Gay Fresno - Entertainment
Entertainment
Married & Counting: One Gay Couple, Seven Weddings
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- Parent Category: News
- Created on Wednesday, 15 August 2012 13:30
- Published on Wednesday, 15 August 2012 13:30
- Written by Scott
A new documentary about a same-sex couple who got married in every state that would let them takes aim at marriage inequalityAfter 24 years together, Pat Dwyer and Stephen Mosher decided it was about time they get married. It was 2010 and same-sex marriage was not yet legal in New York State, where they live, so they decided to pack up and drive or fly to the states that would allow them to legally wed. All of them.
From Vermont to New Hampshire, Iowa, Massachusetts, California and Washington DC, the couple hosted low-key, intimate ceremonies and captured it all on film as part of Married & Counting. The documentary, narrated by George Takei, premieres August 11 at the Rhode Island International Film Festival. “For any gay couple to get married at this point in our history makes a statement, but what they are doing…there’s something aggressively joyful about it,” says Vince, the officiant of the New Hampshire wedding, in the film. “They’re saying to the world, very loudly, our happiness is not a threat to you, but we are here and we should be counted.”
The idea for the film came when Stephan and Pat, who met at college in Texas in 1985, started thinking about how they would celebrate being in a committed relationship for 25 years. But unlike straight couples, they could not marry in one state and have that one wedding render them legally married in all 50 states, so they decided they would marry in every state that they could. The plan was to culminate the wedding tour by marrying on the steps of the Supreme Court in Washington DC on the 25th anniversary of their coupledom on April 26, 2011.
They did just that, but the New York State Legislature threw them an alternate ending when it voted to legalize same-sex marriage on July 24, 2011. One of the most touching moments in the film comes when Stephen and Pat sit, holding hands, on the couch watching the vote, waiting for the legislators to decide their fate. “Our world changed like that,” Stephen says of the vote in the film.
Video: Phi Phi O'hara performance in Fresno
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- Created on Saturday, 11 August 2012 13:04
- Published on Saturday, 11 August 2012 13:04
- Written by Jason Scott
If you missed out on Phi Phi O'hara at The Express this Friday, shame on you. But, we've collected videos to share with you to see what you missed or just want relive it, if you were there!

Don't miss Yara Sofia - September 28th. Pre-sale tickets are NOW available. Don't miss out on the $10 rate!
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Why 'Husband's' Matters: An Exclusive Look at the Marriage Equality Sitcom's Second Season
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- Parent Category: News
- Created on Thursday, 09 August 2012 18:18
- Published on Thursday, 09 August 2012 18:14
- Written by Alyssa Rosenberg
When Husbands, the online sitcom about a professional baseball player and a TV star who get married in a drunken weekend in Vegas and decide to stay together in support of marriage equality and because they think they might actually be in love, premiered last year, I wrote that “setting yourself up as a model minority may be an important way to argue for legal rights, real equality means the right to make mistakes and bad decisions—and to work your way out of them.” While that’s true of the show’s main characters Brady (Sean Hemeon) and Cheeks (Brad Bell, also the Husbands co-creator, writer, and executive producer with TV veteran Jane Espenson), when it comes to experimenting to discover the future, it’s also true of Husbands itself, one of the pioneering high-quality ongoing shows to live online rather than on a broadcast network.
What’s exciting about about Husbands, though, is how quickly the show has grown in scope and emotional ambition from its first season to its second, which premieres on August 15. A year’s acquaintance has richened the on-screen chemistry and affection between Hemeon and Bell, and Husbands has grown in confidence both in terms of the ideas it’s exploring and the team behind the show’s sense of the skills they’re developing by working on it. And the show is becoming an important example of how television distributed online fits into a larger pop-culture ecosystem, not simply as an alternative means of distribution for content networks are too timid to make, but as a rich idea lab that could breed a new generation of pop culture tropes and show-runners.
For a sense of that, I have an exclusive first look at the behind-the-scenes material the Husbands crew shot to accompany the second season, which goes inside the table reads and Bell and Espenson’s writing sessions, and also provides some perspective on how large the team involved in the show is:
And it is large: the $60,001 the Husbands team raised through their Kickstarter campaign helped pay the more than 40 people who worked on the second season of the show, let the production move from its cramped initial setting to a rented house that gives the scenes and actors room to breathe, and helped upgrade the cameras from commercial hand-held DSLRs to Steadicam rigs with Scarlet cameras that improved the quality of the images. “It looks like big TV,” Espenson joked when I visited the set in May. “It’s the new big TV,” Bell said, and it’s true. Husbands is an illustration of the narrowing gap between online sitcoms and their broadcast siblings.
The set and the crew aren’t the only way Husbands is bigger in its second season. The show has a large roster of major guest stars, most notably Joss Whedon as Brady’s clueless agent Wes. He’s the kind of man who declares “You know I’d gay-march on hepatatis-infected glass to change things,” even as he tries to get Brady to tone down Cheeks, explaining that “acceptable gays are overweight, over forty, overly professional with their lovers in public,” the show’s painfully accurate swipe at chemistry-free couples like Cam and Mitch on Modern Family. And in a sequence that will make fanboy hearts everywhere go pitter-patter even as it makes a point, Dichen Lachman and Tricia Helfer appear in a brutal parody of straight-guy fantasy about pillow-fighting college girls experimenting with lesbianism.
Husbands‘ emotional palatte is deeper, too, this time around. Cheeks sets off the action in the second season when he snaps a picture of himself and Brady smooching in bed on their three-week anniversary and imprudently Tweets it, prompting frantic calls from Wes about the morality clause in Brady’s contract with the Dodgers, splutteringly angry condemnation from the Billion Moms, and fights between the newlyweds. The show walks a careful line and walks it well: the public reaction to the picture is absolutely wrong, hysterical, and stupid. But it’s deeply insensitive of Cheeks to have Tweeted it without consideration for Brady’s feelings or sense of control over his public image. It’s the kind of argument couples who have just moved in together or just gotten married have about dishes in the sink and joint finances, but played out and amplified by the national media.
The show deftly weaves together those threads with an exploration of a thornier issue that broadcast sitcoms that involve gay couples refuse to explore deeply, in part because it’s a dichotomy that they depend on for humor: the gendered performances of men, be they gay or straight, and the kind of condemnation or approbation they attract. “I’m audi, girlfriend! Pride!” Wes declares when he hangs up with Brady, conflating gayness and femeness, an air of condescension in his aping of the latter. “Be a little less gay,” Brady tells Cheeks, a reminder that discomfort with femenized gender performance is not only a way straight men express homophobia. “Less gay like you? Because you’re less gay. You do get what gay means, right, Brady?” Cheeks asks him bitterly. “The only thing that makes you gay is having an exclusive membership to the same-sex sex club.” It’s an important reminder that there’s something self-deluding and self-denying about the belief that gay people can convert the most stringent, ugly homophobes if only they perform masculinity or femininity well enough.
Add a comment"CinderFella," A Pro-Gay Take On A Disney Classic
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- Created on Friday, 27 July 2012 16:16
- Published on Friday, 27 July 2012 16:16
- Written by Jason Scott
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Green Lantern Proposes to Boyfriend
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- Created on Friday, 06 July 2012 19:23
- Published on Friday, 06 July 2012 19:19
- Written by Scott
DC Comics’ hero Green Lantern proposes marriage to his boyfriend in comic book Earth 2.
The proposal comes after gay superhero Northstar married his boyfriend in Astonishing X-Men No. 51 and Archie’s gay character Kevin Keller married his husband in the January issue (#16) of Life with Archie.
Social conservatives have criticized the increasing number of gay characters in comic books.
Full Story from On Top Magazine
Add a commentSuze Orman to Do Show on Marriage Equality Tonight
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- Parent Category: News
- Created on Saturday, 23 June 2012 14:50
- Published on Saturday, 23 June 2012 14:50
- Written by Scott
Suze Orman is doing a Saturday night show on marriage equality and the financial reasons it is so important, at 9 pm ET on CNBC.
Says Orman in a preview of the show.
“Here I sit in front of you. A 61-year-old woman who has been gay my entire life. Who has been in a committed relationship for the past 12 years.”
Add a commentSharon Needles: Video & Pics
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- Created on Wednesday, 20 June 2012 12:59
- Published on Wednesday, 20 June 2012 12:59
- Written by Jason Scott
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Fresno Rainbow Pride 2012 photos
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- Created on Monday, 04 June 2012 00:13
- Published on Monday, 04 June 2012 00:13
- Written by Jason Scott
Photos by: Brian Putnam. For Gay Fresno. If republishing, seek photographer permission.
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VIDEO: Fresno Rainbow Pride Parade
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- Created on Sunday, 03 June 2012 00:16
- Published on Sunday, 03 June 2012 10:16
- Written by Jason Scott
Hundreds of photos already added from the parade and festival!
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Fresno Rainbow Pride 2012 - June 2nd
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- Created on Friday, 11 May 2012 23:15
- Published on Friday, 11 May 2012 23:15
- Written by Jason Scott
The 22nd Annual Central Valley & Fresno's GLBT Pride Parade and Festival will take place on SATURDAY, June 2nd 2012 in the Tower District between 10am and 3pm.
Simpsons Actress Yeardley Smith Gives $25K to Prop 8 Fight
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- Created on Sunday, 01 January 2012 20:22
- Published on Sunday, 01 January 2012 20:22
- Written by Scott

Yeardley Smith, the French-born actress best know for playing the voice of Lisa Simpson on Fox’s animated series The Simpsons, has pledged up to $25,000 to the group challenging the constitutionality of Proposition 8, California’s gay marriage ban.
The American Foundation for Equal Rights (AFER) announced the gift in an email to supporters on Thursday.
See the Full Story at On Top Magazine
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