Subscribe to:
POZ magazine
E-newsletters
Visit:
Forums
POZ TV
POZ Personals
Sign In / Join
Username:
Password:

July 2009 Archives

Jack Mackenroth is competing at the World Outgames (not to be confused with the Gay Games), which are currently taking place in Copenhagen.

In addition to being a former Project Runway reality TV star and a former POZ cover boy, Mackenroth is an avid competitive swimmer.

He obviously hasn't let HIV get in the way of his aquatic talents--Mackenroth has, as of today, won a bronze medal and two silver medals.

I'll keep my fingers crossed for more medals until the World Outgames ends next week!

UPDATE: The LGBT blog Queerty reports that Mackenroth won a total of eight medals during the event, including two gold medals in the 50-meter freestyle and the 4x50 freestyle relay.

Watch him win one of those silver medals:


Bookmark and Share

Follow me on Twitter.
stevebuyer.jpgRep. Steve Buyer (R-Ind.) offered an eyebrow-raising proposal during the review of health care legislation by the Energy and Commerce Committee, which he serves on.

As originally reported in Roll Call, here's what he's quoted as saying: "Someone who smokes, drinks, participates in bad conduct and behavior, unprotected sex, maybe bad things happen to them, maybe they should pay higher premiums ... That is a radical thought, isn't it?"

It is a radical thought, but not the good kind. This kind of radical thinking is exactly what gets in the way of real solutions to real problems. Punishing people has never been a great motivator. Besides, how would this be enforced?

Prevention is the key to reducing health care costs. What would really be a radical thought is massive federal funding of programs nationwide to educate our society about safer sex and harm reduction.

Bookmark and Share

Follow me on Twitter.

A recent French commercial for Durex condoms caught my attention. The ad starts with an attractive younger heterosexual couple getting frisky and opening a purple-wrapped condom.

The purple wrapper then escapes through the window on the wind. It visits a seemingly teenage straight couple, a middle-aged straight couple and a senior straight couple.

It then visits a party (draw your own conclusions) and rests on the windshield of two male policemen who seem to see each other in a new light.

OK, so LGBTs are the punchline, yet again, in an advertisement. However, at least I felt like we were being laughed with and not laughed at.

Safer sex equals fun. A condom ad that gets it.

Watch the ad:

 

Hat tip to the LGBT blog Queerty for this post.

Bookmark and Share

Follow me on Twitter.

jimjbullock.jpgThe LGBT blog Queerty recently interviewed 1980s TV star Jim J. Bullock, a.k.a. Monroe from the sitcom Too Close for Comfort.

The bulk of the interview sets up the premise that Bullock set the stage for openly gay TV characters in the 1990s. However, the interview also explores some HIV/AIDS themes.

Bullock is now open about being both gay and HIV positive. That wasn't always true.

He came out as gay on The Joan Rivers Show in 1990, but he inadvertently was "half-outed" about his HIV status.

Here's an excerpt from the interview:

"Even years after the show ended, Evangelicals criticized Tammy for co-hosting The Jim J. and Tammy Faye Show with a gay man -- especially when Jim came out as HIV-positive. His status was half-outed, really. In preparation for the 1997 AIDS ride, Jim sent a sponsorship letter to possible donors. He mentioned that in addition to riding in memory of his deceased partner, he was riding for his friends living with HIV/AIDS and that he, too, was living with the disease. A few days later Jim was awakened by knocking at his door. It was a tabloid reporter inquiring about his HIV status."

I remember as a teenager watching Bullock on Too Close for Comfort. I realized that he (or at least his character) was gay. It was heartening for me to see a gay man on TV back then. We owe Bullock some amount of thanks for that.

Click here to read the complete interview.

Bookmark and Share

Follow me on Twitter.
Certain phrases prove to be difficult to erase once they have been written into our language. "HIV virus" is one of those phrases. "HIV virus" is redundant. The word "virus" is already included in the acronym of the human immunodeficiency virus.

Here's the entry for "HIV" in the current version of the stylebook supplement on LGBT terminology from the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association (NLGJA):

HIV: Human immunodeficiency virus. The virus that causes AIDS. "HIV virus" is redundant. "HIV-positive" means being infected with HIV but not necessarily having AIDS. AIDS doctors and researchers are using the term "HIV disease" more because there are other types of acquired immune deficiencies caused by toxins and rare but deadly diseases that are unrelated to what we now call AIDS. See AIDS.
I added the bolding above to highlight that the redundancy issue is well known, at least to those of us who follow such things. Regardless, it just won't go away.

I don't really know if Magic Johnson coined the phrase, but he sure was responsible for popularizing it. In his 1991 speech announcing his retirement from playing professional basketball with the Los Angeles Lakers, he said: "Because of the HIV virus that I have attained, I will have to retire from the Lakers today."

Watch his speech:


The phrase still pops up in news coverage all the time. A recent Google News search found more than 300 results for "HIV virus" being used in a news story. Ugh.
 
Bookmark and Share

Follow me on Twitter.
"Destination Casa Blanca" (Spanish for "White House") is an online political talk show hosted by Ray Suarez on the Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network (HITN).

They recently had a four-part series about HIV/AIDS in the Latino community:
Part One - The stigma of HIV/AIDS
Part Two - HIV/AIDS and Latinas
Part Three - Educating youth on HIV/AIDS
Part Four - HIV/AIDS and seniors

Here's a preview of Part One:



Click here to see the complete series.
 
Bookmark and Share

Follow me on Twitter.
graph_attitudes.jpgBlogger extraordinaire and POZ cover boy Andrew Sullivan wrote an entry on July 7 in his blog, The Daily Dish, tying a turnaround in public attitudes toward homosexuality in 1990 (see chart) to AIDS-related deaths.

Here's an excerpt:

"That was the transformative, traumatizing effect of AIDS on both gay and straight America. It came in the early 1980s, but the deaths only reached their stunning peaks in the early 1990s - which is when the polling shifts.

"Remember: most of these deaths were of young men. If you think that the Vietnam war took around 60,000 young American lives randomly over a decade or more, then imagine the psychic and social impact of 300,000 young Americans dying in a few years. Imagine a Vietnam Memorial five times the size. The victims were from every state and city and town and village. They were part of millions and millions of families. Suddenly, gay men were visible in ways we had never been before. And our humanity - revealed by the awful, terrifying, gruesome deaths of those in the first years of the plague - ripped off the veneer of stereotype and demonization and made us seem as human as we are. More, actually: part of our families.

"I think that horrifying period made the difference. It also galvanized gay men and lesbians into fighting more passionately than ever - because our very lives were at stake."
I couldn't agree with him more. I remember the emotional see-saw I felt in 1991 when I tested HIV negative and then in 1992 when I tested HIV positive. All of us who are HIV positive go through that, but I relate to his assessment that something changed at that time. That feeling, as fleeting as it was, is what allowed me to believe things were going to be fine.

Click here to read the complete blog post.

Bookmark and Share


Follow me on Twitter.
farrah_fawcett_iconic_pinup_1976.jpg

Not surprisingly perhaps, I loved "Charlie's Angels" for all its campy qualities. I wasn't physically attracted to Farrah Fawcett Majors (I know it's just Farrah Fawcett now, but it's still a reflex of mine to call her by her married name--you know, when she was married to Lee Majors of "The Six Million Dollar Man"). However, I did find her captivating, in the way only a gay boy could.

As the years went by, I must admit that I never really kept up with all of the ins and outs of her life. I knew what surfaced to the headlines, as a good news addict should. So I was greatly surprised--and a bit embarrassed--when I finally read on Advocate.com that Farrah had died of anal cancer. I was surprised because I had missed the "anal" part of the phrase "anal cancer" in all the previous coverage of her illness. I was embarrassed not about the kind of cancer, but that I had been so inattentive to such an important detail.

But then I stopped being embarrassed and started being curious. Was I the only one who didn't know? My extremely unscientific "poll" (I asked a few people) made me feel better. One person knew years ago that Farrah had anal cancer. The rest had no clue until the coverage of her passing. What does that mean, if anything?

Without doing an analysis of the coverage, it's unfair of me to say with any certainty that the media deliberately avoided using the word "anal" when describing her cancer. However, I don't think it's unfair of me to say that my gut tells me that if an analysis were to be made of the coverage of her cancer that we might find the word "anal" was omitted more often than it was included. I would hope that such an analysis would find that the LGBT media was better in using the word "anal" versus the mainstream media.

Breast cancer and prostate cancer were taboo topics not even a few generations ago, but society--and the media--got over the giggle factor (for the most part) on those diseases. For obvious reasons, the fact that anal cancer is surrounded with stigma should surprise no one. It remains rare, but it is a real disease that kills real people. The irony of anal cancer taking the life of a sex symbol will hopefully start the destigmatization process.

Bookmark and Share


Follow me on Twitter.


Archives

 

My Favorite Links

Recent Assets

  • stevebuyer.jpg
  • jimjbullock.jpg
  • graph_attitudes.jpg
  • farrah_fawcett_iconic_pinup_1976.jpg

Subscribe to Blog

Powered by MT-Notifier

About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries from July 2009 listed from newest to oldest.

June 2009 is the previous archive.

August 2009 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.