+ All Categories
Home > Documents > 12/29/10 V1I49

12/29/10 V1I49

Date post: 01-Mar-2016
Category:
Upload: south-florida-gay-news
View: 221 times
Download: 3 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
10 Best of 2010
40
G A Y N E W S , S T R A I G H T F A C T S December 29, 2010 VOLUme 1 IssUe 49 6 SFGN WRITERS CHOOSE THEIR BEST STORIES OF THE YEAR Starts on Page 2 SFGN Profile Anthony Humphreys Page 31 DOUBLE MURDER IN MANORS Page 8 Late Breaking Story
Transcript
Page 1: 12/29/10 V1I49

GA Y N E W S , S T R A I G H T F A C T S

December 29, 2010 • VOLUme 1 • IssUe 49

6 SFGN WRITERS CHOOSE THEIR BEST STORIES OF THE YEAR

Starts on Page 2

SFGN Profile Anthony Humphreys Page 31

DOUBLE MURDER IN MANORSPage 8

Late Breaking Story

Page 2: 12/29/10 V1I49

2 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

Associated Press

Editorial officEs

2520 N. Dixie HigHway • wiltoN MaNors, Fl 33305PHoNe: 954-530-4970 Fax: 954-530-7943

Norm KENt

PublisHer aND eDitor iN CHieF

[email protected]

Pier Angelo Guidugli

CHieF exeCutive oFFiCer

Creative Director . . . . . . . . . George Dauphin george .dauphin@southfloridagaynews .com

Online Website Director . . . . Dennis Jozefowicz

Editorial

Managing Editor . . . . . . . . . Joey Amato joey .amato@southfloridagaynews .com

Lifestyle & Features Editor . . A. Sebastian Fortino sebastian .fortino@southfloridagaynews .com

Political Affairs Editor . . . . . Jarrett Terrill jarrett .t@southfloridagaynews .com

Arts/Entertainment Editor . . Mary Damiano marysfgn@gmail .com

SFGNites Editor . . . . . . . . . . JW Arnold

Business Editor . . . . . . . . . . Richard Gary

Senior Features Correspondents . . . . . . . . . Jesse Monteagudo

Tony Adams

Correspondents . . . . . . . . . . Penn BullockAlex Escobar Steve Fritz Jason Shutts

Contributing Columnists . . . Wayne Besen AJ Cross Susan Estrich Brian McNaught Leslie Robinson

Editorial Cartoonists . . . . . . Steve Sack Darryl Smith

Calendar Editor . . . . . . . . . . Matthew Clark

salEs

Sales Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . John Fugate Display Marketing Associates . Brian Swinford

Michael Vitureira Finance Manager . . . . . . . . . . .Chris Grobels National Sales Representative Rivendell Media todd@rivendellmedia .com

Distribution Managers . . . . . JR Davis, Walter Franco

Printing and Publication . . . Miami Offset

South Florida Gay News.com is published weekly on Wednes-days . Our paper is a member of the Associated Press .

The views and opinions expressed within this publication, in bylined columns, stories, and letters to the editor are those of the writers expressing them . They do not represent the opinions of South Florida Gay News .com, Inc ., or the Publisher . They are

included to promote free speech and diversity of thought . You should not presume the sexual orientation of individuals

based on their names or pictorial representations in SFGN, and it would be careless to do so . For the sake of readable newswriting, the word “gay” in SFGN should, when relevant, be interpreted to be inclu-sive of the entire gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered community .

All of the material that appears in SFGN, both online at www.southfloridagaynews.com, and in our print edition, including ar-

ticles used in conjunction with our contract with the Associated Press and our columnists, is protected under federal copyright and intellectual property laws, and is jealously guarded by the

newspaper . Thus, nothing published may be reprinted in whole or part without getting written consent from the Publisher of

SFGN, at his law office, Kent & Cormican, P .A ., 110 Southeast 6th Street, Suite 1970, Fort Lauderdale, Fl 33301 .

SFGN, as a private corporation, reserves the right to enforce its own standards regarding the suitability of advertising copy,

illustrations and photographs .

Copyright©2010 South Florida Gay News .com, Inc .

Florida Press AssociationNational Gay and Lesbian Journalists Association

December 29, 2010 • Volume 1 • Issue 49

I have not had sex with any of the men or women whom I have profiled in SFGN. I’m confessing this fact with a bit

of chagrin and disappointment because it enhances my journalistic integrity more than my unbidden chastity.

Asking me to pick favorites from a year of writing for SFGN is a treacherous request, for a wise parent never admits to favor-ing one child over another. I have been honored to step into the lives of the men and women who consented to my question-ing and I hope my reports enhanced our celebration of the great people with whom we live and whose accomplishments often go unseen.

Reviewing a year of profiling some of the remarkable folks among us allowed me to place them in one of two groups. There were those who knew exactly what they wanted to say and greeted me with an envisioned article and message, and there were those who simply answered my knock on the door with trust that they wouldn’t regret what appeared in print. In both cases, I kept a good number of their candid words out of SFGN rather than let something unintentionally embarrassing cause them an ouch of remorse. Some would say that I’m too gentle to achieve hard-hitting journalism. I’d say that while I love taking in other men’s dirty laundry, I’m not inclined to share it.

I especially enjoyed those moments when I was totally surprised by someone. Before sitting down with female to male transsexual singer-songwriter Mark Angelo Cummings (April 5, 2010) of Hollywood, I was already a fan of his music, but I was not prepared for the surge of sexual attraction I felt for him. I have known other transsexuals, and I’ve interviewed a few, (including the glamorous Amanda Lepore who is in town this week) and I’ve made out on the dance floor with others, but having limited my sexual adven-turing to cis-gendered males, I was surprised by my reaction to him and I mustered heroic

powers of concentration on the pad and pencil held in my lap over the course of our visit. I am grateful to his lovely and gracious wife Violet who surely must have sensed my dilemma but remained hospitable and welcoming throughout.

Another handsome Mark also surprised me. I was already an acquaintance of Mark Foley (July 14, 2010) with whom I often exchange a few words while on my skates in Birch Park. I feared that his vigilant efforts to save the local sea turtles who nest on the beaches of Fort Lauderdale would constitute the kind of drippy and numbing environ-mentalism that I usually avoid. After getting his tour of the nesting sites, I found myself

on the beach many summer nights actu-ally witnessing the approach of giant sea turtles and watching awestruck while they dug nests and laid their eggs. One mid-night, in a drenching thunder and lighten-

ing storm, I witnessed a nest hatch out and saw hundreds of baby turtles head for A1A rather than the sea, distracted by the head-lights. I was pleased to learn that because of my profile of Mark, the number of volunteers who nightly patrol the beach during nesting season has increased significantly.

Also among the easy-on-the-eyes was the fabled Fort Lauderdale tattoo artist Stevie Moon (May 10, 2010). His was easily my lon-gest interview session. I spent the good part of a day at his salon while he worked on a client who slept during much of the process. We got into an amazing theological discus-sion that was certainly not what I expected.

A third Mark who surprised me is Mark King (April 26, 2010) who once operated a phone sex business in California, had a childhood acting career, almost lost his life to drugs and HIV, and has come back from that edge for a dazzling second act in which he is dedicated to honest communication about recovery and HIV. His story spilled out of his mouth when he approached me after I had moderated a panel of writers at

the Stonewall Library and Archives. I think his was the interview in which I did the least talking. Mark has an amazing energy and urgency rooted in his personal survival and in his activist convictions about HIV. Ev-eryone should be following him at MyFabu-lousDisease.com.

Mentioning the Stonewall Library and Archives reminds me of the number of fascinators I’ve encountered therein and subsequently written about. They almost form their own separate category of favoritism. There’s its fabulous director, Jack Rutland (March 15, 2010). The gener-ous and talented Charles L. Ross (May 30, 2010). The witty and wise Dermot Meagher (March 10, 2010). The bright young Chris Finlay (December 22, 2010). Would I ever have had the pleasure of their company had I not walked into the library one day out of simple curiosity? You really must.

I’ve also been terrifically humbled by writ-ing about the local unsung heroes among us whose stories deserved more than my words may have delivered. Jarod Cashner and James Sanzeri who started and operate Sanctuary House (November 24, 2010). The tireless volunteer Chuck Nichols (March 22, 2010). The venerable Father John McNeill (May 17, 2010). Again, only the space restrictions of writing for the kaleidoscopic SFGN keep me from mentioning others whose tireless ser-vice to the community deserves more light.

I do have one favorite 2010 SFGN inter-view moment. In the course of my exchange with famous 75 year old writer and AIDS activist Larry Kramer (July 5, 2010), he dis-closed his efforts to reinvigorate his sex life. While I listened to him describe his presence on hook-up sites, my hands flew across the keyboard to verify his disclosures and I lo-cated his profiles exactly as described! Would that I had gotten the same dirt from Joan Rivers in my SFGN exclusive (June 16, 2010).

I have thoroughly enjoyed writing for SFGN despite the meager pecuniary (or sexual) compensation. The folks I’ve met through the paper constitute the real South Florida that most visitors never see through the haze of beach, booze and banter. I hope to meet you in 2011.

BEST 10 SFGN ARTIClES OF 2010 BY TONY AdAmS

10 10

Page 3: 12/29/10 V1I49

3 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

By Lisa KeenKeen News Service

T he suspense is over: The U.S. Sen-ate finally took a vote on a bill to repeal the ban on openly gay

people in the military and passed it, 65 to 31. Having Congress pass that bill, to repeal Don’t Ask Don’t Tell (DADT), and having that bill signed by the president is an impor-tant legislative and political milestone.

It is not the first time the LGBT communi-ty has ever succeeded at dismantling a form of institutionalized discrimination. That honor goes to the eradication of laws pro-hibiting consensual sex between same-sex partners. That was done state by state and, eventually, in the U.S. Supreme Court. The community has, in several states, won the right to obtain marriage licenses the same as straight couples. And, in 2010, it made enormous progress towards marriage equal-ity nationwide through several lawsuits.

But passing the DADT repeal bill in Con-gress this year was itself a Herculean feat. Partisan hostilities were at an apex, and the Democratic majority was eroding. Two ef-forts to break a Republican-led filibuster failed. Many in the community voiced im-patience and exasperation at the stops and starts in moving legislation. Even more were uneasy with the White House strategy of giv-ing military officials such voice in how and when repeal might happen. And some won-dered why repealing the discriminatory pol-icy in the military took precedence over bills that could have benefited even more people. At the end of 2009, after all, the community was hearing that the Employment Non-Dis-crimination Act (ENDA) would get a vote.

ENDA was blocked, in large part, by de-liberations over the landmark –and conten-tious—health reform legislation. It was also snarled to some extent by preoccupations over bathroom accommodations and wild imagining of bearded kindergarten teachers in dresses. But ultimately, says Mara Keis-ling, an activist who has pushed hard for ENDA, DADT repeal had more money and more organizational drive behind it, from Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, Servicemembers United, GetEqual, and the Center for American Progress, to name just a few. It got a presidential boost in the form of President Obama’s 2010 State of the

Union address. It had a vehicle –the annual defense authorization bill—on which to ride. And it had the fierce advocacy of leg-islators who just would not give up –Rep. Patrick Murphy (D-Penn.), Senator Joe Li-eberman, and many, many others.

At times, it seemed as if the push had turned to shove and the bill would be de-railed. So, too, the public’s growing angst over the deep recession emboldened con-servatives of every ilk to oppose anything and everything the president and the Dem-ocratic Party supported.

But that same public refused to get on-board the gay bashing wagon in the DADT repeal fight. Poll after poll showed grow-ing support for allowing openly gay people serve in the military. A massive survey of ac-tive duty personnel and their families found only a few, isolated pockets of trepidation about repealing the ban.

So, passage of a bill to repeal the Clin-ton-era ban on gays in the military was an event whose time had come, the triumph of a relentless campaign to end discrimina-tion, and the result of a perfect alignment of public opinion, Democratic Party con-trol of Congress and the White House, and LGBT community focus. It was a major po-litical and legislative accomplishment for a community that has long been relegated to second-class citizenship status. It conjures hopes for undoing other institutionalized and formalized discrimination against LGBT people –like the federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). And it may even hobble some elements on the far right that have sought to prosper by peddling hurdles to the mere

idea that LGBT people deserve the same re-spect and rights as other citizens.

But it does not guarantee the ban against openly gay men and lesbians in the military will actually be gone anytime soon. In fact, 2010 will end with the ban still intact.

“Gay, lesbian and bisexual service mem-bers posted around the world are standing a

little taller today, but they’re still very much at risk because repeal is not final,” said SLDN Executive Director Aubrey Sarvis, in a statement released after the Senate vote. “…Even with this historic vote, service members must continue to serve in silence until repeal is final.”

That’s because the strategy chosen by the Obama White House for ending the policy –while successful thus far and noble in its sensitivity to how difficult “change” is for many people-- is akin to soaking a splinter until it falls out. The administration asked that Congress not vote on repeal for nine months while the Pentagon conducted a “study” of how it might best implement re-peal “if” Congress repealed it.

Now, after the House sends the bill to the president and he signs it, another waiting period begins. The Department of Defense must develop regulations and conduct “the planning necessary to carry out this change carefully and methodically,” said Gates, fol-

2010: The Perfect Alignment

(l-r) Major Mike alMy, Captain jonathan hopkins, Gay riGhts General raChel Maddow, lt. Col. ViCtor FehrenbaCh and Cadet katie Miller Celebrate the repeal oF dadt

PHO

TO C

Ou

RTES

Y O

F V

ICTO

R F

EHR

ENB

AC

H

continued on page 38

Page 4: 12/29/10 V1I49

4 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

By A. Sebastian Fortino

B roward Sheriff’s Office Command-er Rick Wierzbicki and Sheriff Al Lamberti lent themselves not only

to protecting our local citizens this past year but also to protecting vic-tims of hate crime on a state level. Wierzbicki is head of Broward Country Sheriff’s Office Hate Crimes/Anti-Bias Task Force.

In May both men worked towards protecting the homeless by inclusion un-der Florida’s hate crimes law. This is quite impres-sive, as we are only the sec-ond state to have enacted such protections.

The new law, passed under Florida House Bill 11, increases state penalties against those who attack the homeless. It went into effect this past October, although it took four years to pass. Due to their diligence in fighting for the rights of homeless in their “own backyard” their efforts were recog-nized farther a field.

“Because of what we did with House Bill 11 Senators Ben Cardin (D-MD) and Susan Collins (R-ME) selected officer Lamberti and myself to submit testimony with the National Coalition for the Homeless (NCH) on the protection of the homeless,” said Wi-erzbicki. Although officers invited to speak were considered on a national level, two of Broward’s own were chosen.

The United States Committee on the Ju-diciary, Subcommittee on Crime and Drugs hearing, “Crimes Against the Homeless: Is the Violence Growing?” was held on Sep-tember 29.

“The NCH believes this was the hearing was the first held by Congress,” Wierzbicki told SFGN about the hour-long trial in which he testified verbally for five minutes. Lamberti was unable to attend, but deliv-ered testimony via a letter. “They had been trying for several years to get the hearing, but it was only realized this year after Sena-tor Cardin had it scheduled.”

The hearing was successful. However, the law was not passed on a Federal level as of yet. The next step will be a hearing before the new Congress some time in 2011. Yet,

the two have not stopped to educate the lo-cal – and statewide – community about the need to educate to eradicate the numbers of hate crimes reported in Broward County.

Our diverse community came in as leading state numbers for reported hate crimes for the fourth year in a row. Broward Coun-try reported 22 hate crimes, while Miami-Dade num-bered 17. Statewide Broward and Miami-Dade tallied the most hate crimes committed on the basis of sexual orien-tation in the state.

However the Broward Sheriff ’s Office promises

town halls and other such venues in which to train people to recognize hate crimes, how offenders are punished, help for vic-tims, and to let the community know it’s not only acceptable to report hate crimes, it is their civic duty.

This has been a passion of Officer Lamber-ti’s since he was appointed sheriff in 2007.

“Broward is the most diverse county in Florida, based on all criteria,” he told SFGN. Those criteria being race, religion, and sexual orientation. “Yet, we also continue to lead the state in hate crimes. How is that possible, I asked, given our diverse resi-dents. This distinction is not something I am proud of, nor should we tolerate.”

Broward is not only the most diverse county, but the population is also led by minority groups – with 49.8 percent of residents identifying as a minority. The Bro-ward Sheriff’s Office plans to hold their next hate crimes education event at the African-American Library in Fort Lauderdale.

“This will be our third one and will take place in Feb 2011. The first one was held at the Pride Center about a year ago. We are going to keep taking it on the road,” said Lamberti. “No one should fear being target-ed for a hate crime.”

We should be thankful to not only have Commander Wierzbicki and Officer Lam-berti not only making our community safe, but extending the arm of the law to embrace often defenseless individuals.

For more information please visit, Sheriff.org

2010: lamberti Took lead on Homeless, Hate CrimesSheriff Promises to Maintain Focus

sheriFF al laMberti

Page 5: 12/29/10 V1I49

5 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

By Jarrett Terrill

T he Lambda South Clubhouse on East Las Olas Boulevard in Fort Lauderdale was burned badly in

a fire on Sunday night. The home of LGBT AA meetings, the group’s largest room, just off the patio, was destroyed. The rest of the facility has suffered significant dam-age from smoke. No one is believed to have been injured in the blaze, which occurred sometime after its last meeting on Sunday, typically held at 7 pm.

“We will be giving regular updates to our community on our website (below),” said Rachel G., the Director of Lambda South.

“We will have an alternative location for meetings set up very soon,” she added. “We have so many communities that depend on their meetings at this location but all of the programs have other meeting locations as well. You can look at the intergroup websites for any of these programs to find another time or location.” The Website Director of SFGN, Dennis Jozephowicz, has promised to post daily updates at www.southflorida-gaynews.com to keep people informed of

Lambda meeting places.Meanwhile, Fort Lau-

derdale Police investiga-tors and Lambda South Officials have been on the scene since Monday, assessing the damage and trying to determine what caused the fire. “I’ve been hearing that it might have been electrical,” said Steve S. The fire is rumored to have started near a fuse or electrical box. Fort Lauderdale po-lice would not confirm or deny any theories about the fire, as it is currently being investigated.

Access to the Lambda South meeting house is only engaged from the al-ley behind East Las Olas Boulevard. The facility is known for its elusive location behind a bak-ery. Although meeting attendees find that their

anonymity is protected by entering from the back, the dark, secluded alley could also give cover for any sort of delinquency or transgression.

“I can talk to you openly,” said Rachel G., “because I don’t represent any of the groups. But since this fire, some of these news out-lets have already printed some misinforma-tion about what we do here. We do not offer therapy or anything like that. The meetings are fully self-supporting and independent of Lambda South.”

Typically, “12-Steppers”and others in the recovery community will often avoid giving their last name to the media. This is to protect their anonymity and privacy. A television news station recently covered the goings on at Lambda South where they printed full names of their interview sub-jects and identified them as “recovering al-coholics.”

For up-to-date information as it becomes avail-

able, please visit: www.LambdaSouth.com, www.

AABroward.org, www.CrystalMeth.org, www.

SouthFloridaCoDA.org

lambda South Suffers Severe Fire

Page 6: 12/29/10 V1I49

6 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

“Expect Excellence”

University of Maryland PA College of Optometry

Board Certified Physician

Yale Johns Hopkins Wills Eye

Board Certified Physician and Surgeon

mittlemaneyecenter.com

Quality Eye Care

Custom Cataract SurgeryOn Site Laser Surgery

Diabetic Eye Care

Glaucoma

Eye Exams

Contact Lenses

Refractive Lens Exchange (RLE)(Freedom from Glasses)

561.478.2015West Palm Beach - Juno Beach

Laurie KellmanAssociated PressWASHINGTON (AP) — Vice President Joe Biden predicted Friday the evo-lution in thinking that will permit gays to soon serve openly in the military eventually will bring about a national consensus for same-sex marriage.

Changes in attitudes by military leaders, those in the service and the public allowed the repeal by Congress of the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, Biden noted in a nation-ally broadcast interview on Christmas eve.

“I think the country’s evolving,” he said on ABC’s “Good Morning America.:” And I think you’re going to see, you know, the next effort is probably going to be to deal with so-called DOMA (Defense of Marriage Act). He said he agreed with Obama that his position in gay marriage is “evolving.”

Stay on top of the news: Get breaking new alerts sent directly to your phone

Gay marriage is legal in only a handful of states, mostly in the Northeast, and in Iowa. President Barack Obama recently said his feelings on the gay marriage issue were in a state of transition. But he also said he still believes in allowing strong civil unions that provide certain protections and legal rights

that married couples have.Obama said he is still wrestling with

whether gay couples should have the right to marry, now that the change in the law will allow them to serve openly in combat.

Presidents in recent years have struggled with this issue. President Bill Clinton devel-oped the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy for the military, and Obama promised repeatedly in his 2008 campaign for the presidency that his administration would have a more sup-portive attitude toward gays. But gay rights groups also have said frequently they have been disappointed with the administration’s performance on this issue.

Biden Says Gay marriage ‘Inevitable’, Says Attitudes in Country Evolving

For the complete article, go to: sfgn.com/biden

Page 7: 12/29/10 V1I49

7 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

By Lou Chibbaro, Jr.

T he Obama administration’s partici-pation in the “It Gets Better” cam-paign to stop anti-LGBT bullying

and teen suicide moved to Europe last week when the U.S. ambassador to Italy appeared in a video promoting an Italian helpline (watch the video here).

Speaking in Italian and addressing viewers of Italy’s version of MTV and YouTube, Am-bassador David Thorne said the American Embassy was “focusing on the rights of gays” this year to commemorate Human Rights Day on Dec. 10.

“If you are a victim of discrimination or acts of bullying, talk to someone who is ready to listen,” he said. “Call the helpline number listed on the screen. Your life is important. You are not alone. Things will get better.”

Thorne’s video recording follows similar videos on the subject of bullying and LGBT teen suicides related to bullying that have been recorded by President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and four cabinet members, including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. John Berry, the gay director of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, also recorded such a video.

Each of the videos, including the one re-corded by Obama, calls on LGBT youth sub-jected to bullying or harassment to remember that things get better once they finish school and enter a career and that they should seek help and support. The videos are modeled af-ter the first such video made by gay columnist and author Dan Savage, who founded the “It

Gets Better Project” to address LGBT teen sui-cides triggered by harassment and bullying.

Paula Thiede, a spokesperson for the U.S. Embassy in Italy, said Thorne made his video through recording facilities at the em-bassy in Rome after seeing an ‘It Gets Bet-ter’ message directed to LGBT young people delivered by Secretary Clinton in a video re-leased earlier this year.

Thiede said Thorne’s video message ap-peared on Italy’s MTV channel Dec. 8-10.

A press release issued by the embassy di-rected to the Italian media also announced that the embassy organized a free concert Sunday [Dec. 12] called “Broadway Night” at a Rome theater that was “dedicated to the lesbian, gay and trans community.”

The news release says the concert, which was open to everyone, was sponsored by the City of Rome and the surrounding pro-vincial and regional governments together with the Italian Gay Help Line.

“The concert last night was a huge suc-cess, the theater was standing room only, with a lively crowd who really enjoyed the music, calling for encores and requesting their favorite American songs,” said Fleur

Cowan, deputy cultural attaché for the U.S. Embassy in Rome, in an e-mail on Monday.

“Guests came from as far away as Naples, and we were approached by many people thanking us for the event and underscoring how important the U.S. example of toler-ance and social inclusion was for the LGBT community here,” Cowan said.

Thorne’s video attracted considerable cover-age in the Italian news media, including sto-ries in two of Italy’s leading mainstream news-papers – La Repubblica and Corriere della Sera.

“This year, both President Obama and Secretary of State Clinton wanted to under-score respect for gay rights,” Thorne said in a statement. “On the occasion of World Human Rights Day, my embassy in Rome decided to collaborate with the associations supporting the Gay Help Line to sensitize public opinion on a very important theme, and to help homosexual young people who are victims of discrimination and bullying.”

Thorne’s video aired at a time when the Ital-ian public and media have been closely fol-lowing the release by the controversial group WikiLeaks of confidential cables from the U.S. Embassy in Rome that were highly criti-

cal of Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.The embassy cables were among thou-

sands of classified and confidential U.S. documents WikiLeaks obtained from un-identified U.S. sources. The Justice Depart-ment is investigating the matter.

Although Thorne’s video steered clear of internal Italian politics, it also followed a Nov. 2 comment by Berlusconi about gays that offended Italian gay activists and drew criticism from opposition party leaders.

In responding to allegations that he hosted parties in his private villas in which young women provided sexual favors to guests – an allegation that Berlusconi strongly denies – the prime minister told reporters at a public gathering, “It is better to like beautiful girls than to be gay.”

His office said the remark was a joke and not intended to offend anyone.

Berlusconi’s government barely survived a vote on a motion of “no confidence” by op-position forces that sought his ouster from office and a call for a national election.

“Reprinted with permission of the Wash-ington Blade, washingtonblade.com.”

International News

US Takes Anti Bullying message to Italy

aMbassador daVid thorne co

urt

esy

of

th

e w

ash

ing

ton

bla

de

Page 8: 12/29/10 V1I49

8 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL50% OFF

all cosmetic surgery procedures

Doctors trained by top surgeons of the millenium

Licensed facilities commended by board of medicine

Guaranteed best prices.Payments as low as $70

GynecomastiaPec Implants

Brazilian Butt liftSmart Lipo

www.southfloridabody.com www.floridacenter.com915 MIDDLE RIVER DRIVE, SUITE 213 FORT LAUDERDALE, FL 33304

NOW OFFERING ZERONA - LOSE UP TO 9 INCHES

SAVE NOW AT THE SOUTH FLORIDA CENTER800-274-LIPO Fort Lauderdale 954-565-7575

By Norm Kent

T he two men whose bodies were found inside their rented home at 2513 NE 8th Avenue in Wilton

Manors were domestic partners Kevin Mark Powell, 47, and Steve Adams, 52, former residents of Hollywood, Florida.

Their bodies were discovered by the Wil-ton Manors police after the sister of one of the victims had called authorities because her brother had not arrived at her home for a planned holiday gathering.

Kevin Powell had been very ill with Dia-betes and Manors police were doing a well-ness check.

Powell, whose hobby was arts and crafts, had once been featured on the Home and Garden channel after creating a home for his dogs within his home, including pet sized lighting and furniture.

Investigators are looking for the victims’ vehicle, a black 2003 Saturn Vue with Flor-ida tag 989VRL. The investigation contin-ues. At this time, investigators do not have a motive and have not named any suspect(s).

“I was like, oh my God!” said neighbor Mitch Geasler whom police woke up early Sunday morning as they began their investigation.

Geasler said the block where they live is transient, filled with snowbirds, renters and vacationers at a nearby bed and breakfast.

Geasler also told a tv cameraman from channel 4 that “the two victims were pas-sionate about small birds they kept in a large tented aviary in their backyard.”

Another neighbor, Brentley Taylor, told

Channel 7 that both men “were very nice gentlemen,” and he, like the rest of his neighbors, were in a state of shock over the killings.

For insvestigative purposes, the Wilton Manors Police Dept. has not revealed the manor of death, other than to say it was a certain homicide.

The killings add to the number of gay men already murdered in South Florida this year, featured in a special report by SFGN on November 3, 2010. The stories are acces-

sible online sfgn.com/issue41.Anyone with information about this dou-

ble homicide is urged to contact WMPD De-tective Biagio Balistreri at 954-390-2150. To provide anonymous information about this case, the public is asked to contact Broward Crime Stoppers at 954-493-TIPS.

Unconfirmed reports at press time indicate a

suspect, reportedly a homeless man, may have

been apprehended for questionning. For further

developments, go to SFGN.com.

Gay Couple murdered in Wilton manors

steVe adaMs keVin Mark powell MissinG ViCtiMs’ Car: blaCk saturn Vue

Page 9: 12/29/10 V1I49

9 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

Neil RogeRs 1942-2010

N eil Rogers passed away on Friday, December 24, 2010 at 9:45am, from conges-tive heart failure. He expired peacefully in his sleep.

His attorney and friend, SFGN Publisher, published a tribute to him in last week’s newspaper. sfgn.com/neil.

Kent stated that there will be a public memorial for Neil next week after the New Year. Details have not been finalized.

“Fans of Rogers are encouraged to read the online obituaries published by Ellie Brecher in the Herald, and by Tom Jicha in the Sun-Sentinel,” Kent stated. “They both capture his life, his energy, and remarkable talent. He was one of a kind on the air, let alone in person.”

Born in Rochester, New York on November 5, 1942, Nelson Roger Behelfer, aka Neil Rogers, had been in a hospice after doctors determined last month his heart condition was inoperable. For over 30 years, the openly gay Rogers was the highest rated AM talk show personality in South Florida. At one point, Rogers was earning $1.5 million a year, broadcasting his show on 560 WQAM.

Passages

Page 10: 12/29/10 V1I49

10 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

By A. Sebastian Fortino

W hen people think of the hol-idays and pets, they think most often of puppies. How-

ever, with more and more animals being dropped off at local shelters, due to person-al budget cuts, a lot of these dogs are older. They are well-trained, loving dogs but just because their puppy days are over many – like older children in the foster-care system – are often overlooked.

“We are not limiting ourselves, to older dogs,” said Peter Stanton who founded Happy Tails Dog Rescue with his wife, Stephanie Stanton. “But our specialization will be older dogs that have ended up in a kill shelter. Our primary mission is to pull them from the kill-shelters, get them cleaned up then into homes.”

For the past year, the Stantons have been making the rescue of these dogs their per-sonal mission. For the past year they have donated 10 percent of their income from a for-profit business in which they are part-ners to take care of the dogs and ultimately a open new shelter in Boynton Beach, to house the dogs until they are adopted. The new location opens in January.

“Now that we have the new facility, and more visibility, we have received donations from the public,” said Peter. A chef friend

of the couple, Ursula Rafer, hosted a vegan holiday baking class and donated the funds to Happy Tails Dog Rescue.

A facility to house the dogs was, of course, a chief priority this year. They want to keep things small so that they can give the dogs the best protection and assistance possible.

“We don’t want to be a large-volume site. We are trying five or seven at a time, then maybe we will try 10 to 12 at a time,” said Stephanie Stanton. So far they have rescued 14 dogs, four of whom have been adopted, while three or four are pending adoptions.

Their mission to rescue at-risk pets came when they started to volunteer at the Miami-Dade Animal Shelter, where they met Sophie.

“Sophie was 11 when we learned about her,” said Peter, after a Miami-Dade Animal Shelter coordinator sent out an email ask-ing if anyone wanted to take the older dog who was in bad need of medical and dental care. Peter and Stephanie adopted Sophie, whom they call their “angel dog.”

“Our mission is to help these wonderful souls that are not able to help themselves,” said Stephanie.

For more information, or to make a donation

please visit HappyTailsDogRescue

Happy Tails, and Happy Holidays

Happy Holidogs!

Page 11: 12/29/10 V1I49

11 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

10 10BEST 10 SFGN ARTIClES OF 2010 BY JOEY AmATO

A lthough I’ve written countless news stories and promoted dozens events throughout the year, the most

important part of my job at SFGN is reaching out to the people in our community who are making South Florida a better place to live.

In the past twelve months, I’ve had both the opportunity and pleasure of meeting some of our region’s most influential and inspirational people. From young professionals such as Chris Caputo and Dustin Jacobs to music icons like Chuck Panozzo from Styx, this year has been magical. Here are some of the people who made the greatest impact on me in 2010:

1 Al Cicotte & Kevin Palombo – American Tax and Insurance Services is a local investment company owned

by partners of nearly 25 years, Al Cicotte and Kevin Palombo. The couple has been active in the retirement-planning industry and makes an indelible impact on the South Florida community. Cicotte and Palombo work hard to support charitable organiza-tions around the country, including the Pride Center at Equality Park, Big Brothers/Big Sisters, and Joining Hearts among others.

2 Chef Ron Kerr – Alibi’s culinary renaissance began two years ago when Chef Ron Kerr was hired

to spearhead the venue’s new menu. Kerr earned his culinary degree from the Florida Culinary Institute in West Palm Beach, but he only relocated to South Florida three years ago from Naples. Specializing in modern American cuisine, Kerr has also been instru-mental in the formation of Alibi catering.

3 Chris Caputo – At age 28, South Florida resident Chris Caputo has a lot going for him. Not only does

he operate his own company, MetroMedia-Works, but he is also partners in two other companies, Print-ibles and RecruiterBuddy. Prior to beginning his own ventures, Caputo achieved a bachelor’s degree in management information systems from the New York

Institute of Technology. Always looking to stay ahead of the curve, Caputo is actively enrolled in Florida Atlantic university’s Weekend MBA program.

4 Jason Tamanini – Jason Tamanini is no stranger to South Florida nightlife. Known by enthusiasts

throughout the east coast, Tamanini has already left an indelible mark on LGBT culture at just 29 years old. Tamanini’s first foray into nightlife came when he held the prestigious position of General Manager at China White, one of Fort Lauderdale’s most remembered establish-ments. Tamanini then took on the title and re-sponsibilities of Regional Director for Halo in both Miami Beach and Washington D.C. Now, as the General Manager of the Manor, Tamanini oversees all aspects of operations including private events, community outreach, human resources, restaurant and nightlife operations.

5 John Tanasychuk – The man behind most of the dining reviews in the Sun-Sentinel, John Tanasychuk

earned a bachelor’s degree in English from the university of Windsor in Canada and has held numerous writing and editing positions in the publishing industry. Tanasychuk has re-viewed everything from local mom and pops to superstar chef Emeril Lagasse’s flagship Miami Beach restaurant.

6 Richard Cortez – On a beautiful Saturday afternoon, I sat in the living room of local singer-songwriter,

Richard Cortez. I listened track by track to his new album, Sleeping with Strangers. Composed over the past two years, the album is a compilation of Richard’s trials and tribulations as a gay man. Written and arranged entirely by Richard, the album fea-tures heart-felt music about love, sex, rela-tionships and sorrow. Drawing from musical influences, Joni Mitchell, Carol King and Ani DeFranco, Richard creates a unique sound, which incorporates his love for theatre and folk music.

7 Kevin Gale – Kevin Gale is the editor of South Florida’s larg-est and most respected business

publication, South Florida Business Journal. Gale oversees all aspects of the paper’s news operations in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach Counties. He joined the Busi-ness Journal as editor in 1998 after 15 years with the Sun-Sentinel where he was business editor. Gale is an active member of the Fort Lauderdale Front Runners, an LGBT group for people who enjoy walking and running. Gale recently served as president of the organization.

8 Thomas Barker – Thomas Barker has changed the landscape of gay publishing as we know it in

South Florida. He is one of Miami’s most influential young professionals and is served on the executive committee of this year’s Miami Beach Gay Pride. In addition to that task, Barker is the executive editor and co-publisher of Wire Magazine. Barker is a supporter of Equality Florida, Care Resource and Pridelines Youth Services and has helped raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for the organizations.

9 michael Goodman – Michael Goodman is partner in one of South Florida’s most prestigious

public relations firms, Bitner Goodman. His work stretches beyond the conference room. He is actively involved with numer-ous local arts organizations. Goodman is the Immediate Past Board Chair of ArtServe, Im-mediate Past Vice-Chair and honorary board member of the Art and Culture Center of Hollywood and Board Secretary of the Florida Theatrical Association. Furthermore, Goodman supports AIDS-related organiza-tions such as the Poverello Center.

10 Pastor leslie Tipton – Out of the many women we have

profiled in SFGN, Pastor Leslie Tipton has one of the most interesting life stories. In her second year of college at San Diego State university, where she majored in Behavioral Psychology and Naval Science, Pastor Leslie began toying with the possibil-ity of homosexuality. In 1987, she entered the Marine Corps, where she remained for over a decade and then in 1997, Pastor Les-lie answered the “call of God” and left the Corp, eventually ordained as a Pastor and becaming Associate Pastor at the Church of the Holy SpiritSong.

To automatically link to any of the above articles, go to: sfgn.com/amato

riChard Cortez

Page 12: 12/29/10 V1I49

12 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

Page 13: 12/29/10 V1I49

13 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

10 10BEST 10 SFGN ARTIClES OF 2010 BY A. SEBASTIAN FORTINO

W hen my friend Liz told me a new LGBT newspaper was launching last Christmas,

as I housesat her place on South Beach, my response was one of disbelief. “No one in this economy is starting a newspaper. Are you kid-ding,” I wrote before I pressed send, convinced it was a lie, or scam of some kind.

“I don’t know,” Liz responded. “I checked the guy’s name out on Wikipedia. The publisher seems pretty serious and, he’s pro-decriminaliza-tion of marijuana.”

My interest peaked, and when my Google findings corroborated with Ms. Liz I came to Wilton Manors for an interview. I had only heard things about the gay village, talk of it being a depraved city of lost gay boys and men wantonly, hopping from bed to bed and party to party, much like my college years in the East Village of Manhattan…it sounded delightful!

Yet, I went to the interview with much trepida-tion. As I am a fan of TruTV I feared whomever met me was going to kill me, transport my remains to the Everglades, where an alligator would enjoy me as a Christmas dinner. Fortu-nately I was not disposed of into any murky depths. Instead, I was eventually offered a full-time position, and it has been my pleasure, privilege and honor to serve the LGBT commu-nity in South Florida as SFGN’s Features and Lifestyles Editor.

We quickly – for it was a learning process for all of us – adapted to newspaper writing as op-posed to the website, magazine, or fiction writ-ing with which we were already familiar. As we adapted to writing for you, you have thanked us by making SFGN a weekly event, something you look forward to each week. We love your praise, and heartily consider your criticisms so we may constantly create a better product.

We have become a part of you, and you a part of us, for that we are all truly grateful. As a writer this is good for me, professionally and emotionally. I need to read and write like some people need to breathe. Now, that I look back on the past year I cannot believe I doubted the ability of this newspaper to survive, or even exist. In a way I guess it was my own fear, suggesting I would not be able to contribute enough to this

paper to become a part of the community. As we begin a new year, the second year of

this publication, we have goals to expand and improve so that 2011 will indeed be a perfect 10 for your newspaper.

1 sFGN, as per HRC & AP, will go ‘lGBT’ – This was my first attempt at writing something that was both

political and humorous. It ended up being a bit of an episode in the office. After changing hands – and eyes – several times the result-ing, final edits had “corrected” the incorrect initialisms that were intended to remain in the piece! It still makes me want a BLT.

2 Gay Actors Respond to Newsweek Claim – Actors Cheyenne Jackson, Michael urie,

Jonathon Groff and others react to the mali-cious claim by entertainment writer Ramin Setoodeh that gay men should – or could – not play straight men. “I think it’s some sort of wish fulfillment by society that wants to believe that sexuality is fluid. Yet on the same token that homosexuality is a choice, which it’s not,” said Paul Hagen an editor and award-winning playwright based in Manhattan.

3 Thirty is a drag – In this column I turn 30, quit drinking and smok-ing, and take a turn on stage for

the very first time. Instead of bombing on stage, which was my biggest fear, I took to it beyond my wildest hopes. This proved to me I’m not getting older, I’m getting wittier! And, well, yes…older too!

4 Indian Professor Booted for Rickshaw Sex – There was a time early on in the paper, before

we had developed our personal styles and col-lective voice, where we tried to emulate the shocking headlines and titles of the National Enquirer and the New York Post. This was my contribution, I even read a 60 page document about gay rights in India. Certainly, the title grabs your attention. However, I don’t think

anyone ponders the fate of the poor professor as much as they imagine a rickshaw shaking salaciously along a crowded Mumbai curb.

5 dirty larry: ‘Wilton drive magazine’ likely to Wilt – As I was searching for roommates I met

all sorts of interesting people, one of them revealed he had moved here for a job that was not what he was expecting. This was my first exposure to writing real, local news. I wrote it with our publisher Norm Kent, it felt very “his girl Friday,” and…a little scary as we did not know how Larry Patterson would react to our exposure.

6 The Bonnet House and Gardens: Bohemian Gran-deur – This was just a wonderful

piece to write! A beautiful, historic home on the beach, and an heiress who lived to be nearly 110 years of age made for a magical afternoon and story that I hope made many of our readers pencil in a day at the Bonnet House Museum. History to me is wonderful – but being able to experience it firsthand in an intimate setting makes it all the more real.

7 Out in Africa – In the wake of in-tense anti-gay feelings and impend-ing legislation in Africa I thought

a more lighthearted look at travel in Africa was needed – I try to believe the glass is half full. This offered a unique opportunity to interview personal friends who have traveled to countries where it might be dangerous to be a gay man. My friend Stefan seemed to have a lot of fun in Africa, this before he was in a committed relationship. “Yes, I have been so comfortable in Africa that I even one time had sex with a very hot African policeman,” he told me from his home in Switzerland.

8 It Gets Better: dan Savage Speaks Out to Gay Teenagers – Working on this piece felt great

for two reasons. Firstly, I was able to write about something hopeful in the depressing wake of the gay suicides that caught national

attention this past summer and fall. Secondly, when I emailed Dan Savage I thought I would never hear from him and that the piece wouldn’t be personalized – after all we are a small, community newspaper! However, he called me back within ten minutes, which meant the paper is a viable voice for our community. The interview with Savage made me feel as if SFGN was on the map.

9 Taking Stock of A Great Gay life: the man Behind Woodstock, Elliot Tiber – As

a teenager my friends and I did not get into a revival of flower power, or The Beatles. We were too urban to wear Birkenstocks and pretend to be neo-hippies. Therefore, I never idolized the music of the sixties and my relatively conservative parents pretty much vilified them as a drug-washed waste of ten years. So, my interview with Elliot Tiber, the man who saved Woodstock, was enlighten-ing on many levels. Another opportunity as a writer in which I felt I made a friend, not only got a great interview!

10 Pornogate on the Beach! – Imagine my surprise that my first as-

signment was a piece on 1960s entertainer Connie Francis, this after going through a rough break-up prior to moving to Fort Lauderdale and becoming rather obsessed with her malt shop melodies. The first piece was fine, and I thought that would be it for Ms. Francis. Well…I was wrong! When her escorts were revealed to be gay porn actors, and a local dignitary quickly detached himself from the scene, a follow up was necessary! Besides, I got to use this line and get away with it! “Oh my God! I don’t know what to do. I can’t hurt their feelings,” when it was suggested [Connie Francis] dismiss the mod-els. Ms. Francis is so nice. She even thinks porn stars have feelings!

To automatically link to any of the above articles, go to: sfgn.com/fortino

Page 14: 12/29/10 V1I49

14 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

10 10BEST 10 SFGN ARTIClES OF 2010 BY JARRETT TERRIll

T his year has been a turbulent one for the LGBT community in Florida and I’ve been fortunate enough to be in

the right places at the right times in regard to a lot of the news items that have many of us on the edge of our seats. There are news items we can’t wait to leave behind (Dove World Out-reach) and others that we know we’re going to be dealing with for quite some time (Repealing DADT). However, there is something to be said for taking a step back and pulling out those rose-tinted glasses on occasion too. Here are the 10 pieces I’ve worked on that I find to be most noteworthy:

1 The AdAP Waiting list – The AIDS Drug Assistance Program expe-rienced cutbacks in the Florida State

budget and at the same time, federal state moneys had not increased enough to cover a rising number of people who are testing HIV positive in the Sunshine State. Not everyone can be covered by the program designed to help low/middle income persons afford their expensive HIV medications.

2 It Gets Better – When the mainstream media took notice of the gay suicides problem (for about

a week or two), they learned what we’ve al-ways known in the gay press – that young gay people in America are deeply troubled and need to be loved and shown encouragement. Even still, when CNN and MSNBC magnified the issue and gave us an in-depth look at the lives of some whom had been lost; it was a very emotional experience for all of us. At SFGN, we can help by offering information about vital services and networks that want to help make things better.

3 Gay men’s Chorus Christmas – Who knew that writing a nice review about a local chorus that’s

been in business for 30 years could be such a controversial move? Well, it turns out that my first foray into writing an arts review was met with tons of personal attacks and

misgivings because some people are still very sore about a recent break-up in the chorus. Nonetheless, I stand by my opinion that the Fort Lauderdale Gay Men’s Chorus had an outstanding holiday performance and I enjoyed it very much.

4 8 Activists in South Florida – There are a number of people in our area who work tirelessly

to make Florida a better, nicer and more equal place for the LGBT community. In this article, I’ve highlighted just 8 of these trailblazers.

5 Interview: Shirley Phelps-Roper on Uganda – One of the most maddening news items on a

global level – the human rights violations in uganda – is most ironically put into perspec-tive by one of America’s most notorious haters, Shirley Phelps-Roper. Roper, as it

turns out, has just as much contempt for the haters as she does the hated.

6 Genealogy Not Just For Straights – With all of the pro-paganda from conservative groups

regarding their definition of “family”, there is a movement of LGBT persons who are securing their place in their own family tree – literally. Here, I reveal that you can kick a gay person out of your family but you can’t take a bloodline out of that gay person.

7 Blog: Julian Assange, World Net daily – Our SFGN blogs are great places for our writers

to muse about their personal and opinion-ated perspectives on current issues or daily life. While the dramatic “Wiki-leaks” saga quickly ascended into the category of “news story of the year”, there was a gay angle on the story that only the most radi-

cal conservatives were discussing… until I blogged about it too.

8 Gay Environmentalism – After the BP oil spill had been gushing into the gulf for days and then weeks on

end, Florida was scared. Very little attention and money had been paid toward dealing with this kind of disaster and many of us looked to our local greenies to offer some perspective. What we found is that, contrary to conventional wisdom, there are gays and lesbians in South Florida who do care about the environment.

9 Blanche lincoln Facebook Attack – A Democratic “Blue Dog” Senator from Arkansas

became a favorite punching bag for the gay community on the social networking giant Facebook when she helped Republicans to avoid cloture on a defense appropriations bill. That bill included a repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. The irony of this story is that even after she lost re-election, she was given a final opportunity to right the wrongs of her past – but she missed that vote too because of a dental appointment.

10 Coral Ridge minis-tries listed As Hate Group / Smart list

includes Butterfly World – When Pastor Tchividian took over Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church, a group of angry con-servatives defected from the church because of what they saw as a liberalization of the church. That group, forced to hold their services and meetings at Butterfly World (owned by one of the members) created a rabidly anti-democratic and anti-gay organi-zation called Coral Ridge Ministries. CRM landed on the radar of the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) this year as a possible “Hate Group”.

To automatically link to any of the above articles, go to: sfgn.com/terrill

PHO

TO B

Y JA

RR

ETT

TER

RIL

L

debra haMpton sinGs ‘santa baby’with the Gay Men’s Chorus

Page 15: 12/29/10 V1I49

15 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

The hiring of a lawyer is an important decision that should not be based solely upon advertisements. Before you decide, ask us to send you free written information about our qualifications and experience.

Affordable Estate Planning Packages From Your Neighborhood Law Firm

Let us review your present documents

at no charge!FREE disk of your executeddocuments in PDF format.

Saturday appointments now available.

Jeffrey Seth Selzer, eSQ. • Scott A. WeiSS, eSQ.

(954) 567-4444(954) 567-4444Become a client for life

• Last Will and Testament • Living Will• Health Care Power of Attorney with Hippa Release

• Durable Financial Power of Attorney

$399.00

iSlAnd city center • 2550 northeASt 15th Avenue • Wilton MAnorS, floridA 33305

Personal Injury (by referral within the office)

A s the region continued to be among the most popular LGBT tourism destinations and winter-weary

Northerners flocked to our sun-soaked shores during “Snowmageddon”, 2010 proved to be another strong year for nightlife in South Florida, with promoters and bar and club own-ers providing plenty of entertainment options for visitors and locals alike. Some of the top stories of the year include:

1 The End of an Era? – The leg-endary White Party held its last Thanksgiving weekend bash at Vizcaya

Museum and Gardens, after 26 years at the Miami landmark. Orgnizers cited high property rental and production costs, as well as limited access for set-up, as the primary reasons for the decision. One of the most popular and successful HIV/AIDS fundraisers, White Party organizers noted the venue rental fees took a $50,000 bite out of proceeds, which benefit local service provider CareResource.

2 Rebel With/Without a Cause? – New York-based DJ Peter Rauhofer again caused a stir during the White

Party and Winter Party weekends for cross-ing the line—throwing his own party on weekends that traditionally raise money for CareResource and local charities that team up with National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. Opponents charge Rauhofer’s greed was tak-ing money directly out of the pockets of local non-profits and HIV/AIDS service providers, while supporters argued there were plenty

of partiers and venues to go around on the biggest weekends of the year.

3 Is it live or is it memorex? – Music videos are so ’90s, but 2010 was a great year for cabaret and live

music across South Florida. Nearly every night of the week, music lovers enjoyed performances from local favorites such as singing gender-bending magician Cashetta, cool Debra Hampton and sultry-voiced Jen-nifer McClain, as well as a host of girl bands at The Manor and New Moon. Our favor-ite? Talented Judy Garland look-a-like (and sound-a-like, too) Ann Marie Olson, a recent New World School of the Arts grad who has developed a following for her monthly shows at the Mustang Lounge in Bill’s Filling Station.

4 He Keeps on Going and Go-ing – In a town where the latest clubs and parties sometimes prove

to be fleeting fancies, South Beach promoter Edison Farrow is on top of the town. 2010 was an especially good year for Farrow and he continues with four big nights: “Jump” Sundays, Martini Tuesdays, “The Simple Life” Thursdays and “Hype” Fridays. Most impor-tantly, when a concept doesn’t fly or he runs up against venue issues (“Penthouse” Satur-days), he smartly knows when to pull the plug and try something else that’s bound to be successful. It’s good to be King, isn’t it Edison?

5 Out and Proud? – Fort Lauder-dale queens have never been afraid to take to the streets and remind

the locals just how many homos reside in the city; after all, we have not one, but two Pride festivals. Can we get any gayer? And in 2010, Miami Beach followed up its first Pride parade with a successful follow-up. Miami Beach is again on track for another big bash in April 2011, while flat festivals in Oakland Park and Wilton Manors (not to mention financial woes) raise questions about the future of Pride in Fort Lauderdale. With all the rainbow flags flying daily across the city, would anybody miss another festival?

1010

BEST 5 SFGN ARTIClES OF 2010 BY J.W. ARNOld

sean daVid and a.j. Cross at white party

Page 16: 12/29/10 V1I49

16 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

Norm Kent, Publisher

Thanking You for Our First Year

SFGN Editorial December 29, 2010

T he First Amendment to the Unit-ed States Constitution provides for a free press but let me tell you

that if you are community newspaper, there is nothing free about it.

The South Florida Gay News.com is pub-lished every Wednesday and distributed im-mediately to over 422 locations in three dif-ferent counties, from South Beach to Palm Beach. This week, we expanded our distri-bution to include guest houses and venues in Key West. Add to that mix the 7-11 stores and local chain pharmacies which carry our publication, and we are everywhere.

Our paper is of course free to everyone, but it costs a small fortune to print and dis-tribute it every week. Two vans, increasing gasoline costs, and cities even charging us money to place our 50 news boxes in pub-lic locations all add to our overhead. But we are proud of the product we have created. We are also proud as we close our first year with our 49th issue that we have become the credible, newsworthy, progressive publica-tion of record for the LGBT community of South Florida.

Our paper is an affiliate of the Florida Press Association and a member of the As-sociated Press. We have developed a media partnership with the Sun-Sentinel and Edge Publications. We are about to join the Sub-urban Newspapers Association and are al-ready partners with the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association, who even invited us to participate in panels at their

national conference. We are the exclusive South Florida distributors of news content for LGBT news services such as the Keen News and Q Syndicate. We have broken na-tional news stories which have been picked up by Advocate.com, Towleroad, Bilerico and the mainstream press.

Whether you realize it or not, we have now published 2,000 pages of news and over 1,000 articles. Our website, accessible at www.sfgn.com, has every one of them, including our daily updates and headlines. Oh, yeah, our dedicated web server costs almost two hundred bucks a month, too. Some free press. Actually, the truth is we are here because of you. Were it not for the support of the business community, your community paper would not be thriving. Yes, we want to be the LGBT newspaper of record for sure, but we also want our busi-ness to make you business.

Therefore, as we close the year, I have to pay special tribute to a wealth of business professionals who took a leap of faith and stood with us from the beginning. They did more than invest in our business. They invested in you, the community, and your aspiration that we needed a weekly news chronicle which illuminated our lives, wins and warts, accolades and embarrassments. We needed a newspaper that was populated first with news, content, and class, not just ads and ass.

Words then, cannot adequately express my appreciation for Andy Weiser and L.

John Castelli, realtors who have stood with us since day one. Much the same is to be said for attorneys George Castrataro and gclaw.com, who backed this paper from the start, along with Gregory Kabel, Selzer & Weiss, Robin Bodiford, and Stephen Je-rome. What gave our paper credibility from the outset was having Dan Pye and Morgan Stanley by our side, along with Al Cicotte and Kevin Palumbo from American Tax and Insurance. Our business is to make you business. But it is also to establish credibility with the gay community. You get that when retirement communities like Forest Trace partners with you, or a guest house as repu-table as the Island House and Oasis House in Key West. But you also know your paper has stature when your original advertisers include Dunham Insurance, the Northwest Savings Bank and City Credit Union. These types of companies tell us that SFGN is where businesses come to succeed.

Yes, this paper is here because my CEO Pier Guidugli joined with me in making this investment, but without profession-

als like Dr. Howard Cunningham, and Oakland Park Dental, or Dr. John Sarris, and Gold Dental Plan, we would not still be here. Businessmen like Paul Hugo and Brett Tannenbaum, owners of the Manor, have done more than change the nightlife of Wilton Manors. They have given us lit-erally, food, and sustenance. For libations and nighttime relaxing, so much is owed to Lori and Jennifer at Sidelines. We have been able to write about them often because of how much they have given back to our own community. So too has the dynamic and vi-brant AIDS Health Care Foundation, nobly fighting an honorable cause while signifi-cantly investing in the South Florida Gay News. And the AHF Pharmacy, like the ‘Out of the Closet’ discount shop, has enhanced our community.

The truth is by July of this year we had run advertising for over 75 legitimate first rate businesses, and were we to use this issue to run each of over 125 advertisers who have graced these pages, this week’s publication would be over 100 pages. The truth is the

Financial protection begins with a plan.Actually, a complimentary consultation.While financial planning is important to everyone, for gay and lesbian partners it can be crucial. Let Morgan Stanley Smith Barney help you develop a plan that works for you now and in the future.• Protect your income and assets• Take advantage of a thorough financial plan• Develop a strategy based on your specific goals

Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC recommends that investors independently evaluate particular investments and strategies, and encourages investors to seek the advice of a Financial Advisor. The appropriateness of a particular insvestment or startegy will depend on an investor’s individual circumstanes and objectives. © 2010 Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC. Member SIPC.

Daniel M. PyeVice President2400 E. Commerical Blvd. Fort Lauderdale, FL 33308 [email protected]

Partner Planning

The hiring of a lawyer is an important decision that should not be based solely upon advertisements. Before you decide, ask us to send you free written information about our qualifications and experience.

Affordable Estate Planning Packages From Your Neighborhood Law Firm

Let us review your present documents at no charge! FREE disk of your executed

documents in PDF format.Saturday appointments now available.

Jeffrey Seth Selzer, eSQ. • Scott A. WeiSS, eSQ.

(954) 567-4444(954) 567-4444Become a client for life

• last Will and testament • living Will • health care Power of Attorney with hippa

release • Durable financial Power of Attorney

$399.00

iSlAnD city center • 2550 northeASt 15th Avenue • Wilton MAnorS, floriDA 33305

Personal Injury (by referral within the office)

Page 17: 12/29/10 V1I49

17 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

newspaper business is not dying in America. We are thriving because we have developed a niche publication that you have supported. We can keep up if you do. Just remember, the paper is free, but the cost of creating, print-ing and distributing it is not. We need your support still.

The LGBT community is a sophisticated one, and therefore we love theater and en-tertainment, culture and nightlife. So from the outset we have not only had theatrical and dining reviews on our pages, they have been enhanced by the support of the Hard Rock Café, the Kravis Center, Broadway Across America, and the Broward Center for the Performing Arts. Even local community theaters like David Goldyn’s Rising Action Theater have helped us achieve a newspaper you can, as we say, respect in the morning.

Even non profits have asked us to publi-cize them while allowing us to provide them with editorial support for their noble goals. The Miami Gay Men’s Chorus, the Fort Lauderdale Gay Men’s Chorus, the newly formed Gay Men’s Chorus of South Florida,

and the Miami City Ballet have reached out to us so we can reach out to you. For stature and credibility, having advertisers such as the Miami Seaquarium, Nova Southeastern University and Amtrak is an indication we are on the right track. Ads from the Human Rights Campaign and first run movies come our way because we have partnered with the nationally credentialed LGBT marketing team at Rivendell Media of Mountainside, New Jersey.

With the cross-section of our advertis-ers, and me trying to pay tribute to all, I am bound to forget some. This will lead to egg on my face next week on one hand, but it is also testimony to the plethora and diversity of businesses that have supported us. My sore back has been treated therapeutically by Coast Chiropractic and Camp 4 Health, and more than once I confess, I have not only had a drink at Johnny’s and Cosmos, I have had a lap dance as well. My tires have been changed at Dale’s, and our company vans repaired by Rosen’s Prestige Automo-tive. I can’t tell you how many pizzas our

staff has had from the Corner Pub. We try to give back to those who give to us, and I sup-pose the Center for Cosmetic Surgery could have a field day if they or Dr. Tiller in South Beach ever got a hold of my body.

Finances dictate that some advertisers come in but move their promotion dol-lars elsewhere, as their business needs take them. Still, we have not forgotten what Earl Rynerson and CLAD Tile did to get us off our feet, or Island City Smiles, or Dr. Nadel’s newly reopened 21st Century Dental. If you were once with us, from the law offices of Lea Krauss, to Da Vinci Realty, we thank you for what you have done, and we wel-come you back at any time. Our goal is to be here forever, and we want you to be part of us now and in the future.

Finally, our newspaper has partnered with LGBT chambers of commerce, and tried to support our various charities from AIDS causes to pet rescues, from the Pride Center to drug rehabilitation centers. There is much we have done, and many stories we have written, There is still more we have to do, but many more stories to still write.

To paraphrase a TV show from the 50’s, there are 8 million stories in the Naked City. Our newspaper is one of them. So is your life. We look forward to the day when we can make your business, your profile, and your accomplishments part of our pages. Your faith in us will never be misplaced.

Emmy-Award Winner

LESLIE JORDAN’S“Deck Them Halls, Ya’ll”

Sunday, December 5, 2010 • 7pm

For tickets call 954.462.0222 or visit BrowardCenter.orgAll programs, artists, dates and times are subject to change.

Follow us on: Facebook.com/BrowardCenter • Twitter.com/BrowardCenter

An outrageous and hilarious one man show, the effervescent Leslie Jordan brings colorful characters lamenting, or celebrating, the Christmas season. A flamboyant ex-stripper trying to win a trip to Vegas; a transgendered lesbian practicing to enter a competition at the local gay bar; a 10 year old that refuses to be pried out of an elaborate Christmas choir robe after being told he has potential and needs to practice for the upcoming Christmas pageant! "Deck Them Halls, Ya'll!" is like no other holiday show! Both scream out loud funny and life affirming, it roller coasters to very surprising conclusion."

Rates effective 09/01/10 subject to change.Company rated A+ Superior by A.M. Best. www.americantaxandinsurance.com

954.302.3228

“The safe return of your money is our top priority”

• 10% Interest bonus credited on Day 1 on total deposit • Principal & interest guaranteed • No up-front fees or charges • Interest grows tax

deferred • Interest available monthly • Representing 60 top rated companies

Guaranteed return Fixed annuity 1st year BOnus interest rate

10.00%PLUS A LIFETIME INCOME RIDER GUARANTEED TO GROW AT 8% WITH INCOME FOR LIFE

Al Cicotte & Kevin Palomboamerican tax & insurance services

2881 E. Oakland Park Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, FL 33306

Page 18: 12/29/10 V1I49

18 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

A s 2010 draws to a close, I’m look-ing ahead. Here are some of my hopes for the LGBT community

in 2011, along with a few predictions.I hope next year the Pope will reveal a

new attitude toward gays. I predict he won’t.Now for a bolder prediction concerning

Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canter-bury, who has the grinding task of holding together the worldwide Anglican Commu-nion as it convulses over the gay issue.

I think poor Rowan will chuck it all. He’ll become a pagan, and periodically be seen frolicking at Stonehenge wearing nothing but a whimsical smile and un-strategically placed flowers.

Turning to another part of the planet, it is my fond hope that the murderous anti-gay bill still pending in Uganda’s parliament will be quietly withdrawn. Or loudly with-

drawn—I’m not particular.Now that the frothing homophobe Yuri

Luzhkov has lost his job as mayor of Mos-cow, let’s hope that city can finally have an open, legal Pride. Russian LGBT folks need an infusion of freedom. Luzhkov, married to a billionaire, needs a soul, but he’ll probably settle for a Piaget watch.

Turning to these shores, I don’t want 2011 to bring on a case of As Maine goes, so goes New Hampshire. You know that in 2009 Maine voters shot down the state’s same-sex marriage law. Now conservative legislators in New Hampshire are gearing up to repeal gay marriage in the Granite State.

Repeal would be a dagger in the heart of every LGBT person in the state. Plus it could mess with my plans. My partner and I have been considering getting hitched in New Hampshire, my home state. If the legislators

kill same-sex marriage, the state will miss out on all the money we planned to spend—on a six-pack and a bag of cheese popcorn.

Regarding the Prop 8 litigation, experts tell us that whatever the outcome in the appellate court, the case won’t really be decided until it reaches the U. S. Supreme Court. I’ll nonethe-less hope for an appellate court victory. I’m not against being bathed in validation.

With DADT on its official way out of Dodge, what can we expect in 2011 from Sen. John McCain, the Obstructer-in-Chief? After fighting with such baffling intensity to keep DADT, McCain’s passion, or bile, over the is-sue of gays in the military will continue. Look for him to chain himself to the Pentagon. Or to Defense Secretary Robert Gates, causing interesting rumors about the two of them.

By the way, if Adm. Mike Mullen, Chair-man of the Joint Chiefs, is still peeved with

Gen. James Amos, head of the Marines Corps, for his public opposition to DADT repeal, I can guess whom Mullen will choose to re-place him: Lady Gaga.

If she can wear raw meat from head to toe, she has the stomach for it.

Turning to other performers, country sing-er Chely Wright and Christian music artist Jennifer Knapp came out this year. Since both hail from genres traditionally unfriend-ly to gays, I want this fine trend to continue next year. Hey 2011, bring us a reggae artist.

Each year I hope a male pro athlete who’s still playing will come out, but so far no-body has obliged me. I hope 2011 will be the year a football, baseball or basketball player does the deed. But I’ll happily settle for a hockey player. With or without teeth.

Finally, I hope that next spring I don’t have to write another column about a gay teen’s fight to attend his or her prom with the ap-propriate date. If Constance McMillen could triumph in 2010 in small-town Mississippi, no place is safe from prom equality.

For approximately the next three months, Leslie

Robinson will continue to date her checks “2010.”

E-mail her at [email protected], and

check out her blog at www.generalgayety.com.

By leslie Robinson

Hopes for the New Year

General Gayety Chely Wright looks to the

horizon after coming out.

Page 19: 12/29/10 V1I49

19 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

E quality Florida (eqfl.org) is the larg-est civil rights organization dedi-cated to securing full equality for

Florida’s LGBT community. EQFL recently published a report, “Winning Equality,” which details the progress of LGBT rights in the Sun-shine State since EQFL formed in 1997.

According to Nadine Smith, EQFL’s Ex-ecutive Director (and my Bilerico.com col-league), “despite a hostile legislative cli-mate, Florida has made dramatic progress in securing legal protections for the les-bian, gay, bisexual and transgender com-munity... [“Winning Equality”] documents pro-equality successes in areas of workplace non-discrimination, family recognition, and school safety, while also highlighting that the organization has defeated anti-LGBT legislative efforts in every session over the past 13 years.”

“Winning Equality” is optimistic about the condition of LGBT people in Florida af-ter 8 years of Governor Jeb Bush, 4 years of Governor Charlie Crist, and over a decade of conservative Republican control of the State Legislature.

Highlights of the report include the repeal (2010) of Florida’s anti-gay adoption ban by the Third District Court of Appeals; city

and county laws banning workplace discrimination based on sexual orienta-tion and/or gender identi-ty; laws passed by 11 cities and counties that provide domestic partner benefits; the passage (2008) of Flor-ida’s anti-school bullying law; and a more supportive business climate.

According to the EQFL report, “Florida ranks 4th in the nation in the number of people protected from discrimination based on sexual orientation. Florida ranks 5th in the nation in the number of people pro-tected from discrimination based on gender identity

and expression. And Florida ranks 8th in the nation in the number of LGBT people living in communities that recognize do-mestic partnerships.”

In other words, as Nadine Smith writes, “Florida now leads the Southeastern United States in passing over 55 local policies outlaw-ing discrimination based on sexual orienta-tion and gender identity, banning harassment of LGBT students, and providing domestic partnership benefits to our families.”

The condition of LGBT people in Florida has certainly improved since the turn of the millennium, when the Sunshine State usu-ally appeared on the bottom of lists issued by human rights organization, and Equality Florida deserves much of the credit. But is our human rights glass half empty or half full? Sadly, things are not as rosy as “Win-ning Equality” would have us believe.

All the human rights and domestic part-nership laws that EQFL rightly praise were enacted on the city or county level, in urban areas that are politically liberal or moderate.

The fact is that, while many Florida cities and counties have become LGBT-friendly, the State government in Tallahassee re-mains socially conservative and homo-phobic. In fact, the recent election of Rick

Scott as Governor, Pam Bondi as Attorney General and other social conservatives to the State Cabinet and the State Legislature guarantees that, on the state level, Florida will be even less supportive of our interests in the years to come.

It is quite likely that Scott and/or Bondi will appeal the District Court’s decision that overturned the anti-adoption law, or that the Legislature will place an initiative on the ballot that, if passed, will amend the Florida Constitution to ban gay adoptions permanently. Other anti-LGBT measures might be introduced by one or more of the Sunshine State’s more extremist legislators.

If a sign of political progress is the elec-tion of openly gay legislators, then Florida is sadly behind other states. In fact, Florida is one of only 14 states that have never elected openly LGBT people to the State Legislature or to Congress. Though a few brave candi-dates tried this year, they were invariably struck down by the anti-progressive “shel-lacking” that marked the Tea Party election. The fact that all the LGBT candidates were Democrats didn’t help their cause.

In fact, our community’s only electoral victories in 2010 were on the municipal lev-el: Craig Lowe, J.P. Sasser and Gary Resnick

were elected or re-elected mayors of Gaines-ville, Pahokee and Wilton Manors, respec-tively. Part of the blame goes to the Sunshine State’s incumbent-friendly system of deter-mining legislative or congressional districts (also known as gerrymandering); one that will hopefully be done away with by the pas-sage of the Fair District Amendments.

All this should not be taken to be an at-tack against Equality Florida, or against the brave, dedicated women and men who make this great organization possible. My thanks and appreciation goes out to EQFL’s staff – Nadine Smith, Stratton Pollitzer, Bri-an Winfield, Joe Saunders, Mallory Wells, Tobias Packer, Michael Farmer and Ed Lally – as well as to its Board members, interns and contributors.

With leaders like these, our community might be able to withstand the backlash that is sure to come next year. Florida is a wonderful state (with horrible rulers), and a negative political climate will not keep me from enjoying life in the Sunshine State.

Jesse Monteagudo ([email protected])

is a not-quite native Floridian and freelance

writer who lives in South Florida with his part-

ner and community members.

Winning Equality in Florida: A Glass Half Empty or Half Full

By Jesse monteagudo

Jesse’s Journal

Page 20: 12/29/10 V1I49

20 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

1 Pier Angelo Guidugli – As I go to summarize the ten most significant stories we ran in our paper this year, I

realize that the most significant thing we have done is publish a newspaper. Faced with an adverse economy, and straight and gay news-papers crumbling in cities across this country, one man took a leap of faith with me and invested his heart, soul, and pocketbook into making sFGN the credible, progressive, newspaper for our LGBT community.

He has stayed the course and steered the ship in a prudent sound direction, and so much of what our staff has done is attribut-able to this quiet and silent business partner of mine, I could not start this column without saluting him, because without him, I would not have started this newspaper.

Maybe I should not call him all too silent, because the fact is his columns on gay life from Italy to China have stirred more com-ments and dialogue on our pages than any of all the other writers we employed. So with Piero Guidugli I not only have a great busi-ness partner who has stood by my side, we all have a great columnist whose insights are enriching, illuminating, and insightful.

2 mikey Verdugo and George Castrataro – First, from our very first issue, you have to ap-

plaud a former cop, Mikey Verdugo, challeng-ing the Hollywood Police Department for his job back. When he first came to us, he had been fired and an arbitrator had ruled the firing was legal. The city of Hollywood also sought to terminate his statewide certi-fication to remain a cop.

During his tenure as a cop, Mikey had done an outstanding job in the department, not only on patrol but in an undercover capacity, taking drugs off the street and seizing dirty money, turning it over to the department and the city. But he also challenged the brass for humiliating him about his sexuality, and some of those superiors wound up undergoing sensitivity training when Mikey’s allegations about sexual harassment were sustained.

As the court battles played out, one attor-

ney, George Castrataro, stood up and went to bat for Verdugo, winning last July the bat-tle to retain Mikey’s state certification. Doing so on a pro bono basis, fighting for the rights of gays in the workplace, Castrataro’s efforts are to be applauded. While a Circuit Court eventually concluded in November that Verdugo’s firing was lawful, the city of Hol-lywood relented just two weeks ago on their claim for attorney’s fees. We salute both Mikey Verdugo and George Castrataro with sFGN’s 2010 ‘making a difference’ Award for ‘lGBT Advocacy.’

3 Tiny Tina and Ray Fetcho – This would be a feel good story had Ray Fetcho, aka, Tiny Tina, not wound up

losing her leg to diabetes later this year. But in March the entire LGBT community was pretty stunned to hear his amazing story. 36 years ago, working as a drag queen at the Copa, Fetcho promoted a wet jockey shorts contest. But cops back then had no sense of humor, just badges. They arrested Ray and charged her with promoting a lewd act. A nominal fine was paid, his career as an emcee prospered, and the episode pretty much

went away, until this year. In his full time charge, Ray had been a nurse’s aide, licensed by the state. And to secure that position, the legislature eventually passed laws restricting that type of employment to those without criminal records.

This year, in a routine check, it came up that Ray, 40 years in the same health care field, and 16 years at one ALF, was no longer employable based on the decades old arrest. He was summarily fired. We did a front page feature entitled ‘God Save the Queen,’ and my law partner Russell Cor-mican came to Ray’s rescue. He petitioned immediately to get Ray an exemption from the rule, pointing out the episode had oc-curred in the distant past. To their credit, the State responded swiftly, and in a story that was generated by sFGN, and covered locally and nationally, from NBC to CNN, Ray got his job back. When you are a young newspaper, and you can help do something that good for someone, it makes you feel good about yourself too. sFGN salutes Ray Fetcho with our 2010 ‘making A difference’ Award for ‘Exemplary Courage.’

4 AHF, The Spirit and HIV Ad-vocacy – Of all the achievements of sFGN, I am proudest of the

fact that we created a quarterly newspaper supplement to remind everyone that HIV is still real, still here; that our community is still getting sick from this pandemic 30 years from its dawn. The saddest reminder of this terrible disease has been the fact that Florida now has a waiting list of over 2,000 patients denied their life saving meds. This cannot stand. It is unconscionable. Ironically, for all the accolades and articles we have published about the Obama Administration’s efforts in this regard, this never happened under two terms of former President George Bush, whose op-ed on AIDS we published on World AIDS Day.

However, one person and one organiza-tion stand out proudly for having taken the gauntlet and raised the flag, saying ‘no more, no way.’ We salute Michael Weinstein and the AIDS Health Foundation for its fortitude and forthrightness in advocating for AIDS patients, taking the legislature to task. But more than just politically, we have seen how AHF has undertaken to help persons individ-ually. When Derrick Burts, a porn star who tested positive for HIV in October went untreated for a month, he contacted me for help. I called AHF, who arranged, without questions, for him to be seen by doctors the very next day.- their mission fulfilled.

We recognize the AIDS Healthcare Foun-dation with the sFGN 2010 ‘making A difference’ Award for HIV Advoca-cy. From protecting porn actors to its mobile AIDS testing unit, AHF has become a driving force for advocacy for those living with HIV in Florida. Whether standing on street corners with placards and bullhorns, or supporting our efforts with media partnerships, we praise AHF for standing up for the HIV community.

5 larry Patterson and Wilton drive – A newspaper’s job is to un-cover scandal. The story of Mr. Patter-

son was not pleasant, but very real. He was using people to start a magazine for Wilton Drive, but not paying them, promising them

10 10BEST 10 SFGN ARTIClES OF 2010 BY NORm KENT

‘THE 2010 SFGN ‘mAKING A dIFFERENCE’ AWARdS FOR AdVOCACY ANd HONOR ON BEHAlF OF THE lGBT COmmUNITY

Mikey VerduGo (riGht) speaks to reporters outside oF Courthouse with GeorGe Castrataro

Page 21: 12/29/10 V1I49

21 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

To automatically link to any of the above articles, go to: sfgn.com/kenttopten

everything and delivering nothing. He was abusing and sexually harassing employees, leading them on with misrepresentations our newspaper exposed. Leaving a trail of unpaid employees and never publishing Wilton Drive Magazine, Patterson was hosting parties and throwing out promises of how much he was going to do for the LGBT community. He did do a lot for us when he disappeared after our expose, and we award him with our 2010 ‘Scam of the Year’Award for making the wrong kind of difference.

6 Stonewall Pride and mike Cruz – We have a right to hope that the people who conduct

not for profits do so responsibly with dignity and meet the challenge. We wrote with disappointment about the mismanagement of Stonewall Pride this year and its residual impact on street festivals in Wilton Manors. Even today, the costs of law enforcement and EMT’s are not paid from last June’s festival. This month, we reported how Stonewall went broke, no way to pay their past bills. Our bad. This community and its leadership have an obligation to do better. Because the city was owed money from last June, it fool-ishly then permitted this year’s Halloween festival to be conducted with the streets open for vehicular traffic. You don’t have a party with people drinking on the streets and allow cars to drive in between them. That was just plain stupid, and I am glad that sFGN protested the city’s malfeasance.

Stonewall Pride may have been an admin-istrative collapse we could have avoided, but sometimes you just can’t stop bad things from happening. Pride South Florida’s repu-tation was tarnished a bit when its former director Mike Cruz was charged with grand theft, stealing donated funds for charities, ac-cused of pocketing it for himself. Not much better than when we had to report that an LGBT Samaritan, 85 year old Miss Vicky, was the alleged victim of elderly exploitation by a man she had trusted. It’s not fun to write about gay people getting arrested unless they are like the Senator from California,

Roy Ashburn, who spent his life bashing gays until admitting he was one- after he got picked up for a DuI with a boy in the front seat. Ashburn sneaks in with the 2010 SFGN ‘Hypocrisy’ Award.

7 Arthur Goldberg and George Rekers – Another headline splash for sFGN that put us on the

map nationally came when we exposed an ex religious leader who ran a therapeutic treatment center for homosexuals, one of those ex gay programs. Working with Truth Wins Out, we exposed Arthur Goldberg’s New Jersey operation, playing himself off as a hero while failing to disclose his criminal convictions for fraud. The icon for the ex gay movement had erased from his moral com-pass his history of scamming money from people which led to a stay in a federal peni-tentiary. Our newspaper outed his criminal past and he was soon thereafter ousted from the boards of the right wing anti gay groups he represented. We recognize him with a sarcastic sFGN ‘making a differ-ence’ Award for ‘Hypocrisy.’

We also did the story on the guys who did the story on George Rekers, exposing him for picking up a rent boy from Hialeah as his ‘travel companion’ for a European vacation. Penn Bullock’s New Times expose led to him being featured on our front page, with his partner, Brandon Thorp, as ‘Writers of the Storm.’ Now in school in Manhattan, Bullock is still an SFGN correspondent, rec-

ognition coming his way this past Fall from OUT Maga-zine, naming him as one of their OUT 100 for 2010. Bullock is a good young man with a solid future in journalism. I will also add that Jovanni Roman, the rent boy who Rekers engaged, is a charming and per-sonable young man whose full story has not yet been told. It will be. when he is ready.

8 dan Choi and Get Equal – Obviously, the repeal of DADT has been a featured item in every

LGBT publication this year, but we have made a point of covering it from our very first issue, when Congressman Alcee Hast-ings supported us with an op-ed calling for its repeal. Few political leaders in this community have ever stood by the LGBT community as righteously and for as long as Alcee has, and we should never forget his never-ending support. Like him or not, Dan Choi worked the streets to make DADT go away, from chaining himself to the White House to delivering national addresses. So too did Robin McGehee get equal by getting in everyone’s face this year, orchestrating demonstrations in congressional offices and maintaining pressure against the inequities of DADT. Our newspaper covered the protests and the speeches leading to the December repeal, and sFGN awards its 2010 ‘Na-tional Activism Award’ for Making a Difference to Dan Choi.

Ironically, ten years ago, when I started and founded express Gay News, we covered this story at that time relentlessly. A decade later, we were still writing about it. Early on this year, the late Leonard Matlovich was fea-tured in a cover story. The repeal is a tribute to men like him, whose memorial reads, ‘In the Army they gave me a medal for killing two men; they threw me out for loving one.’

9 Gay marriage and Prop 8 – This was a year where the gay press and mainstream press

covered so many of the same stories that we shared content back and forth with the Sun-sentinel. But no story got more press than the battle for same sex marriage in California. When the courts declared victory, we took our weekly newspaper and published a special 8 page section the very next day, distributed to all of our 400 plus distribution points. It was testimony to the dedication of our staff, the support of our advertisers, and the significance of the story that we were able to capture the technology of our times and disseminate a newspaper overnight. Winning the battle for same sex marriage was one of our community’s great successes. Publishing a newspaper hail-ing that victory the very next day was this paper’s crowning achievement.

10 Gay Adoption and martin Gill – Not only did the stories of gay

adoption dominate our news pages through-out 2010, we were privileged to have this sto-ry generate right here in our own lap. Florida was the sad state, thanks to Anita Bryant, that did not allow gays to adopt. Our legislature and closeted governor would not budge. Instead, it took courts and judges to make rulings and decisions protecting and providing for gay men to adopt straight children. These are important rulings as they delineate with specificity how there are no empirical facts or rational basis to discriminate against gay men and women who wanted to or were raising foster children. For fighting the good fight sFGN presents its Father of the Year Award for 2010 to Martin Gill. Those that endured the battle were later honored appropriately as heroes of our community. Those that opposed us, like George Rekers, wound up embarrassed and humiliated.

‘THE 2010 SFGN ‘mAKING A dIFFERENCE’ AWARdS FOR AdVOCACY ANd HONOR ON BEHAlF OF THE lGBT COmmUNITY

MiChael weinstein

Page 22: 12/29/10 V1I49

22 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

By Jarrett Terrill

T o finish off the year, SFGN would not be complete without a word from Ray Fetcho (aka Tiny Tina).

Fetcho, as you recall, fell into a misfortune 30 years in the making when he was sud-denly dismissed from his employment taking good care of the elderly. The reason for Fetcho’s dismissal was rooted in an exagger-ated arrest record from 1976 – the result of a police raid on a popular gay nightclub, The Copa.

When The Copa was raided during a “wet jockey shorts contest” in ’76, it was against the backdrop of an extreme campaign to criminalize homosexuality in Anita Bryant’s Florida – an era which is hopefully a little different from today’s Sunshine State. After all, you can see worse things than wet jockey shorts on prime-time television now.

At least that must be the way most people saw it when Attorneys Russell Cormican and Norm Kent (SFGN’s Publisher) secured a speedy exemption from the State of Florida’s Board of Nursing which would have allowed Fetcho to return to work.

Then, in early June of 2010, it began to appear that Fetcho’s bad luck was only get-ting started. As one door opened, another slammed shut and Fetcho’s diabetes gave way to major surgery whereupon his left leg was

amputated below the knee. It was at this juncture that

many members of our community, including but not limited to SFGN, Kent & Cormican, The Manor Nightclub, Robert Trout and Nikki Adams were all expressing con-cern. Trout, for example, noted that Fetcho fell into a category where he could not receive Medicare. Medicare recipients must be age 65 upon retirement or be legally married to someone who is.

Eventually, a benefit was thrown and many tidings of encourage-ment were offered. That was back in June. “But I am not one to live in the past,” says Fetcho, “I live in the now.”

It seems that his stage pres-ence has been retired for the time being but Fetcho has not given up on the moniker. He expresses his gratitude for all the support and encouragement he has been given and signs all of his correspondence with “Love Ya, Tiny Tina”.

“I don’t really foresee any performances in the near future, but I am able to walk with my new leg and getting better every day. I also had my car converted so I can drive us-

ing a left-side gas pedal.”Fetcho relies for now on Social Security

Disability but has not given up on the idea of nursing. “I may work at it part-time in the

future,” he says. “I am under the doc-tor’s care myself. My general health is doing well and my mental health offers some bad days but not enough for me to worry about them.”

When he refers to his mental health, Fetcho is talking mostly about the turbulent angst that comes from suddenly not being able to utilize a limb. “I can go to the mall and I do some volunteer work with kids but I have to sit down a lot quicker. I have to re-learn everything just to func-tion at 50% of the old me. I hope this New Year will bring me up to 75%.”

Recalling the past but not living in it, Fetcho indicates that Florida is, in fact, different than it was in 1976. “You know back then, gay life was difficult. As a female impersonator, I had to apply for an Identification that clearly stated my gender and I was forced by law to wear at least 3 items of male gender-specific attire at all times,” he laments.

“It’s ok to be gay now. It wasn’t before. Today we have not just gay

bars, but gay cities and gay politicians. We can be honest with each other today. If there’s a way to sum it all up, I’d have to go with that phrase… It Gets Better.”.

Rates effective 09/01/10 subject to change.Company rated A+ Superior by A.M. Best. www.americantaxandinsurance.com

954.302.3228

“The safe return of your money is our top priority”

• 10% Interest bonus credited on Day 1 on total deposit • Principal & interest guaranteed • No up-front fees or charges • Interest grows tax

deferred • Interest available monthly • Representing 60 top rated companies

Guaranteed return Fixed annuity 1st year BOnus interest rate

10.00%PLUS A LIFETIME INCOME RIDER GUARANTEED TO GROW AT 8% WITH INCOME FOR LIFE

Al Cicotte & Kevin Palomboamerican tax & insurance services

2881 E. Oakland Park Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, FL 33306

Tiny Tina Has Big ResolveNo Cha Cha Heels for Christmas but Fetcho says “It Gets Better”

JAR

RET

T T

ERR

ILL

Page 23: 12/29/10 V1I49

23 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

Natalie Portman flaps her arms and moves as gracefully as a

bird in the twisted psychosexual thriller black swan, but the

comparisons don’t stop there. The actress ate like one, too.

To transform into mentally unstable ballet dancer Nina Sayers, a

darkly disturbing role that’s already giving Portman major Oscar pull,

the 29-year-old had to train intensely – for nearly eight hours a day

she exercised, toned and practiced – and eat lots of carrots and al-

monds. Then, as soon as production wrapped, she stuffed her face with

pasta… for breakfast, lunch and dinner.

“The physical discipline really helped for the

emotional side of the character,” Portman says,

a sweet laugh escaping her as she discusses the

film during a press day at Los Angeles’ Pantag-

es Theatre. “That’s a ballet dancer’s life – you

don’t drink, you don’t go out with your friends,

you don’t have much food. You are constantly

putting your body through extreme pain, and

you get that understanding of the self-flagella-

tion of a ballet dancer.”

But simply twirling around in pointe shoes, in Nina’s case anyway, is

only the half of it. Pressure to be the best, to succeed in every way for

everyone – herself, her mother (Barbara Hershey) and her instructor

(Vincent Cassel) – mounts in mental madness, as black swan becomes

less about dance than the psychosis of performing it. New dancer lily

(Mila Kunis), who impresses with her dark Black Swan personification,

only adds to the fire burning inside Nina, throwing her into a charged

competition that’s as destructive as the dance form itself.

“It’s really just a retelling of swan Lake,” says director darren

Aronofsky (The Wrestler), “but it definitely shows the challenges and

the darkness and the reality of how hard it is to be a ballet dancer.”

Dirty DancingNatalie Portman and Black Swan cast talk ballet thriller – and that girl-on-girl sex scene

By C h r i s A z z o pA r d i

continued on page 27

Page 24: 12/29/10 V1I49

24 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

Nightlife by J.W. Arnold

NEW YEA

R’S EV

E BLOW

OUT!

IF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OF

SHANNON’SNEW YEAR’S EVE PARTY’SOVER THE LAST 10 YEARS

IN HIS OWN BARIS GOING TO BE OFF THE HOOK!

1913 north andrews avenue • wilton manors, Florida 33311

IF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OFIF YOU EVER BEEN TO ONE OF

THEN YOU KNOWTHIS YEARS PARTY

Out with the Old, In with the New: let’s Celebrate!

You have to love it when holidays fall on the weekend and this year

was no exception as both the Christmas and New Year’s holidays landed most of us an extra day to celebrate. With barely a week to recover from the outrageous Christ-mas parties, New Year’s is upon us and, as usual, South Florida nightspots are pulling out all the stops for a memorable holiday:

FORT lAUdERdAlE ANd WIlTON mANORS

living Room, the swanky club on Fort Lauderdale’s Las Olas Riverwalk celebrates the New Year with future fashion and a fluorescent 3-D “Tron”-themed party, while on Wilton Drive, Bill’s Filling Station rings in the year with videos from popular local VJ Barry Browder, accompanied by a bal-loon drop and champagne toast at midnight. Across the street, the Shoppes of Wil-

ton manors will become the Times Square of South Florida with lots of holiday revelry in the parking lot. Georgie’s Alibi also counts down the New Year inside with a classic bal-loon drop while just a few doors down, Boom features dJ Scott mann on the turntables.A couple of blocks up Wilton Drive at the

Manor Complex, dJ david Knapp will be in the booth and Erika Norell take to the stage to wish 2010 away. On Saturday, Jan. 1, Manor continues the party with dJ lazaro leon. There is no cover either night.If you’re feeling a little dirty—after all not

everybody got their stockings stuffed for Christmas, head to the boy bars. In addition to their regular bevy of hot dancers, Board-walk features performances all weekend long by “Men” magazine’s man of the year, Reese Rideout. Meanwhile, at Johnny’s on Broward Blvd.,

it will be a brutal night, thanks to appear-ances by ultra-dominate porn star Brenn Wyson. If you survive New Year’s Eve, plan to stop by Ramrod, the area’s hottest leather bar on Saturday for the New Year’s pig dance,

sure to be a memorable way to kick off 2011.Looking for more of a low-key holiday? The

local neighborhood bars will welcome you to celebrate the New Year, too. For a Country Western evening, head to Scandal’s Sa-

loon or the Stable on Oak-land Park Blvd. If sports are

your thing, head down to Sidelines Sports Bar. And, we can’t forget matty’s for

the boys and New moon for the girls on the other end of Wilton Dr.Starting in January,

Torch will have new per-formers! Teri Wilson will perform on Wednesday & Thursday nights. Chris Bar-rett can be heard during Sunday brunch at noon. Bob Pagano will be the performer for Sunday Twilight at 6 pm. debi Benson will be there on Friday & Saturday nights. Hear them all! Go to www.Thetorchclub.Com (Click “hear performers”).

SOUTH BEACH ANd mIAmI

Billed as the “biggest party in the world,” matinee comes to Miami Beach’s

Paris Theater on Washington Ave. With the ever popular “Tron” theme, tickets aren’t cheap, going all the way to $175. Elsewhere on the beach, you can get your

cork popped at Edison Farrow’s Hype Fridays at Bar 721. dJ Bryan Zero will be spinning and, as if a complimentary cham-pagne toast isn’t enough, there will be free vodka from 10 to 11 p.m.For the ladies out there, Pandora Events

takes over trendy Lincoln Rd. nightclub, Score, for a huge dance party, “Odyssey: A Glimpse into the Future.” dJ Just Steph will be in the booth and hot sexy cy-borg dancers will be on the move all night long.Just down the road at legendary Twist, dJs

Joey Se and lazaro leon will be saluting 2010 with the best sounds on the beach and dJ miik will be entertaining as you sip your martinis at MOVA Lounge.In Miami, Sugar ushers in the New Year

with dJ Willy G. and shows by Sasha and T.P. lords. Get there early for the cham-pagne toast at midnight—you’ve got to admit, midnight is early for the crowd in Miami.

Page 25: 12/29/10 V1I49

25 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

Page 26: 12/29/10 V1I49

26 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

While financial planning is important to everyone, for gay and lesbian partners it can be crucial. Let Morgan Stanley Smith Barney help you develop a plan that works for you now and in the future.

• Protect your income and assets

• Take advantage of a thorough financial plan

• Develop a strategy based on your specific goals

Financial protection begins with a plan.Actually, a complimentary consultation.

Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC recommends that investors independently evaluate particular investments and strategies, and encourages investors to seek the advice of a Financial Advisor. The appropriateness of a particular insvestment or startegy will depend on an investor’s individual circumstanes and objectives.

© 2010 Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC. Member SIPC.

Partner Planning

Daniel M. PyeVice President2400 E. Commerical Blvd. Fort Lauderdale, FL 33308

[email protected]

Page 27: 12/29/10 V1I49

27 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

Miam

i City

Balle

t

Jan. 7-9 adrienne arsht center

Jan. 14-16 Broward center

Jan. 28-30 Kravis center

company premiere! twyla tharp’s exhilarating Baker’s Dozen

program ii

La SonnambulaBaker’s Dozen Western Symphony

MCB IS SUPPORTED IN PART BY AN AWARD FROM THE NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE ARTS. SPONSORED IN PART BY THE STATE OF FLORIDA, DEPARTMENT OF STATE, DIVISION OF CULTURAL AFFAIRS, AND THE FLORIDA COUNCIL ON ARTS AND CULTURE. FUNDING FOR THIS ORGANIZATION IS PROVIDED IN PART BY THE BRO-WARD COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS AS RECOMMENDED BY THE BROWARD CULTURAL COUNCIL. MCB PROGRAMMING IS MADE POSSIBLE WITH THE SUPPORT OF THE MIAMI-DADE COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF CULTURAL AFFAIRS AND THE CULTURAL AFFAIRS COUNCIL, THE MIAMI-DADE COUNTY MAYOR AND BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS. CITY OF MIAMI BEACH, CULTURAL AFFAIRS PROGRAM, CULTURAL ARTS COUNCIL. MIAMI CITY BALLET HAS COMPLIED WITH THE RE-QUIREMENTS OF CHAPTER 496, FLORIDA STATUTES, THE SOLICITATION OF CONTRIBUTIONS ACT. OUR REGISTRATION NUMBER IS CH1034. A COPY OF THE OFFICIAL REGISTRATION AND FINANCIAL INFORMATION MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE DIVISION OF CONSUMER SERVICES BY CALLING TOLL-FREE (800) 435-7352 WITHIN THE STATE. REGISTRATION DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT, APPROVAL OR RECOMMENDATION BY THE STATE. TOP PHOTO: JEANETTE DELGADO, PHOTO ©2009 LOIS GREENFIELD. BOTTOM PHOTO: JEANETTE DELGADO, PHOTO © GIO ALMA.

Season presenter

561-832-7469kravis.org

305-949-6722 arshtcenter.org

954-462-0222browardcenter.org

Jeanette DeLGaDO MCB Principal Dancer

25TH ANNIVERSARY

SEASON!

50 superB dancers4 thriLLinG premieres

1 Great orchestra

ticKets from $19!Call 305.929.7010 or Toll Free 877.929.7010Select your own seat online 24/7 miamicityballet.org

Hype, however, isn’t over how much weight Portman and co-star Kunis (That ’70s Show) shed to play rivals – about 20 pounds each – or that it took a grueling year for Portman to move as skillfully as she does onscreen. All anyone’s talked about is how they get it on (intensely), how far they go (pretty far), and how much of Portman you see (sorry, zilch). Recently, Portman told V Magazine, “It’s not raunchy – it’s extreme.”

At the November premiere in New York, she also insisted that shooting sex is hard whomever it’s with: “It doesn’t matter if it’s a friend, a male, a female,” she told The Huffington Post from the red carpet. “You’re with 100-something crew members, lighting you, repositioning you; there’s no comfort whatsoever.”

It was just as awkward for Kunis, who spoke about the scene at the Pantages The-atre: “Whether you have a same-sex scene or a scene with the opposite sex, it’s a sex scene nonetheless,” says the actress, who suggestively bedded another woman – but not so graphically – in 2007’s After Sex. “Do-ing something like this with Darren was very

safe and as comfortable as it could be. I never had a fear of being exploited.”

The steamy scene, a switch from Portman’s usually prim-and-proper image (there’s a reason we fell madly in love with her in Garden State), is pivotal in creating Nina, whose newfound liberation af-ter years of repression leads to a raging sexual awakening.

She masturbates, vomits, hallucinates and anxiously scratches herself until she bleeds. The Harvard-educated actress – who says, “This was actually a case where something I learned in school did turn into something practical” – has a name for it: “religious obses-

sion-compulsion.” And then there’s Nina’s smother-mother. Think Mommie Dearest, but with Hershey in Faye Dunaway’s place.

“It was really exciting to come in and do this insular, claustrophobic, intense relation-ship,” says the Beaches actress. “(Portman and I) got to a feeling of ritual. And I tried to copy her eyebrows as much as I could. We were very aware of the symbiotic everyday-ness of living together forever, and that was fun. We didn’t talk about it too much, but we knew it.”

How they reached that unique bond was the product of Aronofsky’s genius suggestion: Exchange letters in character, as mother and daughter.

Portman starts, “Barbara wrote gorgeous letters that were really in character that re-ally gave a sense –”

“Of our history,” Barbara adds. “To sug-gest that was just amazing preparation and it gave me the door to my character, which was great.”

Singularly, as Nina, Portman was made for this role. until age 12, she was a dancer and dreamed of growing up to be one.

“I always idealized it, as most young girls

do, as the most beautiful art,” Portman says. “I always wanted to do a film related to that. So when Darren had this incredible idea that wasn’t just related to the dance world but also had this really complicated character – two characters, really – it was just something completely exciting.”

Really tough, too. Training aside, it’s one of the actress’ most complicated characters, a role that summons an extensive out-of-body performance that only someone with Portman’s range could pull off. And she has before, effortlessly slipping into the erratic seductress role in Closer, as a stripper, and in period pieces like The Other Boleyn Girl. In

January, she’ll star alongside Ashton Kutcher in the sex farce No Strings Attached. Aronof-sky was sold far sooner, though, with one of the actress’ first films, starring a then-13-year-old Portman as a precocious sidekick to a hit man in The Professional.

“One of the reasons I think Darren and I had such telepathy during this was because he’s as disciplined and focused as could pos-sibly be, and that’s what I try to be,” Portman muses, mulling over her Black Swan character. “And I’m not a perfectionist but I’m defi-nitely… I think I like discipline.” Laughing, she insists: “I’m obedient!”

Big shock.

dirty dancing

continued from page 23

Page 28: 12/29/10 V1I49

28 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

TH

E R

EG

Ul

AR

SHeard it on...

By K

arl H

amp

eNAKEd SWORd CElEBRATES dAdT

Well, come on now, everyone has got to make a buck, and the website naked-

sword.com is no different than any other business that has to pay its bills. So why not seize the day, hop

on the moment, and score while you can. Within days after the uS Senate’s vote to repeal DADT, Naked Sword came up with this cool gimmick- just celebrate the end of DADT by enhancing your

military gay porn collection . All we could say is if you ever doubted gays were in the military to begin with, this collection of films should put an end to those thoughts right away.

diCAPRIO WON’T dON dRAG AS HOOVER

leonardo diCaprio has a new male love interest in his forthcoming biopic of FBI honcho J. Edgar Hoover, but don’t expect him to indulge in Hoover’s alleged

cross-dressing, reports michael musto on his Village Voice blog. “I know this for a fact because a reporter friend of mine actually asked the actor about it,” Musto writes.

The Social Network’s Armie Hammer has reportedly been cast to play lawyer-turned-FBI-official Clyde Tolson, a man many believe was also Hoover’s longtime secret lover. Clint Eastwood will direct DiCaprio in the film, based on a screenplay by Milk’s Oscar-winner dustin lance Black.

ElTON JOHN IS A FA-THER

(CNN) – Sir Elton John is a father. The boy was born on Christ-mas Day. And he shall be Levon. Or, more accurately, Zachary Jackson levon Furnish-John, the singer’s publicist said late Monday.

“We are overwhelmed with hap-piness and joy at this very special mo-ment,” John and his long-time partner, david Furnish, said in a statement. “Zachary is healthy and doing really

well, and we are very proud and happy parents.”

John and Furnish formalized their rela-tionship in a much-publicized civil part-nership ceremony in 2005 after 12 years together. The ceremony was held at the Windsor Guildhall – the same venue where Britain’s Prince of Wales and Camilla Parker Bowles married. John has a resi-dence in Windsor, outside of London.

The baby was born in California via a surrogate, according to Fran Curtis, a representative for the couple. Curtis said she would not discuss the details of the sur-rogacy arrangements.

Like his namesake in John’s early 1970s hit “Levon,” the baby boy was born on Christmas Day and weighed 7 pounds, 15 ounces, Curtis said.

In addition to “Levon,” where the couple apparently snatched one of the baby’s middle names, other classic John songs are likely to take on new meaning, such as “I Guess That’s Why they Call It The (Baby) Blues” and “I’m Still Standing” for the tod-dler years.

leonardo diCaprio

david Furnish and Elton John

Page 29: 12/29/10 V1I49

29 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

PREACHER PAT SAYS ‘lEGAlIZE POT’

Count this among the 10 things nobody ever expected to see in their lifetimes: 700 Club founder Pat Robertson, one of the cornerstone figures of America’s Chris-tian right movement, has come out in favor of legalizing marijuana.

Calling it getting “smart” on crime, Rob-ertson aired a clip on a recent episode of his 700 Club television show that advocated the viewpoint of drug law reformers who run prison outreach ministries.

A narrator even claimed that religious prison outreach has “saved” millions in public funds by helping to reduce the number of prisoners who return shortly after being released. His co-host added that the success of religious-run dormitories for drug and alcohol cessation therapy present an “opportu-

nity” for faith-based communities to lead the way on drug law reforms.

“We’re locking up people that have taken a couple puffs of marijuana and next thing you know they’ve got 10 years with mandatory sentences,” Robertson contin-

ued. “These judges just say, they throw up their hands and say nothing we can do with these mandatory sentences. We’ve got to take a look at what we’re considering crimes and that’s one of ‘em.

“I’m ... I’m not exact-ly for the use of drugs, don’t get me wrong, but I just believe that criminalizing marijuana, criminalizing the pos-

session of a few ounces of pot, that kinda thing it’s just, it’s costing us a fortune and it’s ruining young people. Young people go into prisons, they go in as youths and come out as hardened criminals. That’s not a good thing.”

Page 30: 12/29/10 V1I49

30 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

Page 31: 12/29/10 V1I49

31 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

By Joey Amato

B orn in Tallahassee, but now a resident of South Beach, Anthony Humphreys has been making a

name for himself in South Florida’s vibrant and flourishing art community.

A graduate of Full Sail university in Or-lando, Humphreys holds a Masters degree in Music Business and an undergraduate in Digital Arts and Design. He tells SFGN his career path fell into place by sheer coincidence. “I always really wanted to study music,” he states. “When I began delving into it and trying to understand the concepts, it was difficult for me to grasp.” undeterred, Humphreys began focusing on digital art and design instead.

Soon after graduating, Humphreys invested in an SLR camera and began taking stock photos which he used in his design work and shortly after received a surpris-ing gig. “A friend of mine was a booking agent for Wilhelmina Models and asked me to do a test shoot for the agency one day. I was a little taken back as I did not consider myself a photographer of any sort, but I obliged.” This opportunity changed the course of his career. “If it wasn’t for the gig with Wilhelmina, I don’t know where I

would be today,” he explains.Being in the field and sharing artistic

vision with others was a breath of fresh air for Humphreys who typically spent much of his time at a computer. “Being able to combine personal interaction with post production really gave me a new sense of inspiration. That day I followed through with a new vision for myself, a future-for-ward photographer.”

Humphreys credits various experiences for helping to mold him as an artist. “We can never stop learning, and although spe-cific jobs stand out over others, all of them are of value.”

The young artist is a member of Miami’s Independent Thinkers, a non-profit organi-zation dedicated to the unity, development and promotion of Miami’s art community. “I have exhibited with them a total of four times now; two of the shows were at Art Basel in 2009 and 2010.”

In addition, he recent held an exhibi-tion of his work at Dennis Dean Gallery in Wilton Manors and currently has a collec-tion of sixteen pieces displayed at Piola in Hallandale Beach. The exhibit will be open until mid February.

Inspired by his friends, Humphreys de-scribes his work as frozen encapsulations of

time. “My friends are my influence. They are make-up artists, stylists,

hair dressers, videographers, musicians, models, dancers, etc. It is very rare that you

find a friend of mine that is not expressive in some artistic medium.

The human soul is what drives my work.”When he is not working on his art, Hum-

phreys is busy supporting local charities. “I am an avid supporter of the organ and tis-sue donation industry. I am very passionate about this cause and do what I can to raise money and awareness. When one life ends, another life has the opportunity to live.”

An avid patron of the arts, he enjoys traveling, dancing, live events, and listening to new music from The Chemical Brothers and Nicki Minaj.

For more information, please visit Anthony-

Humphreys.com.

SFGN Profile: Anthony Humphreys

Page 32: 12/29/10 V1I49

32 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

Sidelines Goes Smoke Free

Staff Reporters

T he owners and management recognize in order to sustain economic health and continue to grow, they must continue to evolve and change.

So, after months of deliberation, and many discussions with staff, loyal patrons, and business-minded folks, Side-lines co-owners, Laurie Whittaker and Marty Kildea, have decided to “bring a breath of fresh air” to the popular gay sports bar.

On Wednesday, January 5, 2011, Sidelines will become a smoke-free establishment. In order to properly undertake this rejuvenation, various modifications will be made to the bar and it will be necessary to close operations for two days. Therefore, on Monday and Tuesday, January 3 and 4, respectively, Sidelines will be closed. During this time, the staff will be working very hard to refresh, refashion and surprise its customers by creating a new Sidelines!

It must be reiterated that these changes in no way affect the “sports theme” that has made Sidelines the repeated award-winning entertainment venue of Fort Lau-derdale since their opening in 2006.

By giving Sidelines a bit of a “nip/tuck”, the goal of man-agement is to gain even more business, sustain themselves in this seemingly slumped economy, and grow their future business with confidence.

For more information, please visit Sidelinessports.com.

Page 33: 12/29/10 V1I49

33 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

Full Charge Bookkeeping Services

By Amy Paonessa

T he Lighthouse ArtCenter of Tequesta is accepting submis-

sions of artistically-designed bras for its second annual ArtyBras exhibition and auc-tion to benefit breast can-cer research, until January 4. Last year’s auction raised $5,000 for the American Cancer Society’s “Making Strides Against Breast Cancer.” The year proceeds will go to the Ella Milbank Fo-shay Cancer Center at the Jupiter Medical Center. The pieces will be exhibited at the Lighthouse ArtCenter from January 6 until the day of the auction, February 10. Guests at that night’s event will be treated to a fash-ion show, where they can see the creatively decorated bras on the runway.

“The bras can get pretty wild and outland-ish, because there isn’t any limit on what the artists can do,” says Sarah Block of the Light-house ArtCenter. “49 bras were donated last

year, and we’re expecting 50 or more this year. Artists are already bringing in pieces.”

The highest bid at last year’s benefit auction went to local art-ist James Hook’s piece, “Mardi Bra: Unmask the Myth of Breast Cancer,” which sold for $420. Over 300 guests attended the auction. The event organizers plan to hold a ballot auction instead of a live one this time around. This will enable bidders who haven’t checked out the ornate pieces on display at the gallery see them off the runway.

“It’ll give people a chance to get up close and see everything,” Block says.

Artists like James Hook can attest, those of the Y chromosome persuasion shouldn’t be deterred from contributing a bra.

“By and large the artists have been wom-en,” Block told us, “but it looks like men have taken more of an interest this year. I think people are realizing that breast cancer is an issue that affects everyone.”

For more information, please visit LightHouse-

Arts.org, or call (561)746-3101

ArtyBras: Artistically Fighting Breast Cancer

Page 34: 12/29/10 V1I49

34 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

By A. Sebastian Fortino

B oth detractors and fans of Joan Crawford might raise an eyebrow at the title of this thoughtful

biography by veteran Hollywood biographer Donald Spoto. Yet, it’s not meant to be an insult. Joan admitted to her obsessive desire to rise from chorus girl to Hollywood Roy-alty. Furthermore, Joan starred in two films titled Possessed, although the storylines differed entirely.

Born Lucille Le Seur in 1905, her father soon left his wife, daughter and slightly older son. Mrs. Le Seur was left to fend for the fam-ily. For sometime the family lived in a laundry where they all worked to save money.

To secure education for young Lucille, her mother made arrangements with

prestigious schools for girls. She worked off tuition performing menial tasks on campus. However, schooling was brief.

“After the fifth grade she was essentially hired to work, and although she had the right to attend classes, there was no time for that. Therefore she quite accurately said that she had “no formal education.” Indeed, that lack of schooling was part of the inferi-

ority complex to which she often referred, and for which she tried to compensate dur-ing her entire life.”

She would, seek out refined men with background and name, such as Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. and Franchot Tone, of whom she later said, he “…contributed greatly to my cultural and intellectual development,” in 1951. Swimming, dancing, French, poetry and literature were all studied by Joan on her way to prominence.

Part of that stardom came with a name change. Hollywood, still gripped tightly by studio executives such as Louis B. Mayer, felt Lucille Le Seur was too difficult to pro-nounce. A contest was arranged, and Joan Crawford was born. She revealed disliking Crawford – it reminded her of crawfish.

The book deals honestly with Crawford’s enigma – both public and private. While Cathy and Cindy Crawford, identical twins, and others close with the family argue against the majority of Christina Crawford’s damning book Spoto supports facts regard-ing the children’s adoption. They were all ad-opted through a baby broker, in effect black market babies taken from troubled homes.

Spoto points out the infamous wire hang-ers scene in the book and film Mommie Dearest most likely grew from knowledge Christina had about her mother’s time in the laundry, hanging clothes for customers. It is unlikely a wire hanger ever entered the pris-tine home Joan later occupied in Brentwood.

Ex-husband Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. con-firms Spoto’s title is dead on. He speaks of the torture she put herself through in order to be Joan Crawford the movie star both on the set, and in public.

Yet, while she consorted with “people of culture and taste,” said Fairbanks, Jr., she nev-er forgot the audience kept her in demand. Not only did the directors contribute to her image and popularity but so did the crew. She gave generous gifts, called on ill crew people, and in the end learned the craft of filmmaking in addition to acting in films.

Towards the end of her life work still drove her constantly. Even when married to a Pepsi-Cola executive she lent herself to the corporation, and still after when the films got progressively questionable. Yet, Crawford needed work in her life, no matter what the role, to in fact be Joan Crawford.

Book Review

Book: Possessed: The Life of Joan Crawford

By Donald Spoto HarperCollins .com 336 pages

Credible. Newsworthy. Progressive. The Voice of Our Community.

Member, The Associated PressMember, The Florida Press Association

Member, The National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association

Page 35: 12/29/10 V1I49

35 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

By Jarrett Terrill

O n December 22, many long-time community mem-

bers came out to Johnny’s Bar in Fort Lauderdale to help support getting “Father Bill” Collins, the founder of Poverello Food Bank, a new set of wheels.

His entire charity was, at one point, based on driving around to deliver meals to those whom suffered from HIV/AIDS. Now he is not left with much to do since an accident to-taled his car. He has been taking taxicabs to and from the food bank and his home in Lauderdale by the Sea but he cannot afford those expensive trips every day.

At a time when the cost of America’s av-erage car is around $28,000, AJ Cross, the GM of Johnny’s coordinated a fund raiser to help Father Bill purchase a 2010 Ford Focus for the low price of $18,500. But ac-

cording to Cross, they have not been able to reach their goal yet.

Despite everyone’s best ef-forts, Cross lrevealed that the donations did not quite come to half of what the participants had hoped for. Although there were per-formers, and comedians and a silent auction and even city council members attesting to

Father Bill’s good character, the total amount garneredwas $7,200.00, well short of the cost of a new vehicle.

According to Cross, he would like to con-tinue with fundraisers for the car but he ad-mits the possibility that Collins might not be driving that particular Ford Focus after all.

“Once again, Thank ALL Of You,” Cross concluded. ”And this is NOT over yet. There is NO WAY we will stop until Father Bill no longer has to spend money on Cabs.”

bahamasfun day cruises

music, games, sun decks, casino & more.

Receive Free Cash Savings of

Not 1¢ More.All-inclusive, even premium brand drinks

percouple

for only

$129.99*per person

$1,500all the way onboard

Discovery Cruise Line®

Call 1-888-906-3472 or your Travel AgentDiscoveryCruiseLine.com

*Certain restrictions apply. Visit DiscoveryCruiseLine.com for travel terms and conditions. Ship’s registry Bahamas.

DIS-10-490 FunDay SFGayNews.indd 1 12/6/10 1:46 PM

* Offers valid with purchase of Gold Dental Plan.

THE PATIENT AND ANY OTHER PERSON RESPONSIBLE FOR PAYMENT HAS THE RIGHT TO REFUSE TO PAY, CANCEL PAYMENT OR BE REIMBURSED FOR PAYMENT FOR ANY OTHER SERVICE, EXAMINATION OR TREATMENT THAT IS PERFORMED AS A RESULT OF AND WITHIN SEVENTY TWO (72) HOURS OF

RESPONDING TO THE ADVERTISEMENT FOR THE FREE, DISCOUNTED FEE OR REDUCED FEE SERVICE, EXAMINATION OR TREATMENT.

Superhero Bill Needs CarIt’s Back to the Future for Father Bill’s Ford Focus

Page 36: 12/29/10 V1I49

36 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

BusinessCard direCtory

VET CARE

ACCOUNTING PIZZA

Island CIty PIZZa “Home of tHe original uncut pizza”

954-561-4272

1913 north andrews avenue • wilton manors

WHY UNCUT?

The oils and juices stay on the pizza until you are ready to eat not on the bottom of the box so your

pizza crust stays hard and doesn’t go limp.

“WOW” • Dennis J from Sfgn“Best Pizza I’ve Ever Had” • Bob r from fX

“To Die For!” • evan corey

Island CIty PIZZa “Home of tHe original uncut pizza”

954-561-4272

1913 north andrews avenue • wilton manors

WHY UNCUT?

The oils and juices stay on the pizza until you are ready to eat not on the bottom of the box so your

pizza crust stays hard and doesn’t go limp.

“WOW” • Dennis J from Sfgn“Best Pizza I’ve Ever Had” • Bob r from fX

“To Die For!” • evan corey

BEDDINGHAIR DESIGN

11Jeanne White-Ginder – In all the years that Jeanne (Ryan White’s

mother) was flown around for speaking engagements and charity events, she’s never lost that sense of injustice and bewilder-ment about the disease of HIV. On the 20th anniversary of the global day of recognition that her son inspired, she was once again a bit of an outsider. She lives in Florida now, which if you ask me, can be a lot like Indiana in the 1980’s when she was sitting with Elton John and Michael Jackson next to her son’s deathbed. At the time, she was perplexed as to how there could be more money in that room than anyone could ever dream of and yet her son had to die anyway. “I guess I just want to be known as his mom,” she told one interviewer. “I’ve always tried to be best mom I could be… and you just do what you have to… even when it’s not easy anymore.”

On World AIDS Day 2010, the ADAP programs have become a lottery and White-Ginder recalls the last two decades since her son passed in the 3rd person. “They all got so excited back then,” she says, “because, well, we thought there was going to be a cure. They kept talking about a cure that never came. There were so many people who made such a difference, but the people that really did all the work are the ones who are no longer mostly here.”

10 diane J. Savino – This is a wom-an who could sell an ice cube to an

Eskimo but only if they’re willing to listen to her. Republicans in the New York State Sen-ate did not listen to her impassioned speech on behalf of legalizing gay marriage in New York – in fact, they literally left the room and came back when it was time to cast their

votes. Although gay marriage did not pass in New York, Diane’s message went viral and rang wedding bells in the ears of all the right people. You can view it here.

09Ted Kennedy – Although Senator Ted Kennedy did not live

to see the year 2010, something he wrote back during the Clinton Administration resurfaced dur-ing the repeal of DADT (Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell) which carried strong im-plications for John McCain despite the fact that the two had tried to pass legislation together in the past and were even thought of as friends. In short, while not mentioning anyone by name, Kennedy entered a written account of how some of his fellow Senators had completely ignored valuable testimony before rushing ahead with what would become DADT.

08Katy Perry – What if I told you that my new favorite celebrity

started out performing Christian Country music in her parent’s church? You might take away my license to call myself a discerning gay audiophile… She even made a song that was sort of offensive to gay people (“ur So

Gay”). But let me tell you – if Lady GaGa is a “fame monster”, than Katy Perry is the Jabberwocky. The dif-ference between the two, most notably is that while Lady GaGa seems to have chosen her gay fans, we chose Katy Perry for our-selves. Mark my word; DJ’s will be spinning variations on ‘Firework’ for years to come because it’s just really well done. But what puts Perry (or is it Hudson?)

on this list, is the unassuming sincerity and sentiment she’s expressed through her art and actions (duets with Elmo have censored footage now?) and the coolness with which she has purged herself of any wrong-doing by creating the most uplifting “it gets better” video you’ll ever see…

Eleven People Who Totally Rocked me into Next Year

Jarrett Terrill

ted kennedy

PUBLICITY

Page 37: 12/29/10 V1I49

37 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

PLUMBING

Full Charge Bookkeeping Services

ACCOUNTING

marketplaCe direCtory

07Belinda Carlisle – When Carlisle recorded “Heaven is a Place on

Earth” in 1987 it was almost like she was send-ing a postcard to herself in the future. It was this song, actually, that indirectly led me to Buddhism.

For Carlisle, it was something else that brought her to the so-called middle path: “I knew if I didn’t stop I’d be dead,” the 5-years sober Carlisle says, “I remember thinking about how humiliating it would be for my son to have his mom die in a hotel room of a cocaine overdose. That’s pretty low.”

Also speaking of her son, Carlisle has this to say: “Most of my friends are gay and lesbian, but when it’s your own kid ... If there are any parents out there who are struggling with knowing their kid is gay, wanting to throw them out or not loving them – then I hope this book helps. So if this can open somebody’s mind just a little bit then I’m glad I wrote the book.” She may not be the Dalai Lama, but she’s got an idea of what compassion is.

06Barack Obama – Through an epic battle against the allied

special interests who entertained masses of uneducated voters and even created a spe-cial sub-partisan domain to house them in congress, President Obama has shown cool,

calm, collected reasoning ability. He sought compromise and bipartisanship even when it seemed to do so would be egg on his face. Most dishearteningly, he withstood some of the worst attacks not from his political opposites but from the very people he’s looking out for. When groups like GetEqual and AHF decided to tar-get him, his administration and his allies in congress for perceived inaction on gay rights and HIV fund-ing, he extended an olive branch. When the olive branch was rejected he resorted to humor. When humor didn’t quench their bloodlust he tried to dis-appear until the job was done in congress. When it came time to sign the bills he had been fighting for, right along side of us, he did so with a smile. I raise my glass to our President and his family!

05Sandra Bullock – What interest a person lacks in football, they can

surely make up for with an appreciation for hard-working actresses who are down on their

luck. When Bullock made a captivating Oscar acceptance speech for her role in The Blind Side, I rushed to put it on my Netflix queue. Of course, it was every bit as good as it was hyped to be. Her life didn’t immediately get less complicated after the awards as we all know. But she handled it in character – as the new

gay favorite in big Holly-wood – Diva2.0. And of course, she had a little help from a friend who “Gives A Damn”.

04Shirley Sherrod

– It wasn’t the best of circumstances under which Shirley Sherrod became a household name. She was well on her way to becoming

the next “Van Jones” as Fox News would have us believe. “Just another racist black woman settling a score against the white man with help from her friends at the NAACP.” Well, scratch that. The only thing Sherrod wanted to settle was her cell phone bill. She was the victim of one of the most unforgiveable acts of propagandizing video editing we’ve seen.

Her message of coming to terms with racism was portrayed as racism itself and her overall message of cooperation & tolerance was ignored in favor of deeply held prejudices. But it turned out for the best since we are now aware of what an amazing woman she really is.

03Asher Brown – There were as many as 12 gay kids who commit-

ted suicide in rapid succession and it was to be expected that the mainstream media would collect the easy ratings and move on as soon as any other news story emerged. This is of course part of the larger problem that these troubled kids face. Asher Brown, age 13, was one of the most perplexing of the cases and he was the boy that touched my heart and finally brought me to tears. His adorable smiling photo does not easily con-nect with the story of poverty, out-casting, bullying and reckless disregard that stole this child from his parents and the nation at large. I don’t easily make heroes out of vic-tims, but in this case, I gladly accept this kid as a hero because he inspired me to make the rights of kids a priority in my life.

sandra bulloCk

Who are the top 2 people who rocked in 2010? To find out, go to: sfgn.com/rocked

“We treat you like part of the family!”DR. TROY LOMASKY

Graduate, New York Chiropractic College

Coast Chiropractic Injury & Wellness Center

954.463.30362608 NE 16th Ave., Wilton Manors

FL LIC # MM13657

WALK-INSEMERGENCIES

Page 38: 12/29/10 V1I49

38 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

Crossword Puzzle

HE lOVES YOU, YEAH, YEAH, YEAH

Across 1 Three-men-in-a-tub event 5 Oral attention getter 9 So-so grade14 Point of view intro, at Gay.com15 “Oh, What a

Beautiful Morning” singer16 Prayer starter17 Hides of hairy guys?19 Workers under Barney Frank20 He had a crush on Beatle John22 Start of MGM’s motto23 Dean, and others without causes27 Bye Bye Birdie sounds?31 Burn a bit33 Kit letters34 Two to one, for one35 Cat on ___ Tin Roof36 Lacking locks37 Early Beatle song that

expressed how 20-Across felt40 use your tongue41 Edison’s middle name42 Dorothy, to Em43 Three on a sundial44 Joel of Cabaret45 Somewhat formal46 Roman orator of note48 Prefix with political49 Where the relationship of 20-Across stayed?56 The Great Garbo59 Rae of Facts of Life60 Jam ingredients?61 Stud fee?62 Obscene four-letter word63 Sharon of If These Walls Could Talk 264 Name repeated in a Stein quote65 Country suffix

Down 1 Lettuce variety 2 uS citizen 3 The king in The King I, for one 4 Time for Frida 5 Fireplace rods 6 Bounds gaily 7 Deadly septet 8 HIV exam, e.g. 9 One that reproduces without sex10 Backup strategy11 ___ Cabin Federation12 Moist ending13 ‘60s radical org.18 Type of tool21 Muse for Millay24 “My Cup Runneth Over” singer25 Whitman’s dooryard bloomers26 Site of Gay Games VI27 Rex Reed, for one28 Where they say “Aloha”

when they come29 Not straight up30 Button’s place31 Chase of Community32 Georgetown athlete35 Ready and willing partner?36 Cheese for Ms. van de Kamp?38 Composer Copland39 Spread open44 Rosie’s Broadway musical45 Formal order47 Eulogizer of Diana in song48 Responders to “Bite me!”?50 Tenn. neighbor51 Cry after getting the shaft52 Reactions to seeing a hottie53 RBI to Glenn Burke54 Kett of the comics55 Jack McPhee, in Dawson’s Creek56 “Jumpin’ Jack Flash,” to Mick Jagger57 The daily grind58 WWII commandSee solution on page 39

lowing Saturday’s vote.“The legislation provides that repeal will take ef-

fect once the President, the Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff certify that implementation of the new policies and regulations written by the Department is consistent with the stan-dards of military readiness, military effectiveness, unit cohesion, and recruiting and retention of the Armed Forces,” noted Gates. “As I have stated before, I will approach this process deliberately and will make such certification only after careful consultation with the military service chiefs and our combatant command-ers and when I am satisfied that those conditions have been met for all the Services, commands and units.

“It is therefore important that our men and women in uniform understand that while today’s historic vote means that this policy will change, the implementa-tion and certification process will take an additional period of time. In the meantime, the current law and policy will remain in effect.

And then, once certification is submitted, the legis-lation calls for a third waiting period – a 60-day wait-ing period between certification and implementation. The language of the bill does not stipulate what, if anything, should take place during this third wait-ing period, but Senator Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.), who passed away in June, reportedly agreed to vote for repeal of DADT only after this waiting period was added. He told reporters at the time that the 60 days would give Congress “an opportunity to re-examine

the concerns of our Armed Forces and the manner in which they are being addressed.”

Thus, the splinter may not be ready to fall out for some time to come, especially since the 60-day review period will take place after Republicans have taken control of the House and increased their numbers in the Senate from 41 to 47.

Could a Republican House attempt to thwart repeal during that 60-day review period?

“Congress could always re-enter the picture, even repeal the repeal,” said longtime legal scholar and activist Nan Hunter, “but there are obviously not the votes for that, even in the next Congress. You might see oversight hearings on the House side, but, even there, I would doubt it, since I think [Republicans] will want to send a message that they are concentrating on curb-ing spending and other [economic] issues.”

No doubt, President Obama and the Democrats will be concentrating on such issues in 2011, too. The first debate of the 2012 presidential campaign among Republican candidates will take place in the spring of 2001. Given that between 50 and 78 percent of Ameri-cans supported the repeal of DADT, it seems unlikely that President Obama’s push to make repeal happen will be of any consequence in his effort to be re-elect-ed. But it is also unlikely that the president –or any other presidential candidate— will be spending much political capital to champion any other gay-related drives toward equality in the near future. Politicians must balance their capital among a wide variety of constituencies –that’s how they get re-elected.

So, for marriage equality, the LGBT community will have to focus on the courts, through such critical le-gal battles as Ted Olson-David Boies lawsuit against Proposition 8 in California and the Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders lawsuits in Massachusetts and Connecticut. And for protection against discrimi-nation in the workplace, it will to look to the future and another perfect alignment.

sen. Mark udall (d-Co) Consults with sen. joe lieberMan (i-Ct), while aCtiVist air ForCe

lt. Col. ViCtor FehrenbaCh looks on, durinG their CaMpaiGn to repeal dadt

air ForCe Major Mike alMy (leFt) and lt. Col. ViCtor FehrenbaCh

Celebrate the repeal oF dadt

2010: The Perfect Alignment

continued from page 3

Page 39: 12/29/10 V1I49

39 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com

ACCOmmOdATIONS

PERFECT VACATION RENTALSFrom $99/Night & $595/WeekBeautiful Studio, 1 & 2 BR Apts. with Full Kitchens.Clothing optional heated pool, laundry, parking. Close to Gay Dania & Nude Haulover Beaches. Incl. Cable, Tel. & Wi-Fi Internet.Pets Always Welcome Call (954) 927-0090 or visit www.LibertySuites.com

ACCOUNTING

PAuL GuzzARDO,CPA, P.A.Accounting Services,Tax Preparation,Financial Statement,Small Business Audits954-551-0408- [email protected]

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

THE GREEN HOPPER IS NOW FOR SALE. Take this established Business to the next level. A once in a lifetime opportunity to own a local icon. Appointment only. Contact [email protected]

ClEANING SERVICES

CLEANING SERVICES. Years of Experience. Condos, Apts, Homes, Offices, Move Ins/Outs. Weekly or Bi-Weekly. Wilton Manors, Oakland Park, Middle River Terrace, Fort Lauder-dale Area. Great References. Call BJ 954-512-3957

COmPUTER/TECH

COMPuTER/NETWORK SuPPORT FOR HOME OR OFFICE. Personable and Reliable Computer Network Support. Professional with over 15 years of Enterprise Level Experience. Affordable Rates. Contact Peter at (954) 816-4126 Or [email protected]

ExERCISE EqUIPmENT

ALMOST NEW BIKES: 2 TREK Navigator 2.0 bicycles (black); 21speed only used for 2 rides lock incl; Free delivery in tri-county area of SoFL; $350/each Thom at [email protected]

HElP WANTEd

TRAVEL SALES FuLL OR PART-TIMEWell established, web based cruise and travel agency in Ft. Lauderdale, with strong emphasis on the LGBT market, is seeking outside sales persons, full or part-time, in south Florida. This is a commission only position. We are seek-ing someone willing to promote to our market demographics and who prefer-ably already have a following. Previous travel experience is an asset, but we will train the right person. Good opportunity for an ambitious person to make above average income. Work is conducted from your home. Telephone line and high speed internet access with printing capabilities, is a requirement. Send your resume with references to: [email protected]

FOR SAlE

MERCHANDISEBody Text: Beds King 180,Queen 130,Full 110,Twin 90Frames 30, 5 Piece Bedroom Set 399. All Furniture954-465-6498

HElP WANTEd

SEEKING ACCOuNTANT/CPAStonewall Library Museum Archiveseeks a highly qualified account 3-5 hours per month. Prepares monthly financial statements.Overseesbookkeeper. CPA preferred. Send resumeto jack-rutland@stonewall-library,org

INSURANCE & FINANCIAl

ALLSTATE DIRECT: PERSONAL auto,home,condominium,boat and life insurance. For a free quote call Joe Mier 305-754-7414-------------------------------------------------AMERICAN TAX & INSuRANCEThe safe return of your money is our top priority. Call Al Cicotte & Kevin Palombo at 954-302-3228-------------------------------------------------CORRECT COVERAGE INSuRANCELife/Health/Group/Dental/DisabilityIncome/Annuities call toll free 1-877-646-2238 or 954-561-8297 Jim Rakvica www.correctcoverageinsurance.com-------------------------------------------------DuNHAM Insurance Services. Protecting the lifestyle to which you are Accus-tomed. Get Domestic Partner Rates. Call 954-564-7772 or Toll free at 1-888-564-7772

-------------------------------------------------WHILE FINANCIAL PLANNING is impor-tant to everyone, for the gay and lesbian partners it can be crucial. Let Morgan Stanley Smith Barney help you develop a plan that works for you now and in the future. Daniel M Pye 954-267-5683

lEGAl SERVICES

PROuDLY SERVING THE SOuTH FLORIDA GLBTX COMM. since 1993. Law office’s of Robin L. Bodiford ,PA specializes in Bankruptcy, Probate, Wills&Trust. Call 954-630-2707--------------------------------------------------CREDITORS CALLING? Call us! The Law Offices of George Castrataro, PA. Serv-ing Clients With Integrity and Compas-sion 954-573-1444--------------------------------------------------SELzER & WEISS ATTORNEY’S AT LAWLiving Will,Last Will and Testament,Durable Financial Power of Attorny all $399.00. Saturday appointment now available. call 954-567-4444

lICENSEd mASSAGE

dISClAImERThe following advertisers listed under the category “Licensed Massage” are state licensed in Florida and provide

therapeutic massage services.-------------------------------------------------IN-CALL / STuDIO SERVICE. Located in West Central Palm Beach. Nice Rates #MA51008 Call Wayne White at 561-254-8065-------------------------------------------------PROFESSIONAL THERAPEuTIC MAS-SAGE deep tissue, swedish, stretching. mon-sun, 10am-8pm in/out call, NON-SEXuAL ft,lauderdale. call robert 954-497-2372 lic: MA 19604

mORTGAGES

FHA, FANNIE Mae, VA & Jumbo Mortages- Direct Lender. Experts in Pur-chase & REFI of ALL Types of properties & condos. unmatched Rates & Closing- Burti- OFFICE: BR.>954-294-2540 PB.> 561-883-2424 u.S.>1-866-4FHA MORTGAGE (866-434-2667)

PERSONAl TRAINING

CHANGING LIVES SINCE 1991Certified fitness trainer with private gym.Strength and Flexibility Training. All fitness Levels. Frank Ward 954-630-0908

-------------------------------------------------If you are ready to make a healthier you a lifestyle call Christy Fritch,BS CPR certified 954-445-2540

PETS

TWO ENGLISH BuLLDOG PuPPIES for free to a good home. They are very friendly with people and other pets. If interested Please contact [email protected]

PROFESSIONAl SERVICES

HOME HEALTH AID Full or part time, live in or out. CNA experience, references, exercise, nutrition, special anti-cancer diet if interested. Call Jeff for no obligation consultation. 954-854-2420--------------------------------------------------BuTLER PLuMBING One of South Florida’s best plumbing service compa-nies - Professional plumbing services along with kitchen and bath remodeling. 100% quality work. One year warranty on workmanship. Call 561-613-7338 - www.butlerplumbinc.com

REAl ESTATE

WWW.GAYREALESTATE.COMFree Instant Access to Ft. Lauderdale,Wilton Manors & the Nation’s Top Gay& Lesbian Realtors. On-line or Toll Free1.888.420.MOVE (6683)--------------------------------------------------WILTON MANORS HOuSE FOR RENT 4/1 House for Rent- $1,250.00. Fenced yard, washer dryer, tiled floors, parking. Ready to move in.Call Rose - 305-868-8109.

--------------------------------------------------WILTON MANORS 3/2 DuPLEX.Pool,central A/C ,W/D,Tile Floorsupdated Kitchen&Baths. 1500/mo.954-563-8990--------------------------------------------------ANDY WEISER in a tough market You want a tough Realtor. In this market You need Andy Weiser 954-560-9667--------------------------------------------------FT LAuDERDALE/LAuDER LAKES PRIMARILY GAY PARK. Hurricane Ready 1,600sf 2BR/2BA 1 Yr Old, 32’ Party Deck overlooks huge Lake. Manufactured Home. Wood Cabinets & Granite Tops, Slate & Marble floors. Immaculate. Real Show Place! Pics @ www.twitpic.com/photos/FLParadis-e4Sale Cost $205K+, Sell $149,900, Call 954-817-6233--------------------------------------------------THE SHAPIRO GROuP INCResidential Property ManagementLICENSED REAL ESTATE BROKERwww.shapiroproperty.com 954-434-0175--------------------------------------------------KELLER WILLIAMS REALTY- Ted Adcock, Realtor Cell:954-609-4393 [email protected]

RENT/lEASE

FOR RENT: DOWNTOWN FORT LAuDERDALE location Church Sanctuary & Meeting Room. Call 954-731-8173.--------------------------------------------------WILTON MANORS. 2 Stories, fire place, pool 3 BR/2Bath, great room upstairs w/deck, pets ok, all appliances. Central heat & air, 2 car garage 1700 a month 954-918-4005

--------------------------------------------------WILTON MANORS 1BR/1BA one block from shopsRestaurants/nightlife. A/C, ceiling fans Terrazzo floors,laundry room with washer and dryer. large screened in pool & patio. $900/mo. includes:electric call 954-563-4442--------------------------------------------------1/1 RENOVATED APT. close to shopping, beach & I95. Lush landscaping w/fountain, paver patio, Small Pets OK. $650/Mo. Call 954-462-7817 --------------------------------------------------WILTON MANORS LARGE 2BR/1BA in 4 plex. newly renovated, CAC, polised terrazzo floor, new bathroom, fenced yard. $1150/mo F/S 954-566-8049

SElF-dEFENSE

WOMEN ON GuARD. Non-lethal, self-defense and home protection products call Susan Eaton or Martha Martines at 954-532-0600 or email us at [email protected]

YACHT REPAIR

YACHT REPAIR AND CAPTAIN/ENGI-NEER SERVICEYachts serviced: 10’-190’ yacht charters-36’-300plus Free quotes on Yacht Construction/Commissioning, Freelance Captain/Engineer, Electronics repair and instal-lation, Gas/Diesel Repair/Re-power, Hydraulic fabrication, repair and instal-lation, Water maker repair/ installation, Full service Welding & machine shop, Fiber glass/gel coat repair/ Woodwork/Varnishing, Monthly wash and Systems check service, Deliveries, Sea Trials & Surveys Cell Phone: 954.326.1858 Joe MacDonald

To place an ad, call Brian Swinford 954.530.4970or fill out form online at SouthFloridaGayNews.com/classifieds

BRIAN’S POP ad OF THE WEEK!

Solution to Crossword Puzzle on page 38

INTOxISKATE TUESdAYSSOuNDS BY DJ MISHA SAMSONGold Coast is Florida’s largest and

oldest landmark roller rink. Admission: $5. Skate rental $3. Cocktails $4. Beers

$3. Monthly theme parties & give aways. Book your private party with us today.

Next month’s party: TOTALLY 80s - Every Tuesday.

Gold Coast Roller Skating RInk(954) 547-3419

2604 South Federal Highway, Fort Lauderdale, FL

Page 40: 12/29/10 V1I49

40 December 29, 2010 • SouthFloridaGayNews.com


Recommended