Thursday, April 28, 2022

It's not rocket-science

Women should not be demanding to be called either "princess" or "queen" or demanding adoration and worship. Women should not be cooing about how "pretty" a woman's body is and how "ugly" a man's body is.

Saturday, April 23, 2022

vince_guaraldi 2 hrs

GOP Lawmaker busted using fake appointment for surgery to generate donations

https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2022/04/gop-lawmaker-sends-text-fake-gender-reassignment-surgery-appointment-raise-cash/?utm_source=LGBTQ+Nation+Subscribers&utm_campaign=c049f109da-20220422_LGBTQ_Nation_Daily_Brief&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_c4eab596bd-c049f109da-432215392

Monday, April 11, 2022

Sissy Man Blues

Small Sad Sam - Phil McLean 1961

Steve Greenberg - Big Bruce (Version 1)

Leah Zicari -- "Glory Glory," an Early GLBT Anthem -- Story & Music

Empire State Human, "Harvey Milk"

Comin' Down

Little Jackie Shane Live Frank Motley and The Hitchhikers LP

Jackie Shane "Any Other Way" (official audio)

Jackie Shane - Walking The Dog - 1965 R&B

Larry Paulette - What Makes a Man a Man

Charles Aznavour - Comme Ils Disent (1972)

Saturday, April 9, 2022

Ooh! Ooh! My! My! Oh! Oh! / Charlie Parker On Continental

4-F Blues / Charlie Parker On Continental

Rubberlegs Williams - I Want Every Bit Of It

WHATS THE MATTER NOW Clyde Hart-Dizzy Gillespie-Charlie Parker

THATS THE BLUES w/Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Don Byas

Oscar Pettiford Orch. feat. Rubber Legs Williams Worried Life (MANOR 100...

Smash Your Baggage .. 1932

Christopher Green is Music Hall Singer Fred Barnes

Fred Barnes circa 1932 Flexi 78 rpm

Perry Wood After Today Live 2 Highlights1

Friday, April 8, 2022

Sunday, April 3, 2022

Saturday, April 2, 2022

1st queer representative allowed by the str8s

On this day in 1974, On this date Kathy Kozachenko's successful bid for a seat on the Ann Arbor, Michigan city council made her the first openly Gay or Lesbian American to win public office in the United States. Although Harvey Milk is many times mistaken for this historic first, Kozachenko's election predates his win by a few years. Kozachenko joined the Human Rights Party in the early 1970s. The differences between the platforms of the HRP and local Democrats dwindled, yet "Kozachenko's run as an out Lesbian ... provided her with a distinction to set her apart". She would go on to comment that "'the Democratic Party started to look and sound like us, so the students found no need to vote for us if they were saying the same thing, so we found something different to say'". As an out student at the University of Michigan, Kozachenko rallied student radicals. They supported her progressive agenda, which included a fine of no more than five dollars for possession of small amounts of marijuana. Another part of her platform included "a ceiling on the amount of profit a landlord could make from rents on a building". Running solely against a liberal Democrat, Kozachenko was elected to the Ann Arbor City Council on April 2nd, 1974. She won the seat "representing the city's second ward by fifty-two votes". Kozachenko's HRP predecessors on the city council, Nancy Wechsler and Jerry DeGrieck, had come out as a Lesbian and a Gay man during their first and only terms on city council, thus becoming the first openly LGBT public-office holders in the United States. However, Wechsler and DeGrieck did not run for office as an open LGBTQ individual. Kozachenko is overlooked as the first openly Gay elected official in the United States. On the day after the election in 1974, The New York Times ran an article that ignored the election of Kozachenko, and instead focused on the marijuana tax referendum. When listing the winning candidates, the Times depicted her as "a student at University of Michigan who described herself as a Lesbian". In 2008, a reporter at the Washington Post misguidedly commended Gus Van Sant's Milk for "its poignancy in telling the story of the first openly Gay elected official in the United States, Harvey Milk". It was three days before LGBTQ historian Ron Schlittler set the record straight. (You’ll pardon the expression.) Kozachenko served one two-year term before leaving politics. She continued to work as an activist in Brooklyn and then Pittsburgh. She would later meet her long-time partner, MaryAnn Geiger (who died in 2010), and have one son.

Happy birthday, Sir Alec Guinness

In 1914 , Sir Alec Guinness was born, English actor (d. 2000); Guinness married the artist, playwright, and actress, Merula Salaman in 1938, and they had a son in 1940, Matthew Guinness, who later became an actor. All well and good, of course. But in his biography Alec Guinness: The Unknown, Garry O'Connor reveals that Guinness was arrested and fined ten guineas for a homosexual act in a public lavatory in Liverpool in 1946. Guinness avoided publicity by giving his name as "Herbert Pocket" to both police and court. The name Herbert Pocket was taken from the character in Charles Dickens' Great Expectations that Guinness had played on stage in 1939 and was also about to play in the film adaptation. The incident did not become public knowledge until April 2001, eight months after his death. The authenticity of this incident has been doubted, however, including by Piers Paul Read, Guinness's official biographer, who believes that Guinness was mixed up with John Gielgud, who was infamously arrested for such an act at the same period of time, though Read nonetheless acknowledges Guinness's essential bisexuality.

Happy birthday, Camille Paglia

In 1947, Camille Paglia was born today. American feminist writer, born; an American social critic, author and teacher. Her book, Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson , published in 1990, became a bestseller. She is a professor of humanities and media studies at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, PA. She has been variously called the "feminist that other feminists love to hate," a "post-feminist feminist," "one of the world's top 100 intellectuals" (which, along with $2.50 will, I believe, get you a ride on the NY subway system....if it's running) by the UK's Prospect Magazine, and "a feminist bisexual egomaniac." Paglia describes herself as a feminist and as a Democrat who voted for Bill Clinton and Ralph Nader, and even campaigned for John F. Kennedy as an adolescent. Her vocal skepticism of global warming, however, indicates her willingness to break with liberal orthodoxies. Her views on the legalization of recreational drugs and prostitution, and on the relaxation of sexual consent laws, are more libertarian. (Won't someone save us from Ayn Rand and her children?) She is a strong critic of much of the feminism that began with Betty Friedan's 1962 The Feminine Mystique and compared feminists — whom she considered to be victim-centered — to the Unification Church. At the same time Paglia's embrace of fetishism, pornography, sex work and most prominently, male homosexuality, effectively puts her at odds with the "family values" of American social conservatives.

Happy birthday, Hans Christian Anderson

Happy birthday, Hans Christian Anderson. Born 1805. Forget the silly Danny Gay, um...er...Kaye movie of yesteryear in which Hans sings to inchworms and measures all the marigolds. Anderson was an odd duck, all right, but odd in ways not even hinted at in that Technicolor monstrosity. The real story, on the contrary, might actually make a good film. One can already see the scene between his poor parents as they realize something is a little strange about the lad. When the other kids are out doing masculine things, like circle jerks and pulling wings off flies, all he wants to do is sew clothes for his dolls. Then we can have the scene where he decides to leave his place as an apprentice to a tailor to try to make it as an opera singer. He’s really torn about leaving, because he just loves being surrounded by all those clothes to sew. Then there’s his time of starvation on the road until he’s taken in by two Gay musicians who see to it that the hunky young man is plenty stuffed. Passed on to a middle-aged poet, and getting a little wiser, he decides it’s much more fun being kept than taking dancing lessons, as he had originally wanted, in return for services rendered. Eventually he makes it big as the greatest fairy tale writer in Europe, and the entire cast joins in the great production number, “It Takes One to Write One.”