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January 25, 2009
Sean Penn wins Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role in Screen Actors Guild Awards
via Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role | Screen Actors Guild Awards.
11:34 pm Add new tag, Milk movie, Screen Actors Guild, Sean Penn
(Be the first to comment)‘1969′
“What intrigued me was the pattern of how the dial of the ’60s got turned up in 1969,” (author Rob) Kirkpatrick says. “The revolution was no longer just in the city streets but had made its way to the suburbs. It was in Iowa and Indiana. It was even in Zap, N.D.” (Kids who had gathered there over spring break destroyed much of the town.)
Kirkpatrick says he was surprised when sections of his book began to emerge “organically.” Nixon and the covert war in Cambodia in winter. The rise of the sexual revolution in spring. The innocence of Woodstock in the summer. The tragic Altamont concert in California (one homicide and three accidental deaths) on Dec. 6, where the Rolling Stones played before an unruly crowd as the Hells Angels acted as police.
“The year played out in an arc,” Kirkpatrick says. “It had a definite and dark climax.
“People still point to Woodstock as the apex of ’60s counterculture but call Altamont, which happened just four months later, the ‘death’ of ’60s counterculture. It’s a fascinating concept: the heights and depths of a generational movement, all in one four-month period.”
That same dichotomy held true, he says, for technology. Man walked on the moon, while back on Earth pollution was so bad that Ohio’s Cuyahoga River went up in flames.
And then there was the soundtrack. Some pop culture experts say 1969 is all about the music. Led Zeppelin introduced heavy metal, The Who gave us the rock opera Tommy, the Rolling Stones were in top form. It was also the year The Beatles broke up.
“There were truly seismic shifts in music and popular culture” in the late ’60s, says Joe Levy, editor of the music magazine Blender.
Levy, 44, says “the reason we remember 1969 is because of the twin poles of Woodstock and Altamont. The community of peace and love and the nightmare of chaos and disorder…”
Jeremy Wallach, a cultural anthropologist with the department of pop culture at Bowling Green State University in Ohio, calls 1969 “the apotheosis and decline of the counterculture.” He, too, says the music of the day tells the story.
“After (1969) you see the rise of disco, punk, alternative, indie rock, heavy metal,” says Wallach, 38. “What’s interesting is this was the beginning of all these styles. You see what was to come. Pop music got a lot darker.”
Another telling sign of the times was that concertgoers wanted to be “part of the show.” “You can see it in footage from Woodstock. They were rushing the stage,” Kirkpatrick says.
Karal Ann Marling, 65, professor emerita of history and American studies at the University of Minnesota, says 1969 was much more than just Woodstock. “The whole late ’60s are a period,” she says. “I’m not sure we had a lot of hope, but we were bound and determined to have change.”
via ‘1969′: The year, and a book, that defined an era – USATODAY.com
11:23 pm 1969, Altamont, Bowling Green State University, Cuyahoga River, Jeremy Wallach, Karal Ann Marling, Led Zeppelin, Rob Kirkpatrick, Rolling Stones, The Who, USATODAY.com, Woodstock
(Be the first to comment)No Gay Divorce in Texas
A Dallas man has filed for divorce from his husband but the state of Texas is refusing to hear the case.
Attorney General Greg Abbott said that since Texas law prohibits same-sex marriages and civil unions, the men could not be divorced in Texas since their union is not recognized to exist in Texas.
The men, who have asked that their names remain private, were married in Cambridge, Mass., in 2006.
11:15 pm Gay Divorce, Gay Marriage, Greg Abbott, msnbc, Texas
(Be the first to comment)NBC Story on the endless drug war
Prohibition is pointless and it has failed. Weed is part of our culture. Why do we spend countless dollars and waste countless lives fighting it? It’s time to end the war on marijuana.
Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy
10:57 pm marijuana, NBC, prohibition, war on drugs, war on marijuana
(Be the first to comment)Actor Ryan Kelley Joining Dayton Parents for Premiere of “Prayers for Bobby”

Ryan Kelley in "Prayers for Bobby"
Actor Ryan Kelley, star of the new Lifetime Television film Prayers for Bobby, will join the Dayton chapter of Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG) on Sunday, January 25 in an event to celebrate the film’s release and talk about his own experience bringing the acclaimed novel to the screen.
“We are extraordinarily excited to welcome Kelley to Ohio for this special PFLAG event,” said Jan Couchman, the chapter’s president. “Prayers is a unique opportunity to show the role PFLAG plays in so many parents’ lives, and Kelley’s visit underscores the priority that both PFLAG and the film’s cast have placed on changing hearts in the heartland. Though Prayers is a Hollywood production, its impact will be felt most in places like Dayton, where families turn to PFLAG as they learn to embrace and celebrate their lesbian and gay children.”
via Actor Ryan Kelley to Join Dayton Parents to Celebrate the Premiere of New Film Prayers for Bobby.
10:24 pm Bobby Griffith, Dayton OH, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays, Lifetime Television, Parents, PFLAG, Prayers for Bobby, Ryan Kelley
(Be the first to comment)"Here I am, world, at last. All of me."- Leroy AaronsLeroy Aarons: Author of “Prayers for Bobby”

Leroy Aarons
If Leroy Aarons were still alive, he’d probably feel very proud to see his book “Prayers for Bobby” finally turned into a film for Lifetime TV. Aarons, who is listed as one of the film’s co-producers, accomplished much before his death in 2004, but he took special pride in his 1995 book about the real-life tragedy of a boy from Walnut Creek who wasn’t allowed to be himself.
Who was Roy Aarons? First, a consummate journalist who started his career at the New Haven (Conn.) Journal-Courier and went on to the Washington Post, where he stayed for 14 years during the very heady times of the 1960s and early ’70s…
But there came a time when work became personal. In 1990, Aarons, then a senior vice president of the Tribune, headed up a survey of gays and lesbians working in the media for the American Society of Newspaper Editors, which found that those journalists often encountered hostility in the newsroom and that media coverage of gay and lesbian issues was “at best, mediocre.”
Aarons delivered the study’s findings at an ASNE meeting in Washington, D.C., and then added a personal note: “I, as an editor and a gay man, am proud of ASNE.”
Recalling the dramatic coming-out moment in a column for the Tribune, Aarons wrote that his voice may have been shaky as he uttered that sentence, “but it was not from anxiety or fear. It was the welling up of emotion. It said, ‘Here I am, world, at last. All of me.’ ”
Within four months, Aarons and other gay and lesbian reporters met to found the National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association, which continues his legacy today in newsrooms across the country.
10:06 pm American Society of Newspaper Editors, ASNE, Bobby Griffith, Leroy (Roy) Aarons, Leroy Aarons, National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association, NLGJA, Prayers for Bobby, Roy Aarons
(2 comments - Leave yours)Bobby Griffith story “Prayers for Bobby” earning Sigourney Weaver Emmy Buzz
There is a lot of Emmy buzz swirling around “Prayers for Bobby.”
“Well, I don’t read reviews. I just hope people tune in. I’m delighted that I’ll be able to come into the living rooms of so many families because I think this is a very timely story and a very moving one,” she said.
…Weaver’s character doesn’t give up her faith or religion, but changes the way she looks at it. The storyline develops with Mary’s journey after her son’s death – and Weaver gives an amazing performance.
According to Weaver, meeting the real Mary and her family helped her to encapsulate the character.
“It was very important to me. You know, the reason — I mean, the family wanted this story told. They wanted to share it with as many families as possible so that other families, devout families, don’t make the same mistakes that they did,” she said…


