AUGUST 19, 2022 • VOLUME 53 • ISSUE 33 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM Theatre)Signatureofcourtesy(Photo D.C. native on healing power of playing iconic role, page 30
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04 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022 Thank you to our sponsors and partners of the Washington Blade. Community Partners ADDRESS PO Box Washington53352DC 20009 PHONE 202-747-2077 E-MAIL news@washblade.com INTERNET washingtonblade.com PUBLISHED BY Brown Naff Pitts Omnimedia, Inc. PUBLISHER LYNNE J. BROWN lbrown@washblade.com ext. 8075 EDITOREDITORIAL KEVIN NAFF knaff@washblade.com ext. 8088 SR. NEWS REPORTER LOU CHIBBARO JR. lchibbaro@washblade.com ext. 8079 NEWS REPORTER CHRIS JOHNSON cjohnson@washblade.com ext. 8083 REPORTER & INTERNATIONAL NEWS EDITOR MICHAEL K. LAVERS mlavers@washblade.com POP CULTURE REPORTER JOHN PAUL KING PHOTO EDITOR MICHAEL KEY mkey@washblade.com CONTRIBUTING WRITERS TINASHE CHINGARANDE, DUNIA ORELLANA, REPORTAR SIN MIEDO, PARKER PURIFOY, PETER ROSENSTEIN, MARK LEE, LATEEFAH WILLIAMS, KATE CLINTON, KATHI WOLFE, ERNESTO VALLE, YARIEL VALDÉS GONZÁLEZ, LYNARE ROBBINS, PHILIP VAN SLOOTEN, KATLEGO K. KOLANYANE-KESUPILE, KAELA ROEDER, TREMENDA NOTA, ALBERTO J. VALENTÍN, MAYKEL GONZÁLEZ VIVERO, ORGULLO LGBT. CO, ESTEBAN GUZMAN CREATIVE DESIGN/PRODUCTION AZERCREATIVE.COM SALES & DIRECTORADMINISTRATIONOFSALES&MARKETING STEPHEN RUTGERS srutgers@washblade.com ext. 8077 SR. ACCT. EXECUTIVE BRIAN PITTS bpitts@washblade.com ext. 8089 ACCT. EXECUTIVE JOE jhickling@washblade.comHICKLING ext. 8094 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING/ADMINISTRATION PHILLIP G. ROCKSTROH prockstroh@washblade.com ext. 8092 NATIONAL ADVERTISING RIVENDELL MEDIA 212-242-6863; sales@rivendellmedia.com For distribution, contact Lynne Brown at 202-747-2077, ext. 8075. Distributed by MediaPoint, LLC All material in the Washington Blade is protected by federal copyright law and may not be reproduced without the written consent of the Washington Blade. The sexual orientation of advertisers, photographers, writers and cartoonists published herein is neither inferred nor implied. The appearance of names or pictorial representation does not necessarily indicate the sexual orientation of that person or persons. Although the Washington Blade is supported by many fine advertisers, we cannot accept responsibility for claims made by advertisers. Unsolicited editorial material is accepted by the Washington Blade, but the paper cannot take responsibility for its return. The editors reserve the right to accept, reject or edit any submission. A single copy of the Washington Blade is available from authorized distribution points, to any individual within a 50-mile radius of Washington, D.C. Multiple copies are available from the Washington Blade office only. Call for rates. If you are unable to get to a convenient free distribution point, you may receive a 52-week mailed subscription for $195 per year or $5.00 per single issue. Checks or credit card orders can be sent to Phil Rockstroh at prockstroh@ washblade.com. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Washington Blade, PO BOX 53352 Washington, DC 20009. The Washington Blade is published weekly, on Friday, by Brown Naff Pitts Omnimedia, Inc. Individual Subscriptions are $195 per year for 52 issues (only $3.75 per issue mailed to you USPS). Rates for businesses/institutions are $450 per year. Periodical postage paid at Washington, D.C., and additional mailing offices. Editorial positions of the Washington Blade are expressed in editorials and in editors’ notes as determined by the paper’s editors. Other opinions are those of the writers and do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Washington Blade or its staff. To submit a letter or commentary: Letters should be fewer than 400 words; commentaries should be fewer than 750 words. Submissions may be edited for content and length, and must include a name, address and phone number for verification. Send submissions by e-mail to knaff@washblade.com. ©2022 BROWN NAFF PITTS OMNIMEDIA, INC. VOLUME 53 ISSUE 33 Te Only Stack Style Guide v 1 | February 2018
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In addition, Dayson “further” states in her Aug. 12 order that Casa Ruby’s “trustees, directors, officers, managers, or other agents are hereby suspended and the power of any directors or managers are hereby suspended. Such persons and entities shall have no authority with respect to Casa Ruby’s operations or assets, except to the extent as may hereafter be granted by theCoradoReceiver.”also spoke at the Aug. 11 virtual hearing through a telephone hookup. Among other things, she said she does not oppose the appointment of a receiver. But Corado disputed the AG office’s allegations against her and Casa Ruby, claiming the group’s financial problems that resulted in its shutdown of most Casa Ruby programs were caused by the D.C. government’s decision to discontinue many but not all city grants providing funding for Casa Ruby.
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The D.C.-based LGBTQ health and HIV services organiza tion Us Helping Us, People Into Living and The Kier Company, which filed a $3.8 million lawsuit against Us Helping Us in No vember 2020 alleging a breach of contract for its renovation of the group’s headquarters building, have reached an outof-court settlement in the case, according to court records. Us Helping Us Executive Director DeMarc Hickson, who this week informed the Washington Blade about the settle ment, said the two parties have decided to keep the terms of the settlement confidential. Documents filed by the two parties in D.C. Superior Court over the past two years show that settlement discussions be gan in early 2021 as part of a mandatory mediation under court rules for all lawsuits. But the records show that an agree ment between the two parties to settle the case did not take place until April of this year. The Kier Company, which provides interior design and general contracting services for residential and commercial buildings, charged in its lawsuit that Us Helping Us violated the terms of its contract for the renovation of its D.C. head quarters building at 3636 Georgia Ave., N.W. The company claimed Us Helping Us failed to pay the remaining balance of $101,002 out of a total cost for the renovation project of $320,234. Thelawsuit accused Us Helping Us of multiple violations of various provisions in the contract it signed with the com pany, including a failure to remove office furniture from the building during the construction work and the presence of Us Helping Us employees in the construction areas. All of this, the company charged, resulted in “overtime” and “weekend” fees totaling $3,366,000 over and above the original stated cost of the entire project. Us Helping Us stated in its response to the lawsuit that it withheld the final payment because The Kier Company failed to complete the renovation work specified in the original contract and subsequent change orders calling for addition al work. Us Helping Us also claimed that some of the work performed by the company was of poor quality, requiring Us Helping Us to arrange for “remedial construction” services from another company. It disputed the company’s claim for overtime and week end charges, saying the company had agreed to perform its construction work while Us Helping Us employees worked in areas of the building when and where renovation work was not taking place. Court records show that Us Helping Us filed a counter claim accompanying its response to the lawsuit demanding that the Kier Company pay $37,400 in compensatory and actual damages for the costs Us Helping Us incurred to hire another contractor to complete the work it said the Kier Com pany did not complete.
“For over 30 years, Us Helping Us has been providing inno vative care and services to improve the health and well-being of Black, gay men,” the nonprofit group says in a statement on its website. “We work every day to reduce the impact of HIV/AIDS in the entire Black community by providing care to anyone who walks through our door,” the statement says.
06 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022 • LOCAL NEWS Wanda
Construction
| lchibbaro@washblade.com Us
In its court filings, the AG’s office has disputed Corado’s claims, saying the city grant funds for many of Casa Ruby’s pro grams were suspended or discontinued because Casa Ruby failed to comply with the grant requirements that all city grant ees are obligated to comply with.
JUNE CRENSHAW is the Wanda Alston Foundation’s executive director. (Blade file photo by Michael Key)
A D.C. Superior Court judge on Friday, Aug. 12, appoint ed the Wanda Alston Foundation as the city’s receiver for the LGBTQ community services center Casa Ruby in a role in which the Alston Foundation will assume full control over Casa Ruby’s operations and finances. Judge Danya A. Dayson stated in an order she issued at 2:27 p.m. on Friday that she appointed the Alston Foundation for the receivership role at the recommendation of the Office of the D.C. Attorney General, which asked the judge to place Casa Ruby in receivership in a court motion filed on Aug. 3. Founded in 2008, the Wanda Alston Foundation provides housing and support services for D.C. homeless and at-risk LGBTQ youth ages 18 to 24 and advocates for expanded city services for LGBTQ youth, according to a statement on its web site.During a virtual court hearing on Thursday, Aug. 11, Dayson approved the AG office’s request to place Casa Ruby under receivership. During the hearing, Adam Gitlin, chief of the AG office’s Public Integrity Section, announced that the AG of fice had two organizations under consideration for the Casa Ruby receiver – the Alston Foundation of D.C. and the Balti more-based LGBTQ services organization Safe Haven, which has announced it planned to open a facility in D.C. Gitlin asked the judge if the AG’s office could have one more day to make a final decision on which of the two groups should be named as the Casa Ruby receiver, and Dayson granted his request. Among those who spoke at the Aug. 11 hearing was June Crenshaw, the Wanda Alston Foundation’s executive director. Crenshaw told the judge her organization has long supported the mission of Casa Ruby and it was prepared to do all it could to continue that mission in its role as receiver. In a seven-page order issued on Aug. 12 approving the AG’s recommendation that the Alston Foundation be appointed as receiver, Dayson restated her earlier findings that the AG’s office provided sufficient evidence that a receivership was needed. Among other things, she pointed to the AG office’s allegations that Casa Ruby and its founder and former exec utive director Ruby Corado violated the District’s Nonprofit Corporations Act. “The District alleges in its petition that Defendant violated the Act by failing to maintain a lawfully constituted Board of Di rectors, failing to maintain control and oversight of the Corpo ration; permitting Ruby Corado, the executive director, to have exclusive access to bank and PayPal accounts held in the name of, or created to benefit, Casa Ruby; and permitting Corado to expend hundreds of thousands of dollars of nonprofit funds without Board oversight and for unknown reason,” Dayson stated in her “Accordingly,order.itis on this 12th day of August 2022 hereby ORDERED that the District’s motion for appointment of a re ceiver is GRANTED, and it is FURTHER ORDERED that until further order of this court, the Wanda Alston Foundation, Inc., 1701 Rhode Island Avenue, N.W., 2nd Floor, Washington, D.C. 20036 (the “Receiver”), is hereby appointed as Receiver,” DaysonDaysondeclared.statedin her Aug. 12 order that she has “hereby lift ed” her Aug. 3 order granting the AG office’s request that Casa Ruby’s bank accounts and all financial assets be frozen. The Aug. 12 order states that the receiver will now have full control over the bank ac counts and Casa RubyButassets.the judge adds in her latest order, ingstanding“NotwiththeliftoftheAugust 3, 2022, freezing Order, Ruby Corado shall not regain access to the affected accounts.”
Judge
In an April 22, 2022, motion filed by attorneys for The Kier Company, the company informed the judge that the two parties, following mediation, agreed in principle to settle the lawsuit.
The court records also show that Superior Court Judge Fern Flanagan Saddler, who presided over the case at that time, denied motions by both sides calling for him to end the case by ruling in their favor. He issued his denial of both mo tions in a joint ruling handed down on Dec. 28, 2021.
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“Counsel for the parties are currently in the process of pre paring and finalizing the terms of the settlement,” the motion states. The court docket shows that Judge Maurice A. Ross dis missed the lawsuit in a ruling handed down on July 22, 2022, that said the dismissal would officially take place 14 days later on Aug. 12. “The parties previously filed a notice of settlement,” the court docket states.
By
Hicks, the Us Helping Us executive director, told the Blade this week that the group is currently providing monkeypox related support services for people it provides other services for. Alston Foundation chosen as Casa Ruby receiver approves move at recommendation of D.C. Attorney General LOU CHIBBARO JR. Helping Us reaches settlement in $3.8 million lawsuit firm accused LGBTQ group of breach of contract
By LOU CHIBBARO JR. | lchibbaro@washblade.com Helping Us Executive Director DEMARC HICKSON said terms of the settlement are confidential. capture United We Rise YouTube)
Us
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“Victim 1 stated that he and Victim 2 were walking east bound in the 1500 block of T St., N.W. when 4 to 8 sus pects approached from behind and assaulted them with punches,” the report continues. “Victim 1 stated that at least one of the suspects yelled homophobic slurs at him as the assault was perpetrated.
Aiyi’nah
D.C. police on Aug. 11 charged a 46-year-old D.C. man with assault with a dangerous weapon in connection with incident earlier this month in which lesbian activist Aiyi’nah Ford said she was hit in the head three times with the metal legs of a barstool wielded by a man yelling anti-gay names at Aher.police report says the incident took place at the Play er’s Lounge, a restaurant and bar at 2737 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave., S.E., in the city’s Congress Heights neighbor hood shortly before and after midnight on Aug. 3 and Aug. 4. Police identified the man charged in the case as Don nell Anthony Peterson, who police say is a resident of 1200 block of Southern Avenue in Southeast D.C. Ford told the Washington Blade that Peterson, who is a regular customer at Player’s Lounge as is she, assaulted her after the two got into a verbal argument over, among other things, the city’s violence interruption program. Ford said she told Peterson and others who were having a dis cussion that she considered the program to be ineffective and a “joke.”
Another gay couple assaulted in D.C. in suspected hate crime men holding hands when hit from behind by group of attackers
By LOU CHIBBARO JR. | lchibbaro@washblade.com
The affidavit, which was filed in D.C. Superior Court, says Peterson on Aug. 11 “turned himself into the Seventh Dis trict Police Station,” saying he did so after someone told him police issued a Twitter posting announcing he was wanted on an assault allegation.
Singh said he accompanied Johnson to the emergen cy room where he was treated and underwent surgery two days later to treat his jaw, which was broken in two places. Singh said Johnson was also treated for a frac tured thumb. accused of assaulting lesbian activist surrenders to D.C. police Ford attacked at Congress Heights bar earlier this month
By LOU CHIBBARO JR. | lchibbaro@washblade.com
Two
08 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022 • LOCAL NEWS Man
Singh told the Blade the incident began on T Street, N.W., steps away from their house and in front of the house of gay D.C. Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner Kyle Mulhull. He said a group of the attackers approached him and Johnson from behind and the couple didn’t see the attackers until they were struck with punches. “Before we knew it, I heard Chuck yell,” Singh said. “And when I turned to him, I felt a punch on my ear.” According to Singh’s account, the attackers ran toward 15th Street and Johnson ran af ter them presumably to be able to inform police of their location, with the intent that the attackers could be apprehended. But Singh said that another group of attackers emerged from an alley and appeared to have joined the first group and began assaulting Johnson again. The D.C. police report says officers responding to a 911 call from Johnson arrived on the scene when Victim 1, who was Johnson, was observed at the intersection of 15th and U Streets, N.W. “The officers observed that Victim 1 was bleeding from his mouth as a result of the assault,” the report says. The report says the officers call the D.C. Fire and Emergency Medical Services Department for assistance.
It was around that time, Ford said, that Peterson began repeatedly calling her a “dyke bitch” and threatened to shoot her. The arrest affidavit says witnesses reported seeing Ford covered in blood from a serious head injury before an ambulance arrived on the scene and took her to George Washington University Hospital, where she was treated for a head and scalp wound that required multiple stitches.
CHUCK JOHNSON (left) and J.P. SINGH were assaulted in June. (Photo courtesy the couple)
The affidavit for his arrest on the assault charge says police learned about the outstanding U.S. Park Police ar rest warrant when they conducted a criminal record back ground check after learning through a tip that Peterson was the person who allegedly assaulted Ford at Player’s Lounge.
Court records also show that Peterson appeared before Superior Court Judge Renee Raymond on Aug. 12, one day after his arrest, for a presentment hearing in which Ray mond ordered him held in the D.C. Jail until a scheduled preliminary hearing on Monday. At the Monday hearing, through his attorney, Peterson waived his right to a full preliminary hearing and agreed that Judge Neal E. Kravitz, who presided over the hearing, would rule that prosecutors with the U.S. Attorney’s office established probable cause that Peterson committed the assault. The probable cause finding means that the case can proceed to a trial. While ruling in favor of probable cause, Kravitz denied a request by Assistant U.S. Attorney Alec Levy that Peterson continue to be held in jail pending trial. Levy argued that Peterson “viciously” hit Ford over the head with a barstool at least two times as shown on a video recording of the in cident obtained from a camera from Player’s Lounge video security system. Levy also said that at the time Peterson assaulted Ford he used “derogatory” language referring to her sexual ori entation.Butcourt records show that as of the time of the Monday hearing, the U.S. Attorney’s office did not list the assault against Ford as a bias related crime. In response to an inquiry by the Blade, a spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney’s office said he would look into wheth er prosecutors were considering adding a bias or hate re lated enhancement to the assault charge.
The incident took place about six weeks before an other gay male couple was attacked and punched in the head and face by a group of young males appearing in their late teens as at least one of them shouted “monkey pox faggots.” The incident occurred on Aug. 7 along the 1700 block of 7th Street, N.W. in the Shaw neighborhood as the men were walking to a nearby bus stop. D.C. police, who have released photos of two suspects in the Aug. 7 incident and a photo of one suspect in the June 17 case, say no arrests have been made in either of the cases but both cases remain under active investi gation. The two victims in the June 17 case identified them selves as J.P. Singh, Professor of Global Commerce and Policy at George Mason University, and Charles D. “Chuck” Johnson Jr., CEO and President of the Alumi num Association industry trade organization. They initial ly identified themselves in a little-noticed article about the incident that they wrote and published on June 23 in the blog Medium in which they also posted a photo of themselves.“We,JPand Chuck, are a mid dle-age interracial gay couple,” the two wrote in the article. “We have been together for nearly 27 years, and live in a gay neigh borhood in Washington, DC. On Friday, June 17, while walking back from the gym at 10 p.m. and holding hands, a group of young African American men assaulted us on our street,” the two wrote. Their article goes on to explore issues surrounding racial justice and crime, and the possible impact of the Black Lives Matter movement on police response to crime, including anti-LGBTQ hate crimes, among other related issues. “Assaults like ours open wounds in our society around race and LGBTQ issues,” they state in the article. “Through writing this article, we want to emphasize context and healing, and not encourage racialized ways of thinking that we associate with divisive tactics.”
A gay male couple informed the Washington Blade this week that they were assaulted by a group of young men on June 17, at least of one of whom shouted the word “faggots,” while the couple was holding hands walking home on the 1500 block of T Street, N.W. a few doors away from their house. One of the two men suffered a broken jaw and frac tured thumb when two or three of the attackers punched and kicked him in the head and face after knocking him to the ground, according to a D.C. police report that lists the incident as a suspected anti-gay hate crime.
AIYI’NAH FORD (Blade file photo by Michael Key)
Court records show that at the time of his arrest, D.C. police also charged Peterson with Possession with Intent to Distribute a Controlled Substance (Cocaine) based on an unrelated Aug. 26, 2021, outstanding warrant for his arrest on the drug charge obtained by U.S. Park Police.
AUGUST 19, 2022 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • 09
tive socially and politically. Yet, just months after the organization celebrated its achievement, new council members were elected in the borough in January 2022, and soon thereafter a major ity of the council decided to repeal the non-discrimina tion
Pride Franklin County will host its Pride Festival 2022 on Oct. 9 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. More information can be found on the organization’s website at pridefranklin county.org.
Delaware Stonewall PAC, which advocates for the LGBTQ community in Delaware, will announce its en dorsements for the 2022 state primaries and general elections at its 18th annual summer fundraiser in Reho both Beach on Saturday. Del. Sen. Marie Pinkney, the state’s first openly lesbian senator, is slated to deliver the event’s keynote speech. Held each year, the event plays a key role in raising funds for the organization’s advocacy efforts, which mostly comes through financial investment in the cam paigns of “candidates that support our issues,” accord ing to Delaware Stonewall PAC Board Secretary Peter Schott.Endorsements are determined by candidates’ re sponses to a survey distributed by the organization re garding its primary issues of interest, and are also influ enced by a candidate’s political background.
But in 2020, at the peak of the event’s popularity — Strayer noted that upwards of 3,000 people attended Pride the year prior — Pride Franklin County had to can cel its programming in light of public health concerns. With the “momentum” it has going, Strayer explained that the organization did not want the pandemic to lim it its ability to serve the Franklin County community: “ That’s when we really decided to make the entire initia tive something bigger,” he said. “We’re not just here to throw a party.” In 2021, the organization began advocating for a lo cal non-discrimination ordinance codifying inclusivity for all community members, regardless of their identi ty. The Borough of Chambersburg Council, which rep resents the largest borough in the county, adopted the ordinance that fall — a major win for LGBTQ activists and allies in a rural Pennsylvania county that leans conserva
JACK WALKER 10 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022 • LOCAL NEWS Pride Franklin County welcomes rural LGBTQ community Pennsylvania organization planning October celebration By JACK WALKER
Pride Franklin County operates under the Franklin County Coalition for Progress, a local social justice non profit that formed in the wake of the 2016 presidential election. “We live in a very rural, conservative area, but that election was a turning point all across the country,” explained Noel Purdy, a founder of Pride Franklin Coun ty and founder and president of FCCP. “People came out of the woodwork who were wor ried about the LGBTQ community … and other popu lations that had experienced different forms of oppres sion in our community,” Purdy explained. This interest in supporting the local LGBTQ community led to a group of LGBTQ community members and allies leading the 2018 Pride celebration. “We just really wanted to create a space where peo ple know that they’re accepted, no matter who they are,” said Nathan Strayer, vice president of FCCP and a founder of Pride Franklin County. “We want people to know that you fit in. There are a lot of people here that are going to love you.”
Delaware Stonewall PAC to announce endorsements courtesy of Pride Franklin County)
Getting Pride Franklin County up and running has “definitely been very emotional,” Strayer noted. When Strayer decided to come out in 1999, he turned to lead ers in his school — a guidance counselor and principal — for advice, but he recalled them “both sitting down and looking at (him) like, ‘We don’t really know what to do,’” making him feel alone in a particularly important part of his life. But with Pride Franklin County, Strayer is “seeing how things are growing and changing.”
Pride Franklin County has also looked to meet the lo cal demand for LGBTQ programming throughout the year while maintaining public health precautions. More recent projects have included mental health LGBTQ programming, community picnics, drag shows and a Taste of Pride food event. Strayer added that there has been significant demand from the community for more programming centering LGBTQ youth. Purdy added that voting rights advocacy has become a center point of current efforts from the organization, as it hopes to educate the local community on the impor tance of their political involvement. “Hopefully, we’re inspiring more people to learn to pay attention more to what’s going on, and trying to understand the connec tion between policy and voting,” Purdy explained While the process of founding a grassroots organi zation has come with obstacles, Purdy and Strayer both noted that the community response has been reward ing. “One thing that I’ve been surprised about is how you have this cultural context of being in a conservative area, thinking that that’s going to be a barrier to do ing an event that supports the LGBTQ community, and that it’s going to be super controversial,” but ultimately receiving a positive reception from many community members and resources needed to keep the organiza tion running, Purdy explained.
Whileordinance.theordinance’s
revocation greatly disappoint ed Pride Franklin County, it also reminded its leaders and activists how much work was left to be done. “From the growth of Pride to the pushback we’ve gotten from some of our elected officials here locally, it’s definitely lit a fire in us to continue pushing ahead so that we can truly make Franklin County an inclusive place for everyone,” Strayer emphasized. This year, the organization launched its Franklin County Welcoming Project, which spearheads public displays of support to the LGBTQ community. In June, the organization received a media grant to create bill board and radio advertisements throughout the coun ty advocating for inclusivity within the Franklin County community.Theorganization also reached out to local business es, providing them with custom decals to put in their windows after signing a pledge stating that they are a “diverse, inclusive, accepting, welcoming, safe space for all,” Strayer said, adding that, despite some initial hesitation, more than 100 local businesses signed the pledge and displayed the logo in their storefronts.
“There’s help out there for youth that are struggling with the same things I was struggling with,” Strayer said. “When I look back at when I was coming out, I thought, ‘This is never going to happen here.’ Seeing now that it is happening here, it’s just such an amazing feeling and it just gives me so much pride in my community.”
This year, 37 candidates for state elections submit ted responses to the survey in pursuit of the organiza tion’s endorsement, said Dwayne Bensing, president of Delaware Stonewall PAC. Although the organization is non-partisan, Bensing noted no Republican candidates sought their endorsement. When reviewing this year’s survey responses, cer tain issues facing the local LGBTQ community weighed heavily in the organization’s decision making. Last year, HB 199, a bill that sought to formally pro hibit discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity or disability in the state constitution, was pro posed in the House, but was “never bought to a floor vote,” Bensing explained. A candidate’s views on consti tutionally guaranteeing access to abortion was consid ered greatly, as Bensing noted the organization hopes to see progress soon on the bill. At the event, the organization will also honor “local and national pioneers in civil and human rights,” accord ing to a July 27 press release from the organization. The leaders that will be recognized at the event in clude C. Dixon Osburn, founder of Servicemembers Le gal Defense Network, which helped end the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” law; Charlotte King, founder of the Southern Delaware Alliance for Racial Justice; and Murray Ar chibald, co-founder of CAMP Rehoboth, according to the press release. Tickets to the fundraiser begin at $75, and the orga nization also welcomes sponsorships. More information can be found at delawarestonewall.org
(Photo
When Pride Franklin County held its first Pride cele bration in 2018, it sought to address a lack of LGBTQ programming in rural southern Pennsylvania. Greeted by more than 1,000 attendees at its inaugural event, Pride Franklin County’s leadership was reassured the event was something the area not only wanted, but needed. Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the local organization has once again sought to address community needs — in new and broadened ways.
AUGUST 19, 2022 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • 11 LIVE LONG DC Saving lives from the opioid epidemic TO SAVE A LIFE Naloxone (aka NARCAN®) is a medication that reverses an opioid overdose and can save the life of your friend, your loved one, even yourself. NO COST. NO PRESCRIPTION. NO IDENTIFICATION. Text LiveLongDC to 888-811 to find naloxone near you.
This is the time of year when gay men say farewell to summer with trips to the beach and resort towns for fes tivities, parties, and other revelry consisting of shirtless dancing and various forms of intimate contact — now a potential health risk as super-spreader events amid a monkeypox outbreak that continues to spread among men who have sex with men.
By CHRIS JOHNSON | cjohnson@washblade.com
12 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022 • NATIONAL NEWS Dance parties: End-of-summer
“But the longer game here is that we don’t want this disease to become endemic in the United States,” Per kins added. “And I think there’s a short-term threat, there’s a long term threat, both of them are really import ant [and] I think should weigh on decisions like the one you’re suggesting people need to make.”
Combs said he’s unaware of any event being cancelled in Rehoboth due to monkeypox and, in fact, its biggest fundraiser of the year, the annual Sundance dance party is on track to happen over Labor Day weekend. Addition ally, Combs said he cannot foresee a proof of vaccination requirement “largely because the availability of vaccines is so difficult to get right now, and there’s…high demand and low supply.” “Certainly we under stand what worked well with COVID, and that was getting information ed ucation out to the public about how this virus is transmitted and provid ing as much access to vaccines as possible,” Combs said. “So the one thing that is different is the number of vaccines available seems to be much lower, so I know that there’s lots of pres sure being placed on the government at all levels to ensure that they get more supply to meet the demand that appears to bePerkins,there.”
Perkins said Karius, which works on advanced mo lecular technology for diagnosis of infectious diseases, is seeking to apply microbial cell-free DNA technology to create monkeypox tests earlier than options currently available, which require a sample from already devel oped skin lesions. The proposed testing has detected the virus in hospital patients, Perkins said, and following research over the course of the next few months may be available on an outpatient basis. In Rehoboth, Combs said CAMP Rehoboth as a result of work with state officials is set to obtain 200 doses of JYNNEOS vaccine and, per guidance from the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, plans to distribute them in a two-dose regimen, with the first dose set for Aug. 23 and second one on Sept. 28. As of Tuesday, Combs said CAMP Rehoboth has already scheduled ap pointments for 135 shots in the two-doze regimen, which is more than two-thirds of the total available shots. “We are in talks with the state to [see] if they are able to get additional doses to create a larger vaccination site that’s capable of having more people vaccinated,” Combs added. “Right now, it’s one person every five minutes — over the span of from nine o’clock to three — and that’s the rate based on the number of doses. But if we can get more, we will do more, and we tell that to theManystate.”of these end-of-summer events consist of gay men engaging in shirtless dancing in close proximity with each other as well as other intimate contact, creat ing ideal opportunities for a disease transmitted by skinto-skin contact. Be honest: While participants aren’t engaging in sex ual activity as part of these events per se, they can lead to sexual encounters in the aftermath with a causal part ner (or causal partners should these participants elect to have group sex to close out the night).
The CDC has guidance on its website for safer sex and social gatherings amid the monkeypox outbreak, which suggests festivals, events, and concerts where attendees are fully clothed and unlikely to share skin-to-skin con tact are safer, as well as being mindful of activities (even kissing) that might spread monkeypox. Enclosed spaces, such as private and public sex parties where intimate and often anonymous sexual contact with multiple partners occurs, the CDC says, may have a higher likelihood of spreading monkeypox.
Health officials urge precautions as cases reach
12,689
During the COVID epidemic, many group events re quired proof of vaccination and were even cancelled in an effort to mitigate the spread of the dangerous and potentially fatal disease. The same, however, cannot be said about events during the monkeypox outbreak, where the disease can be painful, but not fatal, and the availability of vaccines has not kept up with demand.
Although to date the transmission of monkeypox has been overwhelmingly among men who have sex with men, Perkins predicted that could change. “In fact, we’re starting to see more cases outside that circle,” Perkins said. “I would expect that that will increase unless we control this epidemic. I think that will be a cer tainty moving forward that we’ll see a broader distribu tion of cases, because certainly the transmission of this infection, unlike HIV…includes routes of transmission that are non-sexual.” fun or monkeypox super-spreaders?
With the number of reported cases of monkeypox in the United States reaching 12,689 and demand for vac cines failing to keep up with supply, questions remain about taking precautions like those seen during the coronavirus epidemic as health experts and event orga nizers point to existing guidance to ensure a reasonable degree of safety. Wes Combs, president of the CAMP Rehoboth board of directors, said his organization from the beginning of the monkeypox outbreak has been engaging with health officials at the state level in Delaware about what people should be looking for in terms of symptoms, as well as in formation about how people in high-risk categories can sign up to get vaccinations. “As is everywhere in the country right now, where LGBTQ communities have big populations people are concerned, so we have received a number of calls about more information about monkeypox, about whether or not people can get vaccinated at CAMP Rehoboth,” Combs said. A monkeypox town hall hosted by CAMP Rehoboth in conjunction with Delaware state health officials took place Tuesday, providing an opportunity to offer the lat est information and answer questions about the monkey pox outbreak. CAMP Rehoboth announced it has been identified as one of two additional sites for vaccinations in addition to what the Department of Health provides from its health centers. Rehoboth is among the many places in the United States where gay men are expected to flock to cele brate, along with Fire Island and Provincetown on the East Coast, making vaccinations against monkeypox in high demand at a time when the Biden administration is facing criticism for not making them more widely acces sible. (Gay cruises for the summer, however, may not be among these events. A Carnival Cruise Line spokesper son said the charters team has no LGBTQ cruises coming up.)
Brad Perkins, chief medical officer at Karius, Inc., when asked about appropriate guidance for these end-ofsummer events advised “trying to encourage community awareness and responsibility to isolate yourself and not infect others if you believe that you’ve been exposed or know that you’re infected.”
asked whether precautions taken during COVID would be appropriate for monkeypox, drew a distinction between the two diseases, pointing out “the sort of positive take on monkeypox is that we’re some what prepared for this threat, mostly through efforts to prepare for “Certainly,smallpox.”themost relevant one I think the communi ty at this point is if you think you have been exposed, or, particularly if you’ve been exposed and you’re ill, getting vaccine, accessing the vaccine that’s available, or at least discussing being vaccinated as prophylaxis or at least, if not prophylaxis, prevention of infection, at least decreas ing the severity of illness if it does occur,” Perkins said. “I think as is you know, it’s one of the good news stories of the efforts that have been taken to date.”
Scenes like this from Sundance 2019 in Rehoboth have some concerned about the spread of monkeypox. (Blade file photo by Daniel Truitt)
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Among the group advocating in the case for addition al protections under ADA were LGBTQ groups, including GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders and the National Center for Lesbian Rights, which filed a friend-of-the-court brief before the Fourth Circuit. Jennifer Levi, GLAD’s transgender rights project director, said in a statement the decision is a “huge win” for trans gender advocates because “there is no principled reason to exclude transgender people from our federal civil rights laws.”“It’s incredibly significant for a federal appeals court to af firm that the protections in our federal disability rights laws extend to transgender people,” Levi said. “It would turn dis ability law upside down to exclude someone from its pro tection because of having a stigmatized medical condition. This opinion goes a long way toward removing social and cultural barriers that keep people with treatable, but mis understood, medical conditions from being able to thrive.”
BRODY LEVESQUE
As a result, the appeals court remanded the case for ad ditional review to the lower trial court, which had come to the opposite conclusion and determined transgender peo ple aren’t covered under ADA. The case was filed by Kesha Williams, a transgender woman with gender dysphoria who spent six months in carcerated in the Fairfax County Adult Detention Center. Although she was initially housed in a women’s prison, she was transferred to a man’s prison when officials learned she was transgender and was faced with delays in getting transition-related care as well as harassment from fellow in mates and prison officials.
14 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022 • NATIONAL NEWS
U.S. Circuit Court Judge Diana Gribbon Motz, an appoin tee of Bill Clinton, wrote in a 56-page decision gender dys phoria doesn’t fall under the those two categories in the law because “gender dysphoria is not a gender identity disorder.”“[T]heADA excludes from its protection anything falling within the plain meaning of ‘gender identity disorders,’ as that term was understood ‘at the time of its enactment,’” Motz writes. “But nothing in the ADA, then or now, compels the conclusion that gender dysphoria constitutes a ‘gender identity disorder’ excluded from ADA protection.”
“Conversion therapy is a traumatic practice based on junk science that actively harms the people it supposedly seeks to treat,” said Governor Wolf in a press statement.
Actress Anne Heche died after she was removed from life support on Sunday, nearly two weeks after her Mini-Cooper crashed through a two-story house in Los Angeles’ Mar Vista neighborhood. Investigators with the Los Angeles Police De partment believe she was intoxicated at the time. She sustained a severe anoxic brain injury along with se vere burns and was being treated at the Grossman Burn Cen ter at West Hills Hospital, near Chatsworth in the San Fernan do Valley. The 53-year-old actress who was a star of films like “Don nie Brasco,” the political satire “Wag the Dog” and the 1998 remake of “Psycho,” had been declared legally dead under California law on Friday, however, her family kept her alive long enough to be an organ donor. In a statement Friday, the LAPD announced that: “As of to day, there will be no further investigative efforts made in this case. Any information or records that have been requested prior to this turn of events will still be collected as they arrive as a matter of formalities and included in the overall case. When a person suspected of a crime expires, we do not pres ent for filing consideration.” LAPD detectives had previously made public that investigators into the crash found narcotics in a blood sample taken from Heche.
(Screenshot/YouTube Inside Edition)
The year after her break-up with the comedian, in September 2001, Heche recounted in her memoir “Call Me Crazy,” about her lifelong struggles with mental health and a childhood of abuse.
CHRIS JOHNSON Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf (D) signed an executive or der Tuesday that banned use of state funds for conversion therapy and also directs state agencies to discourage con version therapy. The order will also put measures in place to ensure state offices implement culturally appropriate care and services to LGBTQ constituents.
BRODY LEVESQUE Transgender people have additional protections from discrimination under federal law for having a disability if they experience gender dysphoria, the U.S. Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday in a consequential deci sion that marks a first for a federal appeals court.
“This discriminatory practice is widely rejected by medical and scientific professionals and has been proven to lead to worse mental health outcomes for LGBTQIA+ youth sub jected to it. This is about keeping our children safe from bullying and extreme practices that harm them.”
Anne Heche dies after crash
A three-judge panel on the Fourth Circuit, which has ju risdiction over Virginia, North Carolina, and South Caroli na, determined the Americans with Disability Act prohibits discrimination against people with gender dysphoria — de spite explicit language in the law excluding “transsexual ism” and “gender identity disorder” as protected classes.
Court rules trans people have legal protections under ADA
Pa. guv bans conversion therapy using state funds Gov. TOM WOLF (Photo courtesy of the Office of the Governor of Pennsylvania) Bi actress ANNE HECHE died after crashing her car into a house in LA.
Advocates from The Trevor Project attended Tuesday’s signing of the executive order, commemorating it as a vic tory for LGBTQ young people in the state. On Wednesday, The Trevor Project planned to host a town hall meeting in Philadelphia to discuss the impact of the executive order with community members. “Taxpayers’ dollars must never again be spent on the dangerous and discredited practice of conversion ‘ther apy’ — which has been consistently associated with in creased suicide risk and an estimated $9.23 billion eco nomic burden in the U.S.,” said Troy Stevenson, Senior Campaign Manager for Advocacy and Government Affairs of The Trevor Project. “Thank you Gov. Wolf for your leadership and for taking bold action to protect and affirm LGBTQ young people across the Commonwealth. We urge the state legislature to pass comprehensive state-wide protections and for governors across the nation to follow the Keystone State’s lead in ending this abusive practice.”
The actress’s family released a statement on Friday: “Today we lost a bright light, a kind and most joyful soul, a loving mother, and a loyal friend. Anne will be deeply missed but she lives on through her beautiful sons, her iconic body of work, and her passionate advocacy. Her bravery for always standing in her truth, spreading her message of love and ac ceptance, will continue to have a lasting impact,” the state mentHecheadded.was married to camera operator Coleman Laffoon from 2001 to 2009. The two had a son, Homer, together. She had another son, named Atlas, during a relationship with ac tor James Tupper, her co-star on the TV series “Men In Trees.” Between 1997 and 2000, Heche was in a relationship with talk show host Ellen DeGeneres. “This is a sad day,” DeGeneres posted on Twitter. “I’m sending Anne’s children, family and friends all of my love.”
The idea transgender people are covered under ADA has been controversial even among transgender people. On one hand, reading the law to include transgender people gives them added legal protections. On the other hand, transgender advocates have been fighting for years to make the case that being transgender isn’t a mental dis order. The American Psychological Association removed “gender dysphoria” as a type of mental disorder with the publication of DSM–5 in 2013. Although the Fourth Circuit is the first federal appeals court to rule transgender people have protections under the Americans with Disabilities Act, other courts have come to the same determination. In 2017, a federal trial judge in Pennsylvania ruled transgender people are able to sue in cases of discrimination under ADA despite the exclusions under the law.
At Kaiser Permanente, the region’s leading health system,1 we’ve always supported the LGBTQ+ community. From inclusive, compassionate care provided by physicians knowledgeable about LGBTQ+ health issues to a welcoming and safe environment, you’ll always get care that makes you feel like you belong.
AUGUST 19, 2022 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • 15 kp.org/pridemedical/masCelebratingdiversity, supporting the community, and sharing our pride.
Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of the Mid-Atlantic States, Inc.2101 E. Jefferson St. Rockville, MD 208522022BD0702 MAS 6/3/22-12/31/23
1In the survey Best Health Insurance Companies for 2021 by Insure.com, Kaiser Permanente as a national enterprise is rated #1 overall among 15 companies. In the NCQA Commercial Health Plan Ratings 2021, our commercial plan is rated 5 out of 5, the highest rating in MD, VA, and DC. The 2019 Commission on Cancer, a program of the American College of Surgeons, granted Three-Year Accreditation with Commendation to the Kaiser Permanente cancer care program (extended through 2022). The Mid-Atlantic Permanente Medical Group is the largest multispecialty medical group in the Washington, DC, and Baltimore areas and exclusively treats Kaiser Permanente members. Permanente doctors are recognized as Top Doctors in Northern Virginia Magazine (2022), Washingtonian magazine (2021), and Baltimore magazine (2021). According to NCQA’s Quality Compass® 2021, we’re rated 5 out of 5 in 29 measures, including: controlling blood pressure (heart disease), blood pressure control (140/90) (diabetes), glucose control, colorectal screening, breast cancer screening, cervical cancer screening, childhood immunizations, prenatal check-ups, and postpartum care. Quality Compass is a registered trademark of the NCQA.
Dr. Ahmad Qais Munhazim, an assistant professor of global studies at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia who is originally from Afghanistan, has helped three groups of Afghans leave the country since the Taliban regained control of it. Munhazim on Monday noted to the Blade his family has lived in a Toronto hotel room for three months. Munhazim also pointed out the treatment that Ukrainian refugees once they reach the EU, the U.K., Canada or the U.S. “Countries of course would claim they were not prepared, but we can see that it was a very racialized response,” said Munhazim. “The way they responded to Ukraine, they weren’t prepared for that either, but we know that these borders immediately started opening up, assistance was offered in a very, very humanitarian way to Ukrainians just because they had blond hair and blue eyes, which was not offered to Afghans or Syrians earlier when they were fleeing Syria.”
A group of 29 LGBTQ and intersex Afghans who Rainbow Railroad helped evacuate from Afghanistan with the help of the British government and two LGBTQ and intersex rights groups in the country — Stonewall and Micro Rainbow — arrived in the U.K. on Oct. 29, 2021. A second group of LGBTQ and intersex Afghans reached the country a few days later.
Gay man recounts escape from Taliban-controlled Afghanistan Group regained control of country one year ago this week
State Department spokesperson Ned Price on Monday told reporters during a briefing that nearly 90,000 Afghans have been “evacuated or otherwise transported to the” U.S. since Aug. 15, 2021. Price also noted the U.S. has “facilitated the departure of some” 13,000 Afghans from Afghanistan since the last American troops withdrew from the country. “There are a number of priorities, a number of enduring commitments we have to the people of Afghanistan,” said Price. “At the top of that list is to use every tool that we have ap propriate to see to it that the Taliban lives up to the commitments that it has made publicly, that it has made privately, but most importantly, the commitments that the Taliban has made to its own people, to all of the Afghan people. And when we say all of the Afghan people, we mean all. We mean Afghanistan’s women, its girls, its religious minorities, its ethnic mi norities. The Taliban has made these commitments; the Taliban, of course, has not lived up to these commitments.”
Maydaa told the Blade that countries had “this huge concern about LGBT people coming from Afghanistan.” “It was related to, I believe, terrorism and all this prejudgment of Afghan people,” said Maydaa. “I also think this is playing a huge role when it comes to resettlement and interna tionalMaydaa,action.”like Munhazim, also noted the different reception that Ukrainian refugees have received once they reached the EU or the U.K. “They, especially in Europe and the U.K., feel they have more responsibility towards Ukraine,” said Maydaa. “[There was] all this racism on the news. ‘They look like us. They are blonde, green eyes, white skin, Christians.’”
Hirschberg said Canada, France, Germany and the U.K. have “come to bat” and “are really supporting getting LGBTQI Afghans out, along with others.” He told the Blade the U.S. has not done enough. “We’re not seeing quite the eagerness from the United States, unfortunately,” said Hirsch berg. The Blade has reached out to the White House for comment on the first anniversary of the Taliban regaining control of Afghanistan and efforts to help LGBTQ and intersex Afghans leave the country. Russia on Feb. 24 invaded Ukraine.
16 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022 • INTERNATIONAL NEWS
LAVERS | mlavers@washblade.com
IMRAN KHAN is a gay man from Afghanistan. A German group evacuated him from the country in March. (Photo courtesy of Khan)
Taylor Hirschberg, a researcher at the Columbia Mailman School of Public Health who is also the Hearst Foundation scholar, said he has helped upwards of 70 LGBTQ and intersex Afghans and their families leave the country.
The European Union allows Ukrainians to travel to member states without a visa. Germany currently provides those who have registered for residency a “basic income” that helps them pay for housing and other basic needs. Ukrainian refugees can also receive access to German language classes, job training programs and childcare.
MICHAEL
Price, who is openly gay, did not specifically refer to LGBTQ and intersex Afghans during Monday’s briefing.
By K.
Khan was still in Kabul on Aug. 30, 2021, when the last American forces withdrew from the country. Kabul Luftbrücke, a German group, on March 18, 2022, evacuated Khan from Kabul to Pakistan. Khan arrived in Germany less than a month later and now lives in Korbach, a city in the country’s Hesse state. Khan’s partner and many other LGBTQ and intersex Afghans he knows remain in Afghan istan. “I’m still hoping that an angel will come and will save their lives before the Taliban finds them,” Khan told the Washington Blade on Monday. Khan is among the LGBTQ and intersex Afghans who have been able to leave Afghani stan since the Taliban regained control of the country. Dane Bland, the director of development and communications for Rainbow Railroad, on Monday told the Blade the Toronto-based organization has been able to evacuate 247 LGBTQ and intersex Afghans to the U.S., the U.K., Canada and Ireland.
“The U.S. and other governments that profess support for human rights need to do more to ensure the Afghan regime respects fundamental rights of all Afghans and help those in danger to reach safety,” said OutRight Action International. Bland said Rainbow Railroad “absolutely” feels “governments, including the govern ments of the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States, should be doing more to help LGBTQI+ Afghans fleeing the current crisis.” Immigration Equality Legal Director Bridget Crawford on Monday noted her organiza tion’s LGBTQ and intersex Afghan clients who “survived unspeakable trauma, both as a con sequence of sharia law and existing brutal homophobic practices” are “now safely resettled in Canada.” Crawford nevertheless added that Immigration Equality recognizes that “many more queer people are still at grave risk in Afghanistan.”
“The Biden administration must prioritize these LGBTQ Afghans as refugees in the United States,” said Crawford. “President Biden himself has expressed that the U.S. has the good will and capacity to take in vulnerable refugees, but he must back up those words with action.”
The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees notes more than 6 million Ukrainians have registered as refugees in Europe.
Imran Khan is a gay man from Afghanistan. An American soldier who texted him on Aug. 26, 2021, 11 days after the Taliban regained control of Afghanistan, told him to go to Kabul International Airport. Khan, along with a group of other LGBTQ and intersex Afghans and members of the country’s special forces, were able to pass through Taliban checkpoints after a mullah with whom they were traveling said they were going to their cousin’s house for a child’s funeral. The group of LGBTQ and intersex Afghans were able to enter the airport, but Khan and several soldiers who were members of the country’s special forces were outside the perimeter when a suicide bomber killed more than 180 people at a gate the U.S. Marines controlled. They returned after the attack, but were then forced to leave.
“I know that there are some people who are still fighting to get people out, but now it has come down to a trickle,” Hirschberg told the Blade on Monday. A Taliban judge in July 2021 said the group would once again execute gay people if it were to return to power in the country. A report that OutRight Action International and Human Rights Watch released earlier this year notes a Taliban official said his group “will not respect the rights of LGBT people” in Afghanistan. The report also documents human rights abuses against LGBTQ and intersex Afghans, including an incident in which the Taliban beat a transgender woman and “shaved her eyebrows with a razor” before they “dumped her on the street in men’s clothes and without a OutRightcellphone.” ActionInternational on Monday told the Blade that it has had “at least one con firmed report of the killing of an LGBTQ activist, police searching for another and several more reports of extrajudicial killing and other forms of persecution that are difficult to con firm given the danger to political witnesses.”
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In communities across the United States, LGBTQ+ people and their families are facing a growing number of signifi cant barriers to equal rights and protections. In 2022 alone, at least 30 states have introduced anti-LGBTQ+ bills, with a majority targeting transgender and non-binary youth, on top of continued anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric and bias in various states across the country. Despite progress toward equity and inclusion, the LGBTQ+ community is increasingly struggling for equality and basic human rights.
18 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022 • VIEWPOINT
I feel lucky to work for a company that opposes discriminatory actions that could harm our employees, customers, and the communities where we do business, and has equally advanced policies, practices, and benefi ts to support our LGBTQ+ workforce. It comforts me to know my employer supports a society that serves all Americans, including the LGBTQ+ community. But not everyone has the same assurance when they go to work. Now more than ever, LGBTQ+ equity and inclusion must be a business imperative. Business leaders must use their voice to condemn the hate, bias, transphobia and homophobia that sadly exist in our communities. We also need businesses to take meaningful and measurable action in promoting and advancing inclusion for the LGBTQ+ community year-round, not just during Pride month. While it starts with inclusive benefi ts, policies and networks of support, this commitment requires businesses to lead with the values of acceptance and belonging in every decision they make. It’s only then that your LGBTQ+ employees, customers and communities will truly feel included and equal. Since the fi rst LGBTQ+ Business Resource Group at JPMorgan Chase was created in the 1990s, many, like me, have worked hard to make our company a place where LGBTQ+ employees feel they can be their authentic selves when they come to work. Last year, we strengthened this commitment by creating the Offi ce of LGBT+ Affairs, a full-time, dedicated team focused on advancing equity and inclusion for LGBTQ+ employees, customers, clients, and communities. It’s my sincere hope that we don’t see our efforts slowed down by attempts to threaten the rights of people for who they are, whom they love or how they identify.
Supporting LGBTQ rights is good for business and the right thing to do Equity and inclusion must be a corporate Chase.
imperativeistheGlobalHeadofLGBT+Affairsat JPMorgan
BRAD BAUMOEL
I’m truly concerned for members of my community, given the impact these actions are having on our mental health and wellbeing. Several of my LGBTQ+ colleagues and colleagues with LGBTQ+ family members have expressed fear for themselves and their children. Some are scared their transgender child will be taken from them and placed in foster care. Others feel they might be personally prosecuted for seeking gender affi rming care for their child. Many are worried they’ll need to move to a different state just so they can continue accessing essential forms of health care.
VIEWPOINT • AUGUST 19, 2022 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • 19
Casa Ruby’s services must survive But the organization’s name doesn’t matter is a longtime LGBTQ rights and Democratic Party activist. He writes regularly for the Blade. PETER
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Contrary to what Ruby Corado said at the hearing she apparently Zoomed into from El Salvador, it is only important to have someone who knows the work of Casa Ruby and if it is someone who worked for a successful organization in the area all the more reason for them to be named. It’s not important that the name Casa Ruby survives. What is important is the services it once provided to the transgender community survive, and even expand. That can be done under any name. Taking over as receiver will not be an easy task. Crenshaw will have to unravel the mess that is there now. The receiver will have to face the fact money may have been stolen and deal with employees who weren’t paid. They will have to deal with the fact, which now seems clear, that Casa Ruby was out of compliance with the District Non-Profit Corporations Act. D.C. was an amazing place for me to come out and I did so after moving here in 1978. As a political person I got involved with what was then the Gertrude Stein Democratic Club, which had just played a major role in electing Marion Barry as mayor. Over the years I got more and more involved in the LGBTQ community. I, along with Rick Rosen dall, founded and incorporated the Foundation for all DC Families, the organization we set up to fight for marriage equality in D.C. We worked hard, raised funds and had Celinda Lake do the first major poll on the issue in D.C. We found the white community in D.C. was heavily in favor of marriage equality and the Black community was partial ly supportive based on age and religion. We recognized many of us who began the organization had white privilege, which made life easier for us. We never earned that privilege it was something society just awarded us. We worked hard to recruit a diverse board for the organization and involved the faith community in the fight as well. Then along with Sheila Alexander-Reid and Cornelius Baker we incorporated the Campaign for All DC Families as the 501(c)(4) to do the political work to secure marriage equality. We continued to raise some money for the organization and worked with HRC, which lent us staff and meeting space. We recruited new people. We won the fight working with Council member David Catania and the rest of the Council. Mayor Adrian Fenty signed the D.C. marriage equality bill and I still have one of the pens presented to me at the Whitesigning.privilege made it easier for me to be out. Because of this over the years I sup ported groups like the Wanda Alston Foundation, and Casa Ruby, because there are so many members of the LGBTQ community who still struggle in the District, no matter how LGBTQ-friendly our laws are. We must all work to ensure no one falls behind due to homophobia, transphobia, racism, or sexism. Again, I will continue to support the ser vices for the transgender community, which Casa Ruby provided, but don’t care what the organization providing them is called. The problem I have with Ruby Corado was compounded when I read in the Blade what she said at the virtual hearing disputing “the allegations, saying among other things, that claims that she was not in communication with the Casa Ruby board was a misconception.”IfCoradocares about the people Casa Ruby served, why is she in El Salvador? Who has she been in touch with — which board members, and will they confirm this? If she cared about the organization and people it served, and has done nothing wrong, why is she not here in the District fighting for the employees, calling a board meeting (if there is a board)? Non-profit boards hire executive directors and oversee their work. I don’t think Casa Ruby ever had a real ‘working’ board overseeing Corado’s work. We need to question and get affidavits from former ‘board’ members as to what they did and what they know about what Corado did.
A judge approved putting Casa Ruby into the hands of a receiver and approved the D.C. Attorney General’s recommendation of the Wanda Alston Foundation, of which June Crenshaw is the executive director. She is an amazing person. Founded in 2008, according to its website “the Wanda Alston Foundation provides housing and support services for D.C. homeless and at-risk LGBTQ youth ages 18 to 24 and advocates for expanded city services for LGBTQ youth.”
Did you lie to get your monkey pox shot? Well, maybe not lie, lie, but were you perhaps a little, say, economical with the truth? I mean, those eligibility questions were at times ping ponging between the highly personal to the incredibly vague. How many men have you slept with in the last two weeks? Have you come into contact with anyone with monkeypox? Probably, maybe? What exactly is a ‘skin-to-skin’ party? Is it sort of if you know, you know thing? Or can you say Peach Pit, the incredibly 90s dance party, where, as really most gay dance parties, gays shed shirts and dance skin-to-skin come midnight or so? Also, I’m not a sex worker. But, as a real estate agent, I think I can imagine it pretty easily. No disrespect to sex workers, of course. Everyone paused before checking boxes, wondering what were the right answers. Do I feel bad for fi nding a category for eligibility that I could cram myself into? Maybe a little. But I wanted the shot. And let’s be clear — I didn’t create this panic, they did. And just who is ‘they’ I think we as the queer community deserve some answers. How could we fail a test like monkeypox so badly? A test that we had all the questions far in advance. We all saw this coming a mile away. And the lion-share of the credit as to the success of the vaccine rollout so far seems to go to the queer community itself. Activists dusting off old playbooks from the ACT-UP days, and coupling new clout and access to city government and offi cials, we were able to get what was available to us out to as many as possible as soon as possible. That wasn’t them, that was us. And I know two people that have had it. And they have assured me that it was by far the worst pain and most humiliating experience of their lives. Just seeing them quarantining for three weeks in excruciating pain was enough for me to hunt down my second shot. Did I lie to get it? Not really. Was I a little liberal with the truth? Perhaps. But again, that’s really on them. This panic is theirs. So what about them? Who are they? Whose head should roll? You might have missed it. But Secretary of Health & Human Services Xavier Becerra was asked essentially ‘what the hell?’ in a conference call with reporters last month. The Blade’s own Chris Johnson was on the call. Just to be honest with you, I’ve thought Becerra was a disaster long before he ascended to his current position. But in the interview, Becerra became hostile and pointed the fi nger back at us, the “communities at risk.” In a pre-Trump world, that would have been a career-ending interview. But I suppose it’s a different world now. Let me give one giant middle fi nger back at him. And to anyone who thinks a ‘community at risk’ somehow means a community to blame. He’s a disaster. But then again, so is this whole rollout. Let me be clear. I’m not blaming D.C. Health here. On the contrary, I’m incredibly grateful to them. When I walked into the Georgia Avenue clinic for my fi rst shot back in June, I felt terrible for them. A nondescript white building, un-air conditioned, the place looked like something from the developing world. Not something you’d want to fi nd in the nation’s capital. I thanked them all for being there. They deserve better. We all deserve better. And someone needs to answer for why we didn’t get it.
Someone needs to answer for monkeypox
20 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022 • VIEWPOINT
A giant middle finger to Xavier Becerra for blaming us is a D.C.-based writer. He contributes regularly to the Blade. THOMPSON left Janelle Monáe, Nic Stone, Leslie Jordan, Nyle DiMarco, Ashley Woodfolk
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In the future, Team Rayceen Productions is looking to increase the scale and ambition of its creative projects and to reach a wider international audience. However, as they ramp up operations, Rayceen re-emphasized the team’s commitment to its community, even when that means taking a pay cut.
22 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022
“You know how important representation is — being able to see oneself represented, to see similar stories represented in different, unique ways that have not been done before. Because as things continue to change and things continue to evolve, sometimes things also regress,” Krylios said. “It’s important to have certain stories still being represented and being put to the front, and new stories, different stories, being done in that way, so that we keep the importance and we keep the visibility of how certain decisions being made affect people in real life.”
Team Rayceen Productions — which helps facilitate an array of local LGBTQ-centered programming, including live events, performances and partnerships from collaborators and Pride celebrations — is commemorating its eighth anniversary this month. Rayceen Pendarvis, the self-described “Queen of The Shameless Plug, the Empress of Pride and The Goddess of DC,” is a veteran emcee and lifelong Washingtonian. The team’s other members are Zar, creative director, producer and founder, Niqui, booking agent and brand manager, and Krylios, event host and co-emcee.
“What we have done and continue to do is create safe spaces. We create spaces for healing and celebration… we create spaces for voter registration, for community organizations and entrepreneurs; we create intergenerational spaces,” Zar said. “We create diverse spaces which honor and respect Black LGBTQ people who have been centered in so much of what we’ve done from the beginning — so I think we’ve done a good job of both expanding our base and not forgetting how we got here.”
By CARIS WHITE
“One of the greatest core concepts of Team Rayceen is community, is family,” Krylios said. “As someone who was trying to find their way in not only a new space and a new community, but specifically the queer community in D.C., going to ‘The Ask Rayceen Show’ and becoming involved in Team Rayceen Productions was very important to me.”
For Team Rayceen Productions, this ambition for growth comes from the desire for representation. As a platform and safe space for LGBTQ people — especially Black LGBTQ people — the group reiterated the importance of telling these stories in the face of an increasingly regressive political climate.
The central members of Team Rayceen Productions met its namesake at different times and places, and the group’s members have shifted over time before the current “core four” assembled. According to Pendarvis, the team’s mission arose from the queer spaces where its members made their introductions, since “we all met each other in wonderful safe spaces and safe places, and out of that rose that need to uplift, motivate and inspire the community on the next level.” Niqui, who came to the team from “The Ask Rayceen Show,” said that working on the monthly event “was life changing and empowering for me personally, because seeing Rayceen living not just truthfully, but sharing wholeheartedly what makes her who she is, really helped to free my soul and my spirit.”
“We know that, yes, we should be paid a lot more money than what we get. But when people come to us with a small budget or large budget, we take those lemons and make lemonade … creating an experience that you will never forget. When you see or hear Team Rayceen mentioned, whispered or read about, you will know that experience is unforgettable.”
For Gigi Holiday, a burlesque performer and regular guest on “The Ask Rayceen Show,” appearing at the event was a kind of “rite of passage” that quickly turned into an annual tradition. “I felt like every year, I had to, in the sense of ‘I need to come home,’” Holiday said. “You have to have a family reunion once a year, right? That’s why I have always done it once a year and will continue to do so.”
RAYCEEN PENDARVIS is the self-described ‘Queen of The Shameless Plug, the Empress of Pride and The Goddess of D.C.’ (Blade photo by Michael Key)
Krylios, the youngest member of Team Rayceen Productions, said that while he was not there for the group’s founding, its clear sense of purpose and familial warmth drew him in.
“In my 40 plus years getting here, I have done so much stuff free I should be a millionaire,” Pendarvis said. “But my riches come from the community, come from people when they say thank you, when people hug me … those things that are priceless, that money can’t buy.”
Team GroupanniversarycelebratesProductionsRayceen8thmembers,supporters reflect on the past and look to future
In honor of the group’s August anniversary, the Blade sat down with Team Rayceen Productions and some of its frequent collaborators to discuss the group’s history, significance, and future.
Although “The Ask Rayceen Show” recently wrapped its 10th and final season, Zar said that the team’s horizons have always been broader than that monthly event.
“Our gifts are called upon. When you join the family of Team Rayceen, you’re going to get called on, but whatever your gifts might be — whether people know about them or not — it’s a really great chance to just step up to the plate,” singer-songwriter Desiree Jordan said. “You become a better person as a result of being within this family and within this community.”According to its members, the future of Team Rayceen Productions is bright. While the pandemic halted live performances and moved content creation online, Niqui shared that it was also an opportunity for the team to plan its next steps.“Oddly enough, the pandemic caused us to really focus and think. When you’re doing, doing, doing, you don’t really have an opportunity to future-cast, and so those two years were a turbo boost for us because they forced us to have to say ‘Okay, how do we want to focus our energy, what changes do we want to see in the world?’ And the world was changing at the exact same time.”
Sylver Logan Sharp, a singer and longtime collaborator with Team Rayceen Production, emphasized Rayceen’s unique ability to foster people’s talents. “The things I’m good at were nurtured, and they were cultivated, and they were honed, and they are still right now. Rayceen [does] that for the community — you and your entire team do the very same thing — you give people a platform. And nothing is more important right now than a safe place,” Sharp said. “You create that, and you also initiate inspiration in people that otherwise might not have it.” Over and over, collaborators remarked on the group’s blend of familial warmth and comfort with the challenge to grow.
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Sunday, August 21
Wednesday, August 24
OUT & ABOUT
By TINASHE CHINGARANDE
Friday, August 19 Friday Tea Time will be at 2 p.m. in the DC Center in the atrium of the Reeves Center. This is a social hour for older LGBTQ adults. For more information, contact adamheller@thedccenter.org. Go Gay DC will host “LGBTQ+ Speed Friending” at 7 p.m. at Moxy. This event is ideal for those trying to make friends after two years of the pandemic. Tickets are free and can be found on Eventbrite.
Virtual Yoga Class with Charles M. will be at 12 p.m. online. This is a free weekly class focusing on yoga, breath work, and meditation. You can RSVP for this event on the DC Center’s website.
D.C. Veteran Affairs revisits ‘Don’t Ask Don’t Tell’
The Mayor’s Office in partnership with the Mayor’s Office of Veteran Affairs will host “Serving with Pride: LGBTQ+ Veterans Roundtable” on Thursday, Sept. 15 at 12 p.m. at Frank D. Reeves Center. This event aims to connect the District’s veterans with information, resources, and organizations that may be beneficial to a successful military transition. Discussion will revolve around topics such as housing, employment, healthcare, and legal services.
24 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022 CALENDAR
Go Gay DC will host “LGBTQ+ Coffee & Conversation” at 12 p.m. at As You Are. This event is for those looking to make more friends in the LGBTQ community. This event is free and more details are available on Eventbrite.
Monday, August 22 Center Aging Coffee Drop-In will be at 10 a.m. at the DC Center for the LGBT Community and online on Zoom. LGBT Older Adults — and friends — are invited to enjoy friendly conversations and to discuss any issues you might be dealing with. For more information, visit the Center Aging’s Facebook or Twitter. Not Another Drag Show will be at 8 p.m. at Dupont Italian Kitchen. Logan Stone will host the event along with a rotating cast of other DMV performers. Tickets are free and can be accessed on Eventbrite.
Tuesday, August 23
Saturday, August 20
Genderqueer DC will be at 7 p.m. on Zoom. This is a support group for those who identify outside the gender binary, whether bigender, agender, genderfluid, or not 100% cis. For more information, email supportdesk@thedccenter.org.
Thursday, August 25
Middle Grades Queer Book Club will be at 5:30p.m. at 410 7th St. SE. This is a book club, hosted by SMYAL, for daydreamers, fantasy lovers, fiction adventurers, and comic extraordinaires interested in diverse LGBTQ stories. More details are available on Eventbrite.
Peter Hook & The Light will perform at The Fillmore in Silver Spring on Thursday, Aug. 25.
“Sunday Vibes! LGBTQ+ Inclusive Outdoor Event!” will be at 2 p.m. at Dirty Habit. DJs Eletrox and Jai Syncere will be playing top 40, Afrobeats, reggaeton, house remixes, throwbacks and more. Tickets are free and can be accessed on Eventbrite.
Upon conclusion of the discussion, all resource providers in attendance offer feedback on any topics discussed or how they can assist the veteran or their family in a positive capacity. More details are available on Eventbrite.
The DC Center’s Food Pantry Program will be held all day at the DC Center for the LGBT Community. To be fair with who is receiving boxes, the program is moving to a lottery system. People will be informed on Wednesday at 5 p.m. if they are picked to receive a produce box. No proof of residency or income is required. For more information, email supportdesk@thedccenter.org or call 202-682-2245. DC Anti-Violence Project Open Meeting will be at 7 p.m. on Zoom. The primary mission of the DC Anti-Violence Project is to reduce violence against LGBT individuals, and those perceived as LGBT, through community outreach, education, and monitoring cases to ensure that the rights and dignity of LGBT victims are respected and protected. For more information, visit Facebook and Twitter.
English rock band to grace Silver Spring stage English rock band Peter Hook & The Light will perform at The Fillmore in Silver Spring on Thursday, Aug. 25 as part of their “Joy Division: A Celebration” North American tour. The band will perform Joy Division’s seminal two albums “Unknown Pleasures” and “Closer” in full, with additional Joy Division rarities and an opening set of New Order material. The tour follows the debut UK dates for “Joy Division: A Celebration” to commemorate the 40th anniversary of Joy Division and Ian Curtis’ continuing influence. Tickets are $45 and can be purchased on Live Nation’s website.
The Mayor’s Office of Veteran Affairs will host “Rewriting the Narrative of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” on Tuesday, Sept. 20 at 2 p.m. at As You Are DC.
This panel discussion will include an overview of ‘Don’t Ask Don’t Tell’s’ impact on the D.C. LGBTQ veteran community. The event will also touch on the thousands of service members who were discharged without benefits and how to create an environment where LGBTQ D.C. veterans and allies feel empowered, changes to the VA medical center can be made, and, overall, get into one system of a justified platform for all veterans to be treatedMorefairly.details are available on Eventbrite.
Asexual and Aromantic Group will be at 7 p.m. on Zoom. This is a space where people who are questioning this aspect of their identity or those who identify as asexual and/or aromantic can come together, share stories and experiences, and discuss various topics. For more information, email supportdesk@thedccenter.org.
“Free Bingo Series | Feeling Lucky?” will be at 7 p.m. at As You Are. This event is a happy hour bingo night with a game night host, bingo materials including daubers, and awesome prizes. This event is free and more details are available on Eventbrite.
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LGBTQ People of Color Support Group will be at 1 p.m. on Zoom. This peer support group is an outlet for LGBTQ people of color to come together and talk about anything affecting them in a space the strives to be safe and judgment free. For more information, email supportdesk@thedccenter.org.
Mayor’s office to host roundtable for veterans
AUGUST 19, 2022 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • 25 TICKETS ON SALE NOW! WOLFTRAP.ORG WITH THE ENGLISH BEAT LIVE IN SEPTEMBERCONCERT1
In an homage to the movie, O’Donnell (Doris on Third Base in the film) appears in a lovely scene as Vi, the owner of a gay bar. “How is any of this possible? How is this allowed?” Carson asks Vi. “It’s really not,” Vi says. Yet, though same-sex marriage is clearly illegal, Vi refers to her partner as her wife. They have lived together for six years in a nice home, she tells Carson. An annoying thing about the series is its anachronisms. Janis Joplin belts out “Piece of My Heart” in the soundtrack of one episode. Joplin in 1943? Fortunately, such misplaced cultural references are infrequent. The pace of the series is a bit slow in the first two or three episodes. But by the halfway point, you’ll be caught up in the game. “A League of Their Own” hits it out of the park! League of Their Own’ series proves there is crying in baseball Amazon reboot of beloved film an engrossing dramedy
Thankfully, Amazon’s reboot of “League” expands the narrative to include characters that are lesbian, queer, questioning, trans and/or Latina and Black as well as hetero and white.The series, created by Abbi Jacobson (“Broad City”) and Will Graham (“Mozart in the Jungle”), deals with racism, homophobia, transphobia, gender and sexism against the life-changing foreground of World War II. Through Jacobson’s and Graham’s (who are queer) creative sleight-of-hand, “League” is an engrossing dramedy rather than a didactic snooze. As with any self-respecting baseball story, a voice in “League” is heard saying “there’s no crying in baseball.” But if you don’t, while watching this series, shed at least a few tears of exhilaration, wistfulness or sadness, you, like the Tin Man in Oz, may not have a heart. In the reboot, Jacobson plays the Peaches’s catcher Carson. (Geena Davis played the catcher Dottie in the movie). Carson’s husband Charlie is off fighting in the war. Carson, stuck in a small midwestern town, leaps onto a train. So she can try out for the Peaches.
Carson, once she’s on the team, quickly becomes infatuated with her glam teammate Greta (played wonderfully by D’Arcy Carden). When Dove (Nick Offerman), the Peaches’s coach splits, Carson is called upon to lead the team. Carson doubts that she has what it takes to step into Dove’s shoes. Like many of the characters, Carson discovers her sexuality and questions what she wants to do with her life. Will she stay with Charlie after the war? How could she live with Greta (or any woman) when polite “ladies” didn’t even say the word “lesbian” in public? An equally compelling narrative of the series is the story of Max (Chanté Adams). Max is a fabulous pitcher. But there’s no way she could play for the Peaches because the AAGPBL is segregated and no Black women can be in the league. Max, like Carson, is discovering her sexuality. She’s trying to suss out not only how she can fulfill her dream of playing baseball (given the racism of the sport and society), but how to be queer in a homophobic world. One of the most intriguing things about “League” is its attentiveness to women’s friendships. Max’s BFF is Chance. Chance creates fab comic books. But she knows she’s playing against racist, sexist odds. Carson and Max bond over their love of baseball and queerness. They know they’ll likely never see each other after the season ends or overcome the barrier of racial discrimination. But their friendship feels real.
By KATHI WOLFE Amazon’s ‘A League of Their Own’ is a queer-inclusive reboot of the classic film. (Photo courtesy of Prime Video)
Guess what? There is crying in baseball.
“A League of Their Own,” an entertaining, queered-up eight-episode series adaptation of the 1992 movie (of the same name) has dropped on Amazon Prime. Like the movie, the series is the story of what life was like in 1943 for the players of the Rockford Peaches, one of the 10 teams that made up the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League (AAGPBL). Women got to play because many of the male major leaguers were away fighting World War II. As in the film, the characters in the reboot are fictional, but the Rockford Peaches and the league were real. From 1943 to 1954, more than 600 women played for the AAGPBL. The 1992 film was loved by many. But back then, mainstream movies didn’t have much of a queer quotient, and racial injustice was, largely, off the radar.
26 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022
‘A
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28 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022
SCHLICHENMEYER ‘Equal
‘Equal Partners’
Plates on one end, bowls on the other, glasses on top. It’s your turn to load the dishwasher tonight, but if you plead ignorance on how it’s done properly, maybe you could worm your way out of it. Somebody else will do it, so go sit down. Take a rest and read “Equal Partners” by Kate Mangino, then ask yourself if you could’ve assumed another chore tonight. Several years ago, researchers finally acknowledged what generations of women already knew: that many working women were responsible for a “second shift” after 5 p.m. The first shift was the job for which they received a paycheck; second shift included making meals, straightening up, schoolwork help, and all the other things that needed doing at home. Researchers also noted that the “second shift” is detrimental to men and boys; Mangino says that such gender inequality happens around the world, restricting everyone, perpetuated by “allMostgenders.”often,she says, even when we try our hardest to maintain equality in the home, women generally take responsibility for “routine tasks” and men take “intermittent tasks.” It’s easy to slip into those roles; in fact, avoiding them takes real effort – although, interestingly enough, most same-sex couples do pretty well in “fifty-fifty equality.”
Before launching into a life-altering event such as marriage, having a baby, or starting a business, know what questions to discuss with your partner so you’re closest to an agreement. Remember that “women perpetuate sexism, too” and that men generally have “Four motivational themes” for their actions. Pick some role models, and be one, too. And finally, watch your words. They might need to be “tweaked” to reflect more mindfulness.Flipthrough“Equal Partners” and if you’re a man, you may feel a little on the defensive.
Still, no matter what your domestic situation, there are always improvements to seize that can make your household a more equitable one. First, know that things won’t fix themselves. Do a “gender check-up” to determine where you stand in your household and on the equal-housework spectrum.
Author Kate Mangino seems to side with women on issues of home work, but she vows that she’s not showing bias, that statistics confirm her points. Still, some readers may have a lot to overcome before reading this book about overcoming inequality at home.Fortunately, Mangino shows why this is absolutely worth doing.Through pages and pages of stories – some that may have you thinking Mangino was peeking in your kitchen window – she systematically lays out how things get to be how they are and what actions couples can take. There are quizzes to tackle and places for notes (a reason to buy this book outright) and if you’re still not quite convinced, there are happy interviews with dozens of people for whom satisfaction lies in change. Though it’s not without a little abrasiveness, “Equal Partners” is a good conversation starter for fixing the status quo in your relationship status, regardless of what it is. Find this book, and add another thing to your plate. overcoming inequality at home may fix status quo in your relationship TERRI Partners: Improving Gender Equality at Home’ By Kate Mangino c.2022, St. Martin’s Press | $29.99 | 344 pages
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THEATER D.C. likes to claim singer Frenchie Davis as its own. And now we can, again. Davis has returned to the DMV to head the theater arts program at a new charter school as well as wow audiences in Signature Theatre’s production of “The Color Purple” directed by Timothy Douglas. Adapted from Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning, coming-of-age novel about Celie (Nova Y. Payton), a victimized teen in deep Jim Crow South who through grit and courage grows up to find redemption.
FRENCHIE DAVIS plays Sofia in ‘The Color Purple’ at Signature Theatre.
WASHINGTON BLADE: Sofia is incredibly strong. Do you relate?
“I grew up in California but was born in D.C. when my parents were students as Howard University. And years later I came back to attend Howard, so artistically speaking I started my career here,” explains Davis, 43. “I began singing in old school gay clubs like Edge and Wet - that’s how I made extra money when I was in college. I owe a lot of who I am to D.C.” She made national headlines when — despite a big voice and vivacious personality — she was booted off the second season of “American Idol” in 2003 after some topless photos surfaced online, a “scandal” that reads quaint today. But that’s old news. Since then, Davis has performed on Broadway in “Rent,” done national tours of “Dreamgirls” and “Ain’t Misbehavin’,” and played Henri in “The View Upstairs,” an off-Broadway musical about the UpStairs Lounge arson attack that killed 32 patrons of a gay bar in New Orleans. Additionally, she performed at the Blade’s 50th anniversary gala in 2019 and numerous other LGBTQ events. “‘The Color Purple’ is a show I’ve long wanted to do, and performing with my old friend Nova, a beautiful soul and a real talent, makes it that much better,” she says.
BLADE: Walker portrays so many relationships between women: sister, friend, lover. DAVIS: It’s very inclusive. For me, reading the book as a young person before it was dra matized was my first time seeing two black women in love. It was very impactful, especially because I identify as bi. Also, Walker draws a beautiful contrast between shy, plain Celie and glamorous blues singer Shug Avery [played here by Danielle J. Summons], showing both ends of the spec trum of women who survive sexual trauma. In their love for each other, both Celie and Shug find a healing middle ground. As a rape survivor, I didn’t miss that part of the story.
BLADE: Is there a happy ending for Sofia?
BLADE: Is doing the show all that you’d hoped for? DAVIS: That and more. I’m dreaming lyrics at night. I love singing composer Brenda Russell’s music. Sofia’s song, “Hell No,” morphs from anger to a plea for Celie to leave an abusive marriage with Mister. It’s intense in different ways. After rehearsing the scene where Sofia gets beat up, I needed a session with my therapist. Signature is taking such good care of us, supplying intimacy coaches and advocating for selfcare. It’s a special production. There are parts of me as Frenchie that are healing by playing Sofia.
Frenchie Davis wows as Sofia in ‘The Color Purple’ D.C. native on healing power of playing the iconic role
By PATRICK FOLLIARD
30 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022
FRENCHIE DAVIS: There’s a beauty and vulnerability that the other characters miss at first glance because Sofia is so very strong. And I think that’s mirrored in my own life [she laughs]. Recently, I’ve had to stop being ‘the strong friend’ offstage – sometimes it’s too much to be just one thing. But strength is important. I like how Alice Walker created with this book — and it contin ues in the musical version — a beautiful story of sisterhood and the power women have to change their lives and world around them when they come together in support and love.
DAVIS: In a way, but not necessarily the one I’d choose. In my mind the happy ending would be that she ends up with Harpo [played by out actor Solomon Parker III] and his girlfriend Squeak [played by nonbinary actor Tẹmídayọ Amay]. That’s my own personal bisexual happy ending.
(Photo courtesy of Signature Theatre)
Davis plays Celie’s sometime champion, ballsy Sofia, a Black woman loath to buckle under (a part memorably portrayed by Oprah Winfrey on the screen).
‘The Color Purple’
DAVIS: I am an activist. Not a lot of Black women performers were out of the closet when I came out. I think it was just me, Tracy Chapman, and Meshell Ndegeocello. Now, people are kicking the door open. I have a lot of pride. I was young. I was in love with my “ex-hersband” and wanted to honor that love and not be afraid about holding hands in public. My dad, a human rights activist, was terrified for my safety. I told him that if I have to lie then I’m not safe. Ultimately, he really surprised me. He treated my ex as another daughter. They went on hiking trips and all kinds of stuff without me. It kind of got on my nerves. [Laughs.]
BLADE: Walker is also an activist — civil rights, women’s rights, Palestinian self-determi nation to name but a few. Your coming out as bisexual could be described as political. Are you an activist?
Through Oct. 9 | Signature Theatre 4200 Campbell Ave., Arlington, VA | $70-$108 | Sigtheatre.org
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Michael replies: What kind of life will you have if you give up your values? Could you respect yourself or create a life that is meaningful and that you would enjoy? We all face pressure to conform to those around us so that we will fi t in. Doing so is understandable. As you describe, it can be lonely to be on the outside. But betraying who you actually are is a high price to pay for acceptance.
Am I the only gay man who doesn’t sleep around?
When we come out, we have the hope that we will fi nally have a real peer group and won’t feel so different anymore. But that’s not always the case. Gay men are not one homogenous group and many of us have to do some searching to fi nd some people with whom we really connect.
32 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022 ADVICE Dear Michael, I am a 22-year-old man and I am starting to hate being gay. It’s not that I feel bad about being attracted to men. I would love to date a guy, get married, and spend my life with him. My problem is that the values of the gay men I am meeting have nothing to do with what I want in I’velife. been living in D.C. for almost a year now and pretty much all I come across are guys who want to have sex with as many hot men as possible. Relationships, commitment, and honesty don’t seem to mean anything, as far as I can tell. I’ve had guys in long-term relationships hit on me or propose threesomes with their partners. My ex-boyfriend was hooking up on Grindr multiple times per week after we had agreed to be exclusive. When I found out, he told me that it’s impossible for a gay guy not to sleep around. What is it with gay men? Everyone seems to predominantly focus on sex. Whenever I go out to brunch with my gay friends, people are showing pictures and sometimes even X-rated videos of their latest hookups. Sex isn’t something special, just a recreational activity/ competition. None of my straight friends act anything remotely like this. Also, pretty much every gay man I spend time with seems to love getting trashed. I’m not anti-alcohol but I don’t see the fun in getting completely drunk regularly. I’m wary of recreational drugs but guys around me use them nonchalantly all the time. What kind of connection can you have with people around you when all of you are drunk or high on something? I’ve tried to talk with my gay friends about how I feel but they respond like I’m from another planet, as if I’m questioning why they want to breathe oxygen. I just think there’s a lot more to life than hooking up, that people should treat each other as more than just potential sex partners, and that sleeping around when I’m in a relationship doesn’t make for a great relationship. But I seem to be the only gay man I know who feels this way. I don’t want to live the kind of life I see all around me. But I worry that unless I give up my values, I’m going to be lonely.
This is why people come out. And this is why, despite the peer pressure, you are the only person who should decide the kind of life you want to lead as a gay man. There is little point in discussing the many possible reasons why many gay men dedicate so much time and energy to sex. Everyone is free to choose how they want to live and what they want to focus on. And this includes you. You can’t change other people or a community. But I’m hopeful you can fi nd a community of friends with whom you are a better fi t. I know you are far from alone in feeling as you do, because I regularly hear stories similar to yours in my practice. So rather than settling, keep looking, and look beyond the ways in which you’ve made your social life so far. The friend group you develop may not be as large as your current circle of acquaintances. (Or it may be larger!) In any case, you’d likely fi nd it far more nurturing, and a lot more fun, to spend time with others who are more like-minded.
Feeling isolated because your friends don’t share your values? Time for new friends.
Seeking friend group less interested in drugs, partying
It is not easy to feel like the odd man out. And when you want a different life from what most of your peers are seeking, it’s easy to doubt that you are OK. I’m sure you already know this from having grown up gay.
By MICHAEL RADKOWSKY
You are doing important work in thinking about who you are and how you want to live. I hope you will make the choice to honor your time on earth by living it authentically. Michael Radkowsky , Psy.D. is a licensed psychologist who works with gay couples and individuals in D.C. He can be found online at michaelradkowsky.com. All identifying information has been changed for reasons of confidentiality.
AUGUST 19, 2022 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • 33 Equality Virginia held its 19th annual Commonwealth Dinner at the Greater Richmond Convention Center on Saturday, August 13. Commonwealth Dinner Equality Virginia holds 19th annual gala in Richmond (Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)
34 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022 LEFT PAGE Summer’s not over yet! Now is the time to Live Your Beach Life. Trust the #1 Real Estate Sales Team in Coastal DE to make it happen.
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FORD MAVERICK $22,000 Mpg: 42 city/33 highway 0 to 60 mph: 7.7 seconds
36 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • AUGUST 19, 2022 • BUSINESS AUTOS
With all the hoo-ha over electric vehicles, I wasn’t expecting to go gaga over a rather traditional pickup. Yet that’s what happened with the Ford Maverick, an all-new compact truck that comes standard as a hybrid. While a non-hybrid is available, it’s hard not to love the hybrid’s stellar fuel efficiency. I also think this pickup looks sexy, with sumptuously curved sheet metal that any fash ionista could love. Another plus: The Maverick is the least expensive tiny pickup out there. It’s also surprisingly comfy, available only as a four-door crew cab with ample leg room and headroom, as well as nifty storage spaces. The low-slung truck bed, which can carry cargo up to 1,500 pounds, makes loading and unloading easy. And if, say, you’re looking to enter a float in your local Pride parade, this small but mighty hauler can tow up to 4,000 pounds. Built on the same platform as two popular Ford SUVs—the Escape and Bronco Sport— the Maverick boasts handling more akin to a steady sedan than a rough-and-rugged truck. Sure, there was some annoying jostling over potholes, but the steering and brak ing were precise. All models offer niceties such as remote keyless entry, steering-wheel audio controls, smartphone integration and forward-collision warning. While various option packages add up quickly, some features are hard to resist: Bang & Olufsen pre mium stereo, wireless smartphone charging pad, power-sliding rear window, key fob with remote start, adaptive cruise control and more. During my weeklong testing of this vehicle, I took it on a few far-flung treks outside the city. Each time, it was refreshing to tumble back into the Maverick for my drive home. For me — wink, wink — this pickup was the perfect pick-me-up.
By JOE PHILLIPS
KIA SELTOS NIGHTFALL $27,000 Mpg: 25 city/30 highway 0 to 60 mph: 7.5 seconds
When I first slid behind the wheel of a Kia Seltos subcompact SUV last year, the low price — $24,000 for the base model — was beguiling. Overall, though, the funky styl ing and available options were more notable than the actual ride and handling. Not so when I recently drove the latest Seltos — this time the Nightfall Edition, which feels like a completely different vehicle. For just $3,000 extra, the Nightfall trim level adds a bit more style and a lot more substance. This includes a zippy 175-hp turbo engine, which shaves off almost a full second when accelerating from 0 to 60 mph. There’s a smooth seven-speed automatic transmission and all-wheel drive for grippier traction. And larger 18-inch tires offer more road control, as well as slightly higher ground clearance for better driver visibility. Inside, the upscale design and materials are still impressive. But while all models come with tinted rear windows, smartphone integration, automatic headlights and key less entry, the Nightfall adds heated front seats, large touchscreen, navigation system, wireless phone charger, sunroof and other amenities. A blind-spot monitor (with rear cross-traffic alert) is also included with the plentiful array of standard safety gear. To distinguish the Nightfall from its Seltos siblings, there are even blacked-out wheels and exterior trim accents for a sportier look. It’s hard to believe that these two vehicles I drove are related. But with the Nightfall, the difference is night and day.
Ford Maverick, Kia Nightfall easy on your wallet
FORD MAVERICK KIA SELTOS NIGHTFALL Who doesn’t love a bargain? At $47,148, the average price of a new car is quickly approaching — yikes! — $50,000. So when I recently tested two vehicles that cost only half as much, you might assume such rides appeal to my penchant for being kinda-sorta cheap. OK, this is partly true, but along with affordable MSRPs, these low-cost chariots offer lots of other pleasant surprises.
Two small, fun, and affordable rides
By JOSEPH HUDSON JOSEPH HUDSON is a Realtor with The Rutstein Group of Compass. Reach him at joseph@dcrealestate.com or 703-587-0597.
To use a down payment assistance program or not? D.C. is committed to helping residents into homeownership
BUSINESS • AUGUST 19, 2022 • WASHINGTONBLADE.COM • 37
A little-known fact about purchasing homes in the District of Columbia is that there actually are helpful programs for “average” buyers who make a healthy income but might not have tons of cash stashed away for the down payment and closing costs. There are several programs such as DC Opens Doors and the Home Purchase Assistance Program (HPAP) as well as EAHP (the DC Employer Assisted Housing Program) that can help buyers with cash to close or down payment assistance. The DC Opens Doors program helps buyers with a 3.5% down payment, that does get paid back when the house is sold later. Many lenders are familiar with this program, and it gets used frequently.Also,the HPAP and EAHP programs are used frequently, with the assistance of the DC Housing Finance Authority and the Greater Washington Urban League assisting to administer the funds. The amount of assistance given to the buyers is dependent on household size and income. For DC Opens Doors there are also income limits, and credit score requirements. I find that many buyers don’t know that these programs are available to them. I did just find out the amount of assistance for the HPAP program was just raised and will be effective in October of this year. These programs may or may not be the best option for each buyer. The best thing to do is to speak with a lender who is familiar with these programs, and to run the numbers using the program or not using the program. Sometimes the interest rate is higher when using one of these down payment assistance programs, but if that is what is needed to make the purchase happen, then so be it. The good thing is the District of Columbia is committed to helping people find their way into homeownership, and with the recent raising of the assistance levels, they are showing that they understand the cost of homeownership in the District is higher than the average. If you would like more information about these programs do not hesitate to contact me or to attend one of my homebuyer seminars, which will occur this fall. One will be in September, and one will be in October. D.C. is a good place to pursue a down payment assistance program.
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GET AHEAD OF THE SPREAD.
First things rst: Monkeypox is an equal-opportunity virus. Gay, bi, trans, straight; every race, age and gender — it’s not picky about its hosts. Fact is though, about 98% of the estimated 10,000 cases in the U.S. so far are in the gay/bi/trans com munity. Data also show that more than 90% got it through sex or intimate contact. Symptoms can take 5 to 21 days to appear. An outbreak can cause rashes, blisters, scabs and unbearable, blinding pain that lasts up to 4 weeks. Stay up-to-date on vaccine availability, access to treatments, and outbreak stats via the CDC’s directory of local health agencies at the link below, or call the CDC at (800) CDC-INFO.
BrandAidCreative com
MonkeypoxFacts.org