Posts Tagged ‘queer’

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Bike Mechanic Classes for Women and Trans Folk

January 11, 2010

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West Town Bikes is hosting bike mechanic workshops for women and trans folk, what a way to kick off the new year! There are two sessions left that you can sign up for, each one is three consecutive Sundays from 10am-1pm at 2459 West Division Street Chicago, Ciclo Urbano/ West Town Bikes. From Mia Moore, the contact and person who will be conducting the workshops:

I am teaching these classes because I think it’s important and empowering to have a comfortable space in a traditionally hetero-male dominated environment for women and trans folks to learn basic bicycle mechanics skills. I have been a mechanic for five years, and feel it is part of my job to pass on the knowledge I have learned to other women and people in a non-biased setting.

The large workshop space at West Town Bikes has 8 bicycle repair stands and sets of tools, so all the work will be hands on using one’s own bicycle.

The only pre-requisite for the class is to have a bicycle. I don’t expect any other mechanical knowledge. We will start the first class by learning the correct names of all the parts of the bicycle, and the names and uses of all the basic bicycle repair tools. Then we will learn how to fix a flat tire, and how to adjust brakes.

In the second class, we will replace the cables on the front and rear brakes and both derailleurs. This will include a lesson on how all the shifting mechanisms of a bicycle work, and how to adjust them.

In the last class, we will learn how to true wheels.

any interested folks should email me at: ciclourbanochicago(((@)))gmail.com

The next workshop starts on January 31st, and the last session on February 21st.

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Amy Nicole Miller’s Best in Queer Pop Culture for 2009

December 29, 2009

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Amy Nicole Miller is a pop-culture blogger and Editor for VelvetPark as well as a Chicago-based performance artist. You may know her by such characters as Magic Madge or Lez BoBo the Clown. She also has a very gay day job as a Research Associate at Howard Brown Health Center.

10) Carrie Prejean. I’d like to thank Carrie Prejean for coining my favorite term of 2009- “Opposite Marriage.” Miss California somehow managed to make a beauty pageant even more offensive than it already was. The unfortunate part is that next year, more people will probably tune in to Miss USA than ever before. Lucky for us, CP is still making a fool of herself (did you see her threaten to walk out on Larry King?) and hopefully will entertain us well into 2010.

9) Rachel Maddow. I know, it’s so predictable for a lezbian to put Rachel Maddow on a top 10 list. I’m the first in line to complain about MSNBC trying to downplay Rachel’s butchness with those plunging necklines and eye-shadow. All that aside, Rachel was on fire with her intense interviews this year. My favorite was this one with Richard Cohen:

“I realize I was taking the risk of helping promote you and the way that you think about these things but putting you on the air. But I do think that you’ve actually got blood on your hands.” Rachel Maddow to Richard Cohen

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8) Beth Ditto became really famous. When did Beth blow up? I guess this year she was more famous than ever. She’s in British tabloids- what? Gossip plays ginormous sold-out outdoor music festivals in Europe and everyone sings along- even to songs from Standing in the Way of Control- come again? They play on late-night American TV shows- what the…? It’s weird. But never fear- Beth is no sell-out; She’s bringing the queer to the mainstream, not losing site of her punk DIY roots. Still a fat femme activist, she launched a plus-size clothing line for Evans and posed nude for Love Magazine. If you asked me 5 years ago who I’d most like to see get famous it would be her.

7) Lil’ Mama. We saw a different side of Lil’ Mama this year. How disappointing was it when she made those transphobic comments on America’s Best Dance Crew? I used to love her, but when she tried to school Naomi on how to be a “real” lady, I cried. So Lil’ Mama should be on the Worst of 2009 list, except that she jumped onstage uninvited during Jay-Z and Alicia Keys’ performance at the VMAs. She went back to “good crazy” and I love her for giving us one of the most awkward moments of the year. It was actually painful to watch.

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6) The end of the L-Word. Praise the Lord Jesus Christ and all his saviors that this tragedy of a show has ended. No more Jenny Schecter, TiBette, Shane haircuts, or awful stereotyped characters (Max, Kit.) I celebrated with a bang by watching the finale at Stargaze and almost getting into a fist-fight with an annoying lesbian- couldn’t have been more appropriate.

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5) Gays saving the sitcom. I thought that reality TV had finally pushed scripted TV off the cliff. But it’s back on top with two of the funniest and not coincidentally gayest (because gay people are way funnier than straights) sitcoms ever: Glee and Modern Family. Let’s start with Glee: Glee Club automatically equals gay. To make matters better, you got Kurt leading the football players in a dance to Single Ladies on the field. IMO, the true star of the show is Jane Lynch in her best role yet: evil cheerleading coach Sue Sylvester. Next up: Modern Family, my new favorite show of all time. It has three hilarious gay characters: Manny- and really, there’s nothing more adorable than a witty gay kid and the gay couple Mitchell and Cameron who dress up their baby as different divas for photo shoots. G.A.Y!

4) Kathy Griffin. The dick joke heard ’round the world was the first major pop-culture moment of 2009. I’m actually not sure if it happened before or after midnight, but it was discussed on New Year’s day, so I’ll count it. While co-hosting CNN’s Live New Year’s Eve Special with Anderson Cooper, Kathy was heckled by someone off-camera and she replied “I don’t go to your job and knock the dicks out of your mouth” before CNN had a chance to bleep it. It was a huge year for Kathy in general. The 5th season of My Life on the D-List was gayer than gay with guest stars Lily Tomlin, Bette Midler, Betty White, Rosie O’Donnell and Melissa Ethridge- just to name a few. The episode “Norma Gay” showcased what a true advocate she is for equal marriage rights. She was nominated for a Grammy and came out with a memoir – “Official Book Club Selection” which is not only hilarious but touching. She opens up about her early struggles with her career, plastic surgeries and her family.

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3) Video of Perez Hilton crying about being punched by will.i.am. The first time I watched this video was the hardest I’ve laughed all year. He’s a Drama Queen with a capital DQ and either he is ridiculously paranoid (he thought the Black Eyed Peas’ “people” followed him to his hotel, a hotel where they also happened to be staying) or working on a career as an actor. If there were an Academy Award for most dramatic viral video performance (perhaps there should be,) this would win.

2) Wanda Sykes. Her performance at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner was legendary. Not only was she the first African-American woman and first openly-gay person to ever perform at the event, she also killed. I love that she didn’t change her brand of humor and sparked mega-controversy. Her second HBO stand-up Special, “I’ma Be Me” was one of the best stand-ups I’ve ever seen. She talks about her performance at the WHCD, having a gut with it’s own mind and what it’s like to be on a gay cruise. Watch it now. Rare for a woman, even in this day and age, Wanda scored her own late night show, The Wanda Sykes Show on FOX. She’s a face of the equal-marriage movement and a strong supporter of gay rights all-around. Remember the PSA she did about how it’s not cool to call something “gay?”

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1) The return of Pee-Wee Herman! In fact, this could easily be the best moment of the decade. As a Pee-Wee obsessed fan, this is a dream come true. The Pee-Wee Herman Show, in it’s original adult-oriented stage show format is returning with most of the original cast. He’s been doing the talk-show circuit and seeing him again is like reuniting with a lost lover. Look for me in 2010 when the show tours the rest of the country (Presently, it’s only scheduled run is in LA) and I’m chosen as the newest cast member- Lez Bo-Bo the Clown!

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Latham Zearfoss’s Best of 2009

December 24, 2009

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Chicago-based artist Latham Zearfoss is the founder and co-organizer of the monthly queer party Chances. He and the other Chances folks are gearing up for their third round of The Critical Fierceness Grant, a micro-grant for queer art and artists in Chicago. He is a contributor to the new online arts and culture quarterly, monstersanddust.com, currently pursuing an MFA at the University of Illiniois in Chicago, and looking for love in all the right places.

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Doug Ischar – Marginal Waters (art exhibit + catalogue)

Marginal Waters is a set of photographs, debuted in their entirety at Golden Gallery in Chicago, that document casual, amorous, and seductive exchanges between gay men in 1985 on Chicago’s Belmont Rocks (R.I.P.). Chicago-based artist Doug Ischar‘s stunning and provocative series, seamlessly weaves erotic, historical, nostalgic, and ethnographic modes of looking, while never betraying the sense of urgency and intimacy that was the crux of this temporal, now -defunct  queer scene, as well as Ischar’s access and capture of it. Framed both by the city, and brilliant blues of water and sky, these scenes also relay the complex interplay between the urban and the natural, the mass-cultural and sub-cultural. The  show was compiled into catalogue form with excellent contextualization from an essay by David Getsy, an interview with the artist, and a poetic response from Steve Reinke. Contact the gallery to get a copy (they are very reasonably priced!).

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Jonathan Horowitz – And/Or @ P.S.1, New York (art exhibit)

New York-based artist Jonathan Horowitz‘s retrospective-ish show at P.S.1, proposes a new sense of irony - sincere in it’s contradictions, and accessed through personal and political emotion. Horowitz, as erudite in contemporaneity as any other pop cognoscenti, offers fragments of the complicated process by which sexual and political identities foment in this spectacular, celebrity-obsessed, late stage capitalist America we now call the everyday. Funhouse and horrorhouse, sobering and intoxicating, this show manages to somehow be about everything, while simultaneously allowing individual difference – as manifested through subjects ranging from disability, disease, left-wing and right-wing political stances, art historical figures, and most notably, queer identity – to pop and fizzle throughout the work.

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Deborah Stratman – O’er The Land (feature film)

This beautifully shot experimental essay/documentary film magically transforms all the tropes of action films into a languid penetration of contemporary notions of freedom (individuality) and its underbelly (territorial violence and centralized systems of power)., disregarding narrative plot in favor of visual and aural meditations. Shot on color 16mm, Chicago-based filmmaker Deborah Stratman, takes us into various realms of mechanized violence: re-enactments of historical turmoil, organized sports, and patrolled borders. She interweaves these scenes with a constructed telling of Col. William Rankin’s survival through a 48,000 foot ejection from his fighter pilot - sans-pressure suit -amidst a massive thunderstorm that turbulently prolonged his elevation for 45 minutes (coincidentally, almost the length of the film). Despite its provocative subject matter, Stratman’s film is not the expected exercise in demagogic positioning, but rather an entry into the productive space of contradictions.

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monstersanddust.com (online quarterly)
I’ll admit to a little self-promotion here, as I write a column for this online upstart, but I also happen to think the editors (Chris Pappas, Aay Preston-Myint and Joe Proulx) have put together quite an impressive cross-section of cultural production and criticism. The contributions range from drawings to music, but the main star here is the top-notch writing. Amidst the crisis of printed media, Monsters And Dust manages to revitalize the ephemeral word (essays! short stories! news of the world! poetry!), while refusing nostalgia and and upping the ante for web-based media. Look for issue #2 in Feburary of 2010, and a tangible, paper version of the best of the magazine later in the year.


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Shakira – “She Wolf” / Whitney Houston – “Million Dollar Bill” (singles, duh)
What is not to love? These organic, nu-disco jams proclaimed the long-overdue death of auto-tune and overstated production. Both derivative and fresh, Whitney and Shakira make no apologies, looking backward and forward at the same time. If you want to create an instant sense of euphoric community on the dancefloor (at least if any queers or women are involved), bust out these jams and watch the hands go up and the sweat fly. Classic.

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Yoko Ono & The Plastic Ono Band – Between My Head And The Sky (album)

At the age of 76, Yoko Ono revived/reclaimed her old band moniker, with a lineup that includes such vanguard Japanese musicians as Yuka Honda and Cornelius, and, of course, her son Sean Ono Lennon. This record truly feels like a family affair. Electronic, organic, loud and quiet, Ono proves her mastery at mapping psychological, emotional and political space and, perhaps most importantly, interjects her unique brand of Zen optimism into the stale political and musical milieu. This album doesn’t kill, it lives. Look for some (hopefully bangin’) remixes in 2010.

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Taken By Trees – East of Eden (album)

Despite a really obnoxious and problematic National Geographic documentary on Taken By Trees’ latest output, East of Eden is a beautiful, cross-cultural pop record. TBT AKA Victoria Bergsman took a set of hook-y pop songs - including a lovely cover of Animal Collective’s “My Girls” – and her producer to Pakistan, partly due to her own obsession with Pakistani pop singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan. She worked with a stellar group of local musicians there, and the resulting output is 9 songs that meditate on loss, desire and redemption – the very things that pop always tries to address, but through a reductive universality. East of Eden, instead, (successfully) vies for a generative space of difference, and the instrumental and vocal complexities that can arise from deceptively simple pop chord structures. This album feels familiar and strange, universal and local, open and intimate. Perfect for love lost or love found; the interiority of winter or lazing in the grass in the spring.

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The possibility of justice, freedom and closure for the Uighurs unjustly held in Guantanamo Bay. (ongoing struggle)

The case of the Uyghurs (or Uighurs) held in Guantanamo Bay has not just been a case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time, but also revealed the dehumanizing realities of current geopolitics, with China and the U.S. sharing first-prize for biggest assholes. Despite the devastating reversal of a court order that would have freed the remaining Uighurs – who’ve been cleared of enemy combatant status like eons ago! - this year also presented several victories for these embattled Muslim migrant workers from China’s Xinjiang Province. Several of the men were released (ironically) to the island paradises of Bermuda and Palau (though still unable to be reunited with their families), and The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear the case of Kiyemba v. Obama (probably not until early 2010, however), which will determine whether or not the U.S. has a responsibility to provide asylum for wrongly detained international citizens who cannot return home safely (it is highly likely that if returned to their original homes in Northwest China, they would be persecuted). Read more about their case at the website for The Uyghur Human Rights Project, stay informed and continue to raise awareness. This is one of the most scandalous and unjustifiable violations of human rights enacted in our name, and 2010 presents us with the possibility of at least partially righting this incredible wrong. Stay active!

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The possibility/probability of national healthcare for all.
(ongoing struggle)

Despite all the weird Nazi fetishizing, racist mud-slinging, and individualistic BS, I think we (the fucking majority!!!) are gonna get this one in the end. Yes, perhaps the bill will be slightly weak or bastardized, but it will be a beginning. Just think of how much a nationalized healthcare system will help with other core social justice issues: the high costs of care for persons living with HIV/AIDS, the booming rates of teen pregnancy, discriminatory practices that deny same-sex partners coverage. Furthermore, offsetting the astronomical costs of healthcare (I still owe a hospital $500 for getting Penicillin because I couldn’t afford the walk-in rates to get treatment for my strep throat), will greatly contribute to expanding the accessibility of higher education for low-income families, greater job flexibility for the working classes as well as the potential to form unions without fear of losing your healthcare, the possibility of being a working artist, and the list goes on. I look forward to a healthier 2010, and never forget, those freaks in D.C. work for us!

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Ssion/Cody Critcheloe – Boy (feature film)
Cody Critcheloe, the artist/musician behind the disco-punk group Ssion has created a saturated sugarfest of pop pleasure. Boy is a perpetual riff on Truth or Dare, punk and queer subcultures, and affected nihilism. Yet, the film, as with Ssion’s music, is all about the possibility of collective pleasure and the performance of identity. Nothing is sacred, but nothing isn’t the point, either. Rather, Critcheloe and his fantastically hot entourage, are all about carving out a space for the forgotten freaks of subcultural past and present. Don’t miss one of the most interesting dialectical moments of the year: the queer death drive confronting the punk death obsession.
HONORABLE MENTIONS:
Where The Wild Things Are (film, dir. Spike Jonze)
Summer Hours (film, dir. Olivier Assayas
Jennifer Hudson performing Will You Be There at MJ’s Funeral (Phoenix from the flame)
Malalai Joya (Afghani feminist, politician)
Washed Out – Life of Leisure (EP to take ecsasy to)
Martin Puryear retrospective @ SFMOMA (exhibition)
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Deadline Approaching For The Critical Fierceness Grant

December 7, 2009

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Since its founding in 2005, Chances Dances has sought to create a safe space for all gender expressions by bringing together the varied LGBTIQ communities of Chicago. The creation of the Critical Fierceness grant expands upon this goal by offering a unique opportunity for queer artistic expression. Chicago-based individuals or groups who wish to utilize the Critical Fierceness Grant for artistic purposes and who identify themselves or their work as queer are encouraged to apply. Critical Fierceness supports queer artists with financial assistance of up to $500. Chances Dances is proud to provide the Critical Fierceness Grant as an opportunity for personal exploration, community development and radical change through art.
The application is available for download at http://chancesdances.org/projects. Deadline DECEMBER 31st.
Email chances.dances[at]gmail[dot]com for more information.

ALSO: You can RSVP and/or invite folks to the Facebook event !
Although we are open to any and all media and encourage submissions for a diverse range of projects, feel free to check out the previous Critical Fierceness winners for ideas and inspiration:

Actor Slash Model
Rebecca Grady
Rebecca Kling
RAWR!
Marian Runk

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Transgender Day Of Remembrance

November 20, 2009

Slowly, I’ve observed more media coverage of trans issues and while it may not always use the right language or take the most open-minded approach, visibility is still the fastest way to revolution. A result of that visibility, however, is a slow bubble to the surface of  people’s heated differences in opinion, knowledge and experience on what being trans means. There are splinters and factions even among the LGBT’s, where my ultra-lefty queers are intolerant of and keep away from spaces not predesignated as safe, my gay and lesbian colleagues want to take an insider attitude with offensive “tranny” jokes, and a sad number of near and dear straight allies still need an explanation as to why a finite gender or physical change isn’t necessary to identify as trans. 

This week in particular, for 7 days leading up to the 11th annual Transgender Day of Remembrance,  there was a spike in published articles about the topic.

People Magazine has a brief interview with Chaz Bono, who recently came out as trans. What we have here is a celebrity-mongering grocery store glossy taking an assimilationist approach to Chaz’s romantic relationship with lipstick-looker Jennifer Elia, and insisting that it’s a heterosexual union. An excerpt from a facebook comment thread about the article: “barf.” Why? A lot feel that trying to paint our queer relationships as a variation of straight only serves to weaken the power of our unique, queer perspectives. It’s the ways in which we are different that causes people to learn and reflect about what is outside of their experience. This article doesn’t teach you anything.

The Red Eye’s blog had a better, if still problematic feature around a younger woman named Adrianna King who has overcome homelessness and is now engaged in her community. The author, Alexia Elejalde-Ruiz did a good job of telling King’s story, but there is still a hint of northsidism (a Chicago problem where people stereotype the northside as “safe” and the southside as “phobic,” and runs so deep it has caused institutionalized discrepancies in funding for GLBT services) and she never burdens Lakeview residents to take ownership of their racist attitude towards the youth that visit the local LGBT community center. To say nothing of the horrendous comments left by reader JimLkvw , this article and the online response is a prime example of the need for more mainstream dialogue about queer issues on publications like the Red Eye. It might be the only chance we get to reach people like JimLkvw.

Finally, I came across an article about some recent killings of transgendered women in Guatemala. Mind you, these horrific crimes happen all the time in all nations. But being chapine myself, I could picture what the streets looked like, what the passersby did (probably nothing), and the nightmarish sounds and words that were exchanged while these crimes happened. It’s a long way from Chicago to Central America, and to think the families and friends of these women will probably have no legal recourse, it’s important to reflect on the physical and emotional pain that is being dealt with by our transgendered families all over the world. It wasn’t until recently that the United States included gender in its anti-discrimination laws, and it’ll be some time before that legal reality translates to instances of curbed behavior.

I just shared this link with some allies from the American Psychological Association. Unfortunately, trans is still a disorder on the books, sorry to travel so near that touchy area. However I thought this page used language that was accessible to most people, particularly if you are unfamiliar. If you are reading this and you’re a post-queer, post-feminist and so far post-everything that you are so far post-over it, there’s a facebook group for you. Not to be flippant, but we can’t get anything done without allies. The basic numbers make it impossible. If you aren’t at least trying to engage your surrounding community, including those that are not just like you, who are you helping besides yourself?

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Reeling 2009 Has TPR All Stars

October 28, 2009

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The 28th annual Queer Film Festival in Chicago, Reeling 2009, is set to go from November 5th -15th and I’m happy to say the roster includes two movies made by folks who have been getting TPR support for years. Fish Out of Water, the documentary by Ky Dickens about the bible and homosexuality, will have its Chicago premiere on Sunday November 8th at 5pm at the Music Box Theater, with post-film reception hosted and sponsored by In Fine Spirits (5420 N. Clark St.). On Wednesday November 11th at 7pm, The Landmark will screen the world premiere of Riot Acts: Flaunting Gender Deviance in Music Performance, a documentary about trans musicians by Chicago’s very own Actor Slash Model. I’m busy combing through the other entries to see what else I’m excited about, but I’m SO HAPPY about these two that I had to post. Stay tuned, will have ticket giveaways soon!

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Gay Utopia

October 13, 2009

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Trolling around and found a site dedicated to queer art. It houses quite a few artists, thankfully from a wide range of the queer spectrum, with an emphasis on writing. I’m more a visual and audio guy, but I was very impressed with Gay Utopia‘s mission and inclusion. From the introduction:

“The gay utopia is an imaginary future in which gender, sexuality, and identity are fluid and in which pleasure is unregulated by either external or internal censors. It’s a place where taboos dissolve and sublimation vanishes; every relationship is erotic, every action sensual.”

Two of my favorites include Dewayne Slightweight and Edie Falke. Slightweight’s series ‘The Kinship Structure of Ferns’ is rewarding with closer inspections. Click on the photo for the larger image.

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Edie Fake has an aesthetic that really demonstrates a worldview-cyborgs and fairy tales jostle with sex in simple, unrefined lines, referencing the un-innocent childhood we all tend to have. LOVING. He’ll also tattoo you.

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*Edie Fake – “Coat of Arms”

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Stinky Pinky at FKA this Thursday

September 29, 2009

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I think I am wearing my Zoot Suit!

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‘My Fellow Americans’ This October

September 10, 2009

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I told you about ‘My Fellow Americans,’ the modern performance piece about Ronald Reagan by Peter Carpenter a while ago, as it was supposed to debut in May. Unfortunate delays now wrapped up, October 8,9, 15 and 16 will be special nights in Chicago as the show will go on as originally intended. My Fellow Americans will be performed at Hamlin Park Studio Theater located at 3035 N. Hoyne-2nd floor, Chicago. From the press release: Carpenter’s gift for deftly weaving movement and text shines in this work which explores the shifting identity of Ronald Reagan from the perspectives of the “special interest groups” that his rhetoric and policies consistently admonished. Seriously, if you are in any way interested in why your post-queer, post-racial, post-feminist life has all the road blocks it does, you need to see this.

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Original Plumbing Pre-Order

September 10, 2009

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Original Plumbing, the new indie-print magazine for trans-masculine glory is set to be released on September 26th and if you pre-order now, you get some free stuff. The first 100 pre-orders before the release date get a sticker pack and a mini-gloss photo of OP model, Tuck. This first edition will be a collector’s item, guaranteed. Get your tranny paws on it while you can.

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