Arts & Entertainment
OkCupid users can now add preferred pronouns to their profiles
The dating app already offers 13 sexual orientations and 22 gender options


(Photo via Bigstock)
OkCupidĀ rolled out more gender-inclusive options for the dating app making it one of the only mainstream dating apps to have the option besides Grindr.
Users can now choose between he / him, she / herĀ and they / themĀ pronouns to display on their profiles. OkCupidĀ already offersĀ 13 sexual orientations and 22 gender options.
Anyone who does not choose male or female at sign-up will be given the option to choose their pronouns. Users who choose male or female can also display their pronouns but it will only be offered once they have already signed up and are editing their profile. The option will also be available to anyone who doesn’t identify as straight.
Product designer Rowan Rosenthal, who usesĀ they/them pronouns, told the Verge they often had first dates where Rosenthal’s date would refer to them as “she.” However, OKCupid didn’t have a space for pronouns so they couldn’t blame their dates for not knowing. Rosenthal says the option “helps people move past and mitigate the situation.ā
Sports
End of an era: Megan Rapinoe ends her USWNT career
The two-time World Cup winner and Olympian will finish with Seattleās OL Reign- As for Sundayās game, Rapinoe played 54 minutes

CHICAGO ā The final score was United States 2, South Africa 0. But Team USAās victory in Sundayās international friendly was not as significant to the country or to the world as the loss of out gay soccer icon Megan Rapinoe, who played her final match for the U.S. Womenās National Team.
āTo have this night come and to actually feel it and see it from my teammates and from our staff and certainly from the fans, really, it was very special,ā Rapinoe told the Washington Post. For this final match, she donned the former captain once again donned the captainās armband.
The legend walks away from the USWNT at age 38, 17 years and 63 days after her Team USA career began. Sunday marked her 203rd appearance, with a total of 63 goals scored, 73 assists, two World Cup trophies, an Olympic gold medal and the Presidential Medal of Freedom, not to mention several hair colors.
And Rapinoe didnāt just score on the pitch, but also led a successful fight for pay equity with the U.S. Mens National Team, as well as being an outspoken advocate for human rights and transgender equality.
Following the win at Soldier Field, with her fiancƩe Sue Bird and family among the 25-thousand fans in attendance, the soccer federation paid tribute to Rapinoe with a video.
āI felt like I was able to grow up in front of you,ā she said during a tear-filled address to the crowd. āIt has been such an honor to wear this shirt and play out my childhood dream.ā
It seemed fitting that Rapinoe should wrap up her USWNT career in the Windy City, having once played for the Chicago Red Stars, as well as the Philadelphia Independence, MagicJack, Sydney FC, Seattle Sounders Women, Olympique de Lyon, and currently for Seattleās OL Reign. The team will commemorate Rapinoe’s incredible career at its final match of the regular season at Lumen Field on Oct. 6 against the Washington Spirit.
As for Sundayās game, Rapinoe played 54 minutes, and although she did not score a goal or an assist, she came mighty close.
Four minutes into the second half, Rapinoeās corner kick was returned by South Africa;s goalkeeper but USAās Emily Sonnett scored with her head. Although Rapinoe set up the goal, she wasnāt awarded an assist since the ball had been deflected.
Sonnett leaped into Rapinoeās arms and teammates joined the group hug. They then backed away to allow Rapinoe to strike her famous arms outstretched stance, one last time.
A few minutes later, Rapinoeās 25-yard free kick sailed just inches too high and rode the top of the net, denying the champion one final goal.
āI almost got one,ā Rapinoe said. āSo close. Damn.ā
But if there was any doubt Rapinoe felt her work on the field mattered more than what she and her teammates had accomplished off of it, she told reporters at a news conference Saturday that is what she remains most proud of.
āBy a mile,ā she said, smiling.
Related:
USWNT vs. South Africa: Highlights – September 24, 2023:
Sports
Conn. Sun torch NY Liberty in game 1 of WNBA semifinals
The Sun are led by Out lesbian & coach of the year, Stephanie White. Game 2 of the WNBA Semifinals pit the Sun against the Liberty Sept. 26

BROOKLYN, N.Y. ā Despite going 0-4 against the New York Liberty during the 2023 season, the red-hot Connecticut Sun burned their way to a win Sunday at the Barclays Center.
The victory comes just one week after the WNBA named Sun Coach Stephanie White its 2023 Coach of the Year, and two weeks after receiving the same honor from the Associated Press.
The out lesbian is in her first year as coach of the Connecticut team. White has been outspoken as an LGBTQ+ advocate and as the wife of Michelle Fletcher, with whom she is raising three children.
In Sundayās game, DeWanna Bonner ā who got engaged to teammate Alyssa Thomas back in July ā carried the Sun in Game 1, repeating her stellar performance in the previous roundās decisive Game 3 against the Minnesota Lynx, to once again lead Connecticut to victory.
Bonner scored 15 points in the second half on Sunday, notching seven of those in the fourth quarter, and finished with 20 points, seven rebounds, three assists, one steal and three blocks, ensuring her team a chance to take home-court advantage later on in the series.
With six field goals made in the game, Bonner moved into fourth all-time in WNBA postseason history, with 362. Her fiancƩ, Alyssa Thomas, moved into ninth all-time in assists in WNBA postseason history with 10 assists in the game for a total of 213.
Rebecca Allen finished with a postseason career-high 18 points, along with seven rebounds, two steals and two blocks.
Connecticut shot 44.9% on the day, while holding New York to just 33.8.
Game 2 of the WNBA Semifinals pit the Sun against the Liberty on Tuesday, Sept. 26 at 8:00 PM EDT at Barclays Center.
Related:
Connecticut Sun vs. New York Liberty | FULL GAME HIGHLIGHTS | September 24, 2023:
Movies
Bernal shines as real-life gay wrestler in āCassandroā
A polished, engaging film about a real-life figure that carries message of hope

For most Americans, any knowledge of the Mexican wrestling style known as lucha libre is probably limited to what they gleaned from the 2006 Jack Black comedy āNacho Libre,ā which (it should go without saying) is not a movie that anyone should consider āfactual.ā
Now another movie about the subject has arrived, and this time itās not an anything-for-a-laugh fantasy but a biopic about a real luchador who rose to international fame in the 1980s and remains one of the most celebrated and popular figures in Mexican professional wrestling to this day.
The luchador in question is SaĆŗl ArmendĆ”riz ā better known to his fans as āCassandroā ā and the eponymously titled movie about his ascendency begins streaming on Amazon Prime Video Sept. 22 after a limited theatrical release on Sept. 15.
Directed by Roger Ross Williams (who may not be a household name but has the distinction of being the first Black director to receive an Oscar, thanks to the 2009 win of his āMusic by Prudenceā for Best Documentary Short), āCassandroā stars Gael GarcĆa Bernal ā a longtime ally who became a queer fan-favorite thanks to his work in films like āY tu mamĆ” tambiĆ©nā and āBad Educationā ā as the openly gay ArmendĆ”riz and tells the story of his rise to fame in direct defiance of the culturally reinforced homophobia that permeated the professional environment of his field. Set in the 1980s, it follows the future superstar from the early days of his career, tracing his steps as he forges a path to success as an exótico ā a wrestler who assumes a flamboyant persona based in queer (and largely homophobic) stereotypes ā while simultaneously rising above the stigma of his sexuality and his impoverished upbringing to become a pioneering force in LGBTQ+ acceptance within the deeply traditional Latino culture to which he belonged.
Like most biopics, it also focuses on the personal: much of the filmās first half is dominated by the relationship between ArmendĆ”riz and his mother, Yocasta (Perla De La Rosa), a professional āgood-time girlā whose acceptance of his queer identity is absolute yet tempered by her fear for his well-being. There is also a long-running thread about his desire for approval from his father ā a married man with a ālegitimateā family in which he is decidedly not included ā and the pattern in his personal life of repeating that dynamic in romantic relationships with unavailable lovers like closeted big-name luchador āEl Comandanteā (RaĆŗl Castillo) and an apparently fluid but firmly āon the DLā associate named Felipe (Benito Antonio MartĆnez Ocasio, aka Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny for those unfamiliar with his ārealā name) who clearly meets more than just his need for a reliable supplier of cocaine ā it is the ā80s, after all ā while maintaining a strict-if-not-quite-convincing āno homoā stance.
Ultimately, though, as presented by first-time narrative feature director Williams (who co-wrote the screenplay with David Teague after previously covering ArmendĆ”rizā story in the 2016 documentary short āThe Man Without a Maskā), āCassandroā is driven by a narrative about overcoming and reclaiming the pejorative cultural tropes around queer sexuality and turning them on their ear as a means toward fully inhabiting queer identity. Blessed with a relatively supportive mother ā a plainly-implied career sex worker who is depicted as much as a kindred spirit as she is a maternal figure ā and comfortable enough in his own skin to flaunt his ādevianceā in the public eye, the filmās version of ArmendĆ”riz moves through a clearly defined arc toward self-acceptance on his own terms.
Much of this is mirrored, of course, in the tale of his accelerated rise to stardom, in which he wins the hearts of lucha libre fans enough to subvert the accepted formula that the exótico is always the loser, and reinforced by the ways in which he responds to the various long-term relationships in his life ā some nurturing, some toxic ā as his career trajectory helps him to recognize his own worth. In this way, āCassandroā becomes a true-life tale of queer affirmation, the saga of a person who overcomes hardline traditional expectations and deep-rooted social prejudice to use his own queer identity as an avenue to personal empowerment.
That, of course, is exactly what it sets out to be: itās an unabashedly pro-queer narrative that brings the highest level of professional artistry into the mix, using it to convey that subtle blend of aloof observation and emotional engagement that can sometimes win viewersā hearts and minds.
In recognition of that artistry, the foremost acknowledgement must go to Bernal, who turns in a career-highlight performance as both ArmendĆ”riz and his over-the-top titular alter-ego, which requires an impressive display of physicality in addition to keen emotional intelligence. The actor is more than capable on both fronts, and while it would frankly be nice to see one of our queer heroes portrayed in a mainstream film by an actual queer actor, itās hard to complain when the actor is someone like Bernal, who finds within his own lived experience the authenticity to make it all ring true. Kudos are also deserved for both De La Rosa, who establishes an emotional core to the story that endures even after she leaves it, and openly-queer actor Roberta Colindrez as the trainer (and friend) that helps āCassandroā conquer the world of professional lucha libre wrestling by literally flipping the script.
Still, though there is clearly a heartfelt desire to inspire behind the movieās portrayal of its heroās unlikely rise to glory, āCassandroā doesnāt quite deliver the kind of unequivocal āfeel-goodā validation for which it aims. Thereās something rote about the story as itās told to us; ArmendĆ”rizā success seems a foregone conclusion, and his personal struggles ā though impeccably acted and depicted with sincerity ā feel somehow manufactured for the sake of a desired emotional response. Thereās a sense of āHollywoodā about the filmās approach, a deliberate framing of the material which makes this real-life success story seem much too easy, its subjectās struggles too much like tropes to deliver the kind of authentic satisfaction the movie clearly aims for. Built on familiar formula, it all feels a little too predictable ā especially for a saga centered in such a messy, wild-and-wooly environment as professional lucha libre. Yes, it inspires, but much of that is accomplished by playing to sentiment, by what seems a deliberate effort toward building and reaffirming a legend rather than revealing the real human experience behind it, and many details of Armendarizā real story are left out ā a suicide attempt, a struggle with substance abuse, even the origin of his iconic stage name as a tribute to a brothel-keeper of whom he was fond ā that might have made for a less-sanitized and much more interesting story.
Such quibbles, however, are probably a moot point for most viewers; while āCassandroā might feel a little too hollow to satisfy completely, itās a polished, entertaining, and engaging film about a real-life figure that should ā and does ā carry a message of hope and transcendence for queer audiences.
Why would we ever complain about that?
Books
New book goes behind the scenes of āA League of Their Ownā
āNo Crying in Baseballā offers tears, laughs, and more

āNo Crying in Baseball: The Inside Story of āA League of Their Ownā
By Erin Carlson
c.2023, Hachette Books
$29/320 pages
You donāt usually think of Madonna as complaining of being ādirty all dayā from playing baseball. But thatās what the legendary diva did during the shooting of āA League of Their Own,ā the 1992 movie, beloved by queers.
āNo Crying in Baseball,ā the fascinating story behind āA League of Their Own,ā has arrived in time for the World Series. Nothing could be more welcome after Amazon has cancelled season 2 of its reboot (with the same name) of this classic film.

In this era, people donāt agree on much. Yet, āA League of Their Ownā is loved by everyone from eight-year-old kids to 80-year-old grandparents.
The movie has strikes, home runs and outs for sports fans; period ambience for history buffs; and tears, laughs and a washed-up, drunk, but lovable coach for dramady fans.
The same is true for āNo Crying in Baseball.ā This āmaking ofā story will appeal to history, sports and Hollywood aficionados. Like āAll About Eveā and āThe Rocky Horror Picture Show,ā āA League of Their Ownā is Holy queer Writ.
Carlson, a culture and entertainment journalist who lives in San Francisco, is skilled at distilling Hollywood history into an informative, compelling narrative. As with her previous books, āIāll Have What Sheās Having: How Nora Ephronās three Iconic Films Saved the Romantic Comedyā and āQueen Meryl: The Iconic Roles, Heroic Deeds, and Legendary Life of Meryl Streep,ā āNo Crying in Baseball,ā isnāt too āeducational.ā Itās filled with gossip to enliven coffee dates and cocktail parties.
āA League of Their Ownā is based on the true story of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League (AAGPBL). From 1943 to 1954, more than 600 women played in the league in the Midwest. The leagueās players were all white because the racism of the time prohibited Black women from playing. In the film, the characters are fictional. But the team the main characters play for ā the Rockford Peaches ā was real.
While many male Major and Minor League Baseball players were fighting in World War II, chewing gum magnate Philip K. Wrigley, who owned the Chicago Cubs, founded the league. He started the AAGPBL, āTo keep spectators in the bleachers,ā Carlson reports, āand a storied American sportāmore important: his business afloat.ā
In 1943, the Office of War Information warned that the baseball season could be āscrappedā ādue to a lack of men,ā Carlson adds.
āA League of Their Ownā was an ensemble of womenās performances (including Rosie OāDonnell as Doris, Megan Cavanagh as Marla, Madonna as Mae, Lori Petty as Kit and Geena Davis as Dottie) that would become legendary.
Girls and women still dress up as Rockford Peaches on Halloween.
Tom Hanksās indelible portrayal of coach Jimmy Dugan, Gary Marshallās depiction of (fictional) league owner Walter Harvey and Jon Lovitzās portrayal of Ernie have also become part of film history.
Filming āA League of Their Own,ā Carlson vividly makes clear, was a gargantuan effort. There were āactresses who canāt play baseballā and ābaseball players who canāt act,ā Penny Marshall said.
The stadium in Evansville, Ind., was rebuilt to look like it was in the 1940s āwhen the players and extras were in costume,ā Carlson writes, āit was easy to lose track of what year it was.ā
āNo Crying in Baseballā isnāt written for a queer audience. But, Carlson doesnāt pull any punches.
Many of the real-life AAGPBL players who OāDonnell met had same-sex partners, OāDonnell told Carlson.
āWhen Penny, angling for a broad box-office hit chose to ignore the AAGPGLās queer history,ā Carlson writes, āshe perpetuated a cycle of silence that muzzled athletes and actresses alike from coming out on the wider stage.ā
āIt was, as they say, a different time,ā she adds.
Fortunately, Carlsonās book isnāt preachy. Marshall nicknames OāDonnell and Madonna (who become buddies) āRoā and āMo.ā Kodak is so grateful for the one million feet of film that Marshall shot that it brings in a high school marching band. Along with a lobster lunch. One day, an assistant director āstreaked the set to lighten the mood,ā Carlson writes.
āNo Crying in Baseball,ā is slow-going at first. Marshall, who died in 2018, became famous as Laverne in āLaverne & Shirley.ā Itās interesting to read about her. But Carlson devotes so much time to Marshallās bio that you wonder when sheāll get to āA League of Their Own.ā
Thankfully, after a couple of innings, the intriguing story of one of the best movies ever is told.
Youāll turn the pages of āNo Crying in Baseballā even if you donāt know a center fielder from a short stop.
The Blade may receive commissions from qualifying purchases made via this post.
Celebrity News
Angelica Ross becomes latest Trans talent to choose advocacy over Hollywood bullsh*t
Ross is done. Done with Hollywood, done with us. She says āIām moving back to Georgia to prepare to run for office

HOLLYWOOD – Angelica Ross, Pose and American Horror Story star, appears set to chuck Hollywoodās fantasy horror stories for Americaās REAL horror showā¦. Politics.
To quote the late Peter Finch of the yesteryear film about media, Network, she is mad as hell and not going to take it anymore. She is not the first major transgender talent to do so either. Pose writer, director and producer Janet Mock also came out blazing against Hollywood with both guns a fire, āI am angryā she shouted in a speech she delivered at a Pose premiere party a few years back. āāFāk Hollywood ⦠Does this make you uncomfortable? It should. It should make you fāking shake in your motherfāking boots. This is speaking truth. This is what āPoseā is.ā She asserted about the lesser pay she received than other white producers. āItās a show, but it means so much to everyone to āensure that we enable black and brown trans women to make itā because that sounds good. It makes you comfortable to talk like that because then I donāt scare you into facing the fāking truth. You all have stomped on us.ā
One black trans woman who stood and cheered her on that night was Angelica Ross.
Ross speculated to The Hollywood Reporter that her spiritual support of Mock that night may have inspired bad blood with top boss Ryan Murphy. āI was in the audience, and I was standing up and supporting her and telling her vocally, āIāve got your back.ā Iām not saying that I agree with the way that she did things, but Iām like, āJanetās very smart. Why would she do something so dramatic?ā And I knew there had to be a reason. And when I talked to her, she told me, āGirl, you think this is the first time Ryan Murphyās hearing me say any of this? Iāve said this all to him.ā
Angelica Ross thought Murphy was going to be her hero. Instead, he turned out to be her ghost. She had pitched the idea of an AHS with an all black woman cast. He was on board and enthusiastic.
Until he wasnāt. Then he was gone, no explanation, and no renewal of her for a future season of AHS either.
As Ross tried to make sense, and capitalize on exercising power in Hollywood, (āWhat I witnessed ā my eyes just bucked open. I just wasnāt sure what I was witnessing. I definitely was witnessing a lot of white men on set in kind of a white-male-dominated spaceā), she found herself embracing another power that was not so insanely confusing: advocacy. āEver since Iāve been on Pose, your white actors arenāt clocking in like weāre clocking in. We have to go out there now because Pose is this big show. And youāre saying that Pose is not just entertainment, itās an act of advocacy. Youāre not calculating that you have turned your actors also into advocates.ā
So, with the ambition of an artist, and the integrity of an advocate, Ross observed the power brokering of those who might not have had power in the past: white women. She was both admiring, and appalled. āSomehow folks like Emma Roberts and others ā I mean even Billie Lourd, but Billie Lourd Iām cool with ā those girls were able to make moves on the set. They were able to open up their mouths and things moved. Sometimes I didnāt know if I was watching a mean girl or if I was just watching a woman standing up for herself.ā
She took the observation to heart and stood up against transphobia and racism on the set. One incident was reportedly when Roberts mistook making a transphobic comment as an āinnocentā attempt to be shady. Ross called her out on it. According to Ross, Roberts later regretted her behavior āEmmaās got big ballsā¦This girl is no damsel in distress, everā and she called to apologize. What ensued was a poignant discussion on what it means to be an āally.ā Roberts earnestly told Ross she wanted to be one, and that she saw Rossās advocacy. Ross responded, āYou canāt call yourself an ally. It is an action. You need to be real with me in this conversation. Iām being real with you. You were being messyā¦Oh, so you see me? You see me talking about the anti-Blackness? Are you using your platform to amplify the work that Iām doing? No, you havenāt. So what kind of ally are you?ā
Mic drop.
Ross also found herself having to stand up against the harassment of a crew member who was frequently by her side sporting Trump-ian ilk racism including BUILD THAT WALL and I DONāT KNEEL. She put her foot down and demanded that director John Gray do something about it. Gray did something. He ran to HR,
As the bureaucrats poured though employment manuals trying to find the homogenous āmake everyone happyā solution, Ross got pissed and posted about the situation on the X that used to be Twitter. This freaked everyone out, including Murphy himself, and they all demanded she take her post down.
Clearly all involved were oblivious to the fact that they were suppressing Rossās āfree speechā while ruminating over the āfree speechā rights of the white dude grip on the set.
āIāve dealt with this before. This is not my first time at the rodeo of dealing with that energy of white people who think that they are doing good but wonāt check their own selves when someone Black or of the people theyāre trying to help is telling them, āYou have a blind spotā Ross says.
That is all in the past now though. Ross is done. Done with Hollywood, done with us. She tells the Hollywood Reporter, āIām moving back to Georgia to prepare to run for office. Iāve been consulting with Renitta Shannon, a former Georgia state representative who also just recently ran for lieutenant governor. I go into candidate and campaign training next month. I have also been speaking with folks like Bruce Franks Jr., who is also a Black politician from Missouri who shook the table. So Iām fully walking away from Hollywood. But Iām always going to be who I am. You donāt have to be on TV to be a creative person, to live a creative life.ā
So. A powerful actress got her feelings hurt, but may have learned how to be a better and true ally, and we all are waiting to see her prove it. A hugely powerful, talented and progressive media titan got spanked (again) and hopefully will cherish, elevate and value the well spring he heralded publicly: beautiful forthright trans women of color.
And an advocate burned in the capitalistic, transphobic, racist heat of American business has risen as a phoenix to become a professional powerful ADVOCATE, no more to fight using subtleties and stories, but to star as herself taking on the establishment head on.
That is a show we all need.
*****************************************************************************************

Rob Watson is the host of the popular Hollywood-based radio/podcast show RATED LGBT RADIO.
He is an established LGBTQ columnist and blogger having written for many top online publications including The Los Angeles Blade, The Washington Blade, Parents Magazine, the Huffington Post, LGBTQ Nation, Gay Star News, the New Civil Rights Movement, and more.
He served as Executive Editor for The Good Man Project, has appeared on MSNBC and been quoted in Business Week and Forbes Magazine.
He is CEO of Watson Writes, a marketing communications agency, and can be reached at [email protected] .
Events
QueerceaƱera: Celebrating LAtinx Heritage Month
Queerceañera is an inclusive take on the coming-of-age quinceañera tradition throughout Latin America and the United States

LOS ANGELES – Get Ready, LA!Ā This September, the Center will host its inauguralĀ Latinx Heritage MonthĀ commemoration withĀ QueerceaƱeraĀ (queer-seh for short), an inclusive take on the coming-of-age quinceaƱera tradition throughout Latin America and the United States.
Hosted byĀ RuPaul’s Drag RaceĀ Season 15 alum, Salina EsTitties,Ā our Queerce is a cultural summit and community cotillion rooted in accessibility and unbridled celebration; quinceaƱeras are often regarded as out-of-reach status symbols, and our event breaks the gender norms and structures of said celebrations. Both vibrant and bold, Queerce will spotlight LAās richly diverse queer, Latinx diasporic experiences.
RuPaulās Drag Race MĆ©xicoĀ host ValentinaĀ will be honored at the event,Ā kicking off a year-long ambassadorship with the Center to uplift and support outreach within the Latinx community. She will sit down for aĀ keynote conversation with Mexican-Native American entertainer,Ā Miss Benny.Ā The duo will be honored for their trailblazing work in entertainment as breakout, culture-shifting nonbinary and trans artists, respectively.
PROGRAM
ā 5:30PM – Doors + Bars Open
ā 6:00ā7:15PM – Quince-style cocktail reception and a mixer in our courtyard, and then guests will be escorted into our Renberg Theatre.
ā 7:15ā8:30PM – Emceed by celebrity host Salina EsTitties, the stage program will consist of show stopping performances, special honoree presentation and keynote conversations with influential figures from the LAtinx community.
ā 8:30ā10:30PM ā Tiempo de Vals — the post-program offers more cocktails and surprise live performance elements in the courtyard for guests to enjoy before dancing into the evening.
ASL provided for the program. Event venue is wheelchair accessible.
Date and time
Friday, September 29 Ā· 5:30 – 10:30pm PDT
Location
The Village at Ed Gould Plaza1125 N McCadden Place Los Angeles, CA 90038
More event + special guest announcements coming soon!
Celebrity News
Declared an Icon, John Waters gets Hollywood Walk of Fame Star
His first words as he ascended the podium for the Walk of Fame honor: āHere I amā¦closer to the gutter than everā

HOLLYWOOD, Calif. – Today, the famed Hollywood Walk of Fame became a little more rainbow than it had been before. With gilded star etchings depicting icons on every corner, the powers that be dedicated September 18th to a man who arguably helped thrust LGBTQ visibility into a culture that was probably not ready at the time to receive it. The modern-day fascists amongst us might even call him a āgroomer.ā
We call him John Waters.
Waters first arrived in Hollywood in 1970. He parked at Hollywood & Vine and received his first bit of Los Angeles recognition.
He got a jaywalking ticket.
Outspoken and brash, Waters introduced outsider culture and heralded gay and transgender visibility into American cinema when the Stonewall uprising was still a very recent memory. His 1972 film Pink Flamingos was brazenly transgender affirming. It powerfully and glamorously flew in the faces of audiences while trans people only faced marginalization and were stigmatized in the Nixon Viet Nam and Watergate era.
His film Hairspray was first a cult favorite and in later iterations, a hit Broadway musical, and a second mainstream hit movie. It featured LGBTQ characters and a leading character in drag. Waters has also written several LGBTQ themed books including Shock Value and Role Models.
Part of the charm of John Waters is his knack for not taking himself, or any of us, too seriously. His first words as he ascended the podium for the Walk of Fame honor: āHere I amā¦closer to the gutter than ever!ā
āI hope the most desperate showbiz rejects walk over me here and feel some sort of respect and strength,ā he said later paying tribute to his greatest inspirations: the underdogs.
Waters dedicated his star to his parents. Pat and John Waters, who had been horrified by his earliest films, but encouraged him to pursue Hollywood none-the-less.Ā āWhat else could I do?ā he mused.
All in all, Waters was āastonishedā over the tribute. He thanked Outfest for sponsoring the event and for thinking he was āgay enough to receive it.ā
Ever the director, and thinking ahead, he took a moment to make a recommendation for whom he thinks should be Hollywood Boulevardās next star recipient:
Divine.
Film critic and historian Leonard Maltin summed up John Waters this way: “John Waters is a national treasure, a unique and original voice in American cinema. His films are subversive, hilarious, and thought-provoking, and they have helped to change the way we think about outsider culture and LGBTQ+ representation.”
Now Waters has his day, and his star, immortalized forever on the famous Hollywood path. We can only hope his effect on American culture, where the āoutsiderā can stand tall, proves to be as solid.
Related:
John Waters Walk of Fame Ceremony:
*****************************************************************************************

Rob Watson is the host of the popular Hollywood-based radio/podcast show RATED LGBT RADIO.
He is an established LGBTQ columnist and blogger having written for many top online publications including The Los Angeles Blade, The Washington Blade, Parents Magazine, the Huffington Post, LGBTQ Nation, Gay Star News, the New Civil Rights Movement, and more.
He served as Executive Editor for The Good Man Project, has appeared on MSNBC and been quoted in Business Week and Forbes Magazine.
He is CEO of Watson Writes, a marketing communications agency, and can be reached atĀ [email protected]Ā .
Movies
Despite Hollywood strikes, a number of queer films, TV shows coming in fall
āRustin,ā āNyadā among seasonās highlights

Weāre not going to lie: the prospects for our fall entertainment (and beyond) are looking grimmer than usual, thanks to the strikes that have Hollywoodās writers and actors off the job for an indefinite chunk of the future. Sure, there are lots of titles that were in the can and ready to go before the talent walked off the set, but with no certain end date in sight and a union-mandated ban on participation in publicity efforts, much of the ready-to-go content remains in release-date limbo, while prospects for new material being produced anytime soon are pretty much nil.
Even so, weāve managed to put together a solid list of titles that are officially on the slate for this autumn, and we think it will give you more than enough to look forward to while we all wait for the entertainment industry to cobble together some kind of mutually acceptable agreement that will allow it to get back to work.
The list, by release date, is below.
Cassandro, Sept. 15 (Theaters)/Sept. 22 (Prime Video)
Mexican actor Gael GarcĆa Bernal, long a queer fan favorite thanks to his roles in films like āY tu mamĆ” tambiĆ©nā and āBad Education,ā stars as the real-life SaĆŗl ArmendĆ”riz, a gay amateur wrestler from El Paso who reinvents himself as the flamboyant title character and rises to international stardom as the āLiberace of Lucha Libreā ā turning both the macho wrestling world and his own life upside down in the process. Acquired by Amazon even before its world premiere at this yearās Sundance Festival, this wild-and-wooly biopic was directed by Roger Ross Williams, who became the first African-American director to win an Oscar for his 2009 short film āMusic by Prudence,ā and it has all the earmarks of a āmust-see.ā Also starring Roberta Colindrez, Perla de la Rosa, JoaquĆn CosĆo, and RaĆŗl Castillo, with special appearances from El Hijo del Santo and Benito Antonio MartĆnez Ocasio (aka Bad Bunny, for those who didnāt know).
Sex Education, Season 4, Sept. 21 (Netflix)
The cast of this runaway UK hit has come a long way since the series debuted in 2019, with the imminent debut of breakout star Ncuti Gatwa as the new titular Time Lord of the venerable cult sci-fi series āDr. Whoā and his appearance, alongside co-stars Emma Mackey and Connor Swindells, in Greta Gerwigās blockbuster hit āBarbie,ā but thatās not enough to keep the whole student body from reuniting for a final season as they join fellow headliners Asa Butterfield and Gillian Anderson to wrap up the deliciously scandalous storylines that have made this good-natured dramedy about life and sexual discovery in a rural English secondary school a favorite for queer and straight audiences alike. Besides taking us along with its irresistible cast of misfits on a new set of adventures, it features āSchittās Creekā star and co-creator Dan Levy in special appearance as a new character ā but even without that extra icing on the cake, we would have been ready to click āwatch nowā the second this one drops. If youāre already a fan, you donāt need our endorsement to bring you on board; if youāre not, we advise you to do a catch-up binge on seasons 1-3 in time to join the rest of us as we enjoy the final batch of episodes from this refreshing, queer-embracing, sex-positive slice of saucy absurdity.
American Horror Story: Delicate, Sept. 21 (FX/Hulu)

The 12th season of Ryan Murphyās now-venerable and uncompromisingly queer horror anthology series has been, like the preceding installments, shrouded in mystery ā though the inclusion of reality star Kim Kardashian in a starring capacity has garnered much publicity, and not a little controversy, due to skepticism about her acting chops. Despite these misgivings, itās still probably one of the most anticipated entries on this list, the return of a queer fan favorite that ā while it may have a reputation for uneven quality, haphazard storytelling, and fizzling out before it reaches the end ā continues to draw the kind of audience numbers that has made it a tentpole autumn TV staple for a dozen years and counting. Sure, itās a guilty pleasure, but we all have our share of those, and when they come in as slick and stylish a package as this elegantly garish and unapologetically campy pulp culture stalwart, who can resist? Also starring series veteran Emma Roberts, with fellow alums Zachary Quinto, Billie Lourd, Denis OāHare, and Leslie Grossman also coming to the table, as well as Golden Globe winner Michaela JaĆ© Rodriguez and newcomer to the Murphy fold Matt Czuchry (āGilmore Girls,ā āThe Good Wifeā).
Dicks: The Musical, Oct. 6 limited/Oct. 20 wide (Theaters)
Comedy legend Larry Charles (āSeinfeld,ā āBoratā) directed this outrageously titled and absurdly satirical farce, adapted by screenwriters and co-stars Aaron Jackson and Josh Sharp from a stage production they created as members of the Upright Citizenās Brigade. The pair star as two self-obsessed, conspicuously heterosexual businessmen and very close friends who discover they are also long-lost identical twins, sparking a āriotously funny and depravedā plot to reunite their eccentric divorced parents (Nathan Lane, Megan Mullally). Also starring Megan Thee Stallion and Bowen Yang (as God, no less), and teasing the kind of campy, transgressive vibe that marks all the true classics of underground queer cinema, the press for this one touts it as āa queer, hard-R musical comedy which may very well additionally be a future midnight-movie classic.ā Frankly, thatās more than enough to earn it a place on our not-to-be-missed list.
Eismayer, Oct. 6 (Theaters/Oct. 10 Digital)
Fans of queer foreign movies can look forward to this Austrian entry, an award-winner at Venice and other prestigious film festivals, from director David Wagner. Gerhard Liebmann stars in the title role, a legendary real-life drill instructor in the Austrian Armed Forces; renowned for his brutal toughness and his uber-macho image, he leads a double life of anonymous sexual encounters with men behind his wifeās back, but when an openly gay new recruit (Luka DimiÄ) challenges both his authority and his rigid ideas about masculinity, he finds himself drawn into a relationship that will leave āhis closeted existence shaken to the core.ā A boot camp drama that challenges toxic traditional conceptions of what it means to ābe a manā ā especially one that is based on a true story ā is always welcome, and this one comes with a substantial amount of praise to recommend it. Also starring Julia Koschitz and Anton Noori, it might not be āfeel-goodā entertainment, but the buzz says itās worth seeking out for anyone with a taste for raw and uncompromising cinema.
The Matthew Shepard Story: An American Hate Crime, Oct. 9 (ID Discovery)
Just in time for the 25th anniversary of his death, Investigation Discovery premieres a new documentary honoring Matthew Shepardās life and legacy, featuring interviews from Matthewās friends and allies, as well as local journalists and community members, and commentary from key celebrity voices deeply affected by Matthewās tragic story, including Rosie OāDonnell, Andrew Rannells and Adam Lambert. Considered one of the worst anti-LGBTQ hate crimes in American history, Matthewās shocking murder captured Americaās attention and became a turning point in the fight for queer rights, jump-starting a long-overdue conversation about the discrimination, danger, and violence that many LGBTQ Americans face ā especially in rural communities ā every day, and if weāre being honest, thereās been no shortage of documentaries about it. Even so, this one, which benefits from the perspective granted by time and also casts attention on the progress society has made toward queer acceptance (as well as the work that still need to be done), promises to offer the kind of scope that gives it a relevance beyond simply lamenting the unjust cruelty perpetrated against a young gay man who ā like all martyrs ā became an unwilling touchstone in the eternal fight against bigotry, bullying, and brutality fueled by hate.
Candela, Oct. 10 (Digital)
Another international offering with a somewhat more exotic premise, this festival-acclaimed thriller co-produced by France and the Dominican Republic is set in the city of Santo Domingo, where the fates of three strangers ā a privileged young high society woman, a lonely and alcoholic police lieutenant, and a charismatic cabaret drag performer ā are entwined by the death of a young poet and drug dealer on the eve of an advancing hurricane. Directed by AndrĆ©s FarĆas Cintrón and touted as āa Caribbean pop movie,ā itās been noted by advance reviewers for its stunning imagery and visual style, its offbeat and captivating characters, and an āedge-of-your seatā suspenseful plot full of meticulously-crafted twists and turns. Starring Cesar DomĆnguez, FĆ©lix GermĆ”n, Sarah Jorge León, Ruth Emeterio, Frank Perozo, Yamile Scheker, and Katherine Montes, you wonāt find this one at your local multiplex, but it should be well worth the handful of clicks it takes to queue it up on your VOD platform of choice.
Anatomy of a Fall, Oct. 13 (Theaters)
French filmmaker Justine Trietās (āSibylā) latest film was entered as a competitor for the Queer Palm at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival, but it ended up taking the festivalās top prize, the prestigious Palme dāOr. Publicized as āa Hitchcockian procedural,ā it centers on a German writer (Sandra Hüller) accused of murdering her French husband, who must prove her innocence at trial with only the testimony of her blind son ā the sole witness ā to back up her claims. Hüllerās performance has won raves, and the film was a hit when it went to general release this summer in its native France (only āBarbieā topped it at the box office); as for details about the nature of the movieās queer relevance, youāll have to find out the details firsthand, because advance press on this side of the Atlantic has remained scrupulously spoiler-free, though Triet has revealed that she drew inspiration from the case of Amanda Knox, who was notoriously accused of murdering her roommate during a trip to Italy. Our verdict is that it will be worth the effort.
Nyad, Oct. 20 (Theaters/Nov. 5 Netflix)

Billed as āa remarkable true story of tenacity, friendship and the triumph of the human spirit,ā this high-profile biopic stars four-time Academy Award nominee Annette Bening as marathon swimmer Diana Nyad, who, three decades after exchanging the life of a world-class athlete for a prominent career as a sports journalist, becomes obsessed with becoming the first person to complete the 110-mile journey from Cuba to Florida ā known as as the āMount Everestā of swims ā without a shark cage. The screenplay by Julia Cox is adapted from Nyadās own memoir (āFind a Wayā), two Oscar-winning documentarians (Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin, responsible for the popular and acclaimed āFree Soloā) make their narrative film debut at the helm, and Bening is joined onscreen by two-time Oscar-winner Jodie Foster as her best friend and coach. What else could anyone ask for in a strong, inspirational piece of lesbian-themed filmmaking? Count us in.
Rustin, Nov. 3 (Theaters/Nov. 17 Netflix)
Probably the most high-profile piece of queer filmmaking of the upcoming season is this biopic about the gay Black architect of 1963ās world-changing March on Washington, Bayard Rustin. Starring Emmy-winner Colman Comingo in the title role and helmed by five-time Tony-winning director George C. Wolfe, this ambitious fictionalized portrait of an extraordinary, history-making queer hero shines a long overdue spotlight on a man who, alongside giants like the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr., Adam Clayton Powell Jr., and Ella Baker, dreamed of a better world and inspired a movement by marching. Notably, it also comes from Higher Ground, a production company founded by Barack and Michelle Obama, and its August premiere at the Telluride Film Festival resulted in a 100% (so far) approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes from the critics who were there to see it. Besides the powerfully charismatic Domingo, the film features an all-star cast including Chris Rock, Glynn Turman, Aml Ameen, Gus Halper, CCH Pounder, DaāVine Joy Randolph, Johnny Ramey, Michael Potts, and special appearances from Jeffrey Wright and Audra McDonald.

Shorter days, cooler temps, and longer nights can send you skittering inside, right? Donāt forget to bring one of these great books with you when you settle in for the fall.
Releasing in September, look for āBetween the Head and the Handsā by James Chaarani, a novel about a young Muslim man whose family turns him away for being gay, and the teacher who takes him in (ECW Press, Sept. 10). Also reach for āCleat Cute: A Novel,ā by Meryl Wilsner (St. Martinās Griffin, Sept. 19), a fun YA novel of soccer, competition, and playing hard (to get).
You may want something light and fun for now, so find āThe Out Side: Trans and Nonbinary Comics,ā compiled by The Kao, Min Christiansen, and Daniel Daneman (Andrews McMeel Publishing). Itās a collection of comics by nonbinary and trans artists, and you can find it Sept. 26.
The serious romantic will want to find āDaddies of a Different Kind: Sex and Romance Between Older and Younger Gay Menā by Tony Silva (NYU Press), a book about new possibilities in love; itās available Sept. 12. Historians will want āGlitter and Concrete: A Cultural History of Drag in New York Cityā by Elyssa Maxx Goodman (Hanover Square Press, Sept. 12); and āQueer Blues: The Hidden Figures of Early Blues Musicā by Darryl W. Bullock (Omnibus Press, Sept. 14).
In October, youāll want to find āBlackouts: A Novelā by Justin Torres (Farrar, Straus & Giroux), a somewhat-fantasy novel about a dying man who passes a powerful book on to his caretaker. Look for it Oct. 10. Also on Oct. 10, grab āLove at 350Āŗā by Lisa Peers (Dial Press Trade Paperback), a novel about love at a chance meeting at a baking-show contest and āThe Christmas Swap: A Novelā by Talia Samuels (Alcove Press), a holiday rom-com.
Youāre just warming up for the fall. Look for āIris Kelly Doesnāt Dateā by Ashley Herring Blake (Berkley, Oct. 24) and āLet Me Out,ā a queer horror novel by Emmett Nahil and George Williams (Oni Press, Oct. 3).
Nonfiction lovers will want to find āDis⦠Miss Gender?ā by Anne Bray (MIT Press, Oct. 24), a wide, long look at gender and fluidity; āFriends of Dorothy: A Celebration of LGBTQ+ Iconsā by Anthony Uzarowski and Alejandro Mogollo Diez (Imagine, Oct. 10); and ā300,000 Kisses: Tales of Queer Love from the Ancient Worldā by Sean Hewitt and Luke Edward Hall (Clarkson Potter, Oct. 10).
For November, look for āUnderburn: A Novelā by Bill Gaythwaite (Delphinium), a layered novel about Hollywood, family, and second chances. It comes out Nov. 14. For something you can really sink your teeth into, find āThe Bars are Ours: Histories and Cultures of Gay Bars in America, 1960 and Afterā by Lucas Hilderbrand (Duke University Press, Nov 21). Itās a huge look at the spaces that played strong roles in LGBTQ history.
And if youāre looking for yourself or for a special gift in December, check out āTrans Hirstory in 99 Objectsā by David Evans Frantz, Christina Linden, and Chris E. Vargas. Itās an arty coffee table book from Hirmer Publishers of Munich. You can find it Dec. 20. Also look for āSecond Chances in New Port Stephen: A Novelā by T.J. Alexander (Atria / Emily Bestler, Dec. 5) and if all else fails, ask for or give a gift certificate.
Seasonās readings!
Music & Concerts
Hip-Hopās complicated history with queer representation
At 50, experts say the genre still doesnāt fully welcome LGBTQ inclusion

I didnāt really start listening to rap until my college years. Like many queer Black children who grow up in the closet, shielded by puritanical Christianity from the beauty of a diverse world, I longed to be myself. But the affirming references I could pull from ā in moments of solitude away from the wrath and disdain of family and friends ā were in theater and pop music.
The soundtrack to my teenage years was an endless playlist of pop divas like Lady Gaga and BeyoncƩ, whose lyrics encouraged me to sashay my hips anytime I strutted through a long stretch of corridor.
I was also obsessed with the consuming presence of powerful singers like Patti LaBelle, Whitney Houston, and the hypnosis that was Chaka Khan. My childhood, an extrapolation of Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays spent in church groups, choir practices, and worship services, necessitated that I be a fan of throaty, from-the-stomach singing. But something about the way these artists presented themselves warmed my queer little heart. LaBelle wore avant garde geometric hairdos paired with heavily shoulder-padded blazers. Houston loved an elegant slender gown. And Khan? It was the voluminous red mane that gently caressed her lower back for me.
Listening to rap music in college was a political experience. My sociology classes politicized me and so it was only natural that I listened to rap music that expressed trauma, joy, and hope in the Black experience. However, I felt disconnected from the music because of a dearth of queer representation in the genre.
Nevertheless, groups like Outkast felt nostalgic. While delivering hedonistic lyrics at lightning speed, AndrĆ© 3000 ā one half of the rap duo ā mesmerized with his sleek, shoulder-length silk pressed hair and colorful, flowing shirts and trousers ā a style that could be translated as āgender-bending.ā Despite the patriarchal presentation rampant in rap and Hip-Hop, AndrāāĆ© 30000 represented to me, a kind of rebellious self-expression that I so badly wanted to emulate but couldnāt because of the psychological confines of my conservative upbringing.
My discovery of Outkast was also sobering because it was a stark reminder of how queerness is also often used as an aesthetic in Hip-Hop while actual queer people are shunned, rebuked, and mocked. Queer people in Hip-Hop are like backstage wingmen, crucial to the development of the show but never important enough to make a curtain call.
As Hip-Hop celebrates 50 years since its inception in New York City, I am filled with joy because itās been half a century of Black people owning their narratives and driving the culture. But itās fair to ask: At whose expense?
A viral 2020 video shows rapper Boosie BadAzz, famed for hits like āSet It Offā and āWipe Me Down,ā rebuking NBA star Dwayne Wade and award-winning actress Gabrielle Union-Wade for publicly supporting their then-12-year-old daughter after she came out as transgender.
āDonāt cut his dick off, bro,ā said BadAzz with furrowed eyebrows and a gaze that kept turning away from the camera, revealing his tarnished diamond studs. āDonāt dress him as a woman dawg, heās 12 years. Heās not up there yet.ā
The responses from both Wade and Union-Wade were a mixture of swift, sarcastically light-hearted, and hopeful.
āSorry Boosie,ā Union-Wade said to an audience during a live podcast appearance at Live Talks Los Angeles. āHeās so preoccupied, itās almost like, āthou doth protest too much, Little Boos.ā Youāve got a lot of dick on your mind.ā
Wade also appeared on an episode of podcast, āI AM ATHLETE,ā and looked directly into the camera.
āBoosie, all the people who got something to say, J-Boogie who just came out with [something] recently, all the people who got something to say about my kids,ā he said. āI thank you because youāre allowing the conversation to keep going forward because you know what? You might not have the answers today, I might not have the answers, but weāre growing from all these conversations.ā
This exchange between the Wades and BadAzz highlights the complicated relationship between Black LGBTQ individuals and allies and the greater Hip-Hop and rap genres and communities. While Black queer aesthetics have long informed self-expression in Hip-Hop, rappers have disparaged queerness through song lyrics and in interviews, or online rants like BadAzz, outside the recording studio.
And despite LGBTQ rappers like Queen Latifah, Da Brat, Lil Nas X, and Saucy Santana achieving mainstream success, much work lies ahead to heal the trauma that persists from Hip-Hopās history of patriarchy and homophobia.
āāProgressionā will always be relative and subjective based on oneās positionality,ā said Dr. Melvin Williams said in an email. Williams is an associate professor of communication and media studies at Pace University. āHip-hop has traditionally been in conversation with queer and non-normative sexualities and included LGBTQ+ people in the shaping of its cultural signifiers behind the scenes as choreographers, songwriters, make-up artists, set designers, and other roles stereotypically attributed to queer culture.ā
āAlthough Hip-Hop incorporates queerness in their ethos, ideas, and trends, it does not privilege the prospect of an out LGBTQ+ rapper. Such reservations position LGBTQ+ people as mere labor in Hip-Hopās behind-the-scenes cultivation, but not as rap performers in its mainstream distribution,ā he added.
This is especially true for Queen Latifah and DaBrat who existed in the genre for decades but didnāt publicly come out until 2021. Still, both faced backlash from the Black community for daring to challenge gender roles and expectations.

Lil Nas X also faced backlash for his music video āMonteroā with satanic references, including one in which he slides down a pole and gives a character representing the devil a lap dance. Conservatives such as South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem accused him of trying to scandalize children.
āYou see this is very scary for me, people will be angry, they will say Iām pushing an agenda. But the truth is, I am,ā Nas X said in a note that accompanied āMontero.ā The agenda to make people stay the fuck out of other peopleās lives and stop dictating who they should be.ā
Regardless, āMonteroā debuted atop the Billboard 100.
In an article published in āSouls: A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Culture, and Society,ā scholar C. Riley Snorton posited that celebrating queer visibility in mainstream media could be a problem as this kind of praise relies on artists presenting in acceptable forms of gender and sexuality expression and encourages representation that is āread alongsideā¦perceptions of Hip-Hop as a site of Black misogyny and homophobia.ā
In the case of Frank Ocean, who came out in 2012 prior to the release of his album āChannel Orange,ā his reception was warmer than most queer Hip-Hop artists because his style of music is singing, as opposed to rapping. Because of this, his music was viewed more as RānāB or pop.
āFrank Ocean aināt no rapper. Heās a singer. Itās acceptable in the singing world, but in the rap world I donāt know if it will ever be acceptable because rap is so masculine,ā rapper Snoop Dogg told the Guardian in 2013. āItās like a football team. You canāt be in a locker room full of motherfucking tough-ass dudes, then all of a sudden say, āHey, man, I like you.ā You know, thatās going to be tough.ā
So whatās the solution for queer people in Hip-Hop? Digital media.
Williams, the Pace University professor, says that being divorced from record labels allows queer artists to be independent and distribute their music globally on their own terms.
āWe witnessed this fact with artists such as Azealia Banks, Cakes Da Killa, Fly Young Red, Kevin Abstract, iLoveMakonnen, Lil Nas X, Mykki Blanco, and Saucy Santana, as well as legacy LGBTQ Hip-Hop acts like Big Freeda, DeepDickCollective, and Le1f,ā he said. āThe music industry has experienced an increasingly mobilized market due to the rise of digital media, social networking platforms, and streaming services.ā
āMore importantly, Black queer Hip-Hop artists are historicizing LGBTQ+ contributions and perspectives in documentaries, films, news specials, public forums, and podcasts. Ultimately, queer people engaging in Hip-Hop is a revolutionary act, and it remains vital for LGBTQ+ Hip-Hoppers to highlight their cultural contributions and share their histories,ā he added.
(Hip-Hop pioneers Public Enemy and Ice-T will headline The National Celebration of Hip-Hop, free concerts at the West Potomac Park on the National Mall in D.C. on Oct. 6 and 7.)
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