Taiwan president lauds Nymphia Wind’s win on RuPaul’s Drag Race
The Guardian » LGBTQ+ rights
by Chi Hui Lin in Taipei
21h ago
Tsai Ing-wen congratulates and praises drag star, who drew massive support in her home country, for ‘living fearlessly’ A drag queen has sparked national celebration as the “pride of Taiwan” and won praise and congratulations from the island’s president after winning RuPaul’s Drag Race at the weekend. On Saturday, the long-running, Emmy award-winning US reality show, in which drag queens compete in challenges including lip-sync performances, revealed the winner of its 16th season as Nymphia Wind, the drag personality creation of Leo Tsao, a 28-year-old Taiwanese designer ..read more
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Lawsuit in London to allege Grindr shared users’ HIV status with ad firms
The Guardian » LGBTQ+ rights
by Jasper Jolly
21h ago
High court action will claim US owner allowed access to app users’ private information in breach of UK law Grindr faces the prospect of legal action by hundreds of users who will allege that the dating app shared highly sensitive personal information, including in some cases their HIV status, with advertising companies. The law firm Austen Hays is to file a claim on Monday in London’s high court alleging that the US owner of the app breached British data protection laws ..read more
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Kiss Marry Kill review – a truth-is-stranger-than-fiction tale of love behind bars
The Guardian » LGBTQ+ rights
by Kate Wyver
2d ago
Stone Nest, London Dante or Die’s intriguing but underdeveloped story is based on the case of two men, each convicted of a homophobic murder, who became the first same-sex couple to marry in a UK prison Basing a play on real events offers a safety blanket of authenticity, but the facts of a story being true is not always enough to make us believe in them. Dante or Die’s new production about a homophobic gay man in prison is packed with energy and built on significant research, but the storytelling skates over the surface of the knotty topics it tackles, and struggles to make its complex charac ..read more
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‘He was a born member of the underground’: how Peter Hujar captured the New York demimonde
The Guardian » LGBTQ+ rights
by Alex Needham
1w ago
He only published one book – and it was hardly noticed. Now his portraits of drag queens, poets and artists are seen as vital documents of a vanished world. As they go on show, the photographer’s favourite subjects recall his genius ‘He made me wear white,” says Fran Lebowitz, down the phone from New York. The writer is talking about the day her close friend, the photographer Peter Hujar, shot her for Portraits in Life and Death, the only book he ever made. “Peter was very specific. It was in my apartment which was the size of, I don’t know, a book. And the light was a big thing – as it was wi ..read more
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It Runs in the Family review – heartfelt tribute from one film-maker to another
The Guardian » LGBTQ+ rights
by Leslie Felperin
1w ago
When Victoria Villegas learned how her cousin had fled the Dominican Republic, and was gay like her, she was moved to chart his life There have been experimental, freestyling essay films and memoiristic documentaries around for years, going back to Chris Marker’s Sans Soleil or Agnès Varda’s The Gleaners and I. But just lately it feels like the sprawling poetic-realist subgenre is flourishing, especially in the sunny uplands of film festivals. Like an extension of the creative-writing exhortation to “write about what you know” young documentary-makers are increasingly shooting movies about not ..read more
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I was having a drink on a warm spring evening – then a nail bomb exploded just feet away
The Guardian » LGBTQ+ rights
by Jonathan Cash
1w ago
In 1999, the Admiral Duncan pub in Soho was attacked in a campaign of violence by a self-confessed racist and homophobe. It completely changed the course of my life On Saturday 17 April 1999, a bomb exploded in Brixton market in south London, injuring 48 people, including a 23-month-old child. Newspapers showed an X-ray of the toddler’s head with a nail embedded in the skull. Immediately, people knew that someone wanted to kill in an area that had a large Black community. This was the first of three nailbombs that were planted in the capital targeting minorities. The following weekend, a secon ..read more
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Planet Fitness outlets receive bomb threats after far right derides gym policy
The Guardian » LGBTQ+ rights
by Lauren Aratani in New York
1w ago
More than 40 locations across the US reported the backlash after rightwing account stokes anti-trans rhetoric about its rules More than 40 Planet Fitness locations across the country have received bomb threats after a conservative movement against the gym’s trans-inclusive locker room policy went viral online. In the weeks since the backlash against the gym chain started in March, at least 43 locations in Connecticut, Florida, Alabama and other states have received bomb threats, according to progressive media watchdog group Media Matters ..read more
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Hilary Cass warns Kemi Badenoch over risks of conversion practices ban
The Guardian » LGBTQ+ rights
by Aletha Adu and Amelia Gentleman
1w ago
Paediatrician who led review of gender identity services says any new law must not create problems for professionals Kemi Badenoch, the women and equalities minister, was warned about the risks of a planned ban on conversion practices by the doctor who reviewed gender identity services for under-18s. Leading paediatrician Dr Hilary Cass said she had been “really clear” with the cabinet minister that any plans for a change in the law would have to avoid creating problems for professionals ..read more
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Florida can’t ban teacher from asking students to use her preferred pronouns, judge rules
The Guardian » LGBTQ+ rights
by Sam Levine
1w ago
Katie Wood, a transgender algebra teacher, has long gone by ‘Ms Wood’ but the law required students to say ‘Teacher Wood’ Florida cannot prohibit a 10th-grade math teacher from asking her students to call her by her preferred pronouns, a federal judge has ruled. The decision from Mark Walker, the US district judge, is a blow to an anti-LGBTQ law championed by Ron DeSantis, the state’s governor, which prohibits discussion of sexuality in public schools. A 2023 expansion of the measure, widely known as the “Don’t Say Gay” law, prohibits teachers and students from using pronouns that align with t ..read more
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‘My cast and crew’s safety kept me up at night’: why a queer Ghanaian film may never be screened
The Guardian » LGBTQ+ rights
by Saeed Kamali Dehghan
1w ago
Joewackle J Kusi was finishing his film Nyame Mma when an anti-LGBTQ+ bill was passed, bringing the threat of prosecution for those ‘promoting’ queer stories A rare Ghanian film featuring a queer main character could not have been released at a worse time for its director and cast. Joewackle J Kusi was making finishing touches to his short film, Nyame Mma (Children of God), and arranging screenings in the capital, Accra, when a piece of legislation passed through Ghana’s parliament, targeting LGBTQ+ content. According to the bill approved in late February, those involved in the “wilful promoti ..read more
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