17 minutes for a survey. I'm doing them a favor not the other way.
Hey, PARAMOUNT+, I live in Connecticut, come and get me.
I say that because I'm supposedly not allowed to talk about the survey.
That's right the bastards think they can use my time and then NDA me. Oh, hell no. And you didn't get a signature from me so go screw yourself.
They asked questions about RABBIT HOLE -- that awful Kiefer Sutherland show that no one's watching. Boring. That's what it is and that's what I said it was.
It was like a show from last century.
And they wanted to know what else I subscribed to and how many adults and children were in my home and my race and my sexuality and about everything in the world except did I put the seat back down on the toilet after pissing.
I will never take another one of the surveys. For one thing, too many damn questions. For another, I don't like them thinking they can NDA me. You want me to take your survey, don't turn around and them tell me it's top secret and that I've agreed to not discuss you.
F**K you PARAMOUNT+.
Seriously, these are not government secrets.
I'm so pissed at them thinking they could NDA me that I'm thinking of cancelling. The only good thing they've had in their way too long history has been that Sarah Michelle Geller show. Other than it, they've got nothing that I want to see. And, again, don't tell me I can't disclose the survey.
Who the f**k are you? You sent me the e-mail -- because I pay for streaming service. Don't tell me that I'm not allowed to do this or that.
Let me tell you what I'm allowed to do: DROP YOUR SORRY ASS.
Yeah, you work for me, not the other way around. Get it through your damn head. On your studio or in your offices you may be the big cheese. But I DON'T WORK FOR YOU.
Get it through your damn head and don't you ever give me an order again.
I did you a damn favor.
If you're a regular reader and you can't tell how ticked off I am . . .
Let me change the topic to say something nice. I enjoyed Ann's "McMillan & Wife" and Kat's "Judy Garland and MCMILLAN & WIFE." And, because of Ann's talking about VANITY FAIR's digital archives, I went ahead and got a yearly subscription.
This is from new content, Julie Miller's piece on Jane Fonda whose BOOK CLUB sequel is about to come out:
“I’ve been married three times, but I never wore a wedding dress,” Fonda tells VF in a recent phone call about the comedy, which reunites book club members played by Fonda, Candice Bergen, Mary Steenburgen, and Diane Keaton. In the sequel, which opens in theaters Friday, the quartet flies to Italy to celebrate the forthcoming nuptials of Fonda’s character, Vivian, to a septuagenarian stud played by Don Johnson. In one scene, the women take turns trying on bridal gowns. It was Fonda’s first time stepping foot in one. “I wore an antique dress that I had had in a movie years ago when I married Ted Turner,” she says, referencing the high-neck Victorian-inspired dress she recycled for the occasion from 1981’s Rollover. When she married her first husband, Roger Vadim, she wore a white minidress and black boots. “I never had wedding dresses,” she says, audibly shrugging.
At another point in this overseas bachelorette extravaganza, which may or may not result in a brush with the law, Fonda leads the group through the streets of Rome in a bridal veil and sash. It speaks to Fonda’s priorities that she is more accustomed to wearing handcuffs for activism work—she was arrested five times in recent years during climate-change protests—than a bridal sash.
Okay, no wedding dress. Jane married Roger Vadim, I called C.I. and she said it was eloping in Las Vegas. Tom Hayden was next and Jane was pregnant (visibly) so no wedding dress. But didn't she wear a wedding dress to marry Ted Turner? C.I. said that was a dress from her film ROLLOVER. Wow. Three weddings but no wedding dress. Maybe next time. And that's not me mocking Jane Fonda, I'm just honestly surprised that you would have three weddings but never a wedding dress.
I have not had any weddings but I would wear a suit -- even to a justice of the peace. Why no weddings? I'm honestly not sure I believe in marriage. I'm in a good relationship right now and have been for a few years. If it was important to her, I'd probably say sure. But on my own? I don't think I'm ever going to rush into marriage. I've seen too many people just destroy each other in divorces and I don't want to be part of that.
Going out with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
Oklahoma’s Republican governor, Kevin Stitt, has argued that his party could win the 2024 elections if it continues its anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric.
The governor said during a televised interview on Monday (8 May) that he believes Americans think that Democratic representatives have “gone too far” in protecting the LGBTQ+ community.
He claimed that if Republicans continued to dismantle queer rights, the party would be sure to “win” when Americans go to the polls in November 2024’s presidential, congressional and gubernatorial elections.
Louisiana representatives on Tuesday passed a "Don't Say Gay" bill, advancing it to the Senate with a vote of 67-28.
Driving the news: House Bill 466 prohibits K-12 public school employees from teaching or discussing sexual orientation or gender identity in the classroom.
- It also regulates pronouns and names, saying they must match birth certificates.
The big picture: New Orleans has one of the largest concentrations of LGBTQ+ people in the U.S., with 4.7% of the adult population identifying as members of the community.
- A 2021 analysis from UCLA's Williams Institute estimates there are about 46,000 LGBTQ+ community members here.
Zoom out: Including the "Don't Say Gay" bill, Louisiana lawmakers are debating five anti-LGBTQ+ bills this session that could affect nearly every facet of life, particularly for youth.
Issues include:
Pronouns: House Bill 81, called the “Given Name Act” by its author, requires students to use the name and pronoun on their birth certificate. It passed 61-33 in the House on Monday and now heads to the Senate.
- It has an exception if there is written consent from the parent, but teachers can reject the parent’s choice if it conflicts with the teacher’s “religious or moral convictions.”
Health care: A bill that prohibits doctors from offering gender-affirming medical care, such as hormone treatments or puberty-blocking drugs, to anyone younger than 18 advanced out of committee and heads to the full House.
A Wisconsin community is outraged after the local school board renewed the contract of a teacher who allegedly used racist and homophobic language in class.
At a school board meeting in Wausau, Wisconsin, on Monday night, nearly 30 speakers testified for an hour-and-a-half in support of a gay student of Hmong-Lao descent who recently filed an official complaint against Robert Perkins, alleging that the Wausau East High School band instructor directed racial and homophobic slurs at him.
Nevertheless, following the public comment period, the school board, which had previously dismissed the student’s complaint, renewed Perkins’s contract for the following school year, the Wausau Daily Herald reports.
In a better world, high school musicals would have become more friendly toward LGBTQ+ people than my Catholic high school was when it required our production of Spamalot to replace all utterances of “gay” with “happy.” Unfortunately, as the Washington Post reports, school districts across the country are canceling high school theatre productions for including LGBTQ+ content and characters, as well as frank discussions of race and racism and anything else administrators deem inappropriate.
This kind of censorship made national headlines in January, when, halfway through rehearsals, school board members in Ohio canceled a Cardinal High School’s production of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. The school board objected to it because it had, among other perceived infractions, a character whose fathers are gay. Although the musical was eventually staged with some revisions after Spelling Bee creators Rebecca Feldman and Rachel Sheinkin reached out to the board directly, other schools haven’t been so fortunate.
As the Post reports, high school theater productions have been stopped across the United States, often because they include LGBTQ+ content or depictions of racism. Examples range from a gender-bending reimagining of Robin Hood (titled Marian, or the True Tale of Robin Hood) being scrapped in Indiana because of phone calls complaining about the play’s queer characters, to the axing of a Florida production of the play Indecent, which centers on an affair between women.
Pulse Nightclub shooting survivor, Brandon Wolf, did not mince words for disgraced "journalist," Megyn Kelly, after she made disgusting comments on Twitter attacking gun reform activists.
Kelly, a former Fox News Channel anchor, who was fired from NBC in 2018 over blackface comments on the air, tweeted, “Serious q for gun control advocates: you’ve failed to effect change. Pls face it. You can’t do it, thx to the 2A. We’re all well aware you don’t like that fact, but fact it is. What’s next? Must we just stay here sad, concerned, lamenting? Could we possibly talk OTHER SOLUTIONS?”
Kelly’s post, which was tweeted while police were still canvassing the crime scene at the Allen, Texas outlet mall mass shooting, leaving eight dead over the weekend, was not only callous, it’s inaccurate. According to the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, contrary to Kelly's claim that gun reform advocates have 'failed,' Connecticut now actually has the sixth lowest rate of gun deaths, after enacting laws there in the wake of the mass shooting deaths of 20 first graders and six adults in Newtown in 2012. It’s not only safer in Connecticut, but it’s also safer in surrounding states. Additionally, as of 2021, Connecticut had the eleventh lowest rate of crime gun exports. Texas, which has continued to expand access to guns, has the 28th highest gun death rate in the country, including the horrific deaths of 19 children and two teachers in Uvalde last year.
Wolf, an LGBTQ civil rights and gun reform activist, who's currently serving as the press secretary for Equality Florida, responded to Kelly’s tweet and invoked his own horrific mass shooting encounter at Pulse in Orlando: “I refuse to believe that dead children on a sidewalk must be the price of admission for being an American, that my best friend’s mutilated body on a nightclub floor is just the way the cookie must crumble.”
"No. I refuse to accept this nightmarish experiment as inevitable," he added on Instagram.
In the wake of the 2022 Club Q shooting in Colorado Springs and the 2016 Pulse Nightclub shooting in Orlando, which was the second deadliest in US history, LGBTQ Americans feel especially at risk and unsafe as it pertains to gun violence, which has become an epidemic. As of May 7th, The Gun Violence Archive reports there have been more than 200 mass shootings in 2023.
The issue of mass shootings has become so commonplace, that other nations around the world are issuing travel advisories against their people visiting the United States. CNN reports that Australia, the United Kingdom, Canada, Israel, France, Germany, Mexico, Japan, and New Zealand have all issued travel warnings to anyone considering traveling to the United States.
In an interview with GLAAD, Wolf said that his message is simple: "It does not have to be this way. We do not have to serve our children up as sacrifices to the profit-obsessed gun lobby. We do not have to sit by while our neighborhoods become war zones, content to throw up our hands and refuse to address the common denominators. No matter your gaslighting, we know the truth. It's the guns. And we can do -- and expect -- better."
"The LGBTQ community is under assault. Extremists are wielding the power of government against us while they use fear and intimidation to try and force us back into the closet. That reality is making life less safe for us. But we have been here before. We have long been demonized, dehumanized, and used as a cultural wedge issue. But we have forged ahead, securing civil rights protections and greater social acceptance than ever before by refusing to be erased and being unapologetically us. This moment calls for us to raise our flags higher than ever and send a message that we will not be erased," Wolf added.
Wolf also told GLAAD that we all have a stake in this fight and encouraged everyone to take action in their own way: "Every day Americans must be on the frontlines in the fight against gun violence. Find an organization building grassroots power and volunteer or donate. Start showing up in the state legislature. Become a voter for whom refusal to support gun safety reforms is a dealbreaker. Educate and induct your neighbors into the fight. Do not wait until it is your child lifeless on the sidewalk or your best friend who never gets the chance to return your call."
Most of all, "Act now," Wolf said.
More than 6,000 ancient artefacts have been returned to Iraq, bringing the total recovered in five years to 34,000.
The birthplace of the world's earliest recorded civilisation is home to thousands of artefacts. Many have been lost and stolen through conflict and by opportunistic poachers and have yet to be found or returned. Others were on long-term loans.
The latest items were handed back by the UK after they were borrowed more than 100 years ago.
“We have succeeded, through diplomacy, in returning 34,502 artefacts since 2019 until now,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Ahmed Al Sahaf told The National on Tuesday.
According to the Iraqi Presidency statement, President Rashid attended a ceremony at the Iraqi Embassy in London to retrieve the 6,000 antiquities that Britain had “borrowed” from Iraq for “scholarly purposes” since 1923.
The move occurred on the eve of Rashid’s journey to the United Kingdom to attend King Charles III’s coronation ceremony, during which Rashid chose to bring the relics back to Baghdad and hand them over to the Iraqi National Museum.
The Iraqi Foreign Ministry’s spokesperson, Ahmed al-Sahaf, announced in a statement that Iraq is getting 38 crates containing Iraqi antiques borrowed by Britain.
Hakim Al-Shammari, Media Director of the Iraqi State Board of Antiques and Heritage (SBAH), noted that the retrieved antiques are a vital indicator of Iraqi diplomatic achievements under the current administration.
Iraq declared the greatest recovery effort for smuggled Iraqi cultural relics and jewels, returning some 17,000 precious artifacts from the United States at the end of July 2021.
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- This edition's playlist
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