Posts Tagged ‘butt magazine’

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Print BUTT Is On Sabatical

May 12, 2010

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Just got this notice:

Dear BUTT friend,

You may have noticed that BUTT magazine has been coming out more and more irregularly recently, and in fact we are taking a little break this year from the quarterly publication schedule, in order to develop the magazine’s online presence and other BUTT projects. This means that a printed follow-up of the current issue (BUTT 28) is not expected until 2011. In the meantime we’ll use this sabbatical from print as a welcome break to develop new exciting ideas and formats for BUTT, both online and off. Ideas and contributions are welcome as ever!
This August we’ll be launching an updated and more versatile version of our popular website, www.buttmagazine.com – with more fun and functionality for readers and a new platform for BUTTHEADS, the digital community of BUTT lovers. Meanwhile, a follow-up of the delicious BUTT 2010 calendar is well on its way for 2011. Stay tuned!
For now, enjoy the spring and see you very soon!
Gert Jonkers, Jop van Bennekom – Amsterdam
Felix Burrichter, Adam Baran, Michael Bullock – New York

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Think Pink Radio, Incubation and the Future

April 1, 2010

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So yeah. It’s been a minute. There are several reasons for this, and I’m going to try to be as complete and as candid as possible.

I’ve been struggling with this here blog. Not because I’m flailing on its mission, no. I still believe in the power of outness and visibility, and TPR has for 7 years, been a vehicle for me to celebrate those people who are active members of our LGBTQ community. However, I have been doing some pretty intense reassessment of TPR’s cultural value – both in the face of a changing media landscape and a personal wish to DO MORE. When Think Pink started as a radio program, and then transitioned into a blog, it was taking the road that Larry Bob from Holy Tit Clamps and JD Doyle from Queer Music Heritage have taken, and I think I did a pretty good job. The people who make art and talk openly about their queerness to the media have always been and will continue to be an inspiration. Maybe it’s a  refining of the pallet, maybe it’s a widening of my lense, I’m not sure, but taken within the context of a blog that exclusively covers queer artists, activists, performers and celebrities, I’m running out of things to say. The importance of these people and things has not run out, and I’m still interested in writing about them, but after 7 years, how many times can I get excited about the new Magnetic Fields record or developments in JD Samson’s post-Le Tigre career in written form? Besides not wanting to echo what all the other blogs are covering, that’s just not a complete picture of the things that are positively affecting the world and the things that need more press.

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Music

I’m a founding Board Member of The Chicago Independent Radio Project, and in the short time since we launched, I’ve discovered so much great music. More importantly, I realized that even after all this time, my love affair with sound has only gotten more turbulent and dramatic, and I want to shout about it. I have a good amount of experience interviewing queer musicians, but I want to talk to ALL purveyors of melody. A music-maker’s  way of life is so unique, and right now they are one of the most fucked of all groups struggling with new media and distribution of product. I’m fixin’ to get personal. My CHIRP show is called “Walk of Shame’”, and you can hear me spin rock, dance and classic hits every Sunday, 12pm-3pm, Central Standard time. You can stream the broadcast then and any ol’ time at chirpradio.org

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Performance

I don’t mean concerts. I mean performance art. I’ve already started covering it a little bit, but again, queer performers are a small amount of an already tiny sub-culture. I’ve WEPT and given standing ovations to pieces and then NOT mentioned them here because of mission-exclusivity, and I don’t want to do that anymore. Not since music has an artistic genre moved me in such a way, and it’s audience is small. I want to help grow that audience.

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Humanism

I grew up Catholic, and abandoned that pretty quickly as a young adult. I’ve dabbled in Buddhism, and tried to mine for divine protection when on an airplane that’s taking off. But it wasn’t until I started reading Good Without God by Greg Epstein that I realized that I’m a Humanist. If you don’t know what is it, I can briefly summarize it as a belief that people can and are willing to live their life seeking courage, dignity, wisdom and justice. Humanism uses science and empirical evidence as a starting point for social progress, and even though it is not a religion, it does not denounce or otherwise dismiss faith-based groups as worthless. Humanist theory actively provides a language and a context for talking about what you do believe in, rather than simple negative statements about what don’t identify with. I’m finding most of my atheist and agnostic friends are actually Humanists, and they just don’t know it. Presently, I’m engaged in an effort to create a new community in Chicago and will be talking about it in this space. TPR has always been about creating change, but from this point on it will involve more than just music or my beloved community of queers. It’ll involve everyone on the planet. I love this place, and I want to help save it from ruin.

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My name is Erik Roldan and I’m going to use it

I blog for BUTT Magazine. I DJ independently and also for Cage and Aquarium Productions. I’m in the process of co-founding a Secular Humanist group with Non Prophet Status. I’m co-writing and co-directing a short film as a pilot for a queer soap opera called ‘Andersonville’ with Daniel Zox. I’m talking to friends about starting different types of events from dance parties to dance competitions.  I am on the programming committee and head up social media for CHIRP, and the super exclusive article I wrote about WOXY is just the beginning of my interest in capital J journalism. I’ve done live DJ-ing as sound scores for local modern dance companies and also produce and edit my own interview podcasts. Think Pink Radio is going to live on, but it’s not going to be all that I do. Or, rather, it hasn’t been, not for a long time. My need to have my identity linked to TPR has been replaced by the forehead slap realization that it’s just plain limiting to try and tie everything I do to this space. I’ll try to link to all my stuff here as a home base, but I don’t have an internal requirement for it anymore.

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I’m a total dork

I like puns and kittens and chickens, and I think abbrevs are adorb. WATCH OUT.

FYI, I don’t want to have an online diary, the thought of re-fashioning my blog as a Live Journal is so early-oughts and this is a forward-momentum purge. This can and will change over more time. But there are a few things that I want to explicitly identify as new and improved, NOW WITH MORE SWEET CLUSTERS. Think Pink Radio has changed and it’s going to be better than ever.

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Amos Mac’s Best of 2009

December 26, 2009

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Amos Mac is a photographer who documents the queer community. He has shown his work internationally, most recently in Australia, and has been published on the pages of McSweeney’s, Maximum Rock N Roll, the annual documentary photo book “Cutter”, and does portraits and interviews for BUTT magazine’s blog. He is the photographer behind Original Plumbing, the quarterly photo and interview-saturated print mag for trans guys. Original Plumbing is now in the sidebar.

10- Lady Gaga on my 30th fucking birthday : I just cringed when typing out the number “30″.  When I was in 4th grade my mother made me pick between going to THE New Kids on the Block concert at the Spectrum in Philadelphia, or having a birthday party.   I picked “birthday party” yet never forgave her for making me choose.  So when Gaga tickets went on sale and I saw the show was on my actual birthday, I of course was triggered yet realized that I hate birthday parties, especially for myself, and bought a pair of tickets for what is sure to be the most amazing show of the year. (www.ladygaga.com)

9 – Leaving America : I left the glorious continent in which I was born and raised in for the first time ever this past fall! I flew all the way to Munich by myself, passed out on an indoor hammock for 4 hours to deal with jet lag, then took 2 subways and a bus to meet up with Michelle Tea on Sister Spit ‘s first ever Eurotrash tour.  We traveled through Germany and France in a van, got ditched by our lunatic driver on the outskirts of Paris, flew to London and gallivanted around the English countryside, all while I promoted my transsexual magazine and showed slides of my work. (http://blog.sfmoma.org/2009/09/on-the-road-with-original-plumbing/)

8 – Ascots : So I was just in LA and I stopped at this vintage clothing store called Hubba Hubba in Burbank.  The woman behind the counter was a tad on the pushy side.. borderline bully status. As soon as I walked in the door she was all “you know I dress the guys from MAD MEN  and boy oh boy I wish they were YOUR size. You have that vintage size that the men had back in the day when these clothes were ORIGINALLY made! I know JUST the shirt for you. And hat! Don’t forget the suit jackets right in the back. Fancy some wingtip shoes?” I left with an ascot. I love ascots. And to read more about the crazy shop owner, check out the link above.

7 – LOVE Magazine, Issue 2, Winter 2009

I love teens. And this issue was all about teens, fashion and fame. Amazing photographs and articles on teenagers like Rory Culkin, the Willis sisters, and an expose on the Disney machine.

6- The Day Michael Jackson Died & I Was Laid Off

Oh, June 25, 2009, what a dramatic day! I was killing time at my dead end desk job at a gay porn company when I learned (via 100′s of updated Facebook statuses at once) that my beloved Michael Jackson had passed away. Within seconds, I was called into my bosses office and told that due to the economy, blah blah blah, I was one of the next hand full of employees to get axed. I thanked my boss, still dazed from new the news of sweet Michael’s passing. Enter #5.

5- Original Plumbing Magazine

It really exists. Thanks to the #6  (getting laid off from my job, not Michael Jackson dying) I was able to concentrate fully on an idea I had been toying with for awhile– putting together a photo-based magazine on trans male culture.

4- Latest Accent Obsession :  North Jersey. Specifically, comedian John Roberts. “Go turn on my tree.”

3 – Kind Addiction : Fro-yo by the ounce at Icebee in San Francisco.

Pinkberry is so “Perez Hilton 2007″. With self-serve toppings from fresh kiwi to Cinnamon toast crunch cereal, I dare you to try and get a cup of Icebee fro-yo for less than $10.

2- Louis Wain

Crazy man who drew cats in the 1920′s. Tattoo inspirations for life!

1 – “Nobody Knows I’m A Transsexual” t-shirts
A few years ago I thought it would be hilarious to make a t-shirt that says NOBODY KNOWS I’M A TRANSSEXUAL and in 2009 I did it, and I actually wear it, and you can too… if you give me $20.

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Jacob Meehan in BUTT #27

September 10, 2009

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Chicago’s Jacob Meehan, photographer and director of Lakeview’s GOLDEN gallery is having quite a September. First, his photos of the Bijou Theatre (the nations oldest running porn theater) appeared in the current issue of Butt Magazine, alongside interview with Bijou owner Steven Toushin. Meehan was kind enough to send over some Bijou “outtakes” which are posted here after the jump. In addition to being published in one of the most interesting and respected indie-gay publications, Meehan’s gallery’s latest show is happening this Saturday the 12th at GOLDEN Gallery, 816 W. Newport, featuring a collection of photographs by Doug Ischar. Ischar is a local professor and documented Chicago’s Belmont Rocks in the early 80′s, a lakefront paradise of gay men flaunting their queerness. The show is called “Marginal Waters” and it’s showing through October 17th.  More information at golden-gallery.org, read an interview with Ischar in this week’s Timeout.

Read the rest of this entry ?

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Butt’s Having Pride Parties

April 28, 2009

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I can’t tell you how bad I wish I was going to be in NYC the week before Pride. BUTT magazine just announced two pre-Pride Celebrations. The first one, called BANG, will be at The Knitting Factory with performances by Salem, Hunx and His Punx, and Sissy Nobby (more on Sissy Nobby in another post). The 2nd party will be at at Terence Koh’s gallery, Asia Song Society (ASS), and it will be a queer video film fest. They have just anounced an open call for submissions, and will be accepting films until May 20th, the show opens on June 19th.

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John Alexander of Salem’s Flickr Page

March 19, 2009

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Salem continues to enrapture the underground. This is one of those times when I can’t help but think that hipsters rally around a band or sound simply because they know that it will never make it mainstream, and therefore never lose its cred. Don’t think I am hating, there is a compelling inspiration behind making “goth-electro-juke.” And after that crazy music video and intense interview in Butt Magazine with singer John Holland, it is no wonder this trio (yes they are a trio and the 3rd is a lady and no one has ever bothered to ask her anything, WTF) of artists are making a splash. I was even further intrigued when I found John’s flickr page.

Salem – Water

Salem- Trap Door

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Snow Butt

December 20, 2008

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In case you have been busy with the holiday stress, BUTT Magazine’s blog has been amusing for about a month or so. Looking to be even more informal than their publication, this webzine seems to be the replacement for the much-missed Buttstuff section of the print edition. Readers can submit art, letters, photos, and snow butts. I love this snow butt more than you can think I can. Better than, and not as gross as the butt tea cookies a reader once sent them.

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