Dive into the archives.


  • Vogue Evolution

    So if you’ve been watching America’s Best Dance Crew, you’d know that Vogue Evolution has been on this season representing for the ballroom scene kids. So far they’ve been killin’ it and meeting every challenge thrown at them. Sunday, Lil Mama (why is her tacky azz still somebody?) made some comments that have the blogs [...]

  • Bois & Dykes

    “Bois and Dykes is a long-term documentary series that examines the concept of ‘[female] masculinity’ by visually telling the stories of people who live within a spectrum of identities ranging from dyke and butch, to tomboy, aggressive, and transgender.”

  • Barbie, Ken, and Michael Jackson

    In memory R.I.P. one more post…
    So I don’t have a MJ story where I met him or saw him in concert, but I do have this one:
    When I was little, had an entirely pink room, and made up involved scenarios for my Barbies, inevitably a problem would come up: I didn’t have a Ken. I [...]

  • Homo Harlem Film Retrospective

    via TransGriot

    With arguments often eerily reminiscent of old rationales for black oppression, gays and lesbians remain openly, legally and even, ‘righteously’, discriminated against.

    For LGBT people of all races, knowing ourselves, making our extraordinary history known to others, much as with blacks, becomes a key component to liberation. If LGBT heritage remains often obscured and belittled, achievements of African American lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered people, are less well known still.

    In celebration of the 40th anniversary of the Stonewall Rebellion, the film festival, Homo-Harlem: A Film Retrospective, Friday, June 19th-Saturday, June 27th, cosponsored by the Maysles Cinema at 343 Malcolm X Boulevard with Men of All Colors Together, seeks to help to remedy this lack of recognition.

    Through a series of coordinated screenings, critical discussions and walking tours, Homo-Harlem for the first time officially brings Stonewall observations uptown to focus on and honor, figures as diverse as poets Audre Lorde and Langston Hughes, social justice activist Bayard Rustin, composer Billy Strayhorn, photographer Marvin Smith and living legend Storme DeLarverie, whose courageous stand at the Stonewall Bar, 40 years ago, literally helped set in motion the entire Gay Pride Movement.

    We LGBT people have always been busy making Harlem better, as one resident reported in 1928, “Never no wells of loneliness in Harlem…” Space is limited for this exhilarating experience, so be sure to make a reservation in advance and get ready to be enlightened, to be amazed and to party hard!

    “Film retrospective slated to kick off on Juneteenth (June 19) at the Maysles Cinema”

  • Best Documentary Ever!

    Equally outrageous, funny and touching, Jenny Livingston’s acclaimed documentary looks at a very vocal segment of the gay community: the drag “houses” of Harlem that compete in elaborate fashion shows known as “balls,” with contestants dressed as Vogue models, socialites, military men and other sartorial stereotypes. These inner-city groups serve as surrogate families to the [...]

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