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Virtual
victories
Whether it’s Moveon.org or the national parties,
21st century campaigning is all about the Internet, and the battle
for gay and lesbian rights is among the issues reshaping how political
battles are fought and won.
By Todd Henneman |
 
A
chorus of activism
Now launching the 25th anniversary season of the
New York City Gay Men’s Chorus, artistic director Jeffrey
Maynard talks about the group’s support of same-sex marriage
and youth empowerment, and about how the music has changed with
the times.
By Amy Shapiro |
 
Guinea
pigs for legal marriage
Our columnist and her family have joined a study
to detemine the effects of legal marriage in Massachusetts. Her
children may notice few changes, but to her they’re both
profound and blessedly mundane..
By Lis Eisenbud |
 
The
long road ahead
Fifty years after Brown v. the Board of Education,
people forget that most victories in the fight for racial equality
came after that court decision outlawing segregation.
For gays and lesbians, it's time to steel ourselves for the decades
of work we still have to do to achieve equality.
By Evan Wolfson, Executive Director, Freedom
to Marry |
 
Leaving
the United States of Medieval
If you ask our columnist, the October 8 gay boycott
didn’t go far enough. It’s time to let antigay states
form an imperfect union of the benighted and for every self-respecting
gay man and lesbian to leave for more-enlightened homelands.
By Charles Karel Bouley II |
 
Saving
Massachussets marriage
To protect equal marriage rights in the state from
a proposed constitutional amendment, the activist Web site SupportEquality.org
is boosting the campaigns of politicians who favor equality. At
least one marriage opponent has already been defeated.
By Jodi Sperber |
 
It's gettin' hot in here
Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11
comes out on DVD today—just in time for the documentary
film to take one last swipe at George W. Bush before the election.
By Chad Graham |
 
Out against David Dreier
Democratic challenger Cynthia Matthews, an out lesbian, is taking on U.S. representative David Dreier as the conservative Southern California Republican and favorite of the Bush administration continues to duck questions about his own sexuality
By Christopher Lisotta |
 
Same-sex
marriage's Fahrenheit 9/11
A new documentary inspires audiences to tears and anger with the
stories of two families torn apart by the lack of marriage equality.
To help the movie change hearts and minds about same-sex marriage,
says the filmmaker, the first step is to make sure people see
it.
By Kevin Kumala |
 
Merci,
but no thanks
Despite an amazing cast that includes Dianne Wiest and a Vanessa
Redgrave cameo, the limp French farce Merci Docteur Rey
never delivers on its promise.
By Stephen Rebello |
 
Horror
and heartbreak
A journey inside the mind of a murderer and child-rapist is doubly
chilling because it’s based on a true story.
By Dave White |
 
Nauseated in New York
Our reporter, in business drag, mingled with many charming Bush supporters at the Republicans’ recent convention. Then the night of the president’s speech arrived, and the truth of what these friendly, sincere people stand for could no longer be ignored. It’s a good thing he brought the barf bag.
By Paul VanDeCarr |
 
The
way of Will
Big Brother 5’s Will Wikle talks about strategy,
betrayal, and sharing a house with devout Christians.
By Bob Adams |
 
Malaysia's
long sodomy battle
Gay sex between men remains illegal and can be harshly punished
in this predominantly Muslim nation, but one victory was achieved
this month: The sodomy conviction of former deputy prime minister
Anwar Ibrahim was overturned, and he was released from prison
after six years. By Kevin Kumala |
 
Careers without borders
A physician’s “vision quest” to rediscover meaning in his career serves as a model for other floundering workers, while a U.S. expatriate’s Danish dilemma looks to our advice columnist like a opportunity for successful self-employment. By Ed Vladich |
 
Coming out...as Cuban
Why aren't there more Latino men visible in the gay rights movement?
Maybe because telling Mom you're gay is a little different for
a man whose family values masculinity above all else. By
Will J. Castillo |
 
Me
and the 'tweens
A single lesbian in the suburbs can start feeling a little lonely—and
exposed. So when two fifth-graders approach outside a discount
store, how honest should she be?. By Jenni
Spinner |
 
Boycott for Equality: Good move
If gays and lesbians show unity by dropping out of the economy
for 24 hours on October 8, we can make such a powerful impact
that the entire country will take notice of our demand for equality.
By Dale Duncan |
 
Boycott for Equality: Bad idea
Boycotts need to identify specific offending targets to achieve
their ends. Who will suffer from the proposed Boycott for Equality
on October 8? Friend and foe alike, including our own Human Rights
Campaign. By Mike Masters |
 
Lesbian,
Republican, and angry
What’s a nice Jewish lesbian doing in a political
party with a platform that’s antigay and antichoice? Trying
to win it back from the far-right activists who have steered it
away from one its core values: freedom. By
Carol L. Newman |
 
Hamm
brothers: Thanks, gay fans
Olympic champs Paul and Morgan Hamm talk about
their gay fans—and relatives—as they make their way
across the country in a post-Athens gymnastics tour. By
Cyd Zeigler Jr. |
 
Hedwig grows up
John Cameron Mitchell, writer-director and star
of Hedwig and the Angry Inch, is now a mentor to fellow
filmmaker Jonathan Caouette. In an Advocate.com exclusive interview,
he talks about how he discovered Caouette’s Tarnation.
By Bruce C. Steele |
 
Sixteen and ready to change the world
The Advocate’s third annual high school diary
begins as our diarist enters a new school—her third in Texas
in three years—and shares her ambitious plans to increase
queer visibility in her conservative community, a suburb of Houston.
By Paige Palmer |
 
“The Year of the Gay” at Notre Dame
The university’s gay and lesbian students
were tired of living in the dark ages, so in the past year they’ve
brought the school’s LGBT contingent into the media spotlight.
By Joanna Basile |
 
Mean people and marriage
The new film Mean Creek, about teenagers’
plotting revenge on a bully, includes one boy with two dads—and
a lesson about the real power of same-sex marriage. By
Bruce C. Steele |
 
Still swooning over Swoon
Recording a DVD commentary track for the film Swoon,
in which he starred, Craig Chester rediscovered things he didn't
want to know about himself and something about the importance
of the New Queer Cinema, back when it was actually still new.
By
Craig Chester |
 
Married and suing the IRS
The two men whose fluke wedding in 1971 was the
basis for Minnesota's judicial precedent banning same-sex marriage
now say the Internal Revenue Service owes them $793.28 because
they could not file their tax returns as a married couple.
By Mike Hudson |
 
"I do" by the book
Same-sex marriage has not just inspired political
books arguing the cases for and against: It's also generated a
terrific "how to" book and a moving photography document,
By Regina Marler |
 
Who will be the next McGreevey?
The New Jersey governor came out in a very public
and——belatedly——honest manner. Does that
now pave the way for the country's closeted celebrities, politicians,
and athletes to be open about their sexuality?
By Chad Graham, Senior News Editor |
 
McGreevey:
Bittersweet coming-out
The New Jersey
governor’s story as an openly gay man has just begun. Whether
he can transform it from a cautionary tale of failure to a story
of victory in the long fight for equality is now up to him. By
John Crabtree-Ireland |
 
Cop
of the year enters seminary
In an exclusive
excerpt from his autobiography, The Gay Face of God,
an ex-police officer and current openly gay archbishop recalls
his seminary days—and his break with the Roman Catholic
Church. By
Archbishop Bruce J. Simpson, Benedictine
Order of St. John the Beloved (an Old Catholic order) |

Learning
begins in bed
This month’s questions elicit advice on oral sex, what constitutes
an orgasm, overcoming muscle cramps, and how to avoid the transmission
of sexually transmitted diseases.
By Dr. Susan C. Ball

Archives
for previous online reports, news stories,
and commentaries are listed here.

FEATURED
STORY:
Kerrys
plan for gay America
An estimated 4 million gay and lesbian voters could
determine the outcome of perhaps the closest presidential race in
U.S. history. In an exclusive interview, John Kerry makes his case
for the gay vote. By
Chad Graham
CONTENTS
OF THE CURRENT ISSUE
LINKS
TO SITES RELATED TO THIS ISSUE
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|

Kerrys
plan for gay America
An estimated 4 million gay and lesbian voters could determine
the outcome of perhaps the closest presidential race in U.S. history.
In an exclusive interview, John Kerry makes his case for the gay
vote. By
Chad Graham |

A
bishops battle
Jon Bruno has been fighting for gays and lesbians in his church for
many years. Now hes fighting to hold the church together. By
Dan Allen
On
the record
A few notorious examples of how the Bush administration has steamrolled
over gay equality. By
Sarah Wildman
Bloggers
get active
From BlogActives powerful outing campaign to diary entries that
build fan bases, the voices of gay bloggers are louder than ever.
By
Etelka Lehoczky

Dude
looks like a lady
TBSs
reality show Hes a Lady will put 11 brawny straight guys
in touch with their feminine sides.
By Mike Goodridge
Le
Tigre purrs and roars
With
an accessible and energetic major-label debut, the feminist trio seems
poised forgasp!mainstream success.
By
Margaret Coble

BOOK REVIEW
ARCHIVES
MUSIC REVIEW ARCHIVES
VIDEO/DVD REVIEW
ARCHIVES

An
unmannerly preElection Day splenetic
Im too angry to write about this election, writes
Pulitzer Prizewinning playwright Tony
Kushner.
I think whats really driving me nuts is that 50% of my
fellow citizens are going to vote for Bush, and I dont understand
it.
It hasnt gone away
My Perspective guest columnist Ed
Ishmael
sees the effects of AIDS denial firsthand and urges those who remember
to speak up.
Rallying the college troops
Generation Q guest columnist Vincent
Intersimone
talks about ForGayMarriage.com, the site he helped create to mobilize
students in the fight for marriage equality.
Dear
Governor McGreevey...
Minority Retort columnist Alec
Mapa
welcomes the embattled New Jersey governor out of the closet and offers
some helpful hints.
Kerry for doubters
Left Hook columnist Richard
Goldstein
finds John Kerrys equivocation on same-sex marriage much more
palatable than the GOPs proud bigotry.

Bush's antigay rhetoric
If Bush's antigay rhetoric is chiefly to get him reelected, would
you expect him to be less antigay in a second term?
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| News |
| Second convict in Texas gay slaying set to die Tuesday
| Jerry Falwell urges Christians to vote
| Colorado Senate candidates clash over gays, bin Laden
| Holt campaigns on single issue: gay marriage
| Publishers of gay youth magazine protest after schools dump free copy
| Antigay nominee for EU justice fails to win support from panel
| National Coming Out Day marked by marriage rally in D.C.
| | Entertainment |
| Christopher Reeve dead at 52
| Indigo Girls lobby against Georgia marriage amendment
| Gay-inclusive sitcom Five Houses is back in business after seven years
| Rosie O'Donnell to appear on Queer as Folk
| Survey: Ellen DeGeneres's coming out had "most impact"
| Columbia Pictures green-lights Playing It Straight
| In the Life faces censorship over footage provided by Bush AIDS official
| Gay kiss in music video sparks furor in Taiwan
| First season of The Wire premieres on DVD
| | Health |
| Maryland comptroller: Taxpayers should know the names of HIV-positive people
| Los Angeles County officials contact porn companies about condoms
| Australian researchers devise breath test for liver damage
| | Events |
| Music video commemorating Matthew Shepard to premiere in NYC, October 12
| Elton John photos up for auction in NYC, October 14
| Utah AIDS group to hold awards reception October 15
| Bay Area to observe National Latino AIDS Awareness Day on October 15
| "The Leopard Spots" art exhibit on display in Santa Monica, Calif., through October 16
| Gay men's health summit October 16 in Chicago
| Living With AIDS Conference to be held October 16 in Salt Lake City
| Young Queer Women's Health Conference, October 16 in San Francisco
| 15th Tampa International Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, through October 17
| S.F.'s Theatre Rhinoceros presents Alan Bennett's Single Spies through October 17
| 20th annual AIDS Walk Los Angeles in West Hollywood, October 17
| UCLA AIDS Institute benefit concert set for October 18 in Los Angeles
| West Hollywood, Calif., election forum on October 19
| Marriage equality conference features African-American leaders, October 19 in L.A.
| L.A. conference explores marriage equality in black communities, October 19
| Giggles, the first all-gay stand-up comedy TV series, starts filming October 20 at Ice House in Pasadena, Calif.
| Annual GLMA conference to be held October 21-23 near Palm Springs, Calif.
| amfAR to lead fund-raising trek along Great Wall of China, October 24-31
| Out on the Edge festival of LGBT theater in Boston through October 24
| Luchino Visconti retrospective in Los Angeles, through October 24
| L.A. Gay and Lesbian Center presents political documentaries, through October 26
| Steve Silverman's Show Me on the Doll... onstage in L.A. through October 27
| Leslie Jordan performs Like a Dog on Linoleum in L.A. through November 7
| Cabaret show The Girl That I Marry examines same-sex marriage, through November 16 in NYC
| New Pierre et Gilles exhibit, "Le Grand Amour," in Paris through November 18
| Side by Side by Sondheim at the Pasadena [Calif.] Playhouse through November 21
| Oscar Wilde gets modernized in Dorian, the Musical, onstage in North Hollywood, Calif., through November 21
| Phacts of Life returns to Los Angeles, through November 27
| "Games for the Gods: The Greek Athlete and the Olympic Spirit" on display in Boston through November 28
| Anthony Rapp stars in Little Shop of Horrors, on tour through December 12
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