments | Add to del.icio.us | Digg Post tags: Entertainment, John McCain, Music, Music Videos, White Lion
Joining the cacophony of political music videos, California-based drag queen Ms. LaReina DelBarrio took to YouTube to distribute this hip-hop track on John McCain and his running mate, Sarah Palin. CONTINUED » Permalink | 2 comments | Add to del.icio.us | Digg Post tags: Gay, John McCain, Ms. LaReina DelBarrio, News, Politics, Sarah Palin
Time once again to vote my fellow Canadians! Its the 40th General Election - October 14, 2008. Related Link: Elections Canada On-line
Well it’s Thanksgiving Day here in Canada — so its a day off for me to spend with my family… Here’s a link on the facinating history of Thanksgiving and Remembrance Day in Canada.
This week’s featured music video is from that wonderful babe, (I’d date her if I weren’t gay and hitched) P!nk: The Video: P!nk ‘So What’ - More of P!nk
HIV Plus Magazine Unveils Stylized New Website — Redesign of HIVPlusMag.com Coincides with the 10th Anniversary of the Title’s Print Edition. Redesign of HIVPlusMag.com Coincides with the 10th Anniversary of the Title’s Print Edition (Los Angeles, CA) - HIV Plus, the world’s most circulated publication for HIV awareness and education, proudly presents a newly redesigned website. The [...]
LAS VEGAS, NV (PRNewswire) — Bette Midler fans now have more chances to catch the Divine Miss M. in the biggest, hottest, sassiest show to ever hit the Las Vegas Strip: The Showgirl Must Go On; As Midler returns to the famous Colosseum stage at Caesars Palace to close out her super successful 2008 run, [...]
Read More... (http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hUQWDVi4tGl5uYAaXW7P-fXmk4PQD93LRV000)
Choose a Realtor Wisely to Save Money (http://nationalgaynews.com/content/view/4223/173/) Any time somebody decides to sell their home the cost of hiring a professional real estate agent is one of the biggest bottom line factors, and that is doubly true during a real estate recession like the one faced by Americans at the moment. Real estate brokerage fees contribute a substantial portion of overall costs and may be the most expensive line item charge on a real estate...
Mitcham Saddened by Status as Only Openly Gay Male Olympian Diver Matthew Mitcham says he was very surprised he was the only openly gay man in the Olympic village. In fact, a little sad. The gold medallist who won hearts with his incredible final dive at Beijing is proud of his sexuality but understands it can be a harder wrestle for other gay athletes to come out in the public arena. Mitcham was the only...
One of my NC readers, Kristy Ford, went to Asheville Pridefest last weekend, and it turned out to be a very strange experience. Unlike NC Pride, held here in Durham, on September 27 (my report here), the Asheville "celebration" was kept in the closet by the organizers, who held the event on private property, so the MSM wasn't allowed to shoot video or stills of the festivities. Kristy ended up being the "official" photographer, with all photos cleared by organizers.

This is sad -- isn't Pride about celebrating life out of the closet, as allies and LGBT? Here's Kristy's partner's take on Asheville Pride.

Out in Asheville, but not at Pride
Dr. Michelle Joshua

It's cool to be gay in Asheville, but don't be too proud about it. I recently participated in the 2008 Asheville Pridefest as a vendor. My company, Justly Wed, promotes wedding and commitment rings for the LGBT community. We're all about eradicating homophobia, one ring a time. And we thought that Ashville, during Pride weekend, would be a great venue. Even thought the weather was wonderful and the leaves had begun changing their brilliant fall colors, the turnout was shameful -- perhaps 500 people over the course of 8 hours.

We should have known something wasn't quite right when our friends, two out and proud lesbians who own a home less than a mile from downtown, suggested that they heard nothing about the Pridefest before this resident of Carrboro, NC, told them about it. They shrugged and suggested that perhaps it was not a big deal to attend a Pridefest when "everyday is like Pride around here." We got our second clue that something was not quite right when we pulled into the Pridefest venue, a private parking lot with a blocked entrance, across from a bar. It turns out that this spot, off a small side street and invisible to those downtown, was chosen, in part, because of its private property status, which allows organizers to prohibit media coverage and discourages protesters. Kali Brewer, Pridefest Organizer, told my colleague that the reason for the low-key status was because she wanted to respect some of the attendees' right to remain closeted. HUH?! It's a Pridefest, right?

The closet feel continued when Justly Wed co-owner, Kristy Ford, was granted the unofficial title of Photographer (the one and only). She was instructed to take shots of vendors and performers only. So, even though there were quite a few participants having fun last weekend, you won't see any of them in these photos.

More organizer-approved photos are here. What do you all think about this? Shouldn't an event of this sort, given Asheville is a progressive town, be a public event on public property so that people see there's nothing wrong with being out?

I can't imagine anyone proposing such restrictions on NC Pride.

Executive Summary:

If you're already involved with the Voter Suppression Wiki, please say hi on the introductions page, check out the help wanted, and jump into the discussions on planning and strategy.  If you're not involved yet, please join us at our new URL  http://votersuppression.net!    In any case, the rest of the post goes into some background on the purpose of these pages -- and how wikis help enable collaboration and community.

Details:

voter suppression wiki logo

With only three weeks to go until Election Day on November 4, it's time for the Voter Suppression Wiki to start shifting to action mode.  Our challenges at this point are pretty typical of nascent activism groups: building a large enough community and getting enough visibility to have an impact, linking up with partners and allies, getting good communications channels in place, and learning to work together effectively.

We're doing pretty well on all of these fronts, actually: with over 100 people involved we've got the core of a community; we're expecting more press attention later this week; and we've had initial discussions with allies like SourceWatch and their Election Protection Wiki, Twitter Vote Report's grassroots election-monitoring plan, and CREDO action's SMS-based Immediate Response Network.  There's also been a lot of good discussion on the wiki in threads like How can we do better at getting the word out? Still, tempus fugit; so now's a good time to start moving things forward more quickly.
A good place to start is with the hoary, but crucial, observation that our biggest asset is the people involved -- and their diverse skills, connections, experiences, and perspectives.  But just who are "we"?  In aid of this, I've set up an Introductions page on the wiki with threads where people can introduce themselves.*

Introduction threads serve several purposes: breaking the ice, conveying information, building community.  There's also the important psychological aspect of signing up for something publicly and saying "count me in".  Different people like to introduce themselves in different ways, so I set up several different threads.**  My guess is that as people participate, both the words and images will really highlight the wiki's diversity.

Another useful technique in moving to action is the help wanted page.  As Clay Shirky describes so well in Gin, Television, and the Social Surplus, wikis are great at aggregating small contributions from lots of people ... but how the heck are the people suppose to know what contributions will be must useful?  As is so often the case, a simple real-world analogy points out a plausible answer: help wanted information, letting people see for themselves what needs to be done and decide where they'll be most leveraged -- and to suggest other areas where help could be useful.

The  help wanted in turn links to several pages where feedback is particularly valuable -- in other words, people can help by participating in the conversation.  Top on the list is the planning and strategy page, because I think it's in many ways the most important page on the wiki.  This page has a couple of purposes: to let everybody know our best thinking about the current strategy is so they can make better decisions; and, just as importantly, to improve the strategy by getting more people's perspectives.  There are already several good examples of this, with great ideas about partnering with community technology centers, digging, and working with state blogs and community newspapers; the resulting strategy is going to be better than any of us would have come up with on our own.

I first started experimenting with wiki-based planning and strategy with the Ad Astra project when I was at GM of Strategy Development at Microsoft.  Even though it's still difficult for me to overcome my perfectionist aversion to  sharing in-process work that I know is incomplete, it always, always, always has worked out well for me.  Once again, diversity is a key here: I have blind spots and my knowledge is limited in a lot of areas; I'm a geek so I naturally tend to approach things from a techie perspective; and so on.  It's easy to sneer at the "wisdom of the crowds" phenomenon, but in situations like this my experience is that at really works -- and Scott Page's The Difference and other work in cognitive diversity presents powerful models for why.  So if you're skeptical, please suspend your disbelief temporarily and give it a try.

From a learning perspective, wikis' automatic versioning history is extremely useful for strategy pages.  For example, I -- or anybody else -- can go back to Get FISA Right's strategy from the beginning of July or mid-August, and see how we were thinking about things at the time.  What changed?  Which assumptions were or weren't valid?  What can we do better next time -- i.e., now, with the Voter Suppression Wiki, or whatever other projects people are working on?  A week from now, the Voter Suppression Wiki strategy is likely to have evolved significantly; how will today's version look in retrospect?

This kind of introspection is very important for net movement projects.  Understanding what's working and what isn't let's you make better use of your assets; looking at the past gives insight into the likely future if nothing changes -- and helps identify ways of doing better.  Other examples of this are the How can we do better at getting the word out? blog post/discussion thread combo, This time we're writing the history on Get FISA Right's wiki, and the series of analyses of information flow through the blogosphere and mainstream media (MSM) across multiple activism campaigns (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7)***.  We learn by doing; but we learn a lot more effectively by looking back at what we've done and thinking about it.

One thing to point out is that even though I've focused on a wiki-based project here, some of these techniques are very easy to apply in other environments as well.  Introduction threads work well on blogs or threaded discussion forums, and yes even Facebook discussion boards; Google Docs or spreadsheets could work for help wanted pages and strategy documents; and so on.  Personally, I like wikis (in case you hadn't noticed) and think that Wetpaint's discussion threads and social networking elements (friend relationships, compliments, etc.) make it particularly effective for involving people and building community; your mileage may vary.  So if you're thinking of applying these lessons to another activism project, please don't feel constrained by the technology.

The Voter Suppression Wiki, however, is very definitiely wiki-based.  So if you'd like to experience a wiki-centric project first hand, please, get involved!  Introduce yourself page, check out the help wanted, and jump into the discussions on the planning and strategy page and elsewhere ... and invite your friends!

jon

* A good lesson learned here: we didn't do this early enough with Get FISA Right, which helped contribute to the "who put you in charge?" dynamic that I mentioned in Paging Clay Shirky

** I chose threads because they're the easiest way for people to participate on a Wetpaint wiki, and because they show people's avatars.

*** and reveal important insights on topics like who picks up stories from who, the role of "MSM blogs" and the gaps between the progressive blogosphere and the black, feminist, LGBTQ, and social computing blogospheres

Congressman's $121,000 Payoff to Alleged Mistress. GOPerv former Congressman Mark Foley stepped down from his seat after his randy, nasty IMs with underaged House pages became public. I guess his successor, Tim Mahoney (D), decided to pick up where Foley left off and forge ahead with his own scandal. (ABC):
West Palm Beach Congressman Tim Mahoney (D-FL), whose predecessor resigned in the wake of a sex scandal, agreed to a $121,000 payment to a former mistress who worked on his staff and was threatening to sue him, according to current and former members of his staff who have been briefed on the settlement, which involved Mahoney and his campaign committee.

Mahoney, who is married, also promised the woman, Patricia Allen, a $50,000 a year job for two years at the agency that handles his campaign advertising, the staffers said.

Mahoney's office isn't responding to requests for comment but said Allen resigned on her own and "has not received any special payment from campaign funds."

But wait, there's more - he's a Dem Sexual Hypocrite:

The affair between Mahoney and Allen began, according to the current and former staffers, in 2006 when Mahoney was campaigning for Congress against Foley, promising "a world that is safer, more moral."

At the time, Mahoney's campaign ads featured a picture of him with his wife, Terry, with the line, "Restoring America's Values Begins at Home."

He's a piece of work -- he was caught on tape threatening to fire Allen when she said she wanted to break off the affair when she learned that she wasn't the only fling he was having, saying "You work at my pleasure."

Hat tip, TAG002.


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