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WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORGLiberal Oregon and Washington Vowed to Pioneer Green Energy. Almost Every Other State Is Beating Them.by Tony Schick and Monica Samayoa, Oregon Public Broadcasting This article was produced for ProPublicas Local Reporting Network in partnership with Oregon Public Broadcasting. Sign up for Dispatches to get stories like this one as soon as they are published. On Feb. 17, Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek released a video assuring Oregonians that Donald Trump would not derail the progressive states efforts to combat climate change. As promised during his presidential campaign, Trump had issued executive orders during his first week in office aimed at halting new sources of wind power and freezing Biden-era funding for renewable energy. Oregon, Kotek said, had been leading the way for years on courageous state policies to fight climate change. Along with neighboring Washington state, Oregon has set an ambitious mandate for electric utilities to be carbon neutral within the next two decades.Its going to take all of us working together finding innovative solutions, no matter the obstacles, to confront the climate crisis, the governor said, and we are not turning back.But the reality is not nearly as inspiring as Kotek made it sound. For all their progressive claims, Oregon and Washington trail nearly all other states in adding new sources of renewable energy. Iowa, a Republican-led state with roughly the same population and usable volume of wind as Oregon, has built enough wind farms to generate three times as much wind power.Whats held the Northwest back is a bottleneck Oregon and Washington leaders paid little attention to when they set out to go 100% green, an investigation by ProPublica and Oregon Public Broadcasting found: The region lacks the wiring to deliver new sources of renewable energy to peoples homes, and little has been done to change that.Northwest leaders left it to a federal agency known as the Bonneville Power Administration to arrange badly needed upgrades to an electrical grid thats nearly a century old in places. Bonneville, under a setup that is unique to the Northwest, owns most of the power lines needed to carry green power from the regions sunny and windy high desert to its major population centers. Bonneville has no state or local representation within its federally appointed bureaucracy and, by statute, operates as a self-funded business. The agency decides which energy projects can hook up based on whether its infrastructure can handle the extra load, and it decides how quickly that infrastructure gets expanded. Its glacial pace has delayed wind and solar projects under Democratic and Republican presidents alike.Of the 469 large renewable projects that applied to connect to Bonnevilles grid since 2015, only one has reached approval. Those are longer odds than in any other region of the country, the news organizations found. No major grid operator is as stingy as Bonneville in its approach to financing new transmission lines and substations needed to grow the power supply, according to industry groups that represent power producers.Efforts to bypass Bonneville didnt start until this year, when Oregon and Washington legislators considered bills to create their own state bonding authorities for upgrading the regions high-voltage network.Both bills died. Washington and Oregon Trail the Nation in Renewable Growth Changes in states average annual production of power from wind, solar, hydroelectric and geothermal between the decades of 2005-2014 and 2015-2024 (Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration) The grids severe constraints are hindering the Northwest at a time when it desperately needs more electricity. Oregon and Washington lawmakers lured power-guzzling data centers with tax breaks in recent years, and the industry has helped drive electricity demand sky high. Having failed to add enough green-energy sources or any new gas-fired power, the Northwest buys electricity from elsewhere, at high prices, during extreme weather. Rates paid by customers of major Oregon utilities are now 50% higher than five years ago. The worsening energy shortage threatens millions of residents with continual rate hikes and sporadic power outages not to mention dashing the Northwests hopes of drastically reducing its contribution to climate change. The people who, technically speaking, are in charge of our transmission system are dropping the ball, said Oregon state Rep. Mark Gamba, a Democrat who sponsored this years failed legislation aimed at creating a state grid improvement authority. We are absolutely looking at rolling blackouts, and we are absolutely looking at not hitting any of our climate targets when it comes to energy production. Kotek declined an interview request. Kotek spokesperson Anca Matica said in a statement that the governor is open to innovative ideas to increase transmission capacity and labeled it key to achieving the states energy goals. She offered no direct response to questions about Oregons lack of progress in boosting renewables. While Washington and Oregon generate a lot of hydro power, their numbers have trended down over the last decade Hydroelectric generation by state and theyve added new sources of renewables, such as wind and solar, much more slowly than other states. Renewable energy net generation by state, excluding hydro (Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration) Reuven Carlyle, the former state senator who crafted Washingtons 2019 decarbonization bill, said he was deeply cognizant of the regions transmission challenges at the time but that plans to address the problem simply slipped.Its certainly nothing to be proud of that it didnt get resolved, said Carlyle, who founded a consulting firm for climate-focused investments after leaving the Legislature. And its embarrassing that Oregon and Washington, which are such good-looking states, simply cant practically build anything in terms of energy.In the final months of the Biden administration, Bonneville announced a plan to do some grid upgrades, and agency Administrator John Hairston has said the self-funded federal agency is investing in transmission as much as it can without taking on too much debt.Bonneville responded to written questions from OPB and ProPublica by citing recent improvements to its process for connecting energy projects and noting that its not the only player responsible for growing the grid. The agency added that it remains committed to its critical mission of supporting the region with affordable, reliable and secure power.But Bonnevilles latest plans for the grid are in jeopardy. In addition to suspending all new federal wind permits, the Trump White House has added Bonneville to the long list of agencies cutting federal jobs. Three Bonneville employees, requesting anonymity for fear of retribution, said the cuts will make building out the transmission system even harder.With four years of Joe Bidens climate activism in the rearview mirror, the Pacific Northwest appears to have blown its best chance to realize its ambitions for renewable power. Projects in LimboDavid Brown is a case study in the long and agonizing path to breaking ground on a Northwest solar farm. The Portland energy developer has been in the renewables business since 2003, and his firm, Obsidian Renewables, has a plan to put a vast array of solar panels on a piece of southern Oregon high desert thats the size of 3,000 football fields. Brown said its expected to produce enough energy for about 110,000 homes. Obsidian will handle everything from acquiring the land to getting permits approved, then look to sell the solar farm to an investor or utility once its ready for construction. But any power plant, whether fueled by coal, wind or sunshine, has to be wired into the electrical grid: a system of transmission lines and transformers that pools electricity and channels it to customers. While power lines crisscross the nation, power mainly gets used within the region that generates it. As in most parts of the Northwest, the nearest transmission lines Brown could plug into belong to Bonneville. He asked the agency for permission to connect his solar farm to its system in 2020. He doesnt expect approval until at least 2028.I dont know a single place in Oregon or Washington where I can connect a new solar project and get transmission. Not one, he said.One part of the holdup is that Bonneville needs to finish studying what kind of substation it will need to safely let a big new power source into the grid. Browns 400-megawatt solar farm has been through three such interconnection studies so far. The first time, Bonneville estimated Browns business would need to pay $23 million to build a substation, which Bonneville would own. The second study bumped the price to $70 million. By the third, Brown said, it was $212 million. He said the agency blamed supply chain and labor issues, in part, for the near-tripling in cost over four years. David Browns company, Obsidian Renewables, has proposed to build one of the states largest solar farms but has been waiting for five years for Bonneville Power Administrations approval. (Kristyna Wentz-Graff/Oregon Public Broadcasting) There are hundreds of projects like Browns: more than 200,000 megawatts worth of renewable energy awaiting Bonnevilles signoff, or enough to power the Northwest nearly 10 times over. One proposed wind farm has been in Bonnevilles queue for more than 16 years. Among projects 20 megawatts or bigger that were proposed in the past decade, the only one that made it through Bonnevilles waitlist was an add-on to an existing Portland General Electric wind farm that didnt require any major transmission upgrades. It won approval in 2022. The Northwest is not the only region with a backlog of projects waiting to plug in. Grid operators across the country have navigated a deluge of new wind, solar and mass-storage battery requests in recent years. Many applicants proved to be merely testing the waters, with nearly 3 in 4 ultimately pulling their plans, according to Joseph Rand, an energy researcher at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.But other regions managed to sort out problems better than the Northwest, OPB and ProPublica found. The news organizations used data from Bonneville and from a national database compiled by researchers at the Berkeley Lab to analyze how many large renewable energy projects waiting for grid connections made it to the finish line.The data showed that for large projects proposed since 2015, Bonnevilles one approval translates to a success rate of 0.2%, the lowest rate of any region. By contrast, about 10% of new applications for major projects in the Midwest and 28% in Texas made it through. Bonneville has said one reason for the slow progress is that its waitlist is jammed up with too many speculative projects more dream than financial reality. (Theres no evidence that Bonneville has it worse, though; data shows that the share of developers who back out after seeking Bonnevilles approval, 76%, is close to the national average.)Renewable advocates and energy developers say Bonneville struggles to hire and retain people to process connection requests because the agency pays less than the private sector. In January, Washington U.S. Reps. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, a Democrat, and Dan Newhouse, a Republican, introduced a bill to make Bonnevilles compensation more competitive, but it hasnt moved since.To speed things up, Bonneville has halted new requests for grid connections and changed its approach to reviewing applications. Where specialists used to review proposals one at a time, in the order received, they now plan to prioritize projects that are closest to ready. The agency said the new approach will increase the number of projects that get connected while cutting processing time in half, from an expected 15 years. Bonneville said in a statement that it is confident the interconnection reforms we adopted will prove sufficient to meet our customers needs.The changes have not yet helped Brown, who has been awaiting Bonnevilles approval to start work in southern Oregon since 2020. For now, the planned solar project remains in limbo.Its gonna take me years and a couple million dollars to get land use approval, Brown said, and why do I want to get land use approval if I dont know whether or not I have transmission?Theres No Room for Your ProjectThe predicament Brown and dozens of other wind and solar developers face is a product of the Northwests unusual history with electric power.Oregon and Washington were blessed with powerful rivers fed by abundant snow and rainfall. Beginning in the New Deal era, the federal government built dozens of hydroelectric dams and a sprawling transmission system to electrify the rural West. The regions energy supply was cheaper and emitted less carbon than the rest of the nations. Bonneville was at the helm.Even today, hydropower supplies almost 35% of Oregons electricity and more than 50% of Washingtons, according to the most recent data available. But hydroelectric dams are a finite and increasingly shaky power source. Output from existing dams dips whenever droughts sap water from the Columbia River basin. New dams are a nonstarter because dams have decimated the regions salmon populations.That leaves wind, solar and battery storage as the most promising places for the Northwest to turn as it approaches self-imposed deadlines to fully wean utilities off electricity that comes from oil, coal or gas.Bonneville has now become a barrier to accommodating the new power sources, six green energy developers told OPB and ProPublica.An agency that erected more than 4,800 miles of high-voltage transmission lines from 1960 to 1990 built fewer than 500 miles from 1990 to 2020. In the past five years, it built 1. Bonneville has the ability to borrow money, at low interest rates, for projects that would enable the grid to carry more power. Congress pushed the agency to do so in 2021, more than doubling Bonnevilles debt limit specifically to finance transmission upgrades. The chairs of the Oregon and Washington public utility commissions, in a joint 2022 letter, urged Bonneville to spend the money: The region needs BPA to be a leader in delivering a transmission system that serves the entire region. Bonneville, however, has been reluctant to take on debt. It is still paying off billions of dollars in bonds from failed nuclear plants in the 1970s. As recently as 2019, the agencys finances were so poor that some economists expected it to become insolvent. Bonnevilles transmission planners, for their part, have told OPB and ProPublica in previous interviews that they want to avoid building expensive transmission lines that no one ends up using.We cant speculate and build a transmission line to nowhere, Jeff Cook, the agencys vice president for transmission planning, said in May 2024. First image: Contractors repair a transformer box in Portland, Oregon. Second image: Solar panels on the Wheatridge farm, the only project Bonneville approved out of the hundreds that applied for a grid connection in the past decade. (Kristyna Wentz-Graff/Oregon Public Broadcasting) When Bonneville announced in the fall it would tap some of its expanded debt limit to help pay for $5 billion in transmission upgrades over a decade, renewable energy advocates characterized the work as long overdue maintenance that wouldnt provide the expansion the grid needs. Most of the work Bonneville announced was the equivalent of fixing potholes, installing some new round-abouts, doing some repaving, Spencer Gray, executive director of the Northwest & Intermountain Power Producers Coalition, said in an email.A further frustration for wind and solar developers that is unique to Bonneville: The grid operator makes them absorb an outsize share of the cost for projects that help the transmission network accommodate their electricity and it requires a big deposit up front. Thats true even if the new power lines benefit a wide network and will be around for many generations of customers.Lately, the answer to these individual developers has been, Theres no room for your project. If you want to put this project on our system, its going to cost you this many millions of dollars to help us upgrade the system, said Sarah Edmonds, president of a coalition of utilities known as the Western Power Pool.The approach, Edmonds said, has had a chilling effect on the ability of developers to get their projects online.Michelle Manary, Bonnevilles vice president of transmission marketing and sales, said requiring up-front deposits keeps existing ratepayers from getting stuck with the tab if a developer backs out and that Bonneville has begun work on a transmission upgrade. She said other regions have more control over who pays these costs because their entire distribution networks are under one operator. Bonnevilles transmission lines are more like highways, from which electric utilities serve as exit ramps that deliver power the last mile to Northwest neighborhoods. Manary denied that Bonnevilles current way of allocating costs has stifled green energy projects. But she acknowledged the agency needs to reevaluate its policy amid the flood of applications for new projects, and she said that process is underway. Texas Is Kicking Our AssThe rest of the nation has taken a different approach to bringing green power online with better outcomes.In most parts of the country, each grid has a central, independent operator, known as a regional transmission organization, typically run by a board that represents customers, electric utilities and other groups. Bonneville recently rejected joining a California-based energy market that advocates described as the Northwests best bet at accelerating the adoption of renewables.In Texas, which runs its own grid, large renewable projects applying to connect in the past decade took a median of 19 months to get the green light, or nearly two years less than the one project Bonneville approved in that time frame. California and the Midwest were also faster than Bonneville.Texas doesnt require project-by-project grid upgrades the way other grid operators do. It essentially tells developers it will connect their project, and then it figures out how to balance the added electricity after the fact. Texas and other regional grid operators spend billions more than Bonneville on transmission upgrades annually, and they spread the costs across a wider swath of customers than Bonneville does. (Bonneville says the federal agency differs so much from regional operators that theyre not a fair comparison group.) Texas brought more energy online in the past two years than any other power region. Thats helped the oil and gas powerhouse become the countrys biggest producer of wind and solar energy. Last year alone it added more than enough renewable energy to power the entire Northwest.Texas is kicking our ass, said Gamba, the Oregon state representative. Oil well pumps and wind turbines in Lamesa, Texas, in February (Julio Cortez/AP) Northwest lawmakers were told that theyd need to find effective ways of confronting their regions aging transmission system if they wished to phase out coal and natural gas.As Washington lawmakers debated a mandate for renewable power in 2019, Nicholas Garcia of the Washington Public Utility Districts Association testified that replacing coal plants with wind and solar would require more transmission, significantly more transmission.In 2021, when Oregon lawmakers debated their own mandate for carbon-free energy, Republicans also raised concerns that the states transmission lines were maxed out. It became one more GOP argument against the bill, in addition to saying more should be done to ensure green energy projects were built in Oregon. Numerous reports from the Oregon and U.S. departments of energy, for example supported the assertion that heftier transmission lines were needed. Bonneville would be key to meeting that need, with one utilities lobbyist calling Bonnevilles grid the backbone for decarbonization in testimony to Oregon lawmakers. But Oregon state Rep. Pam Marsh, who led the 2021 effort, said in a recent interview she was focused on getting utilities to cut their carbon emissions and that green energy advocates werent demanding transmission improvements at the time.I was not thinking personally about the role that Bonneville might play in this, said Marsh, a Democrat representing southern Oregon. Washingtons Legislature took some action on the need for better transmission: It required the state to study the issue. The resulting 2022 report concluded that the grid was indeed inadequate but led to little in the way of solutions. Instead, lawmakers decided to require utilities to plan out transmission needs 20 years ahead rather than 10, and they created a statewide environmental review in hopes of streamlining the states approval process for transmission. It did nothing about impediments posed by Bonneville. The Legislature was a little complacent about relying on Bonneville to upgrade the grid, said Sen. Sharon Shewmake, a freshman lawmaker in 2019 when Washington enacted its energy mandate.Shewmake and Gamba both introduced legislation this year following states like Colorado, New Mexico, North Dakota and Wyoming in creating independent authorities to finance transmission infrastructure. Gamba said he led an 80-person group of interested parties through 18 months of drafting. Democratic Washington Gov. Bob Ferguson labeled Shewmakes bill a priority.The legislation didnt make it through either states Democrat-controlled legislatures, however.Brown, the energy developer whos been awaiting Bonnevilles solar approval since 2020, said the future of the Northwests energy dreams looks dim.We dont have a prayer of meeting our heralded, flag-waving renewable energy goals, he said. The dialogue will be to blame Trump; it wont be to blame ourselves for poor planning and extremely low expectations. Ellis Simani assisted with data analysis.0 Comments 0 Shares 72 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COMAldi Is Selling the Cutest Outdoor Lanterns That Are Perfect for Small SpacesTheyre so cheery.READ MORE...0 Comments 0 Shares 60 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PRIDE.COMShe shoots, she scores! WNBA legends Courtney Vandersloot and Allie Quigley welcome first babyLess than a week from the start of the 2025 WNBA season, the newest member of the Chicago Sky family was announced to the world.Chicago Sky guard Courtney Vandersloot and her basketball star wife, Allie Quigley, revealed the birth of their first baby together in an exclusive with People.Although the happy couple waited until Mothers Day to break the news, Jana Christine Vandersloot Quigley was born on April 8."We are over the moon to welcome our baby girl to the world," Vandersloot, 36, and Quigley, 38, told the publication.See on Instagram"We have been dreaming of this moment for a long time, and its better than we could have ever imagined!" the pair continued.Vandersloot and Quigley, who are affectionately known as "VanderQuigs," may be making headlines today for expanding their personal team, but the lovebirds also wowed everyone when they became the first married couple to win a professional sports championship together in 2021.The photos from People show the basketball superstars holding baby Jana nicknamed "Jacey" and their dog while smiling at the camera, and in the second photo, they are looking down lovingly at their newest addition.See on InstagramVandersloot also posted a carousel of photos of Jana to her Instagram account in honor of her late mother on Mothers Day. The post included a photo of the baby girl posed asleep on a basketball and one of her wearing a pink lace dress, with a photo of Vandersloots mother. Quigley also posted another Ann Getty-style baby photo of Jana smiling while curled up in a nest-like basket.See on InstagramThe brand-new parents initially met while they were both playing basketball in Slovakia, and their teams ended up going head to head. After Quigleys team won and took home the championship, the two women ended up on the same flight back to the United States, where they were both about to start playing for the Chicago Sky.At first, they decided to just remain friends, but when the basketball season ended, they started dating. Vandersloot and Quigley tied the knot back in 2018, but kept their relationship out of the public eye for more than five years before announcing their marriage on Instagram.0 Comments 0 Shares 45 Views 0 Reviews
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GAYETY.COMGeorgia Faces the Trial of the Summer in Explosive Ginny & Georgia Season 3 TrailerNetflix just dropped the trailer for Ginny & Georgia Season 3, and things are getting darker in Wellsbury. Premiering globally on June 5, 2025, the new season promises more secrets, more drama, and higher stakes than ever before. Season 3 picks up where Season 2s jaw-dropping finale left off. Georgia (Brianne Howey) is arrested for murder during her wedding to Mayor Paul Randolph (ScottSource0 Comments 0 Shares 49 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PRIDE.COM'All Stars 10's Phoenix doesnt hold back after Ice Spice questions her drag legacyThe first two episodes of RuPauls Drag Race All Stars 10 introduced us to a new tournament-style format (that we love), and the first six queens in the orange bracket gave us everything from looks to death drops to a brand-new feud heating up the interwebs.In the first episode, Ice Spice served as a guest judge, and the lip sync for the win between Aja and Irene the Alien was her most popular song, Think U The Sh*t (Fart).See on InstagramDuring the judges critiques, Ice Spice had a few things to say about the performance from Drag Race superstar Phoenix, who has made her first appearance on the show since season 3.I hear youre a legendary icon, but tonight I dont think I would have been able to tell with how shy you were, she said.See on InstagramAlthough Phoenix took it in stride on stage and even let Ice Spice play with her fake breasts during Untucked, she took to her Instagram story after the episode aired to tell us how she really felt about the comment.I appreciate the love from everyone about the Ice Spice comment, she wrote, adding that she would tell the funny part about this later.However, she also said to trust her as she continued, My 25 years of experience and decades of contributing to my community is what makes me an ICON! Not 3 minutes on a tv show.She went on to say she was perfectly fine not getting icon validation from someone whos [sic] fame has come from 1 song about sh*tting and farting.And I oop!To be fair, Ice Spice wasnt the only judge who commented on Phoenixs shyness in the episode, so she wasnt necessarily alone in her overall critique. Questioning her role as a legend in the space, however, was a little off-putting to fans.As of this writing, Ice Spice has yet to respond to the clapback, and Phoenix has yet to divulge what the funny part about all of this is.Catch new episodes of All Stars 10 on Fridays, streaming on Paramount+.0 Comments 0 Shares 42 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PRIDE.COMDiane von Furstenbergs husband spills the tea on the male celebs hes datedBarry Diller is finally ready to tell the truthand name names.In his new memoir titled Who Knew, the 83-year-old billionaire media mogul and longtime husband of fashion icon Diane von Furstenberg confirms what had long been whispered about in Hollywood: that he is gay (or, as he puts it, bi with Di). And in typical Diller fashion, he isnt holding much back.Michael Bennett, the late Broadway legend behind A Chorus Line, and Joe Holland, Johnny Carsons stepson, who died of AIDS in 1994, are among the men he reportedly had relationships with. Diller, whos been with von Furstenberg for nearly 50 years, told The New York Times he never talked about his private life publicly out of fear rather than shame. I was just too chicken to tell anyone anything, he admitted. Its a guilt that will never leave me.On CBS Sunday Morning, he described first realizing he was gay at age 11 and sneaking off to the Beverly Hills Public Library in search of books on homosexuality. Everything I read was, like, horrible, he said. And I got on my bike and rode home and thought, Im a condemned person.He and von Furstenberg married in 2001, after decades of a love story that began with desire and settled into a deep, unconventional partnership. Theyve even famously lived in separate residences for much of their marriage.I dont see anything mutually exclusive with that, he said of loving her while also being attracted to men.While von Furstenberg was the only woman hes ever been with, he writes that his interest in men never went awayand he spent years compartmentalizing that side of himself, afraid it would ruin him professionally.I wanted to tell the story, Diller said, and I knew if I told the story, I had to tell the truth.Dillers coming-out moment may have arrived late in life, but it lands in a cultural moment thats increasingly embracing nuance over labels. Still, hes candid about what his silence cost him, and what it may have cost others. I should have been a role model, for whatever good that might have done for others, he writes. I was wrong.Who Knew hits shelves May 20.0 Comments 0 Shares 47 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PRIDE.COMScott Hoying on his mother's reaction to his coming out: 'It makes me want to cry'It's Scott Hoying's world, and we're just living it.In every aspect of his personal and professional life, the Pentatonix frontman is thriving and achieving every dream he had as a queer kid growing up in Arlington, Texas.With a baby announcement hopefully coming any day, the star is taking a trip down memory lane with his own mother, Connie Hoying, in the powerful new book The Untold Story of Scott Hoying, Pentatonix Star.The novel gives readers insight into Scott's journey to superstardom after coming out at 17 years old, creating the Grammy-winning a cappella group Pentatonix, and eventually marrying his incredible husband Mark Hoying."I'm just so excited that my mom is telling this story from her perspective. There could be parents that relate to it more and understand it more. My mom didn't fully understand [my coming out] at first, but she had unconditional love for me. When I came out, the concern she had was my safety. It just makes me very grateful, it makes me want to cry," Scott Hoying tells PRIDE. See on Instagram The timing of this book's release couldn't be more crucial as many people in the LGBTQ+ community around the world are having a tough time accepting their own sexualities and opening up to their loved ones.Connie Hoying wants parents of queer children to be able to connect with her own experience accepting and loving her gay son."My heart just explodes! When I see him on stage [in front of] an audience of 15,000 people... this is what he wanted to do and he's doing it. I'm hoping parents of gay children learn empathy and acceptance. That's what we need in this world love, acceptance, support, positivity is everything," Connie Hoying says.Scott Hoying's star is only on the rise. With an incredible support system behind him, the singer is ready to tackle his next big project by starring alongside Joel McHale and Paula Patton in the upcoming movie musical Reimagined."There's so much love in this world! Hate gets highlighted so much, but there's so many wonderful, amazing, beautiful people that are just so inspiring. In a lot of different ways, everything is really aligning, and I've just felt more grateful than ever. As I grow up, I'm more grounded and present to be able to really realize those things."The Untold Story of Scott Hoying, Pentatonix Star is available wherever books are sold. To see the full interview with Scott Hoying and Connie Hoying, check out the video at the top of the page.0 Comments 0 Shares 54 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PRIDE.COMFans are livid after first Korean lesbian dating show edits out controversial cast memberSouth Koreas first ever lesbian dating show has seemingly lost the plot as former fans denounce the decision to edit one controversial cast member out of the show.After the first episodes of ToGetHer dropped in April, contestant Kim Riwon quickly found her past working as a cam girl outed to the world. She was also accused of "queerbaiting" after it was discovered she had previously been in a relationship with a man she alleged was toxic and abusive, despite her insistence that she is, in fact, a woman who loves women.As conservative tides turned against her, a fellow cast member also made confusing accusations that Riwon made inappropriate advances towards her by seemingly asking her to spend time together.All of this led to the production company hitting pause on the episodes to regroup as they decided what to do. Some fans were demanding Riwon be cut from the show entirely, while others were furious this was even being considered a scandal.On May 4, ThisPlay announced that the show would be resuming with Riwon edited out as much as possible without losing the overall storylines. (@) The decision has sparked outrage and frustration on social media, particularly from international viewers. Posts from the official account have been met with repeated protests of "no riwon no views" and slamming ThisPlay for allegedly catering to misogyny and homophobia while failing to protect Riwon. (@) "Oh so yall decided to stand by the buillies, riwon is a victim not a criminals yall just token support women and always stand by the men and the patriarchal society i guess" (@) "You know damn well that no one will watch the reality show now, because you didn't want to protect Riwon, she really needed it, don't expect support of any kind and even less from the community to whom this program was directed, it's shameful." (@) "Dont do another show next time. You dont know what you are doing. Your lack of awareness, understanding and insensitivity around these women has been distasteful. This is a reflection of your failure to protect those women" (@) "I think riwon just agreed to whatever was discussedlike limiting her scenesbecause she probably felt she had no right to demand anything. Shes been publicly humiliated simply because of her past. All she wanted was to find love and be out and proud. She didnt sign up for this" (@) "The people you're pandering to will NEVER be accepting of us lesbians, no matter how hard you try to please them. This is a big mistake. Blaming doesn't help us advance our rights, but in this case you are to blame.You let down not only Riwon, but also the lesbian community." (@) "You did your own background checks. You wanted Riwon on your show. She's shown bravery by coming out & appearing on #ToGetHer despite the serious homophobia in your country. Now, you take the easy way out & just cut off the "controversy." Then, that's it for me, too. I'm out."And as subsequent episodes have begun to air, the lack of Riwon has been painfully noticeable, which has added to the backlash. (@) "If Riwon is not there, then the program is not watched." (@) "and fuck you for editing riwon out tf" (@) "ToGetHer is boring and empty without riwon im sorry yall im out" (@) "Riwon and Seoyeon picking matching cards to go on a painting date, you see Riwon hand on Seoyeon shoulder, she is so happy about it, it's so tragic we didn't get to see the date, those two actually like eachother" (@) "Hard to watch now that riwon has been completely cut" (@) "the lack of riwon makes me sick so its so good to see her when we do" (@) "riwon brought so much heart to the episodes. sorry to say but it feels so empty and boring without her. selective allyship is the real stain on the show. BRING RIWON BACK" (@) No matter how you spin it, it's an unfortunate way for South Korea's first lesbian dating show to play out.0 Comments 0 Shares 64 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COMThe Very Last Thing You Should Do with Your Old Cheese Grater (Its So Smart!)It makes my kitchen look amazing.READ MORE...0 Comments 0 Shares 66 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COMI Tried Chunky Grout in My Bathroom Makeover Heres How Its Holding Up One Year LaterThere were (many) doubters in the comment section when I first shared my process on Instagram.READ MORE...0 Comments 0 Shares 61 Views 0 Reviews
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GLAAD.ORGDan Amboyer Talks Marrying Peppermint on Survival of the Thickest, His Time on Younger, and Authentic Storytelling: Love the Human Beyond the GenderIn the second season of the Michelle Buteau-fronted comedy Survival of the Thickest, actor Dan Amboyerhas a big moment as his character Harrison marries RuPauls Drag Race alum Peppermint, who plays a version of herself. In addition, Amboyer starred in Max Mondis two-hander Maybe Tomorrowon stage opposite Elizabeth A. Davis at the Mezzanine Theatre at [...]The post Dan Amboyer Talks Marrying Peppermint on Survival of the Thickest, His Time on Younger, and Authentic Storytelling: Love the Human Beyond the Gender first appeared on GLAAD.0 Comments 0 Shares 62 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PRIDE.COMGuide replaces 'Harry Potter' tours with LGBTQ+ ones for Pride Month because of JK RowlingA walking tour group in Edinburgh is temporarily cutting their Harry Potter tours and replacing them with LGBTQ+ history tours for Pride month and they arent shying away from the reasons why."For the six years now that I have been a walking tour guide in the city of Edinburgh I have given Harry Potter walking tours alongside historical ones," Fraser Horn wrote in an April blog post on his business website. "But theres an increasing amount of negativity around the series which is making it much harder to conjure up affection."Horn explained that he fully expected J.K. Rowlings transphobic rhetoric to have an immediate impact on the demand for Harry Potter-related tours some time ago but nothing changed. The demand continued, and "hardly anyone" ever brought the topic up. Anecdotally, he says that other tour guides across Edinburgh have said the same thing.His post doesnt sugarcoat the situation. Instead, he frames it as a conflict between profit and values, pointing out both how dangerous anti-trans views are for the entire LGBTQ+ community across the world and how much Edinburgh, where Rowling wrote the popular kids series, depends on that connection for tourism."Ive seen some guides try and cut round JK Rowling while giving the tour," Horn admitted. "The link Edinburgh has to the world of Harry Potter is the fact it was written here. The person it was written here by is Rowling. So it cannot really be gotten around."However, he does point out that any money earned from these tours doesnt go towards lining Rowlings already heavy pockets. This stands in worthwhile contrast to something like the upcoming Harry Potter TV series, particularly after HBOs chief content officer seemed to breeze past that issue while recently defending the decision to keep working with Rowling.Clearly, that isnt enough to prevent Horn from carefully considering what other impact continuing to prop up Harry Potter and, by extension, Rowling herself may have. For now, he plans to continue the tours, but his company, Street Historians, is at least pointedly hitting pause for Pride month."I will be replacing my Potter tours with additional LGBTQ tours," he writes, "just because its really funny."0 Comments 0 Shares 58 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COMA White Rental Dining Room Transforms into a Colorful, Euphoric RiotA (mostly) renter-friendly, colorful, euphoric riot? Yes please.READ MORE...0 Comments 0 Shares 65 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.UNCLOSETEDMEDIA.COMWhat It Actually Looks Like When Trans People Follow Bathroom BansSubscribe nowIn Trumps new America, bathrooms have become politicized battlegrounds.What may have seemed like an issue resolved in 2017 following the repeal of North Carolinas infamous HB 2, bathroom bans targeting the trans community have once again made national headlines alongside a spate of new bills.Nineteen states already have active laws that restrict transgender people from using restrooms that match their gender identity. Many of these bills are more extreme than those in previous years, with Florida and Utahtwo states that have banned trans folks from using all government building restrooms that match their gender identitythreatening criminal penalties against violators. Floridas law classifies the offense of using the bathroom and not leaving when asked as a first-degree misdemeanor, punishable by up to a year in prison and a $1,000 fine.Photo on left by Whitney Brewer for Uncloseted Media.To understand what these bans look like in practice, Uncloseted Media documented Briden Schueren, a trans man, legally using the womens bathroom at the University of Cincinnati and Ashley Brundage, a trans woman, legally using the mens bathroom at Tampa International Airport.Whitney Brewer for Uncloseted Media.Schueren, a 37-year-old art studio owner from Columbus, Ohio, walks across the University of Cincinnatis campus, uncertain of where he can and cant use the mens restroom in his home state.What are the bills, what is getting passed in the House, he told Uncloseted Media. [Keeping up] is just exhausting.Ohio is one of seven states that ban transgender people from using bathrooms and facilities consistent with their gender identity in K-12 schools and specific government-owned buildings, including the University of Cincinnati.Provided by a University of Cincinnati student. The public research university made headlines and sparked outrage from LGBTQ advocates when it implemented restroom signs labeled "biological men" and "biological women" to enforce Ohios Senate Bill 104. They took the signs down after just one month of protests, with college administrators apologizing to students in an email, saying that the biological bathroom signs will be replaced and that they made an "error.But even with the removal of the signs, its still illegal for Schueren to use the mens bathroom anywhere on the schools campus, meaning if he wants to follow the law, he has to use the womens bathroom or a gender neutral option that is out of the way, according to students.Schueren says he felt uncomfortable entering a space where he knows he doesnt belong. I now have to be in this bathroom [even though] thats not how I identify anymore socially and mentally, he says. I don't belong there. As a masculine person with a very obvious beard, I feel like my bathroom is the men's restroom.Brundage, a 44-year-old transgender woman from Tampa, Florida, has not used men's restrooms for 16 years since she came out.Florida's Facility Requirements Based on Sex Actthat passed into law in 2023mandates that individuals use restrooms and changing facilities that correspond to their sex assigned at birth in certain public and state-owned buildings, like libraries, schools, post offices and airports.It felt weird, says Brundage, describing the moments before being forced by law to use the mens restroom at the airport. It was a little awkward, right? We wanted to make sure that we weren't making anybody feel uncomfortable."Whitney Brewer for Uncloseted Media.Subscribe nowSchueren says that being back in a bathroom that doesnt align with his identity was painful. Research from the International Journal of Transgender Health shows that 49% of transgender youth reported sometimes avoiding public bathrooms and 22% always avoided them. Youth who avoided bathrooms were nearly twice as likely to attempt suicide in the past year compared to those who never avoided public bathrooms. And a 2020 survey found that 85% of transgender youth who faced bathroom restrictions reported a persistent depressive mood.We already know that the suicide rates for trans individuals are highest amongst everybody, so it just could cause more, says Schueren. Whitney Brewer for Uncloseted Media.Bathroom bans are not only emotionally taxing; they can be dangerous.A 2025 report by the Williams Institute found that transgender people face increased risks when they are required to use bathrooms according to their sex assigned at birth. Transgender men were more likely to experience harassment when using the womens restroom.Schueren has faced harassment in both the mens and womens restrooms. In the early stages of his transition, he remembers entering a bathroom on his college campus and being followed by a man who knew he was trans. He was making aggressive movements, says Schueren.The man stood outside the stall, punching his hand against the wall. He was just so angry. ... [H]e was much bigger than I was. He was making threats, saying I would be injured.For nearly 45 minutes, Schueren sat on the toilet and watched through the crack in the stall door as the man paced back and forth before finally departing. I was just sitting in the bathroom shaking hysterically, waiting patiently for him to leave.Subscribe nowBrundage, who ran for office for the Florida House of Representatives in 2024, sees a massive irony when far-right lawmakers claim these bans will keep women and girls safer.I also want to make sure that my kids are safe in bathrooms, Brundage says. The people who actually do harm in spaces are typically cisgender men. And its like, Who is the actual villain? We should be doing something to address the issue, not scapegoating transgender people.Congresswoman Nancy Mace, who has been vocal and accusatory on this issue, has used transgender slurs in press conferences and has framed her stance as a defense of "biological reality" against what she calls "radical gender-bending experimentation.In November 2024, she introduced a resolution to ban transgender women from using female facilities on federal property. When asked if the resolution was targeted toward Sarah McBride, the first openly transgender member of Congress, Mace said, Absolutely.Even though McBride said she would follow House rules by using a private bathroom on Capitol Hill, Republican Congresswoman Lauren Boebert mistakenly confronted a cisgender woman in a Capitol bathroom, believing she was Rep. McBride.Subscribe nowBoebert reportedly said, You shouldnt be here, before realizing her error and later apologizing.In addition, earlier this month, two cisgender women were ordered to leave a Boston hotel after a security officer demanded one of them show identification to prove her sex while using the womens restroom."We have to do a better job in the world linking bathroom hypocrisy to [discrimination]," Brundage says, drawing a line from todays debates to Jim Crow laws from the 1960s, where Black Americans were banned from white-only bathroomspart of a racist system that falsely promised separate but equal.Whitney Brewer for Uncloseted Media.Far-right media has created a narrative that allowing trans folks to use the bathroom that matches their gender identity is dangerous and unsafe, especially for young girls.In 2021, Fox News aired 88 segments over a three-week period about a sexual assault at a Virginia high school, repeatedly suggesting that the incident was related to trans-inclusive bathroom policies. Fox host Will Cain claimed that the schools transgender policies led to [a fathers] teenage daughter being allegedly raped in the school bathroom by a man in a skirt." These claims were false, as the school's policy was implemented months after the assault.In addition, transgender men are frequently indistinguishable from cisgender men. This means a male predator wouldnt need to disguise himself to enter a womens restroom in a state with a bathroom ban; he could simply claim to be trans.A law's not gonna stop a gross, deranged perpetrator, says Schueren. They're already breaking the law by being a person that wants to be a predator. So it's not trans people that are doing this, it's people that just break the law in general, and those tend to be cis [men].There is no empirical evidence that allowing trans individuals to use a bathroom of their choosing increases the risk of sexual assault.ShareBrundage says that beyond the misinformed narratives surrounding anti-trans legislation lies something far more practical and frustrating: a massive amount of wasted taxpayer dollars."We're talking about this wasteful spending issue of trans people," she says. "Meanwhile, do I have a realistic way to make a living? Am I paying too much for insurance? Do the roads have potholes where I live? All of these things that could actually really affect you on a day-to-day basis aren't being discussed and aren't being solved."Brundage notes the more than $215 million the Trump campaign and the GOP spent on anti-trans ads during the last election cycle.She says the constant political targeting of trans people has psychological and social consequences."Could you imagine if someone was going to be the president and every time they got on the microphone, they talked about all the people named Steve in the world, how awful they are, how crappy they are?" she says. "If your name is Steve, you're going to feel really crappy eventually. You're going to feel like the whole weight of the largest economy in the world is against you."Whitney Brewer for Uncloseted Media.While using a bathroom isnt something cis people have to think about, Schueren says its often on his mind, especially when crossing state lines. I recently went on a road trip with a trans person and we both are at different stages of our transition, he says.Beyond the emotional toll and stress of planning where to use the bathroom, holding in urine can increase the risk of urinary tract infections, cause bladder discomfort, andin the long-runcontribute to bladder dysfunction from overstretching.Subscribe nowSchueren and Brundage say being forced to use the bathroom that doesn't match their gender identity feels awkward, confusing and wrong.Brundage agrees and underscores how much time and energy these debates are taking away from conversations Americans really care about.While we're talking about bathrooms, we're not talking about lowering insurance rates for houses or for cars, because we are all focused on the big bad transgender people, she says. If objective, nonpartisan, rigorous, LGBTQ-focused journalism is important to you, please consider making a tax-deductible donation through our fiscal sponsor, Resource Impact, by clicking this button:Donate to Uncloseted Media0 Comments 0 Shares 55 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.UNCLOSETEDMEDIA.COMHow Can Conservative Christians Stop Calling LGBTQ People Groomers and Look Inward at Sexual Assault Inside the Church?Subscribe nowLast week, I interviewed the founder of Hetero Awesome Fest, which is essentially an anti-LGBTQ Straight Pride under the guise of a religious event thats meant to celebrate faith, family and freedom. Mark Fitzpatrick told me hes taking the festival to the next level this year by launching a 501(c)(3) charity called Heterosexual Awesomeness, Inc. Fitzpatrick, a devout Christian, has said his motivation for starting this charity is that the LGBTQ community is wicked, perverse and [one that] victimizes children and that Pride is associated with disgusting and criminal activity.There are so many Christian Americans who, like Fitzpatrick, believe LGBTQ people are one-dimensional: hypersexual predators or pedophiles coming for your kids.And the data just doesnt support that. Between 1950 and 2020, there were about 216,000 victims of sexual abuse carried out by the French Catholic Churchs clergy. And a 2019 investigation into the Southern Baptist Churches revealed over 380 individuals were accused of sexual misconduct, resulting in 700 victims since 1988.It got me thinking about how much wasted time, money and resources people like Fitzpatrick are putting toward a problem that doesnt need fixing. Whats worse is this energy is being taken away from the support that could be given to the countless innocent children who have been victims of sexual assault in churches around the world.I have met many conservative Christians who are well-meaning butfor whatever reasonare trying to save queer people while the predators are often sitting in the pews of their very own churches.If we were able to get all the Mark Fitzpatricks on board with taking a data-driven approach to fighting back against grooming and pedophilia, there would be transformative work done to dismantle the systemic, pervasive epidemic of sexual assault in conservative Christian spaces.The Fitzpatricks could chip away at and start to erode patriarchal governance structures. They could train pastors to encourage child survivors of sexual assault to feel like they have the agency to come forward. They could dismantle the notion that so-called gossip is sacrilegious if it has to do with assault or abuse of power. And they could teach kids that there can be exceptions to forgiveness and that you can and should do what it takes to hold rapists, abusers and pedophiles accountable.Subscribe for LGBTQ-focused, accountability journalism. Major Social Media Platforms Failing to Meet Basic Standards of Safety for LGBTQ Users: GLAAD (The Hill)Six of the nations leading social media platforms are failing to keep LGBTQ users safe from online bullying and harassment and quell the spread of disinformation, according to a new report from GLAAD.LGBTQ Catholics Hope Pope Leo XIV Continues Francis' Legacy of Acceptance (NBC News)Pope Francis opened the door to the LGBTQ faithful, and they are hoping the new pontiff continues to move the Catholic Church toward acceptance.Montana Judge Finds Trans Care Ban Unconstitutional (Montana Free Press)The decision about the 2023 law could be appealed to the Montana Supreme Court.Save the date and RSVP now! On June 3rd in DC, I will interview Kara Swisherthe host of On with Kara Swisher, cohost of Pivot and the author of Burn Book: A Tech Love Storyabout reporting on LGBTQ issues in todays political climate. The conversation will be followed by a Q&A. Drinks will be served and the event is free. Please RSVP ASAP as space is limited. We look forward to seeing you. Lets celebrate LGBTQ journalism!We are excited to announce we are a finalist for the National Institute for Health Care Management (NIHCM) Foundation Journalism Awards for our HIV Prevention story. Winners will be announced in June. Subscribe nowOver the next week, be on the lookout for new Uncloseted reporting: In 2025, bathroom laws targeting transgender individuals are resurging, forcing them into spaces that don't align with their gender identity. In states like Ohio and Florida, where bathroom bans are the law, we follow two trans people as they follow the law and use bathrooms that dont match their gender identity. Briden Schueren, a trans man, and Ashley Brundage, a trans woman, share their painful and awkward experiences of using public restrooms under these laws. On Tuesday, as anti-trans legislation and violence against the trans community intensifies, more trans women are turning to guns for protection. Jake Angelo speaks to trans women across the country about why many of them feel like carrying is more important than ever. Thanks for reading! Feel free to email me with questions, complaints and story ideas! Spencer Macnaughton, Editor-In-Chief spencer@unclosetedmedia.comIf objective, nonpartisan, rigorous, LGBTQ-focused journalism is important to you, please consider making a tax-deductible donation through our fiscal sponsor, Resource Impact, by clicking this button:Donate to Uncloseted Media0 Comments 0 Shares 57 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.UNCLOSETEDMEDIA.COMData Privacy in Trump 2.0 and LGBTQ Rights: What You Need to KnowDesign by Sam Donndelinger.Subscribe nowThe average American spends over three hours on their phone every day, and nearly half of U.S. teens say theyre on the Internet almost constantly.While most of us understand that not all of our data is private, the scope of how much U.S. government agencies can access is overwhelming: Internet history, private messages, health information, political affiliation and phone location data are all up for grabs.We are constantly shedding data as we go about our daily lives, says Lisa Femia, staff attorney at Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), a digital rights advocacy group. She says with no comprehensive Federal data privacy law, theres little legal protection surrounding our digital rights.This lack of regulation has unique implications for LGBTQ people, especially under the current Trump administration. In March 2025, the Department of Homeland Securitys Office of Intelligence and Analysis removed protections for LGBTQ identities from its restrictions on gathering intelligence. That means queer people are no longer a protected class when it comes to surveillance efforts.This occurred off the back of Trumps January Executive Order, Protecting Children From Chemical and Surgical Mutilation, that attempts to ban trans kids' access to healthcare. In addition, laws banning gender-affirming care have passed in at least 24 states across the country, creating a perfect storm for the government to use digital surveillance to capture folks trying to access what advocates describe as "lifesaving treatment.When our identities are being criminalized or stigmatized, record keeping, if it's not done well, can be a massive, massive tool for oppression, says Shae Gardner, policy director at the LGBT Technology Institute.So what capabilities do law enforcement agencies and the government have when it comes to monitoring LGBTQ folks looking for resources like gender-affirming care? What are the implications for trans youth who are seeking this care out of state? And what can you do to protect yourself?Data BrokersPhoto by Pexels.One alarming way third partiesincluding marketers, scammers, private investigators, tech companies, retailers and law enforcementcan access your digital footprint is through data brokers. These businesses exist solely to collect individuals online data to sell for profit. They have access to highly sensitive data from companies, apps and websites that collect information on people. They also indirectly gather data from public records such as voting registries. In the U.S., their work is virtually unregulated.Data brokers can access our home addresses, telephone numbers, political preferences, location data, online purchases and much more, says Gardner. Users don't even know that their data is available to be sold.There may be up to 5,000 data brokers globally, and out of the top 23 data brokerage companies in the world, 17 are in the U.S. These brokers have profiles on millions of Americans.Through third-party apps, they can even access our health data, putting our sensitive medical information at risk. For example, after the overturning of Roe v. Wade in 2022, privacy experts were concerned that data collected by Flo, the period tracking app, could be misused, given its history of passing the health details of its users to third parties.Subscribe nowBecause of this, Femia says its becoming harder and harder for people to get the care they need, the support they need, or be who they are, without leaving a trail that a hostile law enforcement agency or state government or federal government could use to target them.In some cases, the government has used the Data Broker Loopholea gap in the Electronics Communications Privacy Actto bypass legal requirements of obtaining warrants and subpoenas for data and instead purchasing it directly from private brokers. In Trumps first term, it was discovered that his Department of Homeland Security (DHS) bought cellphone location data to detect possible illegal border crossings.One data broker, Babel Street, created a tool named Locate Xused by the Secret Service and DHSwhich gathers smartphone location data to monitor people worldwide without a warrant. In practice, this is meant to help the government track serious criminal activities. But with increasing animus towards the trans community, it could potentially be used to track the movements of doctors working at gender-affirming care clinics or trans people seeking care.It's not a federal agent following you home anymore. It's someone tracking your location on your phone, says Gardner.While there are no documented instances of the government using this data surveillance to track folks looking for trans healthcare, thats not the case when it comes to reproductive healthcare. In 2023, an Idaho woman and her son were charged with taking the sons girlfriend to Oregon to get an abortion, using her cellphone location data as evidence.And in 2024, one company used location data broker Near Intelligence to track peoples visits to nearly 600 Planned Parenthood locations across 48 states and sold the data to feed a massive anti-abortion ad campaign funded by Veritas Society, a pro-life activist group.On a now-deleted page on the organizations website, they proudly cite that they use Near Intelligence's advanced digital technology known as Polygonning to identify and capture the cell phone IDs of women that are coming and going from Planned Parenthood and similar locations. We then reach these women on apps, social feeds and websites like Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat with pro-life content and messaging.Screenshot via Veritas Society.EducationPhoto by Pexels.In addition to data brokers, American kids are being monitored when they use computers provided by their schools. The Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT) reported an increase in surveillance software to monitor online activity on school-owned devices. In fact, 81% of teachers reported that their schools use some form of monitoring software and 71% reported it being used on school-issued devices, allowing schools to survey children outside of teaching hours.These tools provide teachers and schools with the ability to view students email, messaging, and social media content, view the contents of their screens in real time, and other monitoring functionality, CDT reports.While companies like GoGuardian claim to use their surveillance tools to mitigate potential security threats and monitor students mental health, privacy experts warn that these tools put children in homo/transphobic states at risk of their data being weaponized by their educators and law enforcement.Subscribe for LGBTQ-focused investigative journalism.Schools can specifically ask these programs to flag any LGBTQ content, says Eleni Manis, research director at the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project. So school surveillance software is already in place to provide a dragnet for flagging kids who are LGBTQ, or just exploring their sexuality.In 2023, EFF found that GoGuardian software in the Lake Travis Independent School District in Texas flagged over 75 websites with the terms transgender, LGBT, gay, homosexual, non-binary or queer in the URL. Websites that were flagged included the Wikipedia pages for the Transgender Rights Movement and for the portrayal of transgender people in film; an article from The Guardian about transgender history; and a page about the Gay Mens Chorus of Washington, D.C.In addition to blocking kids from visiting LGBTQ-themed websites, states like Alabama have passed bills that require school personnel to inform parents if a minor expresses a gender identity that is inconsistent with their biological sex. School personnel can enforce these bills through the surveillance of school-owned devices.It's going to disproportionately affect kids who are middle or low-income, kids who don't have the resources to have their own private iPad or laptop, says Manis. In states where gender-affirming care for kids is illegal, questions also arise surrounding what will be done with the datawill it be used to discipline the child or even shared with law enforcement?Manis says this software turns schools into another branch of Americas invasive surveillance apparatus. It's very difficult for those programs to stop flagging LGBTQ students even if they want to. Its the first place conservative, anti-trans or anti-LGBTQ districts can go to [for evidence], she says.Medical RecordsPhoto by Fotofrog.Beyond the classroom, the medical information of child and adult patients is at risk of being compromised.Medical records give you a patient's name, prescriptions, doctor's name, practice name, everything that you need to launch an investigation or prosecution. Same thing for prescription records. Pharmacy's prescription records will tell you who wrote a prescription, when it was filled, who filled it, says Manis.While patients speak frankly with their doctors based on confidentiality, there have been instances where local governmentsand even doctorshave violated patients right to medical privacy in the name of criminal prosecutions.In 2023, Dr. Eithan Haim, a Dallas surgeon, leaked sensitive data about children receiving transition-related care at Texas Childrens Hospital to a conservative activist who published the documents in a magazine.Although what Dr. Haim did was illegal, the Department of Justice dropped their charges against him in January, the same week Trump passed the EO banning gender-affirming care for trans kids.Additionally, in 2023, Vanderbilt University Medical Center handed over records for more than 100 current and former patients seeking transgender health care to Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti as part of an investigation into possible violations of the Tennessee Medicaid False Claims Act.It's a terrifying precedent because it works, even though it shouldn't, says Manis.HIPAA laws permit disclosures of protected health information if they are made to prevent a serious and imminent threat to health or safety, creating a loophole for local governments to work around. The loophole is large enough that when a law enforcement agency comes knocking at a hospital's door and asks for medical records in connection with an ongoing investigation, states typically cooperate.In other words, if the Trump administration wanted to come for patients, theres a model to follow, and HIPAA laws may not protect you.Camera SurveillancePhoto by Scott Webb.On top of all of this, automated license plate readers (ALPRs) are commonplace in policing. ALPRs are camera systems that capture the license plate data of passing vehicles. Nearly 90% of sheriffs offices with more than 500 sworn deputies use ALPRs, as well as every single police department that serves over 1 million people.No specific federal legislative framework exists that governs federal law enforcement use of ALPRs, according to a 2024 report by the Library of Congress. That means law enforcement agencies can access the data, store it for as long as they need, and officers are not required to demonstrate probable cause before accessing it.A 2013 report by the American Civil Liberties Union found that license plate readers check plate numbers against hot listsplates that have been uploaded to the systemto alert a law enforcement agency if a match appears. According to EFF, the data is often managed by private companies and data brokers.In 2024, it was revealed that Sacramento authorities were collecting license plate data and sharing it with law enforcement agencies in other states. In their investigation, the Sacramento County Grand Jury expressed concern that the data could be used to track individuals based on immigration status, place of worship, employment locations, or visits to places such as gun stores or hospitals. Particularly troubling was the potential sharing of ALPR data with other states whose citizens travel to California to seek an abortion, which has been banned or severely restricted in their home states.ShareBy using camera footage surveillance, you can track where people are going and you might see a person going to a clinic, or to an LGBTQ center and use that to aid an out-of-state prosecution saying a parent let their kid get gender-affirming care, Femia says.How Can You Maintain Your Privacy?Photo by Stefan Coders.Despite the various ways you can be monitored, experts say individuals can protect themselves from digital surveillance by using encrypted messaging apps like Signal and more secure search engines like DuckDuckGo. They also recommend using Virtual Private Networks to encrypt your Internet traffic. Finally, they recommend turning your phone off when going to protests or other LGBTQ-themed events so data brokers cant track your location.But theres only so much individuals can do. It's really important that we don't fall into the trap of thinking that this is our fault and our problem to solve, or that you can protect your privacy just by changing some settings on your phone, says Evan Greer, director of digital advocacy group Fight for the Future. We need to fight for policies that protect people. The reality is, this is a collective societal problem, and it should be addressed at a broad scale by enacting policies that protect people's basic human rights.States like California and New York are passing shield laws to protect individuals and cement themselves as data sanctuary states. These laws give consumers more control over the personal information that businesses collect about them and limit the disclosure of their personal data to out-of-state entities.But the way data travels doesn't respect state lines. So the idea that there are differing protections once you hit a state border is kind of silly, Gardner says. Any time the states, no matter how well-intentioned, are attempting to build data protections, they're doing it on a wobbly table that really doesn't have a base because there are [no comprehensive federal protections].Greer cites the European Unions General Data Protection Regulation as an aspirational framework for the U.S. Its a law enforced in 2018 that grants individuals the right to their personal data.What we really, really need is federal privacy protections. We need to enshrine rights to gender-affirming care in federal law. That's the only thing that would truly protect trans and non-binary Americans. It doesn't look like we're gonna get that in the short run, says Manis.**For more information on how to control your data, the Digital Defense Fund has a presentation here.If objective, nonpartisan, rigorous, LGBTQ-focused journalism is important to you, please consider making a tax-deductible donation through our fiscal sponsor, Resource Impact, by clicking this button:Donate to Uncloseted Media0 Comments 0 Shares 57 Views 0 Reviews
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NEWSISOUT.COMInside Symphonii Smith-Kennedys art exhibit Interwoven LayersSymphonii Smith-Kennedy is a 23-year-old Jamaican-American artist from South Florida, exploring themes of identity, race, and queerness through her painting. A graduate of New World School of the Arts, she creates art to reflect on her experiences as a Black queer woman and aims to build connections through her work.Symphoniis debut solo show Interwoven Layers: A Garden of Self Discovery took viewers on a personal journey of self-exploration, blending themes of identity, vulnerability, and experience, especially for those tied to being queer and BIPOC. For Smith-Kennedy, art is more than just creation; it is about connection. With this show, her goal was to remind people that they arent alone in their struggles, encouraging viewers to embrace the beauty of authenticity. This exhibition invited people into her world and showed them that they could face their challenges unapologetically.Exploring feminism, Blackness, and queerness through artSmith-Kennedys art is deeply connected to her identity, focusing on themes of feminism, Blackness, and queerness, with vulnerability at the heart of everything. Interwoven Layers is a collection of painted self portraits in addition to mystic creatures and nature that showed the raw, unfiltered aspects of life that often remained hidden.By sharing her own personal experiences and struggles, Smith-Kennedy opens up space for viewers to connect and understand the complexities of identity. She hoped this exhibition would allow others to see themselves in her work and know that it was okay to be vulnerable.Art by Symphonii. Creating art that reflects a complex identityBeing both queer and Afro-Caribbean, Smith-Kennedys art reflects the intersectionality of her experience.It was hard to make one piece solely represent a group of people, especially when we werent a monolith, she said.Rather than generalizing the experiences of her community, Smith-Kennedys work speaks to the specific, real-life stories of those who were too often overlooked or misrepresented. Her paintings are a voice for the marginalized, challenging societal norms and pushing boundaries to reflect diverse and complex identities.A personal journey: Empowering others through vulnerabilityThrough her work, Smith-Kennedy wanted people to know that vulnerability wasnt a weakness, but a powerful strength.The baggage that you carry is not a bad thing, she shared. Its not for you to carry alone.She encouraged viewers to embrace their true selves and face their life challenges with confidence. Interwoven Layers wasnt just an art exhibition; it was an invitation to connect with the rawness of being human and to embrace the beauty of authenticity, no matter what baggage or struggles people may carry.Challenges of being a queer/BIPOC artist in South FloridaBeing a queer, Black artist in a conservative place like South Florida comes with its challenges. Smith-Kennedy spoke about how censorship impacted her work, particularly when it involved nudity or graphic content that addressed sensitive topics like gender and race.The hardest thing I dealt with was the constant censorship of my work, she said, noting that her pieces, which challenged conventional norms, are often ignored or undervalued. Despite this, she continues to create and push boundaries, making her art a powerful statement on resilience and self-expression.A call for authenticity and self-expressionInterwoven Layers wasnt just about the artists own vulnerability; it was a call for everyone to embrace their authenticity. Smith-Kennedy hoped the exhibition would inspire people to open up, be themselves, and share their own untold stories.It was about showing people that it was okay to not be perfect, and it was okay to share your untold stories, no matter how difficult they might have been, she said.By being honest and vulnerable in her art, she created a space where everyone could feel seen and heard through her use of bold imagery, vibrant colors and eye-catching brush strokes.This story is part of the Digital Equity Local Voices Fellowship lab. The lab initiative is made possible with support from Comcast NBC Universal.The post Inside Symphonii Smith-Kennedys art exhibit Interwoven Layers appeared first on News Is Out.0 Comments 0 Shares 53 Views 0 Reviews
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NEWSISOUT.COMThe OutLook: LGBTQ+ politics & policy: May 16, 2025The Outlook is our weekly roundup of political issues that affect the LGBTQ+ community.The federal government has removed gender identity questions from key crime surveys, cutting off vital data on violence against LGBTQ+ people.Ohio Republicans blocked LGBTQ+ advocates from testifying against anti-trans language in the state budget, silencing concerns over harmful provisions.Republicans new reconciliation proposal includes cuts that the Human Rights Campaign says could devastate LGBTQ+ communities, especially low-income people, those living with HIV, and transgender youth. HRC warns the bill threatens Medicaid access, trans health care, and food assistance programs like SNAP.Over 100 lawmakers are urging Health and Human Services not to cut LGBTQ+ youth support from the 988 suicide hotline, warning the move could endanger lives.A new federal policy now requires IDs like passports to reflect sex assigned at birth, leading to rejections for transgender and nonbinary applicants. The ACLU is challenging the policy in court, where a judge has called it discriminatory and issued a preliminary injunction.The post The OutLook: LGBTQ+ politics & policy: May 16, 2025 appeared first on News Is Out.0 Comments 0 Shares 54 Views 0 Reviews
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NEWSISOUT.COMTariffs hit hard, but queer-owned brands push back with transparency and communityAt the start of President Donald Trumps second term in January, his administration quickly followed through on his promise to increase tariffs on U.S. trading partners. It began in February with a 10% tariff increase on all Chinese imports and a 25% increase on steel and aluminum products. Since then, tariffs have been escalating between China and the U.S. with the highest reaching a 145% tariff for Chinese imports.On May 14, a 90-day pause on tariffs is expected to take place, with both China and the U.S. reducing their reciprocal tariffs to 10%. It is unclear whether this pause will last after the 90 days expire. For many U.S. businesses, the damage from the initial rise in tariffs has had a profound effect, especially for those in retail and apparel.Queer-owned businesses have begun speaking out about the effect of the tariffs and what they are doing to combat rising costs, or at least how to bring consumers attention to them.TomboyX adds a Tariff Surcharge to impacted productsTomboyX, a queer-owned apparel brand, shared a statement from CEO Leslie Garrand about the tariffs on its social media channels.If youre uneasy about the whole Tr*mp situationyeah, same.These are unpredictable times, and we want to be real with you. Trumps wild-@ss tariffs are creating serious challenges for small businesses like oursand starting this May, we now face sky-high tariff costs.The good news:Many of our products (like swim!) are less affected. So go ahead, shop away.The not-so-good news:Products we sustainably produce in China are now hit with tariff rates of + 145%. To help offset just a portion of this cost increase, were introducing a temporary Tr*mp Tariff Surcharge on those items starting May 1. Youll see a clear note on the product page and in your cart. (The amount varies by item, and well remove the charge as soon as we can.)Thank you for sticking with us and supporting a small business doing its best to responsibly weather the chaos. Built to endure. Leslie Garrard CEOSince then, items on the TomboyX website that are affected by tariffs now feature a note in red that says Tr*mp Tariff Surcharge. The additional fees range from around $1 up to $7.Screenshot taken of TomboyXs Tr*mp Tariff Surcharge. A representative from TomboyX was not immediately available for comment.Wildfang speaks out on CBSQueer and female founded apparel company Wildfang based in Portland, Oregon has also spoken out publicly about tariffs. Wildfang CEO Emma McIlroy was interviewed on CBS Mornings on April 9 about tariffs, which heavily impact the company. When asked how the steep rise in tariffs would impact her company, McIlroy shared an example.We had our summer orderso we make apparel, we make fashionarrived on Monday this week. If that order had arrived today, it would have cost us $178,000 more to receive it. I dont have that money.When asked if those increases could be passed on to customers, McIllory said, I do think youre going to see businesses have to pass this on to consumers. If you were trying to maintain the same structure you have right now, it would mean an 83% increase in consumer prices. I dont think youll see that full price increase, but thats how aggressive this would be for consumers.However, McIlroy shared that Wildfang is doing everything they can to mitigate the rising costs.So, as a small business, were going to try everything in our power not to pass that along, said McIlroy. Thats going to include working with our factory partners, looking at new factories and locations to manufacture, and thats going to include cutting our own costs. Every business will try to do that. But as a small business, there arent that many places to cut. I think a last resort is going to increase prices.After speaking out publicly about how Trumps tariffs could affect Wildfang, McIlroy says the response from the community and customers has been overwhelmingly supportive.Weve had tons of lovely messages of support from our community, McIlroy told News is Out. Weve also had lots of notes from other business owners sharing their frustrations and fears and thanking us for speaking up and raising awareness about the topic. In terms of next steps, McIlroy says Wildfang is working with factories to fast-track orders during the 90-day tariff pause. Additionally were working with our factories to sample in Vietnam and Indonesia to diversify our manufacturing base, she said.Gay Pride Apparel watches and waitsFor Gay Pride Apparel owners Sergio Aragon and Jesus Gutierrez, the rise in tariffs hasnt hit the business directly, yet much remains to be seen. Gay Pride Apparel does much of its business with American printers, but tariffs could affect them in other ways.There is a lot of uncertainty for us about whether theyll raise their prices because theyre being hit with tariffs, said Gutierrez in a Zoom interview with News is Out. And its also very timely for us, because obviously, its about to hit Pride. So were trying to figure out: will our production partner raise our prices? Does that mean that we have to raise our prices on our end?Sergio Aragon and Jesus Gutierrez, owners of Gay Pride Apparel. Photo: Courtesy of Gay Pride Apparel Its not just tariffs giving Gutierrez and Aragon pause, its also a challenging economy.We know the economy is a little bit rough right now to begin with, said Gutierrez. Our pricing is already pretty high compared to a normal T-shirt. So were trying to juggle it all. And I think its all been so volatilejust changing every daythat it hasnt really hit us in one way or another. Its almost kind of still up in the air for us.Gay Pride Apparels partners have been working with the company to keep shipping costs down and keep lines of communication open.But the good thing is, our business partners and our suppliers have been really transparent with us and working with us, said Aragon. There are different workarounds theyre doing to help us avoid it.When asked their thoughts on TomboyXs approach of including a clear note about tariffs, Gutierrez applauded the companys transparency.I love it, said Gutierrez. I mean, as you mentioned earlier, were very transparent with our customers, and I think its because its just us two. We have a two-way conversation with our customer and our community. So seeing TomboyX do that was really fun and felt like something we would do. We actually saw it and were like, Oh, should we consider doing something? But we dont know how its going to affect us yet.Gutierrez and Aragon are considering what to do next and if tariffs really begin to negatively impact the company. While some companies are looking at having to pass on increases, Gay Pride Apparel is also looking at an alternative.But as people are raising their prices and responding to this, we were talking about maybe lowering our prices and making less money per sale per product, but becoming more accessible, said Gutierrez. Because truthfully, were struggling. Everyone struggles. How do we meet our customers where theyre at?On a positive note as a queer-owned business, Gay Pride Apparel is seeing an increase in consumers supporting the company as an alternative to those that have changed their stances on support for Pride, diversity and inclusion, like Target and Walmart.Theyll straight up call it out, said Gutierrez. On Threads specifically, well get tagged randomly in posts that are like, whether its a boycott post or its a Pride-related kind of tag your favorite queer business. And then people are like, Oh, I only shop at Gay Pride Apparel now because the rest of them are abandoning us, or I only stick to companies who are here all year, such as Gay Pride Apparel. Theyll even say, Im trying to support, even if its 20% more, 30% more, to buy the shirtIll support Gay Pride Apparel over XYZ.GRRRL Spells faces steep costs and hard choicesWhile not U.S.-based business, Canadian company GRRRL Spells does a lot of business with consumers in the U.S. Last year, GRRRL Spells made headlines as one of the queer/trans-owned businesses when their partnership with Target was drastically reduced and their labels were removed from remaining products.Creator and designer of GRRRL Spells, En Tze Loh, shared their experience as a Canadian brand.Even though were a Canadian business, the majority of our online customers are from the states, said Loh. The de minimis exemption allowing orders under $800 to enter the US tariff-free was removed specifically for products manufactured in China, now subjecting them to an absurdly high tariff fee regardless of where its shipped from. We design all of our own products but get them manufactured both locally and abroad including China, and unfortunately many of our products will now be subject to those tariffs when delivered to U.S. customers.GRRRL Spells owner En Tze Loh. Photo: Courtesy En Tze LohAs a result, GRRRL Spells has pulled back on shipping certain products to the U.S.We have decided to stop shipping any of our items that were manufactured in China to the US as we dont believe anyone should have to pay these extreme fees, which drastically decreases our sales. Enamel pins, which are our most popular product, do not have any North American manufacturers at all and they are mostly produced in China, so sadly there isnt an alternative.During a time which should see the companys biggest spikes, GRRRL Spells is preparing for a slower season.We are definitely anticipating a much quieter Pride month and year due to the tariffs and decline of the economy in general as weve already been feeling the effects of it since the year began. Were trying our best to adapt to the changes and find alternatives in order to keep going but it has been challenging.Looking ahead with resilience and gratitudeLoh also wants consumers and LGBTQ+ people to know how grateful they are for their support. We would like to send so much love and strength to every queer and trans person during these wild times and thank you so much to everyone who has supported us throughout all these years, said Loh. We need the support of each other more than ever right now. While we may not be able to ship many of our current goods to the US at the moment, were working on a new collection for Pride with items that we will be able to ship tariff-free, so please stay tuned!The post Tariffs hit hard, but queer-owned brands push back with transparency and community appeared first on News Is Out.0 Comments 0 Shares 48 Views 0 Reviews
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NEWSISOUT.COMGLAAD Report: Major social platforms fall short on LGBTQ+ safety in 2025GLAAD has released its 2025Social Media Safety Index evaluating seven of the countrys largest social media platforms on how well they protect LGBTQ+ users. The platforms assessedFacebook, Instagram, Threads (Meta), TikTok, YouTube, X (formerly Twitter), and Snapchatwere scored based on their LGBTQ+ user safety, policy transparency, enforcement and protections against harassment and disinformation. No platform scored above a 60 out of 100. TikTok received the highest score at 56, while X ranked lowest at 30. Meta platforms saw the biggest year-over-year declines.In January, Meta owner Mark Zuckerberg announced changes to the platforms moderation, fact checking and protections. The recent major ideological shifts from Meta have been particularly extreme, said GLAAD President and CEO Sarah Kate Ellis. Earlier this year, the company announced it would retreat from stablished norms of trust and safety in favor of welcoming hate speech, and further place the onus on users to block blatantly harmful content that would otherwise violate its policies. The Platform Scorecard and the Key Findings and Recommendations of this edition of the SMSI reflect the early fallout of the current situation and point to why collective advocacy to hold social media companies accountable is so urgent.The report outlines several key areas of concern, including increased anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric, inconsistent content moderation, and a lack of transparency in how platforms enforce their policies. It also highlights the spread of disinformation targeting LGBTQ+ communities, particularly trans and nonbinary users, and suppression of LGBTQ+-related content. Among GLAADs recommendations: strengthen and enforce hate speech policies, provide transparency around content moderation and algorithmic impacts, implement LGBTQ+ cultural competency training for moderators, and offer users more control over data tracking and targeting.GLAAD also notes that the findings point to a growing disconnect between platform policies and user experiences. While most platforms publicly state support for LGBTQ+ communities, the report suggests that implementation and enforcement often fall short.TheSocial Media Safety Indexwas created in 2020 to track year-over-year progress and hold platforms accountable. GLAADs team worked with independent researchers and advisors to evaluate each platforms safety measures, content policies, enforcement and user experience for LGBTQ+ communities.The report highlights the influence social media platforms have on public discourse and how that influence can affect real-world attitudes about LGBTQ+ people.For more detailed platform breakdowns and recommendations, the full 2025Social Media Safety Indexis available at glaad.org.The post GLAAD Report: Major social platforms fall short on LGBTQ+ safety in 2025 appeared first on News Is Out.0 Comments 0 Shares 57 Views 0 Reviews
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GLAAD.ORGNYCs Jasmine Rice Takes Opera and Drag to the Global Stage, Advancing to Britains Got Talent Finals (EXCLUSIVE)There are moments on reality TV that feel bigger than a competition. Jasmine Rice LaBeija stepping onto the Britains Got Talent (BGT) stage in full drag hair: sky-high, gown: glittering, and voice: soaring was one of them. The veteran New York City drag artist, who also happens to be a Juilliard-trained opera singer [...]The post NYCs Jasmine Rice Takes Opera and Drag to the Global Stage, Advancing to Britains Got Talent Finals (EXCLUSIVE) first appeared on GLAAD.0 Comments 0 Shares 49 Views 0 Reviews
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GLAAD.ORGXunami Muse Ascends in Stunning MUVA Music Video Featuring Shea Coule: A Drag Pop Renaissance Has ArrivedThe moment is now. The future is femme. And Xunami Muse is leading the charge. Fresh off a dazzling return to the RuPauls Drag Race main stage for Season 17s finale and the release of her full-length debut album NDA: New Drag Age, the Panamanian-American star makes a thunderous statement with the release of her [...]The post Xunami Muse Ascends in Stunning MUVA Music Video Featuring Shea Coule: A Drag Pop Renaissance Has Arrived first appeared on GLAAD.0 Comments 0 Shares 63 Views 0 Reviews
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GLAAD.ORGAruna Rao Speaks on Breaking Cycles and Building Safe Spaces for LGBTQ South AsiansBy Aruna Rao My child, assigned female at birth, was 5 years old, when he told me that he was a boy, that he wanted to dress like a boy, cut his hair like a boy, answer to a boys name that he had chosen for himself. He asked me to call him by his [...]The post Aruna Rao Speaks on Breaking Cycles and Building Safe Spaces for LGBTQ South Asians first appeared on GLAAD.0 Comments 0 Shares 53 Views 0 Reviews
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GLAAD.ORGThe GLAAD Wrap: Trailers for Hot Milk and The Old Guard 2, First-Look at Too Much and Such Brave Girls, New Music by G Flip, Madame Gandhi, and More!Every week, The GLAAD Wrap brings you LGBTQ-related entertainment news highlights, fresh stuff to watch out for, and fun diversions to help you kick off the weekend. 1.)The queer rom-com Things Like This hit theaters today! In the pic, Zack Anthony (Max Talisman), a struggling writer, and Zach Mande (Joey Pollari)l, a talent agent assistant [...]The post The GLAAD Wrap: Trailers for Hot Milk and The Old Guard 2, First-Look at Too Much and Such Brave Girls, New Music by G Flip, Madame Gandhi, and More! first appeared on GLAAD.0 Comments 0 Shares 53 Views 0 Reviews
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GLAAD.ORGWATCH: Director Nyle DiMarco Talks Deaf President Now! and His Hopes the Film Reminds audiences of the power of collective action.Deaf President Now! tells the true story of one of the most important civil rights movements in history, that many of us have never been taught. In 1988, protests erupted for 8 days straight at the worlds only Deaf university, as they elected a new president. Four students worked together to lead a revolution and [...]The post WATCH: Director Nyle DiMarco Talks Deaf President Now! and His Hopes the Film Reminds audiences of the power of collective action. first appeared on GLAAD.0 Comments 0 Shares 56 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PRIDE.COMKristen Stewart wows on the Cannes carpet of her directorial debut 'The Chronology of Water'Actress-turned-director Kristen Stewart has had a vast and varied career in the more than 20 years shes been in Hollywood. She burst onto the scene in films like Panic Room and playing Bella Swan in the Twilight franchise, since she starred in big blockbusters like 2019s Charlies Angels, and took the indie film world by storm with Clouds of Sils Maria and Crimes of the Future. Now, the 35-year-old is stepping behind the camera to make her directorial debut with an adaptation of Lidia Yuknavitchs 2011 memoir The Chronology of Water. In a new in-depth interview with The Hollywood Reporter amid her first film premiering at the Cannes Film Festival, Stewart is opening up about how the Trump administration is changing the film industry, when her dream of being a director started, why she wanted to helm The Chronology of Water as he first outing in the directors chair, and her belief that making mistakes is fucking hot.Stewart has wanted to direct for years and even started asking other actors whats the youngest director they could stomach working with but hadn't found a project that spoke to her until she came across The Chronology of Water. For some reason, psychotically, Ive wanted to do it forever, because I do think the exchange between an actor and a director is a bridge between two very different positions.She may have waiting until her mid thirties to direct her first film, but shes been thinking about it since she was a kid. I think I was, like, 9 years old, but then I figured out how to actually fucking do it. And now Im 35.On discovering the book that made her want to make a movie: It was one of those books that felt like a choir that you wanted to join. It felt like permission.Making The Chronology of Water was like pulling the cork out of a champagne bottle, and now Stewart wants to make more movies. It also felt like it was breaking a seal because now theres 10 more movies I want to make fucking yesterday, she explained. Stewart took a risk and filmed her debut feature on 16mm, and Indie Wire has described her foray into directing as bristling "with the raw energy of an artist whos found the permission she needed to put her whole being into every frame, messy and shattered as that might be."Imogen Poots, who Stewart described as a sister, stars in the film and both women felt like it was an opportunity to make a really good movie thats important, that girls need to have and eat and metabolize. Boots isnt the only talented actress Stewart cast, Thora Birch, Kim Gordon, and Susannah Flood are all starring in the upcoming drama.On Poots talent: Its not that shes not enough its that its never enough for her. Im like, Give this girl more! I have just loved her for so long, and I felt connected to her before I met her. Poots is starring as Lidia Yuknavitch, the author of the memoir the film is based on, who becomes a teacher, a mother, and a modern writer.Stewart opened up about being queer back in 2017 while on Saturday Night Live and has been living out and proud ever since. When asked about casting Earl Cave, Stewart said she thinks there have been big changes in Hollywood in recent years when it comes to who we see in front of the camera. I do think there have been some tectonic shifts in terms of whos allowed to take up space and be heard, but at the same time, I dont know what the filters are, she admitted. Stewart revealed that while times are changing and its easier to be out there now, the country is also backsliding. But at the same time, were also living in a world thats literally folding in on itself by the split second. So, who the fuck knows?The current political climate is terrifying for most queer people and Stewart isnt immune. The loss is so palpable. Its an exciting time to be alive. And its cool that we all get to be loud together, but at the same time, is that going to do anything? Whats gonna happen? I think were all looking over our shoulders going, 'Holy shit.' The slippage is just terrifying. Stewart has been making her feelings clear about President Donald Trump for years, even slamming him in her monologue on SNL when she came out. Im a little nervous to be hosting because I know the presidents probably watching, and, um, I dont think he likes me that much, she joked at the time. The president is not a huge fan of me, which is so OK, because Donald, if you didnt like me then, youre really probably not going to like me now. Im, like, so gay, dude.Stewart also worries about the way President Donald Trumps tariffs will impact the film industry. [Trumps] shadow is bleak and very dark, she explained. You could almost say opaque. And I think to try and work through that is what were going to do. But in terms of knowing anything, I think we should expect the worst and fight for the best. Stay vigilant. Look alive. But the newbie director clearly hasn't let the presidency impact her life choices. Earlier this year, she married Dylan Meyer roughly two years after the sapphic couple made their relationship public.She said her head blew off when she found out she would be premiering her film at Cannes, and called the attempt to get in a Hail Mary." Stewart continued, I am not being false humble were all running on fumes. I was like, We can do it. I was like an absolute basket case. Im kind of happy to take on something vulnerable. Im happy to take something with mistakes. Mistakes are fucking hot."0 Comments 0 Shares 52 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PRIDE.COM'Vanderpump Rules' star Billie Lee on turning to 'empowering' sex work when she was brokeVanderpump Rules alum Billie Lee is getting candid about turning to sex work when money was in short supply. On a recent appearance on the Oldish podcast, the former reality TV star opened up about how she had trouble finding a job as a trans woman when she first moved to Los Angeles. She had plenty of experience as a server, but she was still being turned down by all of the restaurants she applied to. They would love my resume because I have all this serving experience from college, she told hosts Brian Austin Green and Sharna Burgess, according to People. And then they would see me and then be like, they wouldn't hire me. They were just like, No, we don't know what the hell this is.She said when she worked at Lisa Vanderpumps restaurant while she was briefly on season 6 of the hit reality TV show, sex appeal was valued above all else. Even when I worked at SUR on Vanderpump, it was about being attractive, being sexy, wearing sexy clothes.When the co-hosts asked what she did for money if she couldnt land a job, Lee revealed that she supported herself by getting paid to do sexual things.Because our unemployment rate is so high it still is for trans people, a lot of us do lean on sex work, she admitted. Because we are all so fetishized and over-sexualized.But Lee isnt ashamed of being a former sex worker; in fact, she takes pride in it.I find it very empowering now, she said. I'm a pleaser I'm a people pleaser, which is hard if someone's mad at you but I'm also just a pleaser in general. So whenever I became a sex worker, I was like, Oh, wow, I can get off pleasing these men and also get paid.Since then, Lee has moved on from sex work and is now a published author, a podcast host, and a stand-up comedian, but admits to sometimes being tempted to take men up on their offers when they approach her.Like, the other day, I was charging my car and some guy was hitting on me, she remembered. And if they notice that I'm trans and I don't accept, they're like, Oh, give me your Instagram or your phone number. Then they'll be like, Well, how much? And the back of my head is like, Oh, I could make some easy money right now. She continued, Theres something empowering about wanting to lean back into it because that was kind of what we had as survival, and it just became a way of life for me.Lee explained that as a trans woman it often feels like society is beating you up, and that she has struggled with not always feeling confident in her own body, but although sex work could be scary, having sex with a man who treated her like a queen would give her a welcome boost of confidence.I have to say, I was pretty blessed when I came to sex work, she said. There were times when I would first enter a hotel room, you do certain things that you learn. Like, I would check-in to make sure that the front desk saw me. And I would check and make sure where the cameras were, security cameras. And then I would have a pocket knife up in my coat, like, in my coat sleeve. I would do a check throughout the entire room, like in any cabinets in the bathroom, and stuff like that, before I would get on the bed. So you do like little things to protect yourself in that way.But I had really amazing clients who like treated me with respect and wine and dined me, Lee explained. I was in hotels in Beverly Hills, you know, so I wasn't on the street, which a lot of my sisters are.0 Comments 0 Shares 62 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PRIDE.COM11 best LGBTQ+ true crime docs and where to watch themWe love heartfelt LGBTQ+ dramas, lesbian action movies, and hilarious women-led comedies as much as the next person, but sometimes we want to sink our teeth into a queer true crime documentary.True crime has been all the rage for years, but who wants to let the straights have all the fun? There are plenty of bizarre, entertaining, and bingeable true crime documentaries out there exploring the life and crimes of queer people. From tickling competitions to porn shops being investigated by the FBI to gay serial killers and criminal big cat lovers, there is a doc for every taste. So check out these 11 incredibly entertaining Be Gay Do Crime documentaries!The StaircaseOne of highest rated true crime documentaries out there, this eight-part series follows the case of bisexual author Michael Peterson who was accused of murdering his wife. Most true crimes documentaries are looking from the outside in after a case has already been investigated and brought to trial, but The Staircase gives you an inside look at the investigation and how both the defense and prosecution builds their case, as well as the devastation the trial wrecks on the defendants life and that of his family. The series not only shows you the trial, but also explores how homophobia impacted the case. Once youve watched the whole series, you should do a deep dive on all of the alternative theories of the crime. Our favorite theory? It was an owl. No, seriously. Where to watch: NetflixTiger KingIf youve never seen Tiger King, the wild documentary series that was on everyones lips during the early days of the pandemic lockdown, you need to fix that immediately. Compulsively watchable, Tiger King captivated the world by following the life and crimes of gay big cat lover Joe Exotic, his arch enemy Carole Baskin, and the cult-leader-like zookeeper Doc Antle. Its a story stranger than fiction, and when you start to think that a drug king pin might be the sanest person in the docuseries, you know youre in for a wild ride. And if you cant get enough, there is now a second season too.Where to watch: NetflixReflections of the PastReflections of the Past tells the story of teenagers Pauline Parker and Juliet Hume who killed Pauline's mother, Honora, in 1954 when the young teens were being threatened with being separated. The true crime was also the basis of the Melanie Lynskey and Kate Winslet starring cult classic Heavenly Creatures. Where to watch: Rent on Amazon PrimeMister OrganMister Organ is a New Zealand documentary about director and journalist David Farrier getting caught up in a game of cat and mouse while investigating the mysterious Mister Organ, who has been wreaking havoc in his neighborhood. The three-year-long investigation uncovers bizarre claims of royal bloodlines, ruined lives, and a series of crimes. Where to watch: NetflixThe Jeffrey Dahmer FilesThe Jeffrey Dahmer Files tells the story of notorious gay serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer by using archival footage, re-enactments, and interviews with the medical examiner, lead detective, and Dahmers next door neighbor. Dahmer was convicted of murdering 17 men and boys and dismembering their bodies and the documentary explores the days surrounding Dahmers crimes first being discovered and shows restraint while not shying away from the true horrors of his crimes.Where to watch: NetflixTickledOne of the strangest and most watchable documentaries on this list, Tickled follows journalist David Farrier as he uncovers the strange and homoerotic world of competitive tickling. Yes, tickling. The deeper he dives into the bizarre subculture, the weirder things get as he begins investigating the man behind the competitions. Once youre hooked on this doc trust us, you will be then check out the sequel special, The Tickle King, that explores the equally strange aftermath of the documentary premiering.Where to watch: Tubi, PlutoTV, Fandango at HomeAmerican Sports Story: Aaron HernandezThis 10-part documentary goes into the details of how Aaron Hernandez went from an NFL superstar to being convicted of murder of Odin Lloyd. The intense Ryan Murphy-produced series is based on the Gladiator: Aaron Hernandez and Football Inc. podcast from The Boston Globe. The docuseries goes into great detail about Hernandezs life and crimes, and how his bisexuality and traumatic brain injury impacted what happened. Where to watch: HuluAileen Wuornos: The Selling of a Serial KillerIf youre a fan of serial killer movies, youve probably seen Monster starring Charlize Theron and Christina Ricci, but you may not know the true story behind the award-winning movie that not only showed the murder spree, but the love story between the two women. Aileen Wuornos: The Selling of a Serial Killer tells the story of sex worker Aileen Wuornos who has been dubbed Americas first female serial killer and director Nick Broomfields attempts to interview Wuornos who was accused of a brutal string of murders.Where to watch: YouTubeJohn Wayne Gacy: Devil in DisguiseThis six-part documentary series explore the murder spree of infamous serial killer John Wayne Gacy, who raped and killed at least 33 teenage boys and young men in the 70s. John Wayne Gacy: Devil in Disguise tells the story of the murders, Gacys sexuality, his life as a clown, and how he hid bodies in the crawl space under his house, and includes the words of the killer himselfWhere to watch: PeacockCircus of BooksThe fascinating and fun documentary about a Jewish couple who ran Circus of Books, an adult book store that became the epicenter for gay L.A. and by the 80s had become the largest distributors of gay porn in the U.S. the doc shows shows the cultural significance of the store to the gay community, the double life the owners had to lead at at time when the LGBTQ+ community wasnt accepted, how the story became a refuge during the height of the AIDS crisis, and the their brush with the law when they faced jail time on federal obscenity charges.Where to watch: NetflixAmerican Experience: The Perfect CrimeThis PBS documentary tells the story of two of the most famous gay killers of all time: Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb. Leopold and Loeb were deathly, upper-class college students who planned and executed child abductions and murders just to prove they were smart enough to get away with it. The infamous case has inspired countless movies and books, including Alfred Hitchcocks Rope, and continues to take up space in the popular imagination. Where to watch: PBS0 Comments 0 Shares 58 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PRIDE.COMMax Talisman says his new gay movie 'Things Like This' is a protest: 'Revel in the queer joy'We're here, queer, and not going anywhere.Max Talisman set on a mission to bring LGBTQ+ representation to the big screen with his super cute new rom-com Things Like This. His character, Zack, reunites with his middle school crush and struggles to accept his feelings for his crush."[The inspiration] came from not seeing myself reflected on film, like not seeing a plus-size queer lead in anything. There's not enough queer films in general. I started writing it in 2018 and now it's being released in 2025! You never can give up," Talisman tells PRIDE. See on Instagram Although it took seven years to bring this movie to life, the timing couldn't be more crucial as queer stories are becoming more scarce in today's hostile political climate."Our film accidentally became an act of protest because it's about queer joy. It does feel like that's the opposite of what we're supposed to experience right now, but to live in that joy and to celebrate it for these 90 minutes... it's something really special."Things Like This is the perfect form of escapism for anyone in the LGBTQ+ community, but it also serves as an important to reminder to keep pushing for queer visibility in all forms of media."I want people to come into this movie, laugh for those 90 minutes, revel in the queer joy, and then we can leave and we can keep fighting because right now, that's important too."Talisman is well aware that conservatives will likely stick their nose up at this beautiful film, but he encourages naysayers to simply give this movie a chance before saying anything negative."I would want to dare them to sit there and not laugh and not experience joy. If they can make it through this movie without smiling, I'd give them $100 or more. I think people who feel that way haven't met a gay person or they haven't met the right one."Things Like This is out now in theaters. To see the full interview with Max Talisman, check out the video at the top of the page.0 Comments 0 Shares 57 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PRIDE.COMPope Leo XIV just says no to marriage equalityPope Leo XIV has begun his papacy by affirming that the family is founded upon the stable union between a man and a woman, the Associated Press reports.The new pope made the remark Friday during a private meeting with the Vatican diplomatic corps. A transcript was released to the media.Related: LGBTQ+ Catholic organization's leader says he's 'hopeful' about Pope Leo XIVRelated: Popes brother shared a video falsely suggesting Nancy Pelosi is a drunk and her husband uses GrindrRelated: New pope voted in Republican primaries, Illinois records showWhile his immediate predecessor, the late Pope Francis, was friendlier to the LGBTQ+ community than other popes, Francis did not change Roman Catholic doctrine on marriage and adhered to the traditional definition of families. He did announce in late 2023 that the church would allow the blessing of same-sex couples but said these ceremonies should not resemble weddings. He also said the blessings were for the people in the relationship, not the relationship itself.Pope Leo, then Cardinal Robert Prevost, did not fully endorse nor reject the concept, according to a College of Cardinals report.Allowing the blessings was one of several pro-LGBTQ+ reforms Francis made during his papacy. But the new pope has made some anti-LGBTQ+ statements. In 2012, at a meeting of bishops, he lamented that Western news media and popular culture fostered sympathy for beliefs and practices that are at odds with the gospel, The New York Times reports. He specifically mentioned the homosexual lifestyle and alternative families comprised of same-sex partners and their adopted children. As bishop of Chiclayo, Peru, he objected to a plan to teach about gender in schools, saying, The promotion of gender ideology is confusing, because it seeks to create genders that dont exist.However, he has voiced compassion for the LGBTQ community, according to the Meidas Touch Network. But while he may foster a more welcoming environment, he has not signaled any openness to changing Church teaching on same-sex marriage or the ordination of women, Meidas Touch reports, something further made clear in the meeting with the diplomatic corps.But "during Francis pontificate, he acknowledged Francis call for a more inclusive church, and said he didnt want people excluded just on the basis of their lifestyle," the AP reports.In Friday's meeting with the diplomats, Pope Leo affirmed the church's opposition to abortion, saying, "No one is exempted from striving to ensure respect for the dignity of every person, especially the most frail and vulnerable, from the unborn to the elderly, from the sick to the unemployed, citizens and immigrants alike. He has differed strongly with the Trump administration's anti-immigrant stances.0 Comments 0 Shares 66 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORGProPublica Selects 13 Journalists for Investigative Editor Trainingby Talia Buford ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as theyre published. We are pleased to announce the journalists chosen as the 2025 cohort of the ProPublica Investigative Editor Training Program.The program was established in 2023 to expand the ranks of editors with investigative experience in newsrooms across the country and help better reflect the nation as a whole. Nine journalists from across the country will join four ProPublica staffers for this years program. This program is funded by the Jonathan Logan Family Foundation, which supports journalism, film and arts organizations whose work is dedicated to social justice and strengthening democracy. Participants will undergo a five-day intensive editing boot camp in New York, with courses and panel discussions led by ProPublicas senior editors. After the boot camp, participants will gather virtually every two months for continuing development seminars and be assigned a ProPublica senior editor as a mentor for advice on their work and careers. By providing investigative editing tools to journalists across the country, we aim to ensure that there will be more accountability reporting in more newsrooms across the country, said Ginger Thompson, a managing editor at ProPublica. Its an effort we have long considered one of our highest priorities. Introducing the 2025 cohort of the ProPublica Investigative Editor Training Program: Alejandra Cancino is a senior reporter at Injustice Watch, a Chicago-based nonprofit newsroom investigating the Cook County court system. Her award-winning investigations focus on the intersection of government and business, combining data with personal stories to expose systemic failures. Most recently, she co-authored a five-part narrative series that exposed how the judicial system favors landlords property rights over their tenants rights. The project was recognized with an Investigative Reporters and Editors Award. In 2022, Cancino spent a year editing and training emerging journalists at City Bureau, a nonprofit organization focused on Chicagos marginalized communities. Previously, she covered manufacturing, economic development and labor as a business reporter at the Chicago Tribune. She is a 2025 recipient of Chicagos Studs Terkel Award, which honors a journalists body of work. Cancino serves on the Investigative Reporters and Editors board and is a former president and board member of the Society of Professional Journalists Chicago Headline Club.Daarel Burnette II is a senior editor at The Chronicle of Higher Education. Before joining the Chronicle in 2022, he served as an assistant managing editor and reporter for Education Week and the bureau chief of Chalkbeat Tennessee, a news organization based in Memphis. He has worked as an education reporter at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the Minnesota Star Tribune, and the Louisville Courier Journal. He also worked as a general-assignment reporter at the Chicago Tribune. He received his undergraduate degree in print journalism from Hampton University and a masters degree in politics and journalism from Columbia University. Daphne Chen is the investigations editor at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and a former investigative data reporter for the news organization. In 2022, Chen was part of a reporting team that was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Public Service for a project that uncovered how electrical fires disproportionately endanger poor Black renters. Previously, she was a data reporter for USA Today, where she revealed that state officials repeatedly sent children to live with foster parents accused of abuse. She also spent a year as a reporting fellow in Cambodia. Nic Garcia is The Texas Tribunes regions editor, leading a team of reporters who live across the state and tell the story of Texas policy and politics from the ground up. In 2022, his team produced a series on Texas failing water infrastructure especially in rural communities that propelled a statewide investment in water. Garcia joined the Tribune after a year as politics editor at The Des Moines Register in Iowa. He also was a senior writer at The Dallas Morning News, where he was named journalist of the year and won a second place Headliner award for his COVID-19 coverage. A Colorado native, Garcia covered the Colorado legislature for The Denver Post. His analysis of lobbying records inspired changes to the states lobbying laws. Nicole Lewis is the engagement editor for The Marshall Project, leading the organizations strategic efforts to deepen reporting that reaches communities most affected by the criminal legal system. She previously served as a senior editor at Slate, where she led a team of writers covering the array of legal issues before the Supreme Court for the publications jurisprudence section. In 2020, she was the lead reporter on a first-of-its kind political survey of the incarcerated, which received an honorable mention for an Investigative Reporters and Editors Philip Meyer Award for the projects pioneering use of social science research methods. Prior to The Marshall Project, Nicole reported for The Washington Posts America desk and the Fact Checker. She is based in Brooklyn, New York. Andrea Lopez-Villafaa is the managing editor at Voice of San Diego. She is also a co-host on the VOSD Podcast, the most popular local public affairs podcast in San Diego, and writes a weekly newsletter, Cup of Chisme. She previously worked as a reporter at The San Diego-Union Tribune, where she covered the citys neighborhoods.Jennifer Palmer is an investigative reporter at Oklahoma Watch. She has more than two decades of news reporting experience and her work has been recognized with awards in public service reporting and investigative reporting. She started her career covering police and courts at the Rio Grande Sun, a scrappy weekly in northern New Mexico, where her reporting led to the ouster of a prominent judge. Before joining Oklahoma Watch, she previously worked as a reporter at the Omaha World-Herald and The Oklahoman. She is a native of Norman, Oklahoma, and a graduate of the University of Oklahoma. Chastity Pratt is the national education editor at The Washington Post. Prior to joining the Post in 2024, she was the education bureau chief at The Wall Street Journal, a fellow at the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard and covered education at the Detroit Free Press, Newsday and The Oregonian. Over the years, she has helped train students and journalists for Harvard College, the Education Writers Association and Investigative Reporters and Editors. Milton Valencia is The Boston Globes criminal justice editor in metro, overseeing coverage of crime, policing and public safety. He was previously deputy editor of the Globes inaugural Money, Power, Inequality team, which focuses on addressing the racial wealth gap across the region. Milton started as a reporter at the Globe in 2007. In that role, he reported from the Globes City Hall bureau, helping lead coverage of Bostons historic 2021 race for mayor. In 2020, he was part of a Globe police accountability team that exposed corruption and mismanagement in the Boston Police Department. He also spent several years covering the federal justice system, including the death penalty trial of Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. He was part of the staff that won the Pulitzer Prize for its coverage of the bombings. Milton began his career at local newspapers in Rhode Island and Massachusetts. He holds a degree in philosophy and public policy from the University of Massachusetts, Boston and lives south of Boston with his wife and their two children.Additionally, four ProPublica staffers will join this years cohort. They are: Peter DiCampo is a visuals editor at ProPublica, where he primarily works with local partner newsrooms across the country through the Local Reporting Network. His visual editing and art direction have been awarded by the National Press Photographers Association, the Society for News Design, The Society of Publication Designers and the Online Journalism Awards. Prior to joining ProPublica, he was NPRs international visual editor. Before turning to editing, he worked for more than a decade as a freelance photojournalist, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa. He co-founded Everyday Africa, a collective of photographers using social media to broaden coverage of Africa beyond the headlines, and The Everyday Projects, a global community of photographers and a visual literacy nonprofit. He was a 2019 John S. Knight Journalism Fellow at Stanford University, and he is the recipient of grants and awards from the Brown Institute for Media Innovation, Code for Africa, the Magnum Foundation, the Open Society Foundations, Pictures of the Year International and the Pulitzer Center, among others.Duaa Eldeib is an investigative reporter at ProPublica. She has examined failures that have led to a stillbirth crisis in the U.S., the ways in which insurance companies interfere with mental health treatment and the fatal consequences of delaying care during the pandemic. She was a reporter and producer on the documentary Before a Breath. Her reporting has sparked legislative hearings, spurred government reform and led to the exoneration of a mother who was wrongly convicted of murder, as well as the release of young men who were incarcerated as juveniles and later sent to adult prison for minor offenses. Before joining ProPublica, she worked at the Chicago Tribune, where she and two colleagues were finalists for the Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting. She was also a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in explanatory reporting twice first in 2023 for her series on stillbirths and again in 2025 as part of the team covering access to mental health care. Hannah Fresques is the deputy data editor at ProPublica. She has edited data-driven investigations on the aftermath of Texas abortion ban, high-interest tribal lending and a salmonella outbreak. She joined the organization in 2016, and her work as a reporter and editor has earned recognition from Investigative Reporters and Editors Philip Meyer Journalism Awards, as well as the Online News Association and Sigma Delta Chi Journalism awards. Before working in journalism, Fresques conducted evaluations of education policy for a nonprofit research organization. She holds a masters degree in quantitative methods for social sciences from Columbia University.Andrea Wise is the visual strategy editor at ProPublica, where she edits photography, illustration and other forms of visual journalism. She is also the co-founder of Diversify Photo, a nonprofit organization amplifying the voices of visual creatives from underrepresented groups in the global visual media landscape. She commissioned and led a yearlong photo essay that was awarded the 2025 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service as part of ProPublicas reporting on the harmful consequences of state abortion bans and was also Pictures of the Year Internationals Online Storytelling Project of the Year. That body of work was also recognized with a National Magazine Award for Public Interest, George Polk Award for Medical Reporting, Worth Bingham Prize for Investigative Journalism, and Taylor Family Award for Fairness in Journalism, among other honors. Her photo editing and art direction have also been recognized by Pictures of the Year, the National Press Photographers Association, the Society of Publication Designers, and the Society for News Design. She holds a bachelors with honors in studio arts from Trinity College and a masters in photography from Syracuse Universitys S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications.0 Comments 0 Shares 67 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORGTrump Asked EPA Employees to Snitch on Colleagues Working on DEI Initiatives. They Declined.by Mark Olalde ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as theyre published. Days after President Donald Trump was sworn in for his second term, the acting head of the Environmental Protection Agency sent an email to the entire workforce with details about the agencys plans to close diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives and included a plea for help.Employees are requested to please notify the EPA or the Office of Personnel Management, the federal governments human resources agency, of any other agency office, sub-unit, personnel position description, contract, or program focusing exclusively on DEI, the email from then-acting Administrator James Payne said.No employees in the agency, then more than 15,000 people strong, responded to that plea, ProPublica learned via a public records request.Trump has made ending diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility programs a hallmark effort of his second term. Many federal employees, however, are declining to assist the administration with this goal. He signed an executive order on his first day back in office that labeled DEI initiatives which broadly aim to promote greater diversity, largely within the workplace as illegal and immoral discrimination programs and ordered them halted. His pressure campaign to end DEI efforts has also extended to companies and organizations outside the government, with billions of dollars in federal funding for universities frozen as part of the fight.Corbin Darling retired from the EPA this year after more than three decades with the agency, including managing environmental justice programs in a number of Western states.Im not surprised that nobody turned in their colleagues or other programs in response to that request, he said, adding that his former co-workers understood that addressing pollution that disproportionately impacted communities of color was important to the agencys work. Thats part of the mission it has been for decades, Darling said.Paynes note to agency employees listed two email addresses one belonging to the EPA and one to the Office of Personnel Management where EPA employees could send details about DEI efforts. ProPublica submitted public records requests to both agencies for the contents of the inboxes from the start of the administration through April 1. The Office of Personnel Management didnt respond to the request, although the Freedom of Information Act requires that it do so within 20 business days. The agency also did not answer questions about whether it received any reports to its anti-DEI inbox.The EPA, meanwhile, checked its inbox and confirmed that zero employees had filed reports. Some emails received in that inbox did come from EPA addresses but none of them called out colleagues who were still working on DEI matters, an agency spokesperson said in a statement in May.The White House did not respond to a request for comment.The optimist in me would like to believe that maybe it is because, as an agency, we are generally dedicated to our mission and understand that DEIA is intrinsic in that, a current EPA employee who requested anonymity said. On the flip side, theyve done such a good job immediately dismantling DEIA in the agency that folks who are up in arms might have just been assuaged.Although DEI programs are often internal to a workplace, the administration also put a target on environmental justice initiatives, which acknowledge the fact that public health and environmental harm disproportionately fall on poorer areas and communities of color. Environmental justice has been part of the EPAs mandate for years but greatly expanded under the Biden administration.Research has shown, for example, that municipalities have planted fewer trees and maintained less green space in neighborhoods with a higher percentage of people of color, leading to more intense heat. And heavy industry has often been zoned or sited near Latino, Black and Native American communities.EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin, who was confirmed in late January, has boasted about cutting more than $22 billion in environmental justice and DEI grants and contracts. Many American communities are suffering with serious unresolved environmental issues, but under the environmental justice banner, the previous administrations EPA showered billions on ideological allies, instead of directing those resources into solving environmental problems and making meaningful change, he wrote in an April opinion piece in the New York Post.The EPA spokesperson said employees with more than 50% of their duties dedicated to either environmental justice work or DEI were targeted for layoffs. The agency is taking the next step to terminate the Biden-Harris Administrations Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion and Environmental Justice arms of the agency, the spokesperson said.EPA environmental justice offices worked on a range of initiatives, such as meeting with historically underserved communities to help them participate in agency decision-making and dispersing grants to fund mitigation of the carcinogenic gas radon or removal of lead pipes, Darling explained.A sea change isnt the right word because its more of a draining of the sea, Darling said. It has devastated the program.0 Comments 0 Shares 64 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORGTexas Lawmakers Push to Enforce Election Transparency Law After Newsrooms Found School Districts Failed to Complyby Lexi Churchill, ProPublica and The Texas Tribune This article is co-published with The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan local newsroom that informs and engages with Texans. Sign up for The Brief Weekly to get up to speed on their essential coverage of Texas issues. Texas lawmakers are pushing to impose steep penalties on local governments that dont post campaign finance reports online, after an investigation by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune found some school districts werent doing so.The initial posting requirements, designed to make election spending more transparent, went into effect nearly two years ago. Most of the school district leaders said they had no idea they were out of compliance until the newsrooms contacted them. Even after many districts uploaded whatever documentation they had on file for their trustee elections, reports were still missing because candidates hadnt turned them in or the schools lost them. I was surprised and disappointed, said Republican state Rep. Carl Tepper, who authored the online posting requirement. I did realize that we didnt really put any teeth into the bill. Tepper is aiming to correct that with a new bill this legislative session. He cited the newsrooms findings in a written explanation of why the state needs to implement greater enforcement.The measure would require the Texas Ethics Commission, the agency that enforces the states election laws, to monitor thousands of local governments websites across the state and to notify them if any campaign finance reports are missing. If those government agencies do not upload the records that candidates have turned in within 30 days of the states notice, the commission can fine them up to $2,500 every day until they comply. The proposed measure also recommends the state allot funding for the ethics commission to hire two additional staff members, whose job would be to monitor all local government entities that hold public elections in the states 254 counties and roughly 1,200 cities and towns. The newsrooms previously found the agency did not have any staff dedicated to enforcing compliance in local elections and, instead, investigated missing or late reports only when it received a tip. The bill has cleared the Texas House but still needs approval from the Senate by May 28 if it has a chance of becoming law. The superintendent of Galveston Independent School District, which was among those that ProPublica and the Tribune found hadnt posted any campaign finance reports online last year, said the measure would help schools like his. I do like the suggestion of a 30-day period to achieve compliance after an issue is reported, Matthew Neighbors said of the new proposal in an emailed statement. Our district, for example, had no objections to posting the necessary campaign information once our new employees were aware of the requirements.Kelly Rasti, the associate executive director of governmental relations for the Texas Association of School Boards, said districts do not flout the law intentionally. Rasti said the employees tasked with handling school board election documentation are not always well versed in the states regulations but that the association plans to provide additional resources later this year. District employees are accustomed to handling a plethora of education-related paperwork and reporting requirements imposed by the state. But elections are just different, and they seem to have ever-evolving laws and rules associated with them, Rasti said. Notably, Teppers bill would not directly require the ethics commission to penalize or follow up with candidates who fail to turn in their reports. He initially included a provision in his bill that would make candidates ineligible to run for office if they didnt file those records, even if they won an election. He told the newsrooms that he cut the penalty after realizing the logistical challenges it might present. That means the ethics commission must still decide whether to investigate and fine any of the candidates and officeholders for the states estimated 22,000 local elected positions should they miss a filing. By contrast, candidates who run for statewide office are automatically fined by the commission if they dont make a deadline. Teppers ultimate goal is to create a unified system in which the ethics commission compiles campaign finance records for state and local candidates in one central database, rather than leaving local filings scattered across thousands of city, county and school district government websites. The Republican lawmaker withdrew his proposal to create such a system in 2023 after the commission estimated it would cost $20 million, but he told the newsrooms that he hopes to gain enough support to make that investment next session, in 2027.For now, he sees his proposal as a necessary advance.Im a big believer in incrementalism, said Tepper. This is another step toward better enforcement.0 Comments 0 Shares 67 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORGDemocrats Won a North Carolina Supreme Court Seat. But They Lost Control Over the Board That Sets Election Rules.by Doug Bock Clark ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up for Dispatches, a newsletter that spotlights wrongdoing around the country, to receive our stories in your inbox every week. Last week, North Carolina Democrats scored a victory when Republican Judge Jefferson Griffin, whod lost a tight race for the states Supreme Court, finally conceded defeat after a six-month legal battle to throw out ballots that he contended were illegitimate.But that same morning, the party suffered a setback that may be more consequential: losing control of the state board that sets voting rules and adjudicates election disputes. The board oversees virtually every aspect of state elections, large and small, from setting rules dictating what makes ballots valid or invalid to monitoring compliance with campaign finance laws. In the Supreme Court race, it consistently worked to block Griffins challenges. The conservative takeover comes after the Republican-controlled state legislature passed a law stripping the power to appoint board members from North Carolinas Democratic governor and gave it to the Republican state auditor.Although a board spokesperson said its chair was traveling and unavailable to answer questions about how the new Republican majority would reshape North Carolina elections, experts said it will likely make it easier for challenges like Griffins to succeed and reduce expansive access to early voting. It will tilt the playing field to the advantage of the GOP, said Gene Nichol, a law professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who studies democracy in the state. The party that controls the board holds significant power over who votes, how those votes are counted and who ultimately wins races. Ann Webb, the policy director for Common Cause North Carolina, a liberal voting advocacy organization, called the shift very consequential and said she was worried the new board would seek to remove voters whose registrations have missing information from the states rolls and tighten requirements for people seeking to register or have provisional ballots count. Conservatives called Democrats concerns overblown, particularly after years of Democratic control. Mitch Kokai, a senior political analyst at the John Locke Foundation, a conservative North Carolina think tank, conceded the boards new majority might alter early voting locations or voter ID rules, over which the parties are divided. But he pointed out that many board decisions are made unanimously, not split along party lines.There is some sense that in the age of Trump there is some grand scheme to throw out election results and let the GOP win despite how people voted, Kokai said. I dont think youre seeing the stage being set for anything like that.Historically, the boards five members have been appointed by North Carolinas governor, with three of them coming from the governors party. Since 2016, the governor has been a Democrat. When Josh Stein won a four-year term last fall, a Republican supermajority in the state legislature passed a law, then overrode his predecessors veto, to transfer this power to the state auditor. It was an unusual step. No other state has elections overseen by the state auditor. Stein sued to block the law and, initially, a lower court sided with him. But in April, the states Court of Appeals, which has a Republican majority, issued a three-sentence decision overturning the lower courts ruling without hearing oral arguments. The next day, the state auditor named two new Republican members to the elections board, flipping control of it to conservatives. One is a former legislator who led efforts to redraw the states congressional districts in conservatives favor. The other was the longtime head of a conservative think tank with a history of advancing unsubstantiated voter fraud claims.After swearing in the new members last week, the boards first move was to fire its executive director, Karen Brinson Bell, replacing her with the general counsel to the speaker of the North Carolina House, a Republican. The board denied Bells request to address her staff during the meeting, but she subsequently released a statement that a spokesperson provided to ProPublica in response to a request for comment.We have done this work under incredibly difficult circumstances and in a toxic political environment that has targeted election professionals with harassment and threats, she said of the boards employees. I hope we return to a time when those who lose elections concede defeat rather than trying to tear down the entire election system and erode voter confidence.Experts say the just-concluded battle over the Supreme Court seat provides a window into how changes at the elections board could affect future races, especially close ones with contested results. North Carolina is a swing state, and there have been several such cases in recent years. After the 2018 election, the board ordered a new election for a U.S. House of Representatives seat when a Republican victory was found to be tainted by an illegal absentee ballot scheme.Before the 2024 election, right-wing activists discussed ways to overturn close election losses using a plan similar to the one Griffin put into action, according to a recording of a call obtained by ProPublica. In the month after suffering a 734-vote loss to incumbent Democrat Allison Riggs, Griffin asked the elections board to toss out tens of thousands of ballots, mostly because information about the voters who cast them was missing from the states election database. The board, then majority Democrat, dismissed his challenges, concluding that voters had followed the rules in place at the time and that much of the missing information reflected administrative or clerical errors. Then Griffin sued. Gerry Cohen, a former counsel for the legislature who is now a Democratic member of the Wake County Board of Elections, said it was a real possibility that a Republican-controlled state board would have approved some of Griffins challenges to throw out ballots. If that had happened, Riggs could have fought the boards decision in the courts and won, but she would have then been litigating against the board rather than on the same side as it. The law that gave the state auditor the power to appoint members of the state election board also gives him similar authority over North Carolinas county election boards, which will mean each of them will be controlled by Republican majorities by the end of next month. County boards approve locations and times for early voting, which is when the vast majority of North Carolinians vote. Experts predicted this could lead some boards to reduce the number of polling sites in areas that have more Democrats, like college campuses, or to close polls when Democratic voters are more likely to use them, such as Sundays when Black churches conduct souls to the polls voter drives. Kokai contends that such changes arent necessarily meant to suppress the vote, if they even happen, and doubts theyd have much of an effect on Democratic turnout. If you really do care about voting, you do it, he said. If you go a mile off campus to do other things, you can do it to vote, too.Liberals, however, expect the revamped board to work hand-in-hand with the Republican-controlled legislature to transform elections in other ways. Things are going to look very different, Webb said, in the 2026 midterm elections.0 Comments 0 Shares 66 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORGAfter Two SpaceX Explosions, U.K. Officials Ask FAA to Change Starship Flight Plansby Heather Vogell ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as theyre published. Update, May 15, 2025: This story has been updated to reflect the FAAs announcement late Thursday that it had approved Starship 9 launch, which came after publication. British officials told the U.S. they are concerned about the safety of SpaceXs plans to fly its next Starship rocket over British territories in the Caribbean, where debris fell earlier this year after two of the companys rockets exploded, according to documents reviewed by ProPublica.The worries from the U.K. government, detailed in a letter to a top American diplomat on Wednesday, follow the Federal Aviation Administrations decision last week to grant SpaceXs request for a fivefold increase in the number of Starship launches allowed this year, from five to 25. Growing the number of launches of the most powerful rocket ever built is a priority for SpaceX head Elon Musk, who is also one of President Donald Trumps closest advisers.Of particular concern to British officials is the publics safety in the British Virgin Islands, Anguilla and the Turks and Caicos Islands all of which could face debris risk from Starship 9. After the explosion in January, residents of the Turks and Caicos reported finding pieces of the rocket on beaches and roads. A car was also damaged in the Starship 7 accident. Seven weeks later, after receiving the FAAs blessing to proceed, SpaceX launched Starship 8 from Boca Chica, Texas, but it too exploded after liftoff. Air traffic in the region was diverted, and burning streaks from the falling rocket were visible in the sky from the Bahamas and Floridas coast.The British letter to a U.S. State Department official, Ambassador Lisa Kenna, asks the U.S. to consider changing the launch site or trajectory of Starship 9. If that isnt possible, the request from Stephen Doughty, the United Kingdoms minister of state for Europe, North America and U.K. Overseas Territories asks that agencies like the FAA consider altering the launchs timing to minimize safety risks and the economic impact for the British territories.The letter also requests that the U.S. government provide the United Kingdom more information on increased safety measures that will be put in place before Starship 9 launches, and that British territories be given enough warning to communicate with the public about those measures. We have been working closely with US Government partners regarding Starship Flight 9 to protect the safety of the UK Overseas Territories and to ensure appropriate measures are in place, a UK government spokesperson said Thursday in response to ProPublicas questions about the letter. The State Department did not respond to requests for comment.On Thursday afternoon, the FAA said it was in close contact and collaboration with the United Kingdom and the Turks and Caicos Islands, as well as other regional partners, as we continue to evaluate SpaceXs license modification request for its proposed Starship Flight 9 launch.Hours later, though, after this story originally published, the agency announced it had approved Starship 9s launch, pending the completion of an investigation into the previous explosion. The agency also said it was expanding the "Aircraft Hazard Area" for the mission, stretching from the Gulf of Mexico to the Caribbean, potentially affecting 175 flights. That hazard area nearly encompasses the Turks and Caicos Islands in their entirety, according to the FAAs environmental assessment. The agency said the changes were due to the prior Starships problems and because SpaceX plans to reuse a previously launched Super Heavy booster rocket something it will be doing for the first time.Turks and Caicos Providenciales International Airport will need to close during the duration of the launch window, the assessment said. Airspace over a portion of The Bahamas will be closed, too.The FAA said the launch has been scheduled outside peak transit times to minimize disruptions.SpaceX did not respond to a request for comment. But the company has said it learns from its mistakes. With a test like this, success comes from what we learn, and todays flight will help us improve Starships reliability, the company said after the Starship 8 accident. We will conduct a thorough investigation, in coordination with the FAA, and implement corrective actions to make improvements on future Starship flight tests.Musk who sees the uptick in launches as critical to the development of technology that could help land astronauts on the moon and ultimately Mars has been less diplomatic. He downplayed the January explosion as barely a bump in the road and seemed to brush off safety concerns, posting a video of the flaming debris field with the caption, Success is uncertain, but entertainment is guaranteed!SpaceX has not announced the date of the Starship 9 launch, but news reports have said it could happen as soon as May 21. The FAAs Office of Commercial Space Transportation, which licenses launches and reentries, is undergoing a leadership shakeup. Three top executives, including the head of the office, announced in April that they were accepting voluntary separation offers.Musk has been leading efforts to shrink the federal government through the departures of thousands of federal workers. Critics say he has an inherent conflict of interest because his businesses are regulated by agencies such as the FAA and rely on their approvals. Musk said in a February interview that Ill recuse myself if it is a conflict. White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said Thursday that All administration officials will comply with conflict of interest requirements.Last year, the FAA proposed $633,000 in fines against SpaceX for violations related to two previous launches. Musk, in turn, accused the FAA of engaging in lawfare and threatened to sue it for regulatory overreach. The administrative case remains open. The number of rocket launches has increased dramatically in recent years, leading pilots and academics to warn about a growing danger in the air for flights that have only minutes to get out of harms way when a mishap as explosions and other failures are called in industry parlance occurs. Researchers at the University of British Columbia found in a study published in January that the risk space objects pose to aircraft is rising. They said that the chance of an uncontrolled reentry from a rocket over a year is as high as 26% for some large, busy areas of airspace, such as those found in the northeastern U.S., in northern Europe or near major cities in the Asia-Pacific region.A large union for airplane pilots told FAA officials in January that the Starship 7 breakup raises additional concerns about whether the FAA is providing adequate separation of space operations from airline flights, according to a letter sent the day after the rocket exploded.The ability of the FAA Air Traffic Control to respond in a timely fashion to an unanticipated rocket anomaly needs to be further evaluated, said the letter from the Air Line Pilots Association, which represents 79,000 pilots at 42 U.S. and Canadian airlines. It asked that flight crews receive more information about high-risk areas before a launch so they can make an informed and timely decision about their need to potentially reject flight plans that route their aircraft underneath space vehicle trajectories.In a response, the FAA said it would review its processes to see whether more can be done to prepare flight crews before a launch.Capt. Jason Ambrosi, the unions president, said in a statement emailed to ProPublica that changes are necessary. Any safety risk posed to commercial airline operations is unacceptable.0 Comments 0 Shares 69 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COMA $56, 3-Hour Makeover Gives a Neglected Balcony the Attention It DeservesThere's major design power in a can of paint.READ MORE...0 Comments 0 Shares 68 Views 0 Reviews