Library of Congress

Note: External links, forms and search boxes may not function within this collection

minimize

Election 2004 Web Archive Collection

This is an archived Web site from the Library of Congress

http://advocate.com/

Archived: 12/10/2004 at 05:45:12

first First (03/26/2004)    previous Previous  #71 of 72  Next next    Last (12/17/2004) last entry

The Advocate, The national gay & lesbian newsmagazine
Award winner
3 free
The award-winning national gay & lesbian newsmagazine Web site
Thursday, December 9, 2004
The Advocate
 Advocate Poll | Headlines | Help | Idea Exchange | Jobs | LettersLinks | Resources 
Community Partners | Media Kit | Subscribe | Subscriber Services | Travel | Personal Ads
Click here to meet
all__night_long
Travel
 
Search
 

IDEA EXCHANGE
Register now to post your comments, criticisms, and quips.

ISSUE LINKS
Link to related sites for stories in The Advocate

EVENTS
Advocate-
sponsored events and other happenings nationwide.

e-mail
Click here to send us a letter about The Advocate or Advocate.com
Click here as well to read letters from our readers about The Advocate or Advocate.com

SIGN UP
Sign up now for the weekly Advocate Update and get E-mail updates of the week's gay news

Subsrcibe
Want to pay your bill online? Give a gift subscription? Check into our Subscriber Services page

Melissa
Photos, music, and our archive of reporting about Melissa Etheridge

 
 
Canadian high court OKs gay marriage
In a landmark opinion, Canada's supreme court on Thursday said the government can redefine marriage to include same-sex couples, but religious officials cannot be forced to perform unions against their beliefs. Read the full story>>>

Gift Guide

EXCLUSIVES


Two views of gay Asian lives
Asian-American filmmaker Quentin Lee talks about his new film-festival favorite, Ethan Mao, while the Indonesian hit Arisan! features that country’s first gay male kiss, mild though it be.
By Kevin Kumala 



Survivor's first axed lesbian tells all
She endured the wilds—and accusations of man-hating-—but lesbian Survivor contestant Ami Cusack couldn’t overcome an alliance gone wrong on the hit reality series.
By Web Behrens 



Network rejection
Myles Herman played one half of a gay couple in a television ad that was recently rejected by CBS and NBC. He says the networks misunderstood the message from the United Church of Christ.
By John Caldwell 



Coming together to battle AIDS
With funding running short and public attention to the crisis dwindling on this World AIDS Day, it’s time for AIDS service organizations to join together to accomplish their goals.
By Robert W. Kuhn 



The truth about Matthew?
An investigative piece by ABC’s 20/20 claims to have new information about the tragic murder of gay Wyoming college student Matthew Shepard. But the real tragedy is in the network’s shoddy journalism.
By Chad Graham



Like father, like son
Between tears and fear, my teenage son worked up enough courage to come out to me, his father. Yet I had my own secret about my sexuality.
By Gary DeBusk



My Iraqi conquest-in Denmark
When a 21-year-old American flees to Copenhagen to escape his country’s militarism, he finds himself drawn to his own quest for liberation: Getting his secret Iraqi lover to come out.
By Justin Ho



Kinsey lives!
Out Oscar winner Bill Condon (Gods and Monsters) talks about sexual repression, bisexuality, the far right, and abstinence education—the hot-button issues of 2004, all woven into his acclaimed new film, Kinsey, set in the 1940s and ’50s. By Bruce C. Steele



Sad this Thanksgiving
I’m going home to Michigan to be with my family this Thanksgiving, but it won’t be a happy time. I'm returning to one of the 11 states that approved a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. I suspect members of my family voted to support this anti-gay measure. By L.Douglas Baker



Is gay marriage older than the Bible?
The ancient epic poem Gilgamesh, argues its latest translator, scholar and poet Stephen Mitchell, depicts the first known instance of a same-sex union.
By Stephen Karam



Same-sex marriage is not to blame
Gay equality should not be viewed as too radioactive for mainstream politicians to touch, despite the post-November 2 spin. Local electoral victories point the way to winning on a national level
By Mary Bonauto and Marty Rouse



Achieving Fusion
Fusion, Los Angeles’s film festival featuring LGBT people of color, celebrates its second year November 19–21 with three feature films, three programs of short films, and a rare opportunity for cultures and moviegoers to mix and match.
By Kevin Kumala



Recipes for success
Our career coach answers questions about businesswomen who want to network with other women and how to spin a successful restaurant into a specialty foods business.By Ed Vladich


Making the case for optimism
Buck up, my fellow gays and lesbians. The fight for equality is a long war and some skirmishes are inevitably lost. As we prepare to go back into battle, remember that time and history are on our side.
By Neal Broverman



We are the counterbalance
The reelection of George W. Bush is no historical anomaly—the Republicans win more often than not. But this was no Reagan-like landslide: Almost half the country rejected his right-wing agenda. The country is changing
By Michael Nava



Premature emancipation
Giddy with successes like Lawrence v. Texas, advocates for gay equality overreached by demanding marriage before making the case with the average American. The result was seen in full on Election Night 2004.
By Gary R. Cohan, MD



We all must hang together...
...as Benjamin Franklin once said, or assuredly, we shall all hang separately. Antigay priests and ministers must not be the only religious figures with a say in gay rights: It’s time for pro-gay religious leaders and our secular allies to present a united front.
By the Most Reverend Bruce J. Simpson, Benedictine Order of St. John the Beloved



"Gay? No prob. Welcome to Canada!"
After devoting 10 years of my life to working in the United States—where I never got a green card and couldn’t marry my partner—I’d had enough. Then Canada welcomed me and my partner with open arms. Want to join us?
By Austin Kiyomiya



Cancer warrior
As I battle breast cancer, I see the grim reaper off in the distance trying to entice me into crossing over. But I laugh in the face of death. Anger may have contributed to my illness; humor is contributing to my survival
By Toni Riss



Feeling blue in a red state
Living in Atlanta with my partner of seven years, I’m just trying to make sense of a world where our lives together, our partnership, yes, our marriage, has just been declared illegal by a majority of our fellow Georgians. Who among us is immoral, again?
By Mitchell Anderson



The slippery slope
As hopes for equal rights for gay and lesbian Americans melt away and the antigay forces muster power, will we know when it’s time to leave just to save our own skins?
By Rod Abid



So long, my friend
Yes, this election was deeply personal. So here’s the thing: If you call yourself a friend of mine but voted with the people who want to deny my right to exist, I don’t think we can be friends anymore.
By Jim David



If it's broke, fix it
Yes, 59 million voters nationwide and 11 antigay states can be wrong. But so can the leaders of the LGBT movement, who need to take some responsibility for Tuesday’s trouncing. Here’s a suggestion for getting our act together
By Beth George



A failure of will
Want to know why 11 out of 11 states voted away your rights to marriage and, in several cases, civil unions? Two reasons: (1) You don’t want it enough, and (2) it’s the wrong battle
By Charles Karel Bouley II



My Christian mom
A church-going mom called her gay son last night to ask what he thinks about a ballot initiative to ban same-sex marriage and civil unions in their native Oklahoma. The conversation didn’t go as he expected.
By Rob Hamm



Adjusting to life in League City
The Advocate’s high-school diarist talks about being out and fitting in at her new school in a suburb of Houston.
By Paige Palmer



Are the Fab Five in need of a makeover?
We still love Carson, Kyan, Ted, Thom, and Jai, but for their own good, it’s time for Queer Eye for the Straight Guy to brave new territories—like Michigan and Wal-Mart.
By Michael Matson


Learning begins in bed
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.

CURRENT ISSUE
daily focusFEATURED STORY:
Finding asylum
After he was arrested for sodomy and tortured in Uzbekistan, bisexual reporter Ruslan Sharipov escaped to the United States.
By Patrick Letellier
   
  


CONTENTS OF THE CURRENT ISSUE
LINKS TO SITES RELATED TO THIS ISSUE

Cover
ON THE COVER
People of the year: The mayors
During a year in which marriage rights for gay and lesbian couples played a major role on the political stage, three mayors were willing to lead the way by taking risks and challenging the system. By John Caldwell

NEWS FEATURES
Finding asylum
After he was arrested for sodomy and tortured in Uzbekistan, bisexual reporter Ruslan Sharipov escaped to the United States.
By Patrick Letellier 
Why Bush’s win is a victory for gays

Like Howard Dean and John Kerry, George W. Bush has come out in favor of same-sex civil unions. What that means, writes
Abner Mason, is that if we can work with the Administration instead of against it, the 2004 election could mark a turning point in acceptance of gay relationships.
 
 
 
ARTS
Last-minute gift guide
With parties to attend, cards to mail, and work deadlines to meet, who has time to shop? Our multiple-choice guide to easy-to-buy gifts can help make history of your holiday list. PLUS Our expanded DVD gift listings.
The man behind the Housewives
How out creator Marc Cherry’s insight into Desperate living led to one of TV’s biggest hits.
By Mike Goodridge 
Everywhere man

Sexually, spiritually, and politically, Christopher Isherwood lived his life to the limits—a gay hero for our time.
By David Ehrenstein

COLUMNS
WeHo, warts and all
My Perspective guest columnist
John Morgan Wilson traces the evolution of West Hollywood, Calif., as it celebrates its 20th anniversary as America’s first gay city. 
The election should rally gay youth
Generation Q guest columnist
Nathan Julius urges gay youth to start a modern gay rights movement in light of the reelection of President Bush. 
We’re still divine, darling

Don’t Get Me Started columnist
Kate Clinton pitches a new reality show called The Spirit Is Willing in which contestants take a leap of faith in order to come out. 
Dear Republican friends...

Coastal Disturbances columnist
Christopher Rice makes a plea for Republicans to take back their party from religious extremists. 


Wedding pictures
Did the images of gay couples marring in 2004 help the gay rights movement?

 
OUTQ NwsHEADLINES
News

Canadian supreme court rules in favor of gay marriage
New Zealand adopts civil unions for all couples
Challenge to Oklahoma's ban on adoption by gays proceeds
Rejected pro-gay church ads aired by some affiliates
Lesbian mom denied child custody in Virginia files appeal
Utah judge awards child visitation to lesbian partner
London teacher jailed for lesbian affair with pupil
Singapore police ban gay Christmas party
Entertainment

Etheridge, Michael, Sedaris among Grammy nominees
Health

Scientists identify key genes linked to HIV response
Local politics may prevent needle exchanges in Newark, N.J.
U.K. survey shows little sympathy for people with AIDS
South Korea abandons plans to create Korean word for condom
Events

looking4sex onstage in NYC through December 11
AIDS dance-a-thon December 11 in New York
Anthony Rapp stars in Little Shop of Horrors, on tour through December 12
Bazaar Bizarre coming to Boston, December 11, and L.A., December 12
The Phacts of Life returns to L.A. December 11, 18
AIDS Foundation of Chicago to hold advocacy forum December 16
Moisés Kaufman directs Tennessee Williams's One Arm in Chicago through December 19
Steve Wilkerson performs holiday classics by Capote and Sedaris through December 24 in Portland, Ore.
Kinsey Sicks perform Oy Vey in a Manger in S.F. through December 31
Lea DeLaria stars in Once Upon a Mattress through January 2 in SF
Five by Tenn, featuring newly discovered one-act plays by Tennessee Williams, in extended run in NYC
Portraits by Don Bachardy on display in San Marino, Calif., through February 6
Black Lesbian Conference in Dallas, April 7-10

 Home Headlines | ReviewsIdea ExchangePollLinksLettersResources | Community Partners | Media Kit
Travel | Top of page | Help Subscribe | Subscriber Services | Contact | JobsPrivacy policy

Advocate.com © 2004 by LPI Media Inc.