31 minute read
Ethyl’s Place
Welcome to Wrightwood, CA!!!
Now I hope you are sitting down while reading this, cause honey, she went CAMPING!!! I’m sure you are in as much shock as I was landing at the campsite, but I did it. I’m all about doing something out of my comfort zone at least once, and I’m quite thrilled that I did. I landed at the “Lion’s Camps” at Teresita Pines with my sleeping bag in hand, smore’s fixings, and two cans of bug spray. I will let you know that this was a cabin camping moment and not in a tent. I tried the tent ordeal about three years ago and will never do that again. She needs her creature comforts if you know what I mean. The campsite was cute, and I pretended to be a damsel in distress at times, thinking that Jason Voorhees was out to get me when the sun set. The campsite is located spitting distance from Wrightwood and that’s where the magic is. I simply love a smalltown vibe and this one DID NOT DISSAPOINT!
The town is about 4 blocks wide, but it was enough for me to leave the campsite 3 days in a row to explore. These are the stops you must make when you head to the forest for a visit:
The Grizzly Café has the best breakfast in town. You can eat inside or out and on weekends there is a wait. I dined with a group of 6 friends and every dish looked DELICIOUS! I of course had the French toast, and I could not believe it when they brought out the plate: FRENCH BREAD was used for the toast! EPIC doesn’t even describe it. When you go, you must request to sit in Roxy’s section. She is the most fabulous server and will treat you just right. While you are there, be sure to put a quarter in the machine to hear “Mortimer the Moose” tell jokes from his mounted wall position over by the counter. www.grizzlycafe.com
When you are finished with your meal, simply stay in the same building and shop till you drop at Golden Acorn Gifts! I know, it just keeps getting better! In this store you will find everything your heart desires from salt & pepper shakers held by a grizzly bear, scented candles, yard gnomes, and cute camping items for your trailer!!! The focal point is an upside-down Christmas tree with… you guessed it: Huge Golden Acorn ornaments. I bought myself the most adorable sweater onesie with Bigfoot on the front, in the most complimenting color of teal. It’s sure to keep me coxy on those chilly winter nights we have coming up. I walked out of that store a trend setter and was the bell of the ball at the campsite!
Next stop was Applewood Court. This quaint little grouping of stores includes a gift shop with a wide selection of Yankee Candle’s, an adorable ice cream shop with vintage candies and the BEST fudge this side of the Mississippi! I became fast friends with the store associate Paris, and she serves up a double scoop like no other. The hidden GEM of this court is the Christmas Shop. You must ask an employee to open it for you and it is located on the lower level of the complex. Inside, you will behold every little thing that good Ol’ Saint Nick has in his big red bag! You can follow Applewood Court on Facebook for all the latest!
The GA Mercantile store is worth the trip alone!!!! The most FABULOUS selection I have ever seen. This is your one stop shop for seasonal décor, inspirational plaques, garden accessories, paper dolls, and the list goes on and on. By this point you can tell that this gal likes to shop! It’s a trait that was passed down through my family for generations. I found the cutest Halloween Décor and couldn’t resist adding a couple of other things to the cart. The store does close for five days to prepare for the Christmas Holiday, and from what I have been told, it’s a big event in town! www.gamercantile. com
If you enjoy an arcade game and cats … yes, I said cats … then head over to the PURR Ground. This special experience allows you play your favorite arcade games with some furry felines! The cost is $10.00 per hour, and I don’t think I’ve ever seen anything like it in my life! It’s the 80’s vibe we all need in the forest! The best part is that if you see a pussy that you fall in love with…. you can adopt and give them the forever home they all need. Learn more about them on Facebook at their page The PurrGround. #OBSESSED
My favorite adventure though, would have to be the Ziplines at Pacific Crest! I have ziplined a couple of time before, but this was next level zipping. We chose to do the Mountain View Tour, which included six different zip lines with lines as long as 1,000 feet and getting up to 55 mph. I was grateful that I packed a “shake and go” wig in my knapsack and had sensible sneakers, otherwise, it would have been a no go for this lady. The experience was AMAZING and the vistas from the mountain tops were simply breathtaking. The best part were our guides that took us out on the mountain. If you book a tour, ask for Casey as he made it the BEST EVER. www. ziplinespc.com
There is way more to tell you about that I can’t put in this article, but I want you to have your own experiences when you visit. We dined at other places, saw more sights, and did more shopping and it was all just good clean fun. The town is also known for it’s ski lodge during wintertime, and I plan to head back there and live my best ski bunny fantasy. I hope you enjoy this town as much as I did when you head to the forest!
Here’s to fun and joyful journeys! XO Ethyl
The Many Layers of GREGORY MATHIS JR
By Alexander Rodriguez
Reality TV has often become a hotbed of drama, salacious displays of sex, catfights, and catty one-liners. Emerging from the typical noise of reality TV, E! Entertainment’s Mathis Family Matters is a breath of fresh air. The show details the life of popular TV personality Judge Mathis, his wife, and his four adult children, as everyone congregates in Los Angeles, all together again after pursuing their separate lives. Judge Mathis’ older son, Gregory Mathis Jr, has become a major focus of the show as his personal life turned public in the blink of an eye. His public coming out, his long-term relationship with his partner Elliot, and his involvement with both political and social causes has placed him among this year’s LGBTQ stand-out activist.
A major storyline for the show’s debut season is Greg Jr’s reluctance to make his sexuality a public thing. Though well supported by his family, his experience in politics as well as the neighborhoods he grew up created an atmosphere of wariness. What would his dad’s fans say? What would the nation say? What would his political peers say? Once he publicly came out, there would be no going back. Since the show premiered, it has been nothing but a media frenzy from major network talk shows to podcasts across the nation, to print coverage in all types of mediums. Though he never wanted the spotlight, it gravitated towards him, and it has been a blessing, certain challenges notwithstanding.
What I have enjoyed the most are people who’ve genuinely been touched or inspired by just seeing me live my life, and it surprises me every single time. I get messages in my inbox on Instagram, people who are saying that I helped them in their journey by being public with Elliot on the show and our coming out journey. I was actually just at dinner with a buddy of mine who went to Michigan undergrad with me and he was telling me that his younger brother just came out and he said, “Our entire family started watching the show because we were just trying to figure out how to deal with this and your show has helped us in that way.” And so that’s been the best part, just knowing that it is making an actual difference. The hardest part has been having the spotlight on me because, I mean, look, none of us are perfect. And so, it’s a little scary when you say something or tweet something, you do have all these people looking up to you and looking at what you do as an example. Pressure to not say the wrong thing or not want to let folks down who may be looking to you for some sort of guidance or as a role model, quite frankly. One of the reasons I did want to do this show is because I know that putting myself out there in that way will help people and save a lot of lives. I mean, representation’s important and I know how valuable it would’ve been to me growing up and on my journey to see someone like me on television, someone that was living their life authentically, someone that was open about their struggles with their sexuality and how difficult it was to get to this point and how I’m still a work in progress.
Mathis’ journey to reality TV comes by way of politics, a career that runs in the family. Mathis Sr, after serving time in jail, became heavily involved as a campus activist at Eastern Michigan University and worked for the Democratic Party, organizing demonstrations against South African Apartheid policies and went from unpaid political intern to serving as the appointed head of Jesse Jackson’s Presidential campaign in Michigan. Mathis Jr. followed suit and served over a decade in political offices, starting off as an intern as well, filling many positions, including staff assistant for Former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr.
It was a product of the way I grew up. I mean, my dad was in politics from an early age, he ran a lot of political campaigns when I was growing up and so I was around it. But also, when I was young, I went to Detroit public schools up until sixth grade, and then we moved out and went to suburban schools. I could remember even at that age; I saw the difference in the school districts. I saw the resources that were so disparate between the suburban well-funded schools and the inner-city schools and it didn’t make sense to me then. I knew what the people who looked like that went to those different school districts as well and so I always kind of had an eye for wanting to figure out how I could help other people. That was my first example. I’m like, wait a minute, what can I do when I stopped going to inner city schools and went to suburban schools to help the kids that are still going to these inner-city schools? And so, I always had a little bit of a passion to just want to help people and that really is the reason I started in politics. It was a passion deep within, I would say.
Though he enjoyed a successful career in politics, his career as a fashionista in politics was short-lived.
I remember I was an intern in Jesse Jackson Jr’s office and on my first day I was so excited. If you all have ever been to
DC in the middle of the summer, it is piping hot and that’s when all the interns come to DC. I’m thinking, I’m going to put on this great outfit and look great. It just shows how naive I was at that time. I should have known better, but I put on some nice shoes, and a pair of what I thought were nice khaki shorts with a polo, because they said we didn’t have to wear a suit that day, wear casual. I walk into the office and the first thing they say is, “Why are you wearing shorts in the office?” And my face just dropped, and I was so embarrassed. It ended up being a great intern experience, but that always stands out to me because here I am walking in bright-eyed and bushy-tailed on my first day as an intern, and that’s literally the first story I have. They said, “You’re lucky the Chief of Staff’s not here because he would’ve sent you right home, but I’m going to let you stay for the day, but don’t ever wear shorts in the office again.”
All jokes aside, his political work would constitute some of his proudest moments to date.
My favorite moment was when I was on the Senate floor the night that John McCain voted no on repealing the Affordable Care Act. We thought the law was gone for sure and John McCain came in there and, rest his soul, saved the day. We partied like it was 1999 at night. I did a lot of domestic policy issues and healthcare fell in my portfolio when I was working in the United States Senate and that was a really special moment because we fought so hard for that. I worked on President Obama’s reelection campaign in Ohio, which was probably one of my other best moments the night that we won Ohio. That was the last time the Democratic party won Ohio, unfortunately, but that was a special moment.
Would Greg Jr ever run for office himself?
I would never say never no to anything, and I wouldn’t necessarily say I’ve left politics completely. I still take my advocacy very seriously. But I think everything has a season and I’m excited for what is going to be next for me, I’m going to be able to really have an impact in a different way both in my advocacy from the LGBTQ perspective, but also in work with my family on some projects. My dad has a production company and I’m working with him on some projects that I’ll bring a unique perspective to it with my background, both in the LGBTQ space, but also my background in politics.
His family is having an impact. Without table flipping, catfights, or backstabbing, Mathis Family Matters has become a hit. Proving that reality TV can be wholesome and popular at the same time, the nation gets a glimpse of what a successful, Black, American family looks like, with each family member proud of the other for their individual successes. The show came to fruition because of his younger brother, Amir, a television producer.
Amir came to our family with this concept a few years ago, and at first, we were super reluctant to do it. Everybody was like, no, we’re not putting our lives out there like that. But he came with a unique perspective of like, look, we have a super close-knit family, we have a lot of fun together, we
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love each other, and he ultimately convinced us that we had something to offer the world that was different than what we do see on TV, and he sold us on that quite frankly. My dad eventually said yes because everybody else got on board. Amir went out and sold the show and made it happen all on his own and that is the genuine way in which this came together. It was partially Amir being able to convince us that this was something that would be positive. It really gives us an opportunity to showcase a positive family. I’m not going to say we’re perfect because we’re not. We have our issues that we work through, but that’s healthy for the world to see also … something slightly different to offer than what you see on a lot of reality TV shows.
Showcasing Greg Jr’s coming out story is so important not only for mainstream audiences to see but for other groups such as the Black and religious community. Part of Greg’s reluctance to come out was directly because of the environment he was brought up in, although his sexuality was part of who he is from early on.
I can’t put an exact age on it, but I just remember being young being attracted to a guy and thinking at that age, oh no, this is wrong. I can’t tell anybody about this. I’m not supposed to be doing this. Cause at that point, I would’ve been teased and bullied like crazy if I had ever expressed those feelings at that age. I talk about this on the show a little bit, but I actually went to the church at the time and the pastor would speak frequently about how people who were homosexual were against what the Bible taught and that we were going to hell and it was an abomination and I actually would go home after church frequently and would try and pray not to be gay.
I can’t paint a broad brush for how our entire community feels, but I can speak from personal experience, which is that to me, the way I was raised, the Black church was very important to me. It was the anchor of our family, and many of our community. Being raised in the south, it was even amplified - once you leave high school, you’re expected to be bringing home a wife and have a family. In my experience, it’s been that mixture of Black families wanting their relatives to have a family, to have a strong Black family, and then the fact that we are so rooted in the church, which I continue to be. I go to church every Sunday. I’m very strong in my faith, but I just have a different interpretation than I think a lot of other people might.
Looking towards the future, now with reality TV star added to his resume, he is eager to show the world what else makes up Gregory Mathis Jr.
Now that (the coming out) is done, I’m excited to just get to living my life and not having to revisit that constantly. It’s like, okay, I’ve come out of the closet. You know who I am now. In future seasons of Mathis Family Matters, I’m excited for the world to see that yeah, I’m gay, but there’s so much more to me than that. I am really looking forward to people getting to see those different layers and getting to know me in a different way, rather than just the gay son of Judge Greg Mathis.
You can stream the full season of Mathis Family Matters on E!
Glen Alen
This Emmy Winner is Turning Drag into Art
By Alexander Rodriguez
In a time where social media and reality TV shows are making stars of drag queens, there is a faction of trailblazers that have taken the idea of drag and turned it into an art. Three-time Emmy Award winner Glen Alen is one of those queens. Hard to succinctly describe his style, his drag creations and celebrity impersonations are works of art unto themselves. The man behind the makeup is equally as magical with a glowing personality and a resume as colorful as his makeup.
He was destined to be an artist from a young age, learning the basics of color and form from delving into oil painting. After high school, he would embark on a 17-year career with the Regis Corporation becoming a National Educator, award-winning hair artist, and award-winning salon manager. During that time, he would also work with major brands like Smashbox, Lancome, Estée Lauder, Make Up For Ever, and Urban Decay and have his work seen in print, film, music videos, and commercials. Letting a woman’s natural beauty shine through, he would present it together with his flawless technique.
After leaving Regis, he would become one of the most sought-after film and television makeup artists with his work seen on Drag Race, Legendary, A Star Is Born, The Greatest Showman, Penny Dreadful, The Masked Singer, Dancing With the Stars U.S.Tour, America’s Next Top Model, Days Of Our Lives, America’s Got Talent, Key & Peele, and the list goes on and on, with celebrity standouts that include Loni Love, Rita Moreno, Rosie O’Donnell, Tamar Braxton, Mel B, Leeza Gibbons, Raquel Welch, Pat Benatar, Kathy Griffin, Lisa Rinna, Betty White, Carol Channing, Bea Arthur, Debbie Gibson, and more.
Evolving his own drag style, he created the Drag Makeup Academy, where he teaches his unique techniques and looks around the nation. His transformative art is astounding. If you’ve ever had the opportunity to see Glen perform live, you know it is not just a lip-synch and glued eyelash. It is art.
Glen Alen is our GED Drag Centerfold of the Month! How did you go from oil painting to makeup?
As soon as I saw pop stars on TV like Boy George, Pete Burns, Cyndi Lauper, and Steve Strange, I knew my face had to be my new canvas.
What did you learn most about makeup from being at the Regis Corp?
Being an educator, I learned that when it comes to art there are principles, guidelines, and rules. Yes, rules were meant to be broken. But you must know them first.
Because of social media, the makeup Industry has gained massive appreciation and respect for its intricacies and for the discipline it takes to be successful.
I think it’s grown in two ways: The word ‘subtlety’ comes to mind. The high definition for TV, film, and print has taught me to blend even beyond what is seen by the naked eye. And the word ‘intensity.’ As a drag queen and club kid, a rule of thumb is that “more is just a place to start.”
What was your first experience with drag makeup?
I came across a drag show in the 80s called The Cosmetixs which performed at the club called Peanuts West Hollywood. It was filled with celebrity impersonators who performed as Madonna, Tina Turner, Grace Jones, Cher, and many others, with the lead performer, Michael Angelo, serving outrageous club kid fantasy looks.
What is your take on influencers on social media becoming stars from doing makeup techniques - are they getting it right?
Photo courtesy of Glen Alen
They are talented and inspiring. They are getting it right when doing makeup on themselves, and it’s a beautiful thing to see. Now, having said that, they get it right because most of them have a commercially beautiful face, meaning their face fits the golden ratio. The golden ratio is the mathematical face proportion that models are chosen for … it’s what plastic surgeons use for restructuring a face. The challenge is doing makeup on all other face shapes and skin tones.
What does being a multiple Emmy award winner mean the most to you?
It means I’ve grown into a disciplined and responsible artist. I’ve learned the importance of working as a team and not needing the spotlight on me or my work. And it’s also a symbol of decades of mental and spiritual growth and perseverance.
What celebrity project has been your favorite, and why?
It’s not the projects, it’s the legends. It’s the women who have been in the business for 40, 50, or 60 years. To get their approval means the world to me.
How would you categorize your personal drag persona?
The category is ‘Shapeshifting.’
What do you love most about performing in drag?
I love suspending reality and transporting the audience and myself to another place in time where there is no stress, no worries, and no pressures that we encounter in our day-to-day life.
Hometown: Lakewood California.
Guilty pleasure?
A row of Chips Ahoy cookies.
Favorite part about doing drag?
The creative process of creating different looks and not getting stuck in a rut.
Least favorite part about doing drag?
Photo courtesy of Glen Alen
#Corset
Craziest drag story?
I was impersonating Kathy Griffin for a red carpet event and then had the real Kathy Griffin surprise me and walk up the carpet. She approved and we took many photos together.
Most undrag thing you do?
Camping.
What celebrity most needs a drag makeover?
Gordon Ramsay.
Favorite nightlife hotspot?
Heart WeHo.
Favorite non-profit?
APLA Health.
Favorite binge food?
Mexican.
What is the most overrated pop song?
“Baby Shark.”
Go-to cocktail?
A giant coffee.
What would the name of your biography be?
From Bullied to Brilliant. Favorite song to perform?
“Otto Titsling.”
What is your after-drag ritual?
To release the Kraken. [Laughs]
What’s your favorite pickup line?
It’s a dick pic.
You can follow Glen on IG: @GlenAlen
Tommy Boi
This Golden Ticket is OUT and PROUD
At the age of 19, singer/songwriter Tommy Boi was granted the golden ticket to go on to Hollywood on American Idol’s Season 12. Though his path on the competition show was short-lived, he walked away with advice from season judge Nicki Minaj - to never give up and keep working at it. Heeding her advice, he has done just that and has become one of the bright stars in the LGBTQ independent musician circuit. Overcoming some major obstacles in his life, he has been heating up the scene garnering millions upon millions of streams across all the major platforms and hitting the stage with powerhouse performances.
Music started early for Tommy, with piano lessons and singing starting at age 7 in Sacramento, California.
I had so many close friends that were like family to me, and I made so many beautiful memories growing up there. And while I was able to make a lot of amazing music with my friends, I always felt like I needed to get to LA to take my career to the next phase. Music became a huge part of my identity from so early on. It gave me the ability to process my emotions. I keep that with me in my songwriting. It was always the place I could turn to when I felt discouraged or lost. As I was finding myself growing up, music was my safe place.
Having a safe space was very important for Tommy as his sexuality started to develop. His early singing started in the church, and he would go on to attend a Christian university. It was at school that Tommy fell in love for the first time. The struggle between personal identity and a conservative upbringing would soon start to clash to form the foundation for today’s openly proud, gay musician.
I think deep down I always knew I was different, but I wasn’t sure why. Then during middle school, people would start to ask me if I was gay but, growing up in such a conservative world, that never felt like an option for me. I started to get bullied in high school about it, but I hadn’t fully accepted it for myself. I kind of just focused on music during high school and making lots of friends. It wasn’t until I fell in love for the first time with a boy when I was 21 that I knew I had to come out. I was scared of getting rejected by everyone in my life, but I had to make that choice to live my truth. I wanted to be happy and be free no matter the cost. Some people faded away when I came out, but the real ones in my life accepted me with open arms.
And his relationship with religion today?
I don’t really associate with any one religion today but growing up in a religious household definitely made me a spiritual person. I believe in the power of the universe and that all things do work together in such a beautiful way. It’s really all about your mindset and perspective when dealing with life every day. Once I wrote that song, I knew I didn’t want to live my life in hiding. I finally felt that feeling that everyone else always talked about and I just wanted to let it all out. I knew the people in my personal life would hear my heart in the song and how genuine that love was. It gave me the strength to finally take that step forward.
“Holiday” (the companion song to “Glue”) would detail Tommy’s journey to Los Angeles and the hardships that came with it, including couch surfing just to survive.
Living on my own for the first time and experiencing true independence can also feel like loneliness at times. We all have to find our path in this life and only you can go on that journey but I’m really grateful to have made some really close friends that lift me up and remind me of who I am when I’m struggling.
After his original move to Los Angeles, he was in a horrible car accident that forced Tommy to move back home for months to recover. But still, he wasn’t throwing in the towel.
That was the darkest time of my life. I was living in LA, recording music, and felt on top of the world but then, overnight, my life changed and just like that I was back home with a broken leg and no car. I was in recovery for six months, but the one thing I did have was all of the masters of my songs. So, it actually gave me time to process the coming out situation with my family and brought us all a lot closer again. I also released “You Never Called Back” while I was living back at home, and it started to take on a life of its own. It was a sign from the universe to not give up.
Despite Tommy’s hardships, his fan base in the music industry and on social media continued to climb. Each new single met with even more attention. As life continued to challenge Tommy on a personal level, the experiences gave him a new edge.
I think my perspective has matured a bit. I’ve learned a lot about love and relationships over the years and I hope that comes through in my songs. It’s less of a victim mentality like “You hurt me, how could you” and more of being grateful for the memories that I made with those people. I think you can see that new perspective in my song “California” - it’s about a past love but it’s not in a hurtful way, but more of a nostalgic and beautiful way. The song is just me processing those feelings of genuinely being happy for someone else while still feeling like I was sacrificing fun to pursue my dreams and build my own life. It’s not really a sad song, but more so about me stepping back and looking at my life, feeling nostalgic about the past, but also knowing that I was in the right place doing what I needed to do for myself to move
my life forward. I wanted the song to make people feel good and understood. There is so much beauty in that struggle of growing and forging your own path.
Above all, he remains unabashedly out and proud. Does he think being an openly gay musician is limiting at all?
I don’t like to think about it as a limitation because it’s my story and my reality. All I can do is live transparently and people can take that however they want. Making music is just something I must do to express myself and will always do regardless of what people think about me or my personal life.
While fans can recite Tommy’s lyrics along with him, they also have an equal fervor for Tommy’s shirtless, or pant less pics on social media. Do the underwear and muscle pics overshadow his skills as a musician?
Photo by Steven James - IG @stevenjamesphotos
I do think it may confuse people a bit but I can’t help it. I’m just trying to live my authentic life and I also make music from my heart. Being a sexual human being is just part of being a human and I’m not ashamed of that. I am just trying to live openly and transparently, and I hope that inspires everyone else to do the same no matter what their sexuality is.
Even choosing the stage name “Boi” is without apology.
Someone once told me that my stage name was too gay, so I felt like I just had to do it. It’s not so much about being a boy as it is about being forever young and not
It’s this mix of confidence, sexuality, and truly well-crafted music that has set Tommy apart from his peers. His voice is plaintive and powerful at the same time, commanding and pleading at others. For Tommy, he is simply telling his story his way.
Fans appreciate the vulnerability and honesty in my lyrics. They can hopefully hear the tenderness in my voice when I sing and that’s it all just coming from my heart and my real-life experiences. It’s scary to put my stories out there sometimes but it is so worth it when I know it’s helping somebody else in their journey feel understood. I just want people to know that they aren’t alone in the struggle of growing up and healing from a broken heart because we all have been there.
With skilled instruction in his arsenal as well as life lessons, his creative process is precise.
I’m always writing down titles in my phone of stories I want to tell or phrases that resonate with me. Then from there, when I’m ready to write, I’ll sit down with my laptop and a guitar or piano and start to write out the hook. I typically build out the song from that point. I write the melodies and the lyrics hand in hand as I go. I’ve written to tracks before, and I enjoy that a lot, but my favorite is writing with an instrument in my hand because it feels like the song is just fully coming from my mind and body.
Tommy’s biggest priorities right now are to release his next EP and continue his live bookings across the U.S. Not only does he want to be an inspiration to other LGBTQ people in coming out, but he also wants to be a point of light for other musicians. His best advice?
Just remember that your story is worth being told. Keep going because you love making art. Make the best music you can and remember why you started in the first place. Enjoy the journey and just focus on growing every single day. It’s all about baby steps! Celebrate every win and learn from every loss. Every day that you are alive is a blessing and a chance to begin again. Find that dream life for yourself and remember it is all about baby steps. I love you all so much!
You can listen to Tommy’s music across all major platforms, and follow him on IG: @TommyBoi.
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