Get ready for an enthralling and enigmatic episode titled “The Sicilian Error of Color” airing on NBC at 10:00 Pm on May 21, 2023.
Find out everything you need to know about the The Sicilian Error of Color episode of The Blacklist, including a full preview, videos, release date, cast information and how to watch!
The Blacklist The Sicilian Error of Color Season 10 Episode 13 Preview
In this episode, Siya (played by Diany Rodriguez) accompanies the ever-enigmatic Red (James Spader) on a series of unusual tasks, only to uncover more details about Meera’s (Parminder Nagra) past. As they work together, the tension between Red and Siya thickens, leaving viewers eager for more.
Meanwhile, the ambitious Congressman Hudson (Kevin Kilner) seeks to expand his crusade against the task force. In an attempt to gain an upper hand, he tries to persuade a powerful friend to join his cause, adding another layer of complexity to the storyline.
Find out everything you need to know about the The Sicilian Error of Color episode of The Blacklist, including a full preview, videos, release date, cast information and how to watch!
The Blacklist The Sicilian Error of Color Season 10 Episode 13 Preview
In this episode, Siya (played by Diany Rodriguez) accompanies the ever-enigmatic Red (James Spader) on a series of unusual tasks, only to uncover more details about Meera’s (Parminder Nagra) past. As they work together, the tension between Red and Siya thickens, leaving viewers eager for more.
Meanwhile, the ambitious Congressman Hudson (Kevin Kilner) seeks to expand his crusade against the task force. In an attempt to gain an upper hand, he tries to persuade a powerful friend to join his cause, adding another layer of complexity to the storyline.
- 5/14/2023
- by News
- TV Regular
Click here to read the full article.
Pose star Angelica Ross is set to make her Broadway debut in Chicago this September, her arrival marking a historic moment for both the musical and the industry.
Ross will star as Roxie Hart, the aspiring actress turned murderess, in Broadway’s second longest-running musical. She is the first openly trans actress in the role, and among one of the first known trans actresses to star in a leading role in a Broadway musical.
The activist, executive producer, president of Miss Ross, Inc. and founder of TransTech Social Enterprises will begin her run at the Ambassador Theater on Sept. 12, with the American Horror Story star playing an eight-week limited engagement through Nov. 6. Earlier this year, Pamela Anderson portrayed the same character for her own limited run during the spring.
In 2018, Ru Paul’s Drag Race star Peppermint became the first known, openly trans...
Pose star Angelica Ross is set to make her Broadway debut in Chicago this September, her arrival marking a historic moment for both the musical and the industry.
Ross will star as Roxie Hart, the aspiring actress turned murderess, in Broadway’s second longest-running musical. She is the first openly trans actress in the role, and among one of the first known trans actresses to star in a leading role in a Broadway musical.
The activist, executive producer, president of Miss Ross, Inc. and founder of TransTech Social Enterprises will begin her run at the Ambassador Theater on Sept. 12, with the American Horror Story star playing an eight-week limited engagement through Nov. 6. Earlier this year, Pamela Anderson portrayed the same character for her own limited run during the spring.
In 2018, Ru Paul’s Drag Race star Peppermint became the first known, openly trans...
- 8/4/2022
- by Abbey White
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The fallout from Dave Chappelle’s harsh words about trans and LGBTQ+ communities in his Netflix special The Closer crested Wednesday with a walkout and rally that saw more than 100 protesters and allies attend, and present their “list of asks” to the company in the wake of the controversy.
B. Pagels-Minor, the Netflix employee fired last week from the streamer for allegedly leaking financial information to the media about Chappelle’s comedy special, was among those participating at the company’s Vine Street offices near its Sunset Boulevard headquarters.
Pagels-Minor told Deadline on the sidelines of the rally that they did not leak information to the media. “I compiled a series of data, I’m a data person, and I shared it with a lot of people internally,” Pagels-Minor said. “If they’re going to fire me, they’re going to have to fire a lot of people,” the former staffer added,...
B. Pagels-Minor, the Netflix employee fired last week from the streamer for allegedly leaking financial information to the media about Chappelle’s comedy special, was among those participating at the company’s Vine Street offices near its Sunset Boulevard headquarters.
Pagels-Minor told Deadline on the sidelines of the rally that they did not leak information to the media. “I compiled a series of data, I’m a data person, and I shared it with a lot of people internally,” Pagels-Minor said. “If they’re going to fire me, they’re going to have to fire a lot of people,” the former staffer added,...
- 10/20/2021
- by Dominic Patten
- Deadline Film + TV
By coming out as trans, Elliot Page has joined the ranks of transgender celebrities like Laverne Cox, Caitlyn Jenner, and Chaz Bono — the first three photos that appear after a Google search for “famous trans people.” Notably, only Bono is trans masculine in the group, and while he is a trailblazer who came out during a much different time, his story is lesser known by the young people who would most benefit from his example. As a trans masculine person, I wish I had grown up with a role model like Elliot Page, and I am so happy for all the kids who get to live in a world where he can, as he so eloquently wrote, “love who I am enough to pursue my authentic self.”
There are many reasons why trans feminine identities have been more visible in the years that have seen a steady growth in trans media representation,...
There are many reasons why trans feminine identities have been more visible in the years that have seen a steady growth in trans media representation,...
- 12/3/2020
- by Jude Dry
- Indiewire
Exclusive: Filmmaker Sam Feder has signed with Gersh and Luber Roklin Entertainment for representation in all areas. Feder is known for his recent groundbreaking Netflix documentary Disclosure. With his new reps, Feder will build upon his documentary work and expand into narrative film and television.
Disclosure garnered critical acclaim when it debuted at Sundance earlier this year and reached a wide audience when it debuted on Netflix on June 19. The documentary has become required viewing when it comes to the authentic representation of the transgender community in film and TV. Chronicling an eye-opening look at trans depictions in Hollywood, the docu reveals how the film and TV industry simultaneously reflects and manufactures our deepest anxieties about gender.
The docu was executive produced by Laverne Cox, who is also featured in the film. Disclosure also features prominent members of the trans community including Jen Richards, Marquise Vilson, Tre’vell Anderson, Angelica Ross,...
Disclosure garnered critical acclaim when it debuted at Sundance earlier this year and reached a wide audience when it debuted on Netflix on June 19. The documentary has become required viewing when it comes to the authentic representation of the transgender community in film and TV. Chronicling an eye-opening look at trans depictions in Hollywood, the docu reveals how the film and TV industry simultaneously reflects and manufactures our deepest anxieties about gender.
The docu was executive produced by Laverne Cox, who is also featured in the film. Disclosure also features prominent members of the trans community including Jen Richards, Marquise Vilson, Tre’vell Anderson, Angelica Ross,...
- 8/24/2020
- by Dino-Ray Ramos
- Deadline Film + TV
Disclosure, directed by Sam Feder (Kate Bornstein is a Queer & Pleasant Danger) and executive produced by Laverne Cox, debuts on Netflix today, June 19th. And in the wake of the whiplash from the Trump administration’s decision to erase healthcare protections for trans people, followed by the Us Supreme Court’s momentous ruling protecting those same folks from workplace discrimination, it couldn’t have arrived at a better time. The doc is an exhaustive and entertaining look at how trans individuals have historically been depicted onscreen through surprising archival footage (Birth of a Nation and Bugs Bunny make appearances) and insightful interviews […]...
- 6/19/2020
- by Lauren Wissot
- Filmmaker Magazine - Blog
Disclosure, directed by Sam Feder (Kate Bornstein is a Queer & Pleasant Danger) and executive produced by Laverne Cox, debuts on Netflix today, June 19th. And in the wake of the whiplash from the Trump administration’s decision to erase healthcare protections for trans people, followed by the Us Supreme Court’s momentous ruling protecting those same folks from workplace discrimination, it couldn’t have arrived at a better time. The doc is an exhaustive and entertaining look at how trans individuals have historically been depicted onscreen through surprising archival footage (Birth of a Nation and Bugs Bunny make appearances) and insightful interviews […]...
- 6/19/2020
- by Lauren Wissot
- Filmmaker Magazine-Director Interviews
Laverne Cox appears in the new trailer for Disclosure, a Netflix documentary on transgender representation in film and television, out June 19th in celebration of LGBTQ Pride month.
Directed by Sam Feder and executive produced by Cox, the trailer opens with the actress observing Hollywood’s influence on trans culture and society’s beliefs that have evolved overtime.
“I never thought I’d live in a world where trans people would be celebrated,” Cox says. “On or off the screen.” She adds: “I never thought the media would stop asking...
Directed by Sam Feder and executive produced by Cox, the trailer opens with the actress observing Hollywood’s influence on trans culture and society’s beliefs that have evolved overtime.
“I never thought I’d live in a world where trans people would be celebrated,” Cox says. “On or off the screen.” She adds: “I never thought the media would stop asking...
- 6/11/2020
- by Angie Martoccio
- Rollingstone.com
Manhattan Theatre Club will Trans Visibility in the Theatre, a panel directly following the Sunday, November 4th matinee of The Nap. Come to an open discussion about increasing trans presence in the theatre, with panelists including Alexandra Billings The Nap, Transparent, Kate Bornstein Straight White Men, I Am Cait, Will Davis India Pale Ale, Men On Boats, Alexa Fogel Pose Casting Director, Bianca Leigh The Nap, Transamerica, and Marquise Vilson Charm. They will discuss how the arts industry can sustain and further the current push for greater trans presence and representation.
- 10/24/2018
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Kate Bornstein is a world renowned performance artist, and the award-winning author of Gender Outlaw: On Men, Women, and the Rest Of Us. She recently co-starred in the Broadway production of Young Jean Lee’s Straight White Men.
I was born in 1948, just under a year after Donald Trump was born. We both grew up in the Fifties, back when it seemed we all knew that America was great. World War II was over, and we’d won. The boys came back and returned to work in the factories. The...
I was born in 1948, just under a year after Donald Trump was born. We both grew up in the Fifties, back when it seemed we all knew that America was great. World War II was over, and we’d won. The boys came back and returned to work in the factories. The...
- 10/23/2018
- by Kate Bornstein
- Rollingstone.com
In “Straight White Men,” Young Jean Lee’s cutting but deeply humane satire about straight white male privilege and pain, Armie Hammer, Josh Charles and, in an especially heart-wrenching performance, Paul Schneider play three brothers with mid-life issues. In director Anna D. Shapiro’s super-smart production, the bros are first observed as they go through the family Christmas rituals with their widowed father Ed (Stephen Payne), who’s in on all the goofy jokes.
Actually, it takes a while to get to this opening scene. In a head-scratching pre-curtain turn, preceded by a few minutes of assaulting rap music, two weirdly costumed interlocutors of indeterminate gender, played by Kate Bornstein and Ty Defoe, pointedly let the audience know that they, the so-called Persons in Charge, are the real persons in charge. The men in her play, Young Jean Lee is determined to show us, are her puppets and playthings.
Once...
Actually, it takes a while to get to this opening scene. In a head-scratching pre-curtain turn, preceded by a few minutes of assaulting rap music, two weirdly costumed interlocutors of indeterminate gender, played by Kate Bornstein and Ty Defoe, pointedly let the audience know that they, the so-called Persons in Charge, are the real persons in charge. The men in her play, Young Jean Lee is determined to show us, are her puppets and playthings.
Once...
- 7/24/2018
- by Marilyn Stasio
- Variety Film + TV
Armie Hammer, Josh Charles and Paul Schneider, names and faces well-known to film and TV audiences, make self-assured Broadway debuts in Straight White Men. No sarcasm about artistic stretches or the lack thereof necessary.
Young Jean Lee’s delicate balance of a play, directed by Anna D. Shapiro with a more sensitive understanding of character than pace, brings together three adult brothers and their widowed dad over a Christmas holiday that will see laughter and tears.
And if there’s anything straight white men can’t handle, it’s tears, especially from other straight white men.
At least that’s the suggestion from the playwright’s outside-looking-in vantage. The first Asian-American female playwright to be produced on Broadway, Young Jean Lee confronts the controversial idea of writing what you aren’t from the very start of Straight White Men.
We meet the guys of the title following a brief direct-to-audience...
Young Jean Lee’s delicate balance of a play, directed by Anna D. Shapiro with a more sensitive understanding of character than pace, brings together three adult brothers and their widowed dad over a Christmas holiday that will see laughter and tears.
And if there’s anything straight white men can’t handle, it’s tears, especially from other straight white men.
At least that’s the suggestion from the playwright’s outside-looking-in vantage. The first Asian-American female playwright to be produced on Broadway, Young Jean Lee confronts the controversial idea of writing what you aren’t from the very start of Straight White Men.
We meet the guys of the title following a brief direct-to-audience...
- 7/24/2018
- by Greg Evans
- Deadline Film + TV
Paul Schneider will round out the Broadway cast of Young Jean Lee’s Straight White Men, joining, among others, Josh Charles and Armie Hammer.
In the play – which begins previews at the Helen Hayes Theater June 29 – Schneider will play Matt, one of three adult sons who gather with their father for an eventful Christmas Eve. His two siblings will be played by the previously announced Charles (The Good Wife) and Hammer( Call Me By Your Name). Tom Skerritt plays the father.
Also in the cast are Kate Bornstein and Ty Defoe. The play will officially open on Monday, July 23.
The Second Stage Theater production will be directed by Anna D. Shapiro, the artistic director of Steppenwolf Theatre who won a 2008 Tony Award for her direction of August: Osage County.
The production description of Straight White Men: It’s Christmas Eve,...
In the play – which begins previews at the Helen Hayes Theater June 29 – Schneider will play Matt, one of three adult sons who gather with their father for an eventful Christmas Eve. His two siblings will be played by the previously announced Charles (The Good Wife) and Hammer( Call Me By Your Name). Tom Skerritt plays the father.
Also in the cast are Kate Bornstein and Ty Defoe. The play will officially open on Monday, July 23.
The Second Stage Theater production will be directed by Anna D. Shapiro, the artistic director of Steppenwolf Theatre who won a 2008 Tony Award for her direction of August: Osage County.
The production description of Straight White Men: It’s Christmas Eve,...
- 5/24/2018
- by Greg Evans
- Deadline Film + TV
A new play by Dear Evan Hansen playwright Steven Levenson, a new musical from the creators of Red, Next to Normal and Avenue Q and a production of Christopher Shinn’s Pulitzer Prize finalist Dying City have been announced for the 2018-19 season of New York’s Second Stage Theater.
The trio of new productions join the previously announced Straight White Men, starring Kate Bornstein, Josh Charles, Ty Defoe, Armie Hammer and Tom Skerritt, and the return of Harvey Fierstein’s Torch Song for the Second Stage’s 40th anniversary season.
The new Off-Broadway productions announced today are:
Days of Rage, a world premiere of Levenson’s new play, to be directed by Trip Cullman (Lobby Hero), beginning previews Oct. 2 and opening later that month at Second Stage’s Off-Broadway Tony Kiser Theater. As Second Stage describes the play: “Against the backdrop of an endless, unwinnable war raging halfway across the world,...
The trio of new productions join the previously announced Straight White Men, starring Kate Bornstein, Josh Charles, Ty Defoe, Armie Hammer and Tom Skerritt, and the return of Harvey Fierstein’s Torch Song for the Second Stage’s 40th anniversary season.
The new Off-Broadway productions announced today are:
Days of Rage, a world premiere of Levenson’s new play, to be directed by Trip Cullman (Lobby Hero), beginning previews Oct. 2 and opening later that month at Second Stage’s Off-Broadway Tony Kiser Theater. As Second Stage describes the play: “Against the backdrop of an endless, unwinnable war raging halfway across the world,...
- 5/9/2018
- by Greg Evans
- Deadline Film + TV
Josh Charles will make his Broadway debut this summer in Straight White Men, Young Jean Lee’s dark comedy also featuring the previously announced Armie Hammer and Tom Skerritt.
Charles’ casting was announced today, along with co-stars Kate Bornstein and Ty Defoe. The play begins previews at the Hayes Theater on Friday, June 29, with an official opening date of Monday, July 23.
The Second Stage Theater production will be directed by Anna D. Shapiro, the artistic director of Steppenwolf Theatre who won a 2008 Tony Award for her direction of August: Osage County.
The production marks the Broadway debuts of Charles, Hammer, Bornstein and DeFoe. Skerritt made his Broadway debut in the 2013 production of A Time to Kill.
The play – which will be a Broadway first by an Asian-American female playwright – is set on Christmas Eve, when Ed (Skerritt) has gathered his three adult sons to celebrate with matching pajamas, trash-talking, and Chinese takeout.
Charles’ casting was announced today, along with co-stars Kate Bornstein and Ty Defoe. The play begins previews at the Hayes Theater on Friday, June 29, with an official opening date of Monday, July 23.
The Second Stage Theater production will be directed by Anna D. Shapiro, the artistic director of Steppenwolf Theatre who won a 2008 Tony Award for her direction of August: Osage County.
The production marks the Broadway debuts of Charles, Hammer, Bornstein and DeFoe. Skerritt made his Broadway debut in the 2013 production of A Time to Kill.
The play – which will be a Broadway first by an Asian-American female playwright – is set on Christmas Eve, when Ed (Skerritt) has gathered his three adult sons to celebrate with matching pajamas, trash-talking, and Chinese takeout.
- 4/5/2018
- by Greg Evans
- Deadline Film + TV
The 2017 Tribeca Film Festival has come and gone, but several of its highlights face an uncertain future. While the festival opened with an iTunes-ready documentary about Clive Davis and closed with back-to-back screenings of the first two “Godfather” films, many of the films in its competition sections arrived at the festival without distribution deals and ended it in the same state. Here’s at a few significant titles from this year’s edition that deserve to get picked up.
“Blame”
Overachieving multi-hyphenate Quinn Shephard was just 20 when she wrote, directed, produced, edited and starred in her feature directorial debut, a modern spin on Arthur Miller’s “The Crucible,” set in the witch hunt capital of contemporary America: the suburban high school. While Shephard cast herself as the film’s Abigail Williams — an outcast with secrets to spare who gets entangled with a smoldering substitute teacher, played by Chris Messina — the...
“Blame”
Overachieving multi-hyphenate Quinn Shephard was just 20 when she wrote, directed, produced, edited and starred in her feature directorial debut, a modern spin on Arthur Miller’s “The Crucible,” set in the witch hunt capital of contemporary America: the suburban high school. While Shephard cast herself as the film’s Abigail Williams — an outcast with secrets to spare who gets entangled with a smoldering substitute teacher, played by Chris Messina — the...
- 5/1/2017
- by David Ehrlich, Eric Kohn, Jude Dry and Kate Erbland
- Indiewire
In its most profound moments, “Saturday Church” follows its searching young protagonist, Ulysses (Luka Kain) at the slightest remove, mirroring the distance he puts between himself and the world. It’s a place that’s been unkind to this soft-hearted teen who sneaks away from his father’s wake to try on a pair of strappy red heels, cracking the faintest smile as he holds them up to his grey Sunday best. Stepping into the shoes ever so gingerly, Ulysses wobbles briefly before admiring his reflection in the mirror. It’s a quiet moment, almost sacred, and one anyone who has ever furtively raided a parent’s closet will recognize.
Read More: ‘Whitney: Can I Be Me’ Review: Bisexual Subtext is the Documentary’s Most Powerful Reveal — Tribeca Review
Director Damon Cardasis delivers a gorgeous rendering of an oft-heard but rarely seen story of a Bronx-born teen who finds his...
Read More: ‘Whitney: Can I Be Me’ Review: Bisexual Subtext is the Documentary’s Most Powerful Reveal — Tribeca Review
Director Damon Cardasis delivers a gorgeous rendering of an oft-heard but rarely seen story of a Bronx-born teen who finds his...
- 4/30/2017
- by Jude Dry
- Indiewire
Over the past year I have been working on raising awareness of Rachel Pollack’s run on Doom Patrol. She’s not only one of two trans women to ever write at DC Comics, she’s also the only woman to write Doom Patrol.
When I was given a slot here at ComicMix to be a weekly columnist, I used my second column to talk about Coagula. Once DC Comics announced its plans to launch the Young Animal imprint helmed by Gerard Way and how Doom Patrol would be the flagship title, I wrote about my excitement and made sure to discuss Rachel Pollack’s contributions again. Months later I took to Geeks Out to praise the importance of Rachel’s run to queer comics history. Most recently, I wrote up a piece last week on how Rachel Pollack has been forgotten by the comics industry at [insertgeekhere].
After a year...
When I was given a slot here at ComicMix to be a weekly columnist, I used my second column to talk about Coagula. Once DC Comics announced its plans to launch the Young Animal imprint helmed by Gerard Way and how Doom Patrol would be the flagship title, I wrote about my excitement and made sure to discuss Rachel Pollack’s contributions again. Months later I took to Geeks Out to praise the importance of Rachel’s run to queer comics history. Most recently, I wrote up a piece last week on how Rachel Pollack has been forgotten by the comics industry at [insertgeekhere].
After a year...
- 9/13/2016
- by Joe Corallo
- Comicmix.com
Caitlyn Jenner isn't backing down - even when faced with less-than-open ears. In a sneak peek at Sunday's upcoming season finale of I Am Cait, Jenner, 66, and her friends travel to Houston and end up getting involved with pastors resisting Lgbt rights by supporting the repeal of Houston's Equal Rights Ordinance."We came to Houston to do something about this city's response to the hatred, especially of five pastors, who turned an entire Human Rights Ordinance into a lie about bathrooms," Jenner's friend Kate Bornstein explains. "Caitlyn's idea was, 'I'll go see them and talk with them face to face.
- 4/22/2016
- by Aurelie Corinthios
- PEOPLE.com
Caitlyn Jenner isn't backing down – even when faced with less-than-open ears.
In a sneak peek at Sunday's upcoming season finale of I Am Cait, Jenner, 66, and her friends travel to Houston and end up getting involved with pastors resisting Lgbt rights by supporting the repeal of Houston's Equal Rights Ordinance.
"We came to Houston to do something about this city's response to the hatred, especially of five pastors, who turned an entire Human Rights Ordinance into a lie about bathrooms," Jenner's friend Kate Bornstein explains. "Caitlyn's idea was, 'I'll go see them and talk with them face to face.'...
In a sneak peek at Sunday's upcoming season finale of I Am Cait, Jenner, 66, and her friends travel to Houston and end up getting involved with pastors resisting Lgbt rights by supporting the repeal of Houston's Equal Rights Ordinance.
"We came to Houston to do something about this city's response to the hatred, especially of five pastors, who turned an entire Human Rights Ordinance into a lie about bathrooms," Jenner's friend Kate Bornstein explains. "Caitlyn's idea was, 'I'll go see them and talk with them face to face.'...
- 4/22/2016
- by Aurelie Corinthios
- People.com - TV Watch
Caitlyn Jenner isn't backing down - even when faced with less-than-open ears. In a sneak peek at Sunday's upcoming season finale of I Am Cait, Jenner, 66, and her friends travel to Houston and end up getting involved with pastors resisting Lgbt rights by supporting the repeal of Houston's Equal Rights Ordinance."We came to Houston to do something about this city's response to the hatred, especially of five pastors, who turned an entire Human Rights Ordinance into a lie about bathrooms," Jenner's friend Kate Bornstein explains. "Caitlyn's idea was, 'I'll go see them and talk with them face to face.
- 4/22/2016
- by Aurelie Corinthios
- PEOPLE.com
Caitlyn Jenner Is Hung Up on When She Calls a Transphobic Church: Watch the Shocking I Am Cait Clip!
Caitlyn Jenner and her squad are on a mission on this Sunday's I Am Cait season two finale! "We came to Houston to do something about this city's response to the hatred, especially of five pastors, who turned an entire Human Rights Ordinance into a lie about bathrooms," Kate Bornstein explains in the clip above. "Caitlyn's idea was, 'I'll go see them and talk with them face to face.'" When the squad arrives in Houston, Jenny Boylan decides to call a church where one of the pastors works. Jenny's told that the pastor isn't available but she's informed that there's a prayer service that evening. "I'm a transgender woman...
- 4/22/2016
- E! Online
Caitlyn Jenner takes New Orleans! It's party time on Sunday night's all-new episode of I Am Cait as Caitlyn and her girlfriends take a detour to The Big Easy to let their hair down and meet up with a very special guest: Kris Jenner! Despite a little bit of tension between the exes at dinner, Kris blends in perfectly with Cait's squad, and everyone ends up having a wild and wonderful time. Recap the latest episode of I Am Cait with these five must-see moments! 1. The Surgery Debate: After Kate Bornstein admits she doesn't mind when people ask if she's had gender confirmation surgery, Candis Cayne disagrees. "I think your privates are your privates, and I...
- 4/11/2016
- E! Online
This article was written by Caitlyn Jenner and Jerid Bartow for WhoSay as part of an ongoing original series that explores issues and people in the Lgbt community.
Ever since I transitioned, I've been asked, "Who are you going to date?" Here's my answer: Me!
Nine months into this and I'm still learning who I am.
However, the road trip with my girls has put a lot of things into perspective (as I'm sure you saw Sunday night on I Am Cait …). Something that has really struck me is the difficulty of dating as trans woman or trans man. Because...
Ever since I transitioned, I've been asked, "Who are you going to date?" Here's my answer: Me!
Nine months into this and I'm still learning who I am.
However, the road trip with my girls has put a lot of things into perspective (as I'm sure you saw Sunday night on I Am Cait …). Something that has really struck me is the difficulty of dating as trans woman or trans man. Because...
- 3/28/2016
- by Caitlyn Jenner, @Caitlyn_Jenner
- People.com - TV Watch
This article was written by Caitlyn Jenner and Jerid Bartow for WhoSay as part of an ongoing original series that explores issues and people in the Lgbt community.Ever since I transitioned, I've been asked, "Who are you going to date?" Here's my answer: Me! Nine months into this and I'm still learning who I am. However, the road trip with my girls has put a lot of things into perspective (as I'm sure you saw Sunday night on I Am Cait …). Something that has really struck me is the difficulty of dating as trans woman or trans man. Because...
- 3/28/2016
- by Caitlyn Jenner, @Caitlyn_Jenner
- PEOPLE.com
Caitlyn Jenner is opening up about her future. In this exclusive deleted scene from Sunday's I Am Cait, Caitlyn and her squad attend a Native American ceremony where they set intentions and reveal what they soon hope to accomplish. "I hope to be loving and to find the presence of God wherever I am and to be open to the things I don't understand," Jenny Boylan says. "I'd like to be part of peacemaking and ending suffering," Kate Bornstein reveals. "I want my spirit free," Caitlyn says. "It was depressed for so many years and finally at this stage in my life I can actually let my spirit be free. And with that, I've been able to do a lot of good, much more...
- 3/15/2016
- E! Online
Sunday's I Am Cait was jam-packed with tense moments! With Caitlyn Jenner and her squad on a month-long bus ride, there's bound to be some major arguments and on Sunday's episode there were two! The first heated debate happened between Kate Bornstein and Jenny Boylan over the use of the word "tranny." The second debate was between Caitlyn and pretty much the rest of the bus over politics when Caitlyn suggested that Donald Trump would be "very good" for women's issues and then criticized Hillary Clinton. Caitlyn's squad is very passionate about their beliefs, so when their point of view is challenged, it leads to major tension. But in the end the group is able to...
- 3/14/2016
- E! Online
Author and activist Jenny Boylan was on a bus full of trans women, barreling down a highway in the Southwest, when she learned that a high-profile trans rights measure on the November ballot, the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance, or Hero, had been voted down.
In Houston and nationwide, the religious right had campaigned fiercely against the anti-discrimination measure, claiming it would allow men to use women's restrooms. The argument, ludicrous as it may sound, resonated with voters, and 62 percent of them voted against it.
Boylan was on that bus as...
In Houston and nationwide, the religious right had campaigned fiercely against the anti-discrimination measure, claiming it would allow men to use women's restrooms. The argument, ludicrous as it may sound, resonated with voters, and 62 percent of them voted against it.
Boylan was on that bus as...
- 3/8/2016
- Rollingstone.com
Caitlyn Jenner's new life as a transgender woman is further chronicled in the second season of E!'s reality series, I Am Cait. The first episode concerns the undertaking of what promises to be a season-long, cross-country road trip by Caitlyn and her band of six friends (Jennifer Finney Boylan, Chandi Moore, Candis Cayne, Ella Giselle, Kate Bornstein, Ronda Kamihira and Courtney Nanson), the initial stop being the Grand Canyon. Lacking the inherent drama of the first season, which involved Caitlyn's coming out, this episode (the only one previewed for critics) is essentially an extended coffee klatch among Caitlyn
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- 2/29/2016
- by Frank Scheck
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Eric Lavallee: Name me three of your favorite “2013 discoveries”… Katie Stern: One of my favorite movies of the year was Spring Breakers, my favorite book was Kate Bornstein’s A Queer and Pleasant Danger, I finally saw and enjoyed Me at the Zoo, loved the Claes Oldenburg exhibit at MoMA, and felt sadly, underwhelmed by the Depeche Mode album (Delta Machine).
Lavallee: The underrated/under the radar Francine was your first fiction feature as a producer. I’d like to know what lessons carried over from making a miniscule film and how did the project come to you?
Stern: Francine was a true labor of love. I met Brian M. Cassidy and Melanie Shatzky through Washington Square Films (where we represent them as commercial directors) and we instantly became friends. When they told me about the idea for the film, I was immediately intrigued. The world they described (and ultimately,...
Lavallee: The underrated/under the radar Francine was your first fiction feature as a producer. I’d like to know what lessons carried over from making a miniscule film and how did the project come to you?
Stern: Francine was a true labor of love. I met Brian M. Cassidy and Melanie Shatzky through Washington Square Films (where we represent them as commercial directors) and we instantly became friends. When they told me about the idea for the film, I was immediately intrigued. The world they described (and ultimately,...
- 1/15/2014
- by Eric Lavallee
- IONCINEMA.com
Tags: Morning BrewThe N&N FilesNikki & NoraPatti DavisElaine D. KaplanBrooke CandyLily TomlinSandra BernhardJudy GoldTig NotaroWhy We Laugh: Funny WomenAmanda Leigh DunnLPIMDb
Good morning!
Two lesbian Lapd officers won a sexual harassment lawsuit against their former supervisor. They were awarded $1.25 million and the supervisor no longer works for the police department. Holla!
President Obama has nominated out attorney Elaine D. Kaplan for judge on the United States Court of Federal Claims. Werk!
Ronald Reagan's daughter Patti Davis has written a story about a woman who falls for her sister-in-law in the book Till Human Voices Wake Us. "This is not me. None of it is autobiographical,“ she told The New York Post. "I didn’t want to write ‘Fifty Shades of’ whatever. It’s a love story.”
If you were a fan of Nikki & Nora, you'll be happy to hear there's an Indiegogo campaign to get it made into a new web series.
Good morning!
Two lesbian Lapd officers won a sexual harassment lawsuit against their former supervisor. They were awarded $1.25 million and the supervisor no longer works for the police department. Holla!
President Obama has nominated out attorney Elaine D. Kaplan for judge on the United States Court of Federal Claims. Werk!
Ronald Reagan's daughter Patti Davis has written a story about a woman who falls for her sister-in-law in the book Till Human Voices Wake Us. "This is not me. None of it is autobiographical,“ she told The New York Post. "I didn’t want to write ‘Fifty Shades of’ whatever. It’s a love story.”
If you were a fan of Nikki & Nora, you'll be happy to hear there's an Indiegogo campaign to get it made into a new web series.
- 3/21/2013
- by trishbendix
- AfterEllen.com
I have long admired Dan Savage's advice, especially to struggling queers. Like Kate Bornstein's advice to Teens, Freaks and Other Outlaws, Savage's advice inspires me to keep in mind the invisible struggles of non-conformers. I have also found daily inspiration in the viral responses to Savage's (and Terry Miller's) "It Gets Better" campaign. It is revolutionary and empowering to watch videos on demand in which, as Chris Rovzar wrote in 2010 in New York Magazine, "grown-ups ... tell gay kids that things will be easier in the future, when they are out of school, or when they are simply older and more comfortable with who they are."
While the "It Gets Better" campaign initially intended to represent happy and adjusted older queers to struggling younger queers, the campaign evolved to encourage anyone to tell a struggling person that the future will be easier and more fun than the present.
While the "It Gets Better" campaign initially intended to represent happy and adjusted older queers to struggling younger queers, the campaign evolved to encourage anyone to tell a struggling person that the future will be easier and more fun than the present.
- 2/25/2012
- by David Gorshein
- Aol TV.
A friend of mine recently made the audacious claim the The Big Bang Theory is gayer than Glee. I, of course, was like, "Dude, Glee is gayer than a basket of tiaras in Elton John's sewing room!" But his vehement assertion made me pause and think about the last four seasons of the nerdgasmic sitcom. It also made me wonder: How gay is The Big Bang Theory, really?
You can't talk about the gayness of Big Bang without addressing the giant, purple elephant in the room: Jim Parsons' sexual orientation. He shows up to awards shows with Todd Spiewak; he wins an Emmy and thanks Todd Spiewak; he makes public theater donations with Todd Spiewak; tabloids claim he is engaged to Todd Spiewak.
But when AfterElton.com asks, Parsons' PR reps won't comment on his sexuality. Like Ae editor-in-chief Michael Jensen said after Parsons' Emmy win, it's murky...
You can't talk about the gayness of Big Bang without addressing the giant, purple elephant in the room: Jim Parsons' sexual orientation. He shows up to awards shows with Todd Spiewak; he wins an Emmy and thanks Todd Spiewak; he makes public theater donations with Todd Spiewak; tabloids claim he is engaged to Todd Spiewak.
But when AfterElton.com asks, Parsons' PR reps won't comment on his sexuality. Like Ae editor-in-chief Michael Jensen said after Parsons' Emmy win, it's murky...
- 9/22/2011
- by Heather Hogan
- The Backlot
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