November 24, 2011

Shirtless "Teen Wolf” and the Sun gods


  
Written by Instinct Staff 
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Marco da Silva_4Matt and Cameron_3
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As we prepare to travel over the river and through the woods to Grandmother's house, we can only hope that this wolf is hot on our trail. Yum. After the jump, check out Tyler Posey playing shirtless with his band Lost in Kostko and giving the other teen wolves a run for their money.

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Watch Zombie Mitt Romney

    New York Mag


 

 Will Mitt Romney's run for the White House include a cameo on The Walking Dead?
In the wake of Romney's campaign ad, which blatantly took a Barack Obama quote out of context, and his declaration in Tuesday's debate that America "wants the brains" of foreign scientists and engineers, New York's  Jonathan Chait noted that the line "desperately needs to appear in an attack ad, juxtaposed against images of an army of moaning zombies that Romney may or may not plan to unleash on America if elected." Chait's call was seconded byBusiness Week's Joshua Green, who tweeted: "I eagerly await the Romney/zombie ad ... Don't let me down internet!"
Jonathan, Joshua, and the rest of the politics-and-zombie-loving Internet: Your prayers have been answered.







‘Ex-gay’ lobbyist alleges gay rights advocate put Hit on Him } They Still do That?


Staff Reports    lgbtqnation.com
 BURLINGTON, Vt. – Truth Wins Out, a non-profit advocacy group that fights anti-LGBT extremism, has reacted with outrage and disgust over a television interview in which Greg Quinlan, President of Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays (PFOX), who claimed that TWO Executive Director, Wayne Besen, put a hit out on his life.
Wayne Besen (left) and Greg Quinlan.
Quinlan, a lobbyist for the New Jersey Family Policy Council, appeared in an interviewwith Mark Segraves on WDCW-TV in Washington, D.C. on Oct. 7 — the comments, first noticed by Ex-Gay Watch, came to TWO’s attention on Tuesday.
Throughout the show, Quinlan distorts reality and flat out dissembles on several subjects, and fabricated an alleged hit on his life, said TWO, in a statementWednesday.
“Truth Wins Out if you look further, including Wayne Besen. He’s asked for people, you know, somebody needs to run Greg over. He needs to be hit with a bus. Somebody should inject him with AIDS. Those are the things that Wayne Besen and Truth Wins Out says about me. That’s pretty hateful rhetoric,” said Quinlan.
“The bizarre and defamatory scenario portrayed by Quinlan exists only in his own mind,” said Besen. “What he said is entirely fabricated and a dishonest and brazen attempt to smear me personally, destroy my reputation, and discredit the good work of Truth Wins Out.”
Besen called the remarks “outright libel” and a “complete fabrication that he invented out of thin air.”
The integrity of PFOX has long been questioned. Its former president,Richard Cohen, was expelled for life from the American Counseling Association for multiple ethics violations. A key member of the organization’s Speaker’s Bureau, Arthur Abba Goldberg, is a convicted felon sent to prison for financial fraud.
In 2010, Quinlan attended a conference organized by Americans for Truth About Homosexuality, a group that is listed as a certified Southern Poverty Law Center hate group. During his speech at the meeting, Quinlan disparaged LGBT people and said that when he used to live as an openly gay man he wasn’t a “flaming faggot.”
“I wasn’t your flaming faggot, you know,” Quinlan told the chuckling crowd. “I can say that because I’ve been there and done that. You know, the one’s whose wrists are so limp that when the wind blows they slap themselves in the face. I wasn’t one of them.”
“It speaks to Quinlan’s character that he lies so easily and simply makes things up,” said Besen.
“I’d be willing to take a lie detector test to prove my innocence and to show that I’ve never said such vile words,” he said. “Will Quinlan also take these tests to prove the ‘veracity’ of his calumny?”
Besen commented that his organization is exploring its legal options.

AIDS/HIV } New Controversial Proposals From NYC Health dept.


BY DUNCAN OSBORNE    chelseanow.com  

Lesson
Among a number of proposals that could be controversial, New York City’s health department wants to collect more information on people with HIV and to change state regulations to allow it to more widely use and share that information with doctors and other health departments, according to a prevention plan it filed with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

“The concern is that they are trying to expand how they will use surveillance data,” said Kristin Goodwin, director of New York City policy and organizing at Housing Works, an AIDS group. “The concern is that somehow people’s data would be released for other purposes.”

As part of a CDC-funded project, the 12 jurisdictions with the highest AIDS prevalence developed three-year HIV prevention plans. Those plans were posted on the CDC’s web site on November 16.

The 68-page document produced by New York City’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) contains some proposals that AIDS groups support, but others are raising concerns. Several of the changes the DOHMH wants would require new state regulations or alterations to existing ones




When an individual is in the DOHMH’s HIV registry but is not in another jurisdiction’s registry, New York officials can only share the names of the HIV-positive person’s sex partners from that jurisdiction –– not the name of the HIV-positive person himself. The DOHMH wants to be able to share all of its data on such an HIV-positive individual with another jurisdiction should that person move there.

With 34 states currently criminalizing exposing others to HIV or having sex with someone without disclosing one’s positive HIV status, the concern is that New York City’s health department could supply evidence that might contribute to a criminal prosecution.



The DOHMH also wants to share all of its case information on any person with HIV in its registry with any other jurisdiction that also has that individual’s name in its HIV registry.

The DOHMH has a database of the sex partners of HIV-positive people that it uses to perform partner notification services and for epidemiology studies. State regulations require that the partner’s names be deleted one year after any investigation is closed. The department wants to retain those names indefinitely. Failing that, the agency wants to keep the names for ten years.

The sex partner database appears to provide health officials with data helpful in tracking specific individuals. The DOHMH received information on 1,996 partners between September 1, 2006 and September 30, 2007, according to a study the department released in August. Of those, 1,270, or 64 percent, had sufficient identifying information –– first and last name and age or date of birth –– that the department could compare those names to its HIV registry and determine that 386 were already in the registry.

The DOHMH wants to be able to contact the doctor of any person who constitutes “an ongoing public health risk as a result of their being named repeatedly over time by different persons interviewed” by the agency’s Field Services Unit.

The department also wants access to Medicaid pharmacy billing records. That data would show which anti-HIV drugs Medicaid beneficiaries are taking. The DOHMH already receives viral load test results, which show how much HIV is in a person’s blood; T-Cell counts, which indicate the state of a person’s immune system; and drug resistance tests, which document which anti-HIV drugs a an individual’s virus has resistance to, so it could monitor how HIV-positive Medicaid beneficiaries are doing on a particular drug regimen.


In 2006, Thomas Frieden, who was then the city’s health commissioner –– and is now director of the CDC –– made a similar proposal, but he wanted the DOHMH to be able to contact an individual’s doctor if the viral load, T-Cell counts, and drug resistance information showed a person with HIV was doing poorly. That proposal was angrily resisted by some AIDS groups and their clients, and it did not result in any new policy.

The plan posted on November 16 also revealed that the DOHMH will meet with the city’s police department to try and gain support for a state bill that would bar using condoms as evidence in prostitution cases. AIDS groups support that legislation.

Other elements of the DOHMH and police interaction are less clearly beneficial. In addition to the condom legislation, the DOHMH wants to discuss “cross-cutting issues of policing and public health” with the NYPD, and the health department wants to present data, including “high risk behavioral surveillance data,” at police roll calls. The DOHMH is barred by state law from disclosing the names of people with HIV, but it could discuss locations where high risk behavior is taking place.

Responding to questions that were emailed on November 17, the DOHMH, on November 21, wrote, “Unfortunately, we will not have responses to your questions ready by the end of the day today. We are working on them and will have them to you as soon as possible.”

Housing Works’ Goodwin said keeping the sex partner data was troubling.

“I have issues with them feeling like it’s okay to track specific partners,” she said. “It’s this whole thing that specific individuals are more of a problem because of their risk behavior... It’s this very Big Brother feel to it.”

If the discussions with police concern only ending the practice of using condoms as evidence of prostitution then AIDS groups would approve, but broader conversations could be a problem.

“Hopefully, the education work is intended to discourage using condoms as evidence for sex work (which we hear sporadic reports of) and making improper arrests for syringe possession, and not sharing info about sex or drugs locations,” Sean Barry, a director at VOCAL-NY, a group that does political organizing among HIV-positive people as well as among drugs users and those formerly incarcerated, wrote in an email.

For Sean Strub, a longtime gay activist, the DOHMH proposals were part of a trend of health departments across the country collecting more and more information on people with HIV.

“This is all part of a disturbing trend towards an increasingly policing-oriented public health system that is about regulating and controlling rather than empowering people and preventing disease,” he wrote in an email. “People with HIV are being tested, tagged, and tracked; with ever-growing files on their private activities that can be used against them in criminal prosecutions.”

As Gay City News went to press, the HIV Law Project and the Gay Men’s Health Crisis (GMHC) said they were still studying the plan. The Center for HIV Law & Policy, the Latino Commission on AIDS, and Gay Men of African Descent (GMAD) did not respond to calls and emails seeking comment.

Conrad ‘Hilton' Auto Crash } Wine & Weed - Vid





Conrad Hilton 
-- Paris Hilton's 17-year-old brother who crashed into a parked car last weekend -- was driving with wine bottles, zig zag papers and a bottle of medical marijuana in his vehicle.

TMZ broke the story and posted surveillance video of Conrad slamming into the car in Brentwood, CA., at 12:45 AM Saturday, after leaving a nightclub in West Hollywood. 

Hilton left the scene after exchanging information before cops arrived on scene.  Cops told TMZ Hilton would not be cited or arrested.   And Hilton's dad, Rick, told TMZ the accident occurred as his son tried to avoid a dog in the road.

But now we've obtained photos of Hilton's car after the crash, which show a bottle ofmedical cannabis, zig zag papers and 2 unopened wine bottles.  

A neighbor who was first on the scene tells TMZ ... "He was taking a piss in the driveway of my neighbor ... he said, 'I'm sorry sir.  I am drunk and I have done a very stupid thing.'"  The neighbor adds, Hilton pleaded for him not to call the police or his parents.  

The neighbor says he asked Hilton why he was driving drunk, and he said, "Because I'm a f**k-up.  You cannot call my parents.  They're on vacation, I'm 17 and out past curfew."

The neighbor says Hilton "smelled of weed and alcohol and his eyes were bloodshot."

And there's this ... The neighbor says Hilton dangled his wrist in front of him and said, "See this bracelet.  It costs $11,000.  I can pay for everything."  Another neighbor confirmed the story.

The neighbor says someone in a BMW came by, picked Hilton up, and drove away.

Cops tell us ... there's nothing they can do once someone leaves the scene, because there's no way of proving the items inside the car weren't placed there after Hilton left.  As for Hilton leaving, cops say he did so legally, because he left the appropriate identifying information.

See surveillance video of the crash below:

George Michael With Pneumonia } Cancels Show

  showbizspy.com


GEORGE Michael has been forced to cancel a host of concerts after being diagnosed with pneumonia.
The ‘Faith’ singer was hospitalized on Monday in Vienna, Austria, and had to axe his gig in the city as well as a concert in Strasbourg, France.
However, he is still not fully recovered and has canceled two performances in Cardiff, Wales, which were due to take place later this week.
A statement on his website read, “With great regret, George Michael has been forced to postpone his November 26 and 27 shows in Cardiff, Wales, due to his on-going illness.
“George was recently forced to postpone tour dates in Vienna and Strasbourg under doctor’s orders after being diagnosed with pneumonia. He is currently receiving treatment.”
His representative added, “Plans to reschedule these postponed tour dates will be provided when available.”
George, 48, will stay in Vienna until he is fully recovered from the illness.
His concert promoter Manfred Leodolter said, “George Michael is still in Vienna. Doctors have warned him for the moment against flying and he is getting rest in Vienna”.
Last month, George apologized to fans after he pulled out of his secondSymphonica: The Orchestral Tour show at London’s Royal Albert Hall because of back problems, a viral infection and high temperature.
The canceled Royal Albert Hall show will now take place in May next year.

Argentina } With Equal Marriage It’s Become A-OK in our Community


Argentina’s capital Buenos Aires has gained increasing popularity as a gay destination, largely due to recent liberalization laws which have supported gay and lesbian lifestyles, reports Pink Choice.
Bandera Argentina
    Argentina has approved same sex civil unions were approved and later Congress passed a gay marriage law conferring full equal rights to same sex couples.
    “So, with an open minded philosophy, and with some of the feel of a European city, Buenos Aires can now be added to the list of up and coming gay destinations for LGBT travelers looking to vacation further afield from previously tried and tested gay hotspots”, points out Pink Choice.
    The city with its broad-minded attitude doesn’t have a gay neighborhood as such. Instead, gays and lesbians socialize in the many cafes and trendy restaurants that populate the city. The districts of Recoleta, Barrio Norte, Palermo and San Telmo have a particularly gay feel, and are some of the safest areas of any major city in South America.
    The city offers a wide variety of gay and gay-friendly accommodation ranging from apartments, guesthouses as well as the ‘straight-friendly’ Axel Hotel.
    Furthermore this summer a gay cruise is expected to call in Buenos Aires.

    Raleigh NC } Referendum on Gay Marriage for the State Constitution



    RALEIGH – Behind-the-scenes efforts are slowly gearing up for a referendum next May in which North Carolina voters will decide whether to engrave a ban on gay marriage into the state constitution. Pro- and anti-amendment forces are assembling campaigns that will raise money and build support for their causes
    .
    In an era of increasing acceptance of same-sex relationships in the U.S., well-funded national groups that view North Carolina as a flashpoint on the gay marriage issue are preparing to get out their checkbooks. At least one is already spending in a bid to sway the outcome May 8 in the only Southeastern state that doesn’t limit marriage to a man and a woman in its constitution. The winning side may need millions of dollars.
    “Money is what gives us the resources to win,” said Jeremy Kennedy, of the newly formed Coalition to Protect North Carolina Families, the referendum campaign committee opposed to the constitutional change. The salaries of two coalition employees already are being paid by the Washington-based Human Rights Campaign
    .
    TV or radio ads and campaign mailers are expected to reach voters in the weeks leading up the referendum, although exactly how many will be seen and heard may depend on the polling or perceptions that the outcome is uncertain. Voter registration drives, debates on college campuses and pulpit sermons also are in the works.
    “There’s a massive organization going on, and we are extremely excited about having the opportunity to let our voice be heard,” said the Rev. Patrick Wooden, pastor of Upper Room Church of God in Christ in Raleigh, a predominantly black congregation that supports the amendment
    .
    Thirty other states already have approved constitutional amendments designed to prevent same-sex marriage. North Carolina state law already limits marriage to a man and a woman, but amendment supporters persuaded enough General Assembly members in mid-September that voters should be allowed to decide. The new Republican-led majority at the Legislature agreed to consider the question after it was blocked for years when Democrats were in charge
    .
    Amendment backers say they want to protect traditional marriage by making it harder for a legal challenge by same-sex couples from other states who want their marriages to be recognized. Opponents said expanding gay rights – not constricting them – is on the right side of history, pointing to six states and the District of Columbia were gay marriage is legalized.
    It’s too soon to determine whether the amounts spent on referendums in other states will be spent in North Carolina, said John Dinan, a political science professor at Wake Forest University. Often money pours in during the last month before such a referendum, he said.
    “People are just trying to get a sense of will this be competitive,” Dinan said.
    The pro-amendment campaign is in the planning stages and expected to be unveiled in a week or so, said Tami Fitzgerald, executive director of the North Carolina Values Coalition. Wooden said a positive message is being planned about the pre-eminence of traditional marriage in society
    .
    The Washington-based Family Research Council also plans a statewide bus tour next spring in support of traditional marriage and other causes, said Tom McClusky, a council vice president. He adds the group’s legislative arm will pay for radio ads next year supporting the referendum, as they did in September before the Legislature’s vote.
    Kennedy said the amendment debate will go beyond that just discrimination against people over their sexual orientation because the change would harm all unmarried couples.
    The amendment would make marriage between a man and a woman the “only domestic legal union that shall be valid or recognized in this state.” It would bar local governments – there are currently eight in the state – from offering benefits to domestic partners of employees. Other legal experts argue it could invalidate domestic violence protections for married couples and affect child custody cases
    .
    Kennedy said plans are still being worked out but the coalition will include gay rights groups, social and racial justice organizations, religious leaders and progressive businesses. The coalition will have field offices and seek support on campuses and in churches.
    “We are really going to be a united coalition,” he said. “This isn’t just about gays and lesbians.”
    Other groups, including Hickory-area based Faith in America and the Asheville-based Campaign for Southern Equality also are participating in opposition efforts to the amendment. Southern Equality held a two-week demonstration last month in which same-sex couples sought marriage licenses at the Buncombe County registered of deeds offices.
    The pro-amendment effort got a boost this month when the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina voted for a resolution endorsing the amendment. The convention’s new president, the Rev. Mark Harris, also pledged to work with the convention’s 4,300 churches to get the amendment passed
    .
    Both sides are seeking advocates with enthusiasm like that of Lydia Lavelle, a Carrboro town council member.
    An N.C. Central University law professor, Lavelle has participated in two legal forums on what she calls the amendment’s broad consequences for domestic partners. She wants to distribute information to female attorneys and leaders in other municipalities about the amendment.
    “Everyone has kind of unique abilities,” said Lavelle, who registered with her longtime female partner in Carrboro this year. “Sometimes I have to rein myself in with all of the things that I can do.”

    Poland } Far Right Gets Away With Court Recognized ‘No Gay Sex’ Logo


     











    WARSAW — Polish gay rights campaigners on Wednesday denounced a court ruling that allowed a far-right movement to formally register a homophobic symbol as one of its logos.
    "Such symbols tap directly into fascist, neo-facist and xenophobic traditions, and intolerance," Robert Biedron, a top campaigner and newly-elected lawmaker from the left-wing opposition, told reporters.
    Biedron, who is Poland's first openly-gay member of parliament, urged the justice ministry to step in.
    In a little-noticed decision at the end of October, a court allowed the small National Rebirth of Poland (NOP) party to register two symbols.
    One was the Celtic cross, used by far-right movements internationally, while the other was a stylized illustration of gay sex with a bar through it.
    The NOP trumpeted the court ruling on its website earlier this week, saying it capped a two-year legal battle.
    Grzegorz Schetyna, a senior player in Poland's ruling centrist Civic Platform, accused the judge who made the ruling of failing in his duties.
    "Such symbols are unacceptable," he told the station Radio Zet.
    The No turns out regularly to oppose gay rights rallies in Poland (AFP/File, Jacek Bednarczyk) The homosexual community in Poland -- where more than 90 percent of the 38-million-strong population is Roman Catholic -- has in the past complained of living in a "climate of fear".

    Opinion surveys show that 80 percent of Poles oppose gay marriage and 93 percent believe gay and lesbian couples should not have the right to adopt children. Two out of three Poles oppose gay rights demonstrations.
    The NOP has been back in the spotlight after clashes with police during Poland's Independence Day celebrations on November 11.

    Dave Letterman Jokes about Marcus Bachmann } “and if you are gay, god will take care of you” [ Video CBS did not show]

    The Video Clip that CBS would not Allowed to be viewed, afraid that religious factions might be offended. But nowadays there are no secrets on the net. Thanks to YouTube I am showing it to you:

    GLADD } Let Aunt Betty Feel Awkward by Thinking Straight about Being Gay

      qsaltlake.com       turkey

    Amidst the turkey, gravy and stuffing, the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation is encouraging queers and their allies to speak up at the Thanksgiving dinner table. In a recent study of American’s who have a positive view toward queers, four out of five said they personally knew someone who identified as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender.  GLAAD wants to help make even more people aware that they have friends and family members who are queer.
    “The fact is, while you’re scarfing down mashed potatoes and staying silent while everyone else at the table is freely speaking their minds, you’re missing a golden opportunity to make real, honest progress by talking about your life, and the things you care about. It’s OK if Aunt Betty feels a little awkward at first, it’s important for her to know that someone she loves cares deeply about LGBT equality. And the more we all talk about what’s important to us, the less awkward those conversations will become,” GLAAD said in statement. “Speaking openly and honestly about your life with your loved ones is one of the best ways for all of us to move forward together.” 
    This Thanksgiving, Let Aunt Betty Feel Awkward
    The LGBT community has a ton to be thankful for from the past year. But we also have a long way to go. And believe it or not, putting down that forkful of stuffing for a minute and just talking about yourself (if you’re able to) this Thanksgiving can make a huge difference. We’ve all had those Thanksgiving dinners where Aunt Betty decides this is the perfect time to discuss a year’s worth of ailments and medical treatments. Well, you know what? If she can talk about her podiatrist, you can talk about your partner.
    The fact is, while you’re scarfing down mashed potatoes and staying silent while everyone else at the table is freely speaking their minds, you’re missing a golden opportunity to make real, honest progress by talking about your life, and the things you care about. It’s okay if Aunt Betty feels a little awkward at first, it’s important for her to know that someone she loves cares deeply about LGBT equality. And the more we all talk about what’s important to us, the less awkward those conversations will become.
    Speaking openly and honestly about your life with your loved ones is one of the best ways for all of us to move forward together.
    This was a banner year for the movement towards LGBT equality. The number of same-sex couples who can get married in the United States doubled when New York legalized marriage equality. Gay men and women are now legally allowed to serve openly in the U.S. military. Millions of people “went purple” around the world to show support for LGBT young people on Spirit Day. Chaz Bono brought unprecedented awareness of the transgender community when he was picked to compete on Dancing with the Stars. Numbers came out showing that in the past decade, the number of same-sex couples who have adopted children in the United States has more than tripled, from fewer than 6,500 couples to nearly 22,000.The Bottom Line.
    At GLAAD, we try to amplify the voices of the LGBT community in the media, so that people in households all across America have a better idea about what it means to be LGBT. But there’s no substitute for getting that info firsthand. Talking about our lives with our loved ones and family members is vital to advancing equality. It doesn’t just put a human face to an otherwise politically charged issue. It puts YOUR face on the issue. And to people who care about you, that really matters. So go ahead and tell your stories. Be true to who you are around your loved ones this Thanksgiving. And even if Aunt Betty feels a little awkward this year, she’ll be greeting you with open arms and asking you for info next year.

    Trekkies } ‘Star Trek’ 3D Sequel To Open 18 Months


    Deadline.com


     NIKKI FINKE
    EXCLUSIVE: Sony moved Roland Emmerich’s Singularity from May 17th, 2013, to Nov 1, 2013. So now Paramount is grabbing that primo pre-Memorial Weekend date of May 17, 2013 for its much anticipated writer/director J.J. Abrams’ Star Trek sequel (which is really No. 12 among the Captain Kirk/Dr Spock star fleet movies). No title yet. But this one is being co-written by Abrams with Lost‘s Damon Lindelof, plus Alex Kurtzman & Roberto Orci. But JJ is going to be making the movie in 3D. The first of Abram’s rebooted franchise opened May 8, 2009 for a $79M weekend and ultimate did $258M in North America and $130M international at the box office. The pic is being produced by all those writers and Bryan Burk, who is JJ’s Bad Robot production partner. It is anticipated that David Ellison’s Skydance will be co-financing the film with Paramount. All key cast members will be returning, like Chris Pine and Zach Quinto and Zoe Saldana.
    Paramount took a real risk rebooting what many thoiught was a tired franchise played out but the studio wound up with another potent franchise. That’s because Abrams’ reboot widened well beyond Star Trek‘s rabid but older fanbase and attracted a new and younger audience. (Paramount marketed the movie as “not your father’s Star Trek”.) And the critical reviews were 96% positive. The goal of the new pic was to finally attract more filmgoers overseas since the franchise had never done $100M international before.
    As for the sequel, Abrams had to finish Super 8 so there was no way he could make the June 29, 2012 release date that Paramount initially had carved out for the film. (The studio gave that slot to its other sequel G.I. Joe: Retaliation.) Abrams had been hunkering down with writers Orci, Kurtzman, and Lindelof to work on the Star Trek script. The studio exercised its option on the cast and they would be ready when Abrams was.
    To Open :  May 17, 2013

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