Author Topic: News Coverage: May 2006  (Read 51650 times)

Offline tpe

  • Moderator
  • Jack + Ennis
  • ***
  • Posts: 96691
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #60 on: May 12, 2006, 01:01 PM »
It's not as good as yours, Thomas, but....



Achille and Patroclus



We are reading each other's mind frances.

I sent a pix of this to Lost_Girl 2 days ago.  I also have it in my collection.  I think you read my mind...







Offline welshwitch

  • Jack + Ennis
  • *
  • Posts: 6480
  • Gender: Female
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #61 on: May 12, 2006, 04:01 PM »
Today#s "Guardian" (London) had a story about a new exhibition ay the National Gallery. It's of erotic objets d'art from Ancient Greece and Rome, and at one point the curtor has included two modern images, oneof which is of Jack and Ennis ( fully dressed, but you can;' have everything). Just sjows how our movie is getting in everywhere!

Offline stephan

  • Jack + Ennis
  • *
  • Posts: 4651
  • Gender: Male
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #62 on: May 12, 2006, 04:24 PM »
Yes indeed, welshwitch. Links to articles on that exhibition have been posted by Frances :
http://www.ennisjack.com/index.php?topic=3862.msg112522#msg112522

 ;)

Offline ennisandjack

  • Alma
  • ****
  • Posts: 357
  • Gender: Female
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #63 on: May 13, 2006, 02:24 AM »
Lovin the art guys  :)

Cable Positive to Benefit from Brokeback

http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA6334027.html?display=Breaking+News

5/11/2006 4:05:00 PMNBC Universal Cable will donate $10,000 to Cable Positive tying in with the video-on-demand and pay-per-view premiere of Brokeback Mountain May 18.

The programmer said it will donate $1 to Cable Positive for every Brokeback Mountain e-card sent via Universal Pay-Per-View & On Demand’s Web site (www.universalvod.net).

NBC U Cable will also contribute an additional $5,000 to each participating local Cable Positive chapter.

Time Warner Cable of New York City said it will match NBC Universal Cable’s contribution and donate a portion of Brokeback Mountain on demand buys to the cable industry’s AIDS-awareness organization’s New York chapter. Time Warner’s promotion will be supported by cross-channel, radio, online and e-mail.

BrokebackMountain won Academy Awards for “Best Achievement in Directing,” “Best Original Score” and “Best Adapted Screenplay.”


Offline tpe

  • Moderator
  • Jack + Ennis
  • ***
  • Posts: 96691
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #64 on: May 13, 2006, 04:39 PM »
Thanks ennisandjack.  Interesting piece of news.

Offline frances

  • Jack + Ennis
  • *
  • Posts: 5153
  • Gender: Female
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #65 on: May 14, 2006, 01:26 PM »
The Authentic Life

It thrived at Walden Pond, not ‘Brokeback Mountain’


By PAULINE PARK
Monday, April 17, 2006



Henry David Thoreau might well have been thinking of Ennis Del Mar and Jack Twist when he wrote that "the mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation." While Thoreau’s "Walden" long predates Annie Proulx’s "Brokeback Mountain" short story and the Ang Lee film based on it, the transcendentalist philosopher’s magnum opus remains as relevant today as was published in 1854.

Much of the comment about the film, just released on DVD, has focused on its transgressive love story. But if "Brokeback" speaks powerfully to gay and non-gay audiences alike, it is because the film not only articulates the tragedy of true love constrained and ultimately defeated by homophobia, but also speaks to the tragedy of life not truly lived.

Thoreau could have been describing the "Brokeback" Wyoming of the 1960s when he wrote, "The surface of the earth is soft and impressible by the feet of men; and so with the paths which the mind travels. How worn and dusty, then, must be the highways of the world, how deep the ruts of tradition and conformity!"

Jack attempts to persuade Ennis to climb out of the rut of heteronormative expectations in rural Wyoming, but Ennis is traumatized by a childhood episode in which his father took him and his brother to see a dead gay man who was tortured and beaten to death for having the temerity to live openly with another man.

So Ennis’ fear of violence is a realistic one. But in choosing to live his life from a script written by someone else, Ennis is false to himself and to everyone else—and above all, to the one person who loves him for who he truly is. In their final encounter, Jack confronts Ennis with the desperately sad truth that they have wasted their lives in outward conformity and secret transgression. Ennis has settled for mere existence, wasting years in a loveless marriage, unable to overcome his fears. The price of outward conformity to a rigid code of heteronormativity is a slow inward death for both of them.

CANONICAL PHILOSOPHY may have little appeal to most people, whether LGBT or otherwise. But at its most practical, philosophy poses basic questions that we all face as human beings: What is life and how shall we live it? In "Walden," Thoreau offers this answer: "I did not wish to take a cabin passage, but rather to go before the mast and on the deck of the world, for there I could best see the moonlight amid the mountains. I do not wish to go below now."

What is that "moonlight amid the mountains" of which Thoreau speaks? It is the sheer exhilaration of the authentic life lived fully in the integrity of one’s own truest self. Ennis and Jack glimpse the literal moonlight amid the mountains when they live on Brokeback and later return to it on their periodic "fishing trips." But only Jack can see the metaphorical moonlight of the authentic life that offers itself to them before they descend from the mountain into the dreary desperation of straight conformity and loveless marriage. Thoreau could well have been describing Jack in the passage in "Walden" in which he famously declared: "If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer."

The authentic life is there for the living, and the deepest tragedy of "Brokeback Mountain" is Ennis’s refusal to accept Jack’s invitation to live it. Regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity, anyone seeking to live an authentic life need look no further than the conclusion from "Walden" for guidance:
My candle burns at both ends / It will not last the night / But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends / It gives a lovely light (Edna St. Vincent Millay)

Offline tpe

  • Moderator
  • Jack + Ennis
  • ***
  • Posts: 96691
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #66 on: May 14, 2006, 04:03 PM »
The Authentic Life
The authentic life is there for the living, and the deepest tragedy of "Brokeback Mountain" is Ennis’s refusal to accept Jack’s invitation to live it. Regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity, anyone seeking to live an authentic life need look no further than the conclusion from "Walden" for guidance:

As you had quoted in another thread these words from Walden:


I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived.



Offline boo_boo

  • Jack + Ennis
  • *
  • Posts: 2493
  • Gender: Female
  • Never enough lip & tongue, never enough.
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #67 on: May 15, 2006, 06:35 PM »
"the mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation".   :(

Great article - thanks for posting it.
“Ennis, on a good day it’s hard to understand ya…but when you’re talkin into my ass…I really got no idea what the f*ck you’re saying.” - Missing Motel Moments by haunted_by_bbm

Offline FlwrChild

  • Jack + Ennis
  • *
  • Posts: 18550
  • Gender: Female
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #68 on: May 15, 2006, 07:52 PM »
Yes, an excellent article. And the references to Jack's ability to see the metaphorical moonlight are wonderful. I love that character and I love to see new ways to appreciate him. Thanks for sharing.
For a moment in our lives. Forever in our hearts.

"They were respectful of each other’s opinions, each glad to have a companion where none had been expected." ~ BBM Short Story

There are three ways to ultimate success:
The first way is to be kind. The second way is to be kind. The third way is to be kind. (Mister Rogers)

Offline frances

  • Jack + Ennis
  • *
  • Posts: 5153
  • Gender: Female
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #69 on: May 16, 2006, 07:44 AM »


National Gay and Lesbian Task Force's 17th Annual Leadership Awards

The Task Force played host to more than 450 people Saturday night, May 6, at the district's Omni Shoreham Hotel overlooking Rock Creek Park. The event, a dinner marking the Task Force's 17th Annual Leadership Awards, paid tribute to three people and an institution: Rep. John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.), a longtime ally of the gay community; Annie Proulx, author of the gay-themed short story Brokeback Mountain, which garnered much attention as a film a few months ago; Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wisc.), a possible contender in the 2008 presidential race, and a supporter of same-sex marriage; and Food & Friends, the metro area's non-profit provider of groceries and prepared meals to thousands of ill clients and their families

Proulx did not offer a politician's enthusiasm. Instead, she appeared somewhat bashful as she took the lectern, her soft monotone a sharp contrast to the other speakers' styles. ''They never told me I'd have to say something, but I will,'' she deadpanned.

Proulx, in from Wyoming for the awards dinner, spoke about her stretch of the country as a ''mean, spare, hard'' place. ''It's a tough place. I like it because it's a tough place. Its beauty is hard and subtle."

That hardness comes with a particular challenge.

"People don't really disturb the ancient traditions of rural places, and that's too bad," she said. "You really have to take a look at what's not right, and not support the status quo.''

She closed with an invitation, observing that there are many GLBT people from her part of the country, but that they often leave her rough terrain in favor of gay-friendly cities. With an apparent desire to turn that tide, she imparted, ''If any of you are contemplating a move to the country, do it.''
My candle burns at both ends / It will not last the night / But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends / It gives a lovely light (Edna St. Vincent Millay)

Offline tpe

  • Moderator
  • Jack + Ennis
  • ***
  • Posts: 96691
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #70 on: May 16, 2006, 08:02 AM »


National Gay and Lesbian Task Force's 17th Annual Leadership Awards

The Task Force played host to more than 450 people Saturday night, May 6, at the district's Omni Shoreham Hotel overlooking Rock Creek Park. The event, a dinner marking the Task Force's 17th Annual Leadership Awards, paid tribute to three people and an institution: Rep. John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.), a longtime ally of the gay community; Annie Proulx, author of the gay-themed short story Brokeback Mountain, which garnered much attention as a film a few months ago; Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wisc.), a possible contender in the 2008 presidential race, and a supporter of same-sex marriage; and Food & Friends, the metro area's non-profit provider of groceries and prepared meals to thousands of ill clients and their families

Proulx did not offer a politician's enthusiasm. Instead, she appeared somewhat bashful as she took the lectern, her soft monotone a sharp contrast to the other speakers' styles. ''They never told me I'd have to say something, but I will,'' she deadpanned.

Proulx, in from Wyoming for the awards dinner, spoke about her stretch of the country as a ''mean, spare, hard'' place. ''It's a tough place. I like it because it's a tough place. Its beauty is hard and subtle."

Superb.

Quote
That hardness comes with a particular challenge.

"People don't really disturb the ancient traditions of rural places, and that's too bad," she said. "You really have to take a look at what's not right, and not support the status quo.''

She closed with an invitation, observing that there are many GLBT people from her part of the country, but that they often leave her rough terrain in favor of gay-friendly cities. With an apparent desire to turn that tide, she imparted, ''If any of you are contemplating a move to the country, do it.''

A very difficult challenge.


Offline frances

  • Jack + Ennis
  • *
  • Posts: 5153
  • Gender: Female
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #71 on: May 17, 2006, 07:37 AM »
Not exactly new..but new to me


'Brokeback Mountain': A Dissenting View

by Dale Carpenter

(Bay Area Reporter)



In a 1980 essay entitled “The Boys on the Beach,” conservative writer Midge Decter described the gay men who summered at Fire Island in the 1960s:

No households of wives and children requiring security; no entailments of school bills, doctor and dentist bills; no lifetime of acquiring the goods needed for family welfare and the goods desired for family entertainment, with a margin left over for that greatest of all heterosexual entailments, the Future: no such households burdened the overwhelmingly vast majority of homosexuals.

Homosexuality, argued Decter, is a flight from adult responsibility. Heterosexual men who accept their share of the burden to raise the next generation feel “mocked,” especially by gay men, because male “homosexuality paints them with the color of sheer entrapment.” Being gay, she concluded, means “taking oneself out of the tides of ordinary mortal existence.”

From early on in Brokeback Mountain, the Oscar-contending film by director Ang Lee, I found myself thinking about Decter's essay.

The basic story is by now familiar: two young men, Ennis Del Mar (Heath Ledger) and Jack Twist (Jake Gyllenhaal), meet and fall in love in 1963 while tending sheep in the mountains of Wyoming. Subsequently, they each get married and have kids but get together a couple of times a year to go “fishing,” the euphemism they give their wives for the periodic renewal of their affair. The story ends in 1983.

There's much to admire in this film. Ennis and Jack bust stereotypes of gay men. They aren't effeminate. When they meet, they are modern “cowboys” who live on profanity, fighting, country music, beer, and hard work for low pay. Yet their masculinity is also not the posed hyper-masculinity of leather, Levi, and uniform fetish scenes.

There's no mention of Stonewall, Harvey Milk, or even San Francisco. It's a welcome corrective to the urban-centered study of gay life in America.

For the most part we do not see sensationalized homophobia. That would be too easy. Instead, we see the everyday contempt for gays that still suffuses life in much of the country. Disdain for homosexuals mostly comes to Ennis and Jack in the sneers of others and in their own shame.

Still, the film—or more precisely, the gay reaction to it—offers some support for the hoary notion that homosexuality is “taking oneself out of the tides of ordinary mortal existence.” Critics have rushed to praise Brokeback Mountain as a universal love story. Perhaps that's true, but it's not the whole story.

It's almost never mentioned that their affair is juxtaposed to the consequences of neglecting life's obligations. The first time Ennis and Jack have sex they shirk their responsibility to watch the flock. That night, a sheep is killed by a wolf; the aftermath is graphically depicted. A large portion of the flock is ultimately lost while they frolic.

More importantly, in their occasional fishing retreats, Ennis and Jack leave behind families. They are adulterers. This doesn't seem so terrible in the case of Jack, whose cartoonish wife is obsessed with her career and her press-on nails. But in the case of Ennis the result is poignant. Rushing out of the house to meet Jack, Ennis bodily passes off his two daughters to his wife (Michelle Williams), who stoically bears the burden left by a homosexual fleeing his entrapment. Eventually they divorce.

The film speaks powerfully to the sense of lost love and opportunity every closeted gay person must feel. “Heartbreaking” is not too strong a word to describe the loss this film confronts us with. But it's difficult to buy the widespread idea that the love between Jack and Ennis is an unvarnished good thing made tragic only by a homophobic world.

Part of the reason is that the love story itself is a bit strained. Hollywood delights in acting of the stumbling-and-mumbling sort (think James Dean and Marlon Brando) because it is thought to convey authenticity. Ledger in particular nails this style. But the spare dialogue between Jack and Ennis puts a lot of interpretive pressure on the meaningful glances they exchange.

Their sexual intimacy seems contrived. The sex—full of wrestling and snorting—is the kind that a person who's neither gay nor a cowboy imagines gay cowboys must have.

But the deeper reason their love doesn't completely register is that every time they go off together one is left wondering, what about the kids? What Ennis and Jack experience as an exhilarating liberation from the mundane and the stifling is for their families an abandonment. Ennis at least talks about living up to his familial obligations, but in truth he's checked out of them almost from the start.

For these reasons, I couldn't quite join in the symphony of sniffles I heard in the theater at the undeniably sad end of the film.

Yes, the world around Ennis and Jack channeled them into unhappy heterosexual lives. All concerned—including their families—would have been better off if that hadn't happened. By itself, that's a powerful argument against homophobia.

I don't have good answers to the problems confronting Ennis and Jack in their time and circumstance. I only have more questions than are currently being asked. Once families have been formed, do the interests of those families count for anything at all? Do we think Ennis and Jack have no obligation except to fulfill their own deepest desires? Do we really believe that the only tragedy in the film is the thwarted love of these two men? Why is nobody in the gay community even considering the moral complexity Brokeback Mountain presents?

Which brings us back to Midge Decter. Much that's happened in the past quarter-century has thoroughly discredited her view of homosexuality as escapism. She was wrong about gays even then, and she's more wrong now. But you would not know that from the sentimental and myopic reaction to this film, which sees in a multi-layered calamity only a beautiful but doomed gay romance
My candle burns at both ends / It will not last the night / But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends / It gives a lovely light (Edna St. Vincent Millay)

Offline tpe

  • Moderator
  • Jack + Ennis
  • ***
  • Posts: 96691
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #72 on: May 17, 2006, 07:44 AM »
Life is never tidy.  Life is never neat.

I think the reviewer assumes too much that most of us who love BBM love it for pure sentiment.

I can say at least this:  I love BBM because love is never tidy; love is never neat; love is never fair.



Offline FlwrChild

  • Jack + Ennis
  • *
  • Posts: 18550
  • Gender: Female
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #73 on: May 17, 2006, 08:55 AM »
Re: "Brokeback Mountain": a Dissenting view by Dale Carpenter -

I'm not sure where to start with this one. Why do so many people feel the need to oversymplify and over-categorize everything? First, Midge Decter's original theory about homosexuality is as ridiculous as it is ignorant. When I think of the gay people I know that wanted to have children (not to mention the ones lucky enough to do so), I can't help but wonder at her willful blindness. And though D.C. says she was wrong, most of his article supports a lot of what she was saying. As if the choices these characters made were easy ones. As if life is ever that 'tidy' or 'neat' (which as tpe pointed out they are Not). And anyone who thinks the movie glossed over the toll their relationship took on their families simply wasn't paying attention! Did he not see the reunion kiss scene?! I agree with tpe that Carpenter doesn't seem to give the audience enough credit. And he certainly isn't seeing what we see. Clearly, his own pre-formed ideas about homosexuality influenced his interpretation of this story. It's too bad he missed so much of what was there (some people just can't see it). Who knows? Maybe my awareness of the complexity of these issues shaped my understanding and appreciation of the movie as well. I guess I can only hope so!

And by the way, it bears repeating that the structure and judgements of society (especially society in the time period of this story) are at least partially responsible for the choices these characters (and their real-life counterparts) are forced to make. Ok, end of rant.
For a moment in our lives. Forever in our hearts.

"They were respectful of each other’s opinions, each glad to have a companion where none had been expected." ~ BBM Short Story

There are three ways to ultimate success:
The first way is to be kind. The second way is to be kind. The third way is to be kind. (Mister Rogers)

Offline tpe

  • Moderator
  • Jack + Ennis
  • ***
  • Posts: 96691
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #74 on: May 17, 2006, 09:56 AM »
Re: "Brokeback Mountain": a Dissenting view by Dale Carpenter -

I'm not sure where to start with this one. Why do so many people feel the need to oversymplify and over-categorize everything? First, Midge Decter's original theory about homosexuality is as ridiculous as it is ignorant. When I think of the gay people I know that wanted to have children (not to mention the ones lucky enough to do so), I can't help but wonder at her willful blindness. And though D.C. says she was wrong, most of his article supports a lot of what she was saying. As if the choices these characters made were easy ones. As if life is ever that 'tidy' or 'neat' (which as tpe pointed out they are Not). And anyone who thinks the movie glossed over the toll their relationship took on their families simply wasn't paying attention! Did he not see the reunion kiss scene?! I agree with tpe that Carpenter doesn't seem to give the audience enough credit. And he certainly isn't seeing what we see. Clearly, his own pre-formed ideas about homosexuality influenced his interpretation of this story. It's too bad he missed so much of what was there (some people just can't see it). Who knows? Maybe my awareness of the complexity of these issues shaped my understanding and appreciation of the movie as well. I guess I can only hope so!

And by the way, it bears repeating that the structure and judgements of society (especially society in the time period of this story) are at least partially responsible for the choices these characters (and their real-life counterparts) are forced to make. Ok, end of rant.

A very nice rant.  :)

You said it better than I could.

It is good nontheless that frances posted this article: to make us realize that the main point of BBM still lies undetected by many people...


Offline LuvJackNasty

  • Mod-ChickY Brigade
  • Moderator
  • Jack + Ennis
  • ***
  • Posts: 26177
  • Gender: Female
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #75 on: May 17, 2006, 11:16 AM »
Re: "Brokeback Mountain": a Dissenting view by Dale Carpenter -

I'm not sure where to start with this one. Why do so many people feel the need to oversymplify and over-categorize everything? First, Midge Decter's original theory about homosexuality is as ridiculous as it is ignorant. When I think of the gay people I know that wanted to have children (not to mention the ones lucky enough to do so), I can't help but wonder at her willful blindness. And though D.C. says she was wrong, most of his article supports a lot of what she was saying. As if the choices these characters made were easy ones. As if life is ever that 'tidy' or 'neat' (which as tpe pointed out they are Not). And anyone who thinks the movie glossed over the toll their relationship took on their families simply wasn't paying attention! Did he not see the reunion kiss scene?! I agree with tpe that Carpenter doesn't seem to give the audience enough credit. And he certainly isn't seeing what we see. Clearly, his own pre-formed ideas about homosexuality influenced his interpretation of this story. It's too bad he missed so much of what was there (some people just can't see it). Who knows? Maybe my awareness of the complexity of these issues shaped my understanding and appreciation of the movie as well. I guess I can only hope so!

And by the way, it bears repeating that the structure and judgements of society (especially society in the time period of this story) are at least partially responsible for the choices these characters (and their real-life counterparts) are forced to make. Ok, end of rant.

Well said FlwrChild!
“What Jack remembered and craved in a way he could neither help nor understand was the time that distant summer on Brokeback when Ennis had come up behind him and pulled him close, the silent embrace satisfying some shared and sexless hunger."

You may say I'm a dreamer But I'm not the only one I hope someday you'll join us And the world will live as one ~ Imagine- J. Lennon

Offline welshwitch

  • Jack + Ennis
  • *
  • Posts: 6480
  • Gender: Female
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #76 on: May 18, 2006, 02:18 PM »
Don't know if this is OT or not, but last night BBC2 screened the first episode of an adaptation of "The Line of Beauty". As the main character's a twenty-one-year-old gay man, this has inevitably led to references to BBM in the press.

For what it's worth ( yes, I know!) the overtly sexual gay scenes just showed what an amazing job Ang, Jake and Heath did in BBM - these were nothing like.

Maybe you'll get the three parts eventually  ?on PBS?

Offline tpe

  • Moderator
  • Jack + Ennis
  • ***
  • Posts: 96691
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #77 on: May 18, 2006, 02:26 PM »
Don't know if this is OT or not, but last night BBC2 screened the first episode of an adaptation of "The Line of Beauty". As the main character's a twenty-one-year-old gay man, this has inevitably led to references to BBM in the press.

For what it's worth ( yes, I know!) the overtly sexual gay scenes just showed what an amazing job Ang, Jake and Heath did in BBM - these were nothing like.

Maybe you'll get the three parts eventually  ?on PBS?

Thanks welshwitch.  I was not aware of an adaptation of "The Line of Beauty". Yes, I would be interested in seeing all 3 parts and compare it with the book itself.


Offline stephan

  • Jack + Ennis
  • *
  • Posts: 4651
  • Gender: Male
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #78 on: May 18, 2006, 03:08 PM »

It is good nontheless that frances posted this article: to make us realize that the main point of BBM still lies undetected by many people...

So true, tpe, so despairingly true.

Quote
Don't know if this is OT or not, but last night BBC2 screened the first episode of an adaptation of "The Line of Beauty". As the main character's a twenty-one-year-old gay man, this has inevitably led to references to BBM in the press.

I haven't read that one, but I have two other worls by A. Hollinghurst. Do I gather that this BBC production doesn't err on the side of subtlety ?  :-\  (OT, sorry)

Offline chameau

  • Moderator
  • Jack + Ennis
  • ***
  • Posts: 28148
  • Gender: Male
  • Miss ya little darlin'
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #79 on: May 18, 2006, 06:18 PM »
Heard on CBC Radio

Two Gay officers of the RCMP (Royal Canadian Mounted Police) will marry soon in Nova-Scotia. Theey are allowed to wear their Parade Uniform for the occasion since it's a tradition for the RCMP members.  Tradtion also have offcers to remove their boots during the banquet and put them on the table  :o

I'll surf the net like crazy to find something ''official'' to post here, there must be something on some gay online magazine.  Google this time was helpless.  :P
La dictature c'est ''ferme ta geule'', la démocratie c'est ''cause toujours''
 Jean-Louis Barrault

Offline LuvJackNasty

  • Mod-ChickY Brigade
  • Moderator
  • Jack + Ennis
  • ***
  • Posts: 26177
  • Gender: Female
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #80 on: May 18, 2006, 10:03 PM »
I found a couple of articles for you.

I found a few articles on the RCMP wedding.

This one is short: http://winnipegsun.com/News/Canada/2006/05/18/1585745-sun.html
METEGHAN, N.S. -- On a Friday night this June, Const. Jason Tree and Const. David Connors will don their scarlet dress uniforms, stand before family, friends and co-workers, and wed in what will apparently be the first same-sex marriage in RCMP history. In an interview in their Meteghan home yesterday, the men said they've had great support from the national police force, the community and their families. The pair will be married by a justice of the peace in Yarmouth, N.S., on June 30.

http://www.365gay.com/Newscon06/05/051806mounties.htm
Gay Mounties To Wed
by Derwin Parsons, 365Gay.com Atlantic Canada Bureau Chief

May 18, 2006 - 5:00 pm ET
(Halifax, Nova Scotia) In what may be Canada's highest profile gay wedding of the year two Mounties will wed next month in Nova Scotia.

It is the first same-sex marriage within the RCMP. and the couple will wear the distinctive scarlet dress uniforms the force is known for worldwide the Chronicle Herald newspaper reports.

Const. Jason Tree, 27, and Const. David Connors, 28, met while in high school. They've been a couple since their university days eight years ago.

In an interview with the Chronicle Herald Tee said they have never experienced a problem on the force.  They are so well liked members of the force, also in their dress tunics, will form an honor guard at the wedding.

"This is a first for us," RCMP spokesperson Sgt. Skidmore told the paper. "Certainly, the RCMP welcomes a workforce that is representative of Canadian society, and that is the case here."

Canada last year became the fourth country in the world to legalize same-sex marriage (story). The legislation was passed by then Prime Minister Paul Martin's Liberal government.  The new Conservative government has pledged to overturn the law.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has said he expects to introduce the bill in the fall. (story)

Earlier this week Canadians for Equal Marriage, a national group that supports same-sex marriage said that a survey it conducted of Members of Parliament  oppose re-opening the marriage debate.

Before he could put a repeal bill before the House Harper would need approval of a majority of MPs to reopen the issue.  CEM's poll showed that 158 MPs would vote against re-opening, 137 would vote for it, and 12 are undecided or will abstain.

“What Jack remembered and craved in a way he could neither help nor understand was the time that distant summer on Brokeback when Ennis had come up behind him and pulled him close, the silent embrace satisfying some shared and sexless hunger."

You may say I'm a dreamer But I'm not the only one I hope someday you'll join us And the world will live as one ~ Imagine- J. Lennon

Offline chameau

  • Moderator
  • Jack + Ennis
  • ***
  • Posts: 28148
  • Gender: Male
  • Miss ya little darlin'
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #81 on: May 18, 2006, 10:09 PM »
I'm a proud Canadian tonight  :'(

Thanks for posting LuvJackNasty ;)

OT  :-X  They won't never be able to back off this bill, it's too late
La dictature c'est ''ferme ta geule'', la démocratie c'est ''cause toujours''
 Jean-Louis Barrault

Offline tpe

  • Moderator
  • Jack + Ennis
  • ***
  • Posts: 96691
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #82 on: May 19, 2006, 07:54 AM »
I'm a proud Canadian tonight  :'(

Thanks for posting LuvJackNasty ;)

OT  :-X  They won't never be able to back off this bill, it's too late

You are so right -- to be so proud.


Offline frances

  • Jack + Ennis
  • *
  • Posts: 5153
  • Gender: Female
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #83 on: May 20, 2006, 07:09 AM »
From Volver's press conference in Cannes (May, 18, 2006) :

Finally, asked the inevitable question about whether he has been tempted lately to make a movie in Hollywood, Almodovar said that while he hasn't found the right U.S. project, he did consider one recent film. "I've had some doubts (about making a film in America)," he said, "I was offered 'Brokeback Mountain', (that was) the only one I thought about for some time."





My candle burns at both ends / It will not last the night / But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends / It gives a lovely light (Edna St. Vincent Millay)

Offline Patriot1

  • BBM. What could possibly top it?
  • Jack + Ennis
  • *
  • Posts: 2527
  • Gender: Male
  • In loving memory of Matthew Shepard 1976 - 1998
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #84 on: May 21, 2006, 12:09 AM »
From Volver's press conference in Cannes (May, 18, 2006) :

Finally, asked the inevitable question about whether he has been tempted lately to make a movie in Hollywood, Almodovar said that while he hasn't found the right U.S. project, he did consider one recent film. "I've had some doubts (about making a film in America)," he said, "I was offered 'Brokeback Mountain', (that was) the only one I thought about for some time."

No comment on his abilities as a director, but thank heaven he passed. 

Tell you what...truth is, sometimes I miss you so much I can hardly stand it...

Love is a force of nature.

Offline Italian_Dude

  • Jack + Ennis
  • *
  • Posts: 3713
  • Gender: Male
  • Love is Never Wrong
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #85 on: May 21, 2006, 12:23 AM »
I'm a proud Canadian tonight  :'(

Thanks for posting LuvJackNasty ;)

OT  :-X  They won't never be able to back off this bill, it's too late

I'm proud with you! That article about the mounties was so great.. aw. they met in highschool! <^( <^( <^(!

Now YAY for Canada... dont vote to overturn the law.. !  ;D
You and me together
Through the days and nights
I don't worry 'cause
Everything's gonna be all right
People keep talking
They can say what they like
But all I know is everything's gonna be all right..

Offline ennisandjack

  • Alma
  • ****
  • Posts: 357
  • Gender: Female
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #86 on: May 21, 2006, 12:46 AM »
'Brokeback' clip stirs anger at school
BOYD COUNTY TEACHER SHOWED CLASS FILM SNIPPET

http://www.kentucky.com/mld/kentucky/news/state/14616137.htm?source=rss&channel=kentucky_state

ASSOCIATED PRESS
An English teacher at an Eastern Kentucky school that has been divided over gay issues showed a snippet of Brokeback Mountain to her students in a class.

About 21/2 minutes of the film was shown last week in a senior cinematography class at Boyd County High School, Superintendent Howard K. Osborne said yesterday.

The brief showing of the film, which centers on the sexual relationship between two male sheepherders, upset at least one parent who had a student in the class. Nothing with sexual content was shown.

Osborne said Brokeback Mountain won't be shown again at the school. He declined to say if any action was taken against the teacher who showed the film.

"We've had an investigative inquiry and we've taken appropriate action," Osborne said. He declined to comment further, calling it a "personnel matter."

Osborne said there have been few complaints from parents over the showing of the film. The film won the Oscar this year for its director, Ang Lee.

Students in Boyd County have been divided in recent years over gay issues since a group of students petitioned to form a gay awareness club at the high school in 2002. A lawsuit ensued, and the school district later settled. The agreement called for anti-harassment training for all staff and students.

Kelley Smith said she was upset the film was shown at all.

"If she wanted to show it in class she should have gotten parents permission and if some students wanted to see it, it should have been their choice," said Smith, whose son, Chris, 17, was in the class.

Offline ethan

  • Administrator
  • Jack + Ennis
  • ***
  • Posts: 11247
  • Country: us
  • Gender: Male
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #87 on: May 21, 2006, 05:12 AM »
ennisjackandjack, thanks for posting this article.

Need parents' permission to show the film? It is a cinematography class and BBM is has one of the best cinematography, no? Besides, no sexual content was shown. I will be outraged if the teacher is punished.  ^*) Sorry, I needed to vent.
Remembering Pierre (chameau) 1960-2015, a "Capricorn bro and crazy Frog Uncle from the North Pole." You are missed

Offline Brokeback_Ca

  • Lureen
  • ***
  • Posts: 133
  • Gender: Male
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #88 on: May 21, 2006, 05:31 AM »


I will be outraged if the teacher is punished. 
Me, too. That is outrageous!
The fact is: That Brokeback Mountain has helped to change the world.  We can change the world.  We really can.  We really are.  When the world is made better for one gay or lesbian person, it's better for everyone.    Ang Lee

Offline welshwitch

  • Jack + Ennis
  • *
  • Posts: 6480
  • Gender: Female
Re: News Coverage: May 2006
« Reply #89 on: May 21, 2006, 10:47 AM »
Yes, I agree, but nothing surprises me about the way schools are run these days. In the UK teachers would also be afraid to show BBM, I think, ( though maybe for a different reason than in the States, where it seems to have acquired some political associations? ) and administrators are afraid of their own shadows. Let's just keep everything nice and bland then we won't have any trouble seems to be their mantra.