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THE LETTER NEWSPAPER | MID-MONTH ISSUE: PRIDE 2009

PRIDE 2009  |  Updated: Saturday, June 27, 2009  |  Volume 20, Issue 6-E

AROUND THE REGION & BEYOND

Kentuckiana Pride Crowd: 8,000
-- 3,000 More Than Last Year!

THE LETTER was the first local media outlet to speak to Mike Shouse, Director of the Kentuckiana Pride Festival, following this past weekend's tremendously successful celebration. Shouse said that a conservative estimate of attendance at the parade and Friday evening event on the Belvedere and at the main festival on Saturday (June 20) was at least 8,000 -- an increase of 3,000 over last year's festival attendance.

Over $5,200 was raised from tips collected at the various drinking stations (an increase of over $200 over last year). Again this year, all tips will be donated to the Louisville AIDS Walk.

Again this year, THE LETTER is proud to have been a sponsor of the Kentuckiana Pride Festival. We salute Mike Shouse and his all-volunteer committee for putting together a record setting Pride celebration!

Pictures from three area Pride events are currently featured in our Community Photo Gallery. Click on the camera below to view these great pictures! Photos courtesy of Mike Buford  and Williams-Nichols Institute and are © 2009. All Rights Reserved.


Gay Christian Speaker Discusses Outing
by Dave VanderPol, Executive Editor

A gay Christian speaker who's outing was unceremoniously splattered across the Internet last year -- thanks to gossip columnist Perez Hilton -- served as the opening speaker this past Saturday (June 20) for the 2009 Kentuckiana Pride Festival (KPF).

Azariah Southworth describes his well-publicized outing, an event that quickly led to his losing his job as a Christian television host, as “a whirlwind” kind of experience.

We recently asked Southworth about his public outing, his popular blog and about how he survived a very anti-gay Christian upbringing.

Southworth currently resides near Fort Wayne, Indiana and travels the country, speaking to college campuses, churches and community events about the connections he believes there can be between homosexuality and religion.

DVP: What do you think about the way Perez Hilton outed you? Do you think it's ever OK for the media to forcibly out closted celebrities?

AZ: When I chose to come out, I wanted to make sure there were fireworks because I knew I was going to lose my TV show. So I am grateful that Perez publicized my story. I received e-mails from people like 19-year-old Matt who came out the same week I did. Matt told me his family wasn't taking it well and he tried to commit suicide twice already. He continued to say when he read my story on Perez's website he felt hope and that everything was going to be OK. If this was the only positive outcome of Perez reporting my 'outing' then I happy he did it.

I don't think its OK to 'out' celebrities. Everyone's journey is different. We 'come out' at different times for different reasons and some of us never do. It's dangerous to alter or interfere with someone’s journey for your own profit.

DVP: Before you were outed did you attempt to change of your sexual orientation through any of the ex-gay ministries?

AZ: At age 13 my parents put me in counseling with their pastor. For five years, once a week, I went through pastoral counseling and multiple exorcisms to become ex-gay. I did everything I was told to do. I read the books of other ex-gays who “made it,” I was reading my Bible daily, rebuking the lustful thoughts, and spending a lot of time in prayer. However, all this did was create a cycle of success and failure. I was a success when I was what everyone else wanted me to be. But I was a failure if I embraced who I am to any degree.

If it's true that everything we do as human’s stems out of fear or love then everything I was doing and taught was out of fear. If you are lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender you are not a failure and you are not something to be “overcome”. When I came out I was choosing not to live a life of fear anymore. I now choose to love who I am and acknowledge that I am worthy to be loved as I am.

DVP: You have a blog (azariahspeaks.blogspot.com) that you keep updated regularly...Tell us about the HOLY CRIMES feature on your blog.

AZ: The weekly posting titled, "This Week In Holy Crimes" is something I get from another blog. I chose to carry it on my blog because LGBT people are often compared to pedophiles, beastiality, among other outrageous and unfair comparisons. Most of those accusations come from religious "right-wing" leaders. I post it on my blog as a reminder to people that the nearest pedophile and money embezzler is as close to you as the local church house and not your local gay bar.

Southworth is but one of the celebrities scheduled to be on hand for KPF that will take place again this year on The Belvedere in downtown Louisville. Popular musical group the Indigo Girls and singer Tiffany are among the musical acts slated to appear. While gas prices (and the price of almost everything else) has continued to rise over the past year, once again this year admission to KPF is just $5.00. Talk about a great value for your money!

Group Asks: Where You Going Now
That You Made It OUT Of The Closet?

Sure, lots of GLBT folks have “come out” of the closet, but many are unsure of “where to go” once they are out. It seems this is a major reason for “under-involvement” by many community members.

In order to help strengthen our community, THE LETTER is currently in the process of organizing OUTlet, a support and social group that will help folks learn about the many resources available to them in throughout Kentuckiana and give them a chance to meet lots of folks outside of their immediate circle of friends. The group will be begin at various locations starting soon at the 4th of July holiday.

For more information about OUTlet, write outlet@theletteronline.com.

Advocacy Group Expresses Both Support &
Concern Regarding Recent Gay Policy Moves

The national office of Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG) has applauded the decision by President Obama to sign a presidential memorandum authorizing the extension of benefits to same-sex partners of federal workers. However, the group urged the President to honor his promise to repeal the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) that prevents the Federal government from recognizing same-sex unions.

"This change for federal employees is a great step in the right direction," said Jody Huckaby, executive director of PFLAG. "However, it is just a first step. We are committed to ensuring that the President will stand by his campaign promise to work towards the repeal of the so-called Defense of Marriage Act that is a barrier to countless lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Americans. DOMA's very existence is the obstacle that prevents the federal government from acknowledging legally-recognized unions."

"DOMA leaves our families and friends unprotected and unequal, without access to more than 1,100 federal benefits. While PFLAG is thrilled to see this Administration move equality forward for federal employees, we will work to ensure that President Obama has not forgotten his commitment to equality for all LGBT Americans." Huckaby concluded.

PFLAG promotes the health and well-being of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender persons, their families and friends through: support, to cope with an adverse society; education, to enlighten an ill-informed public; and advocacy, to end discrimination and to secure equal civil rights. For more information visit www.pflag.org.


University Library Acquires Gay Cable Network Archives

New York University’s Fales Library, the university’s primary special collections repository, has acquired the archives of the Gay Cable Network, one of the largest and most important GLBT media collections in existence.

The Gay Cable Network (GCN), under the direction of Lou Maletta, the gay media pioneer, began in 1982 and stopped production in 2001. The first network in the nation to regularly provide information about the burgeoning AIDS crisis, GCN eventually accumulated tens of thousands of hours of original footage, ranging from a comment Dick Cheney made on gay unions at the 1984 Republican convention when he was a Wyoming congressman, to the first ACT-UP demonstrations. Other footage includes the first Gay March on Washington, City Hall meetings over the Gay Rights Bill, interviews with the first executives of the Gay Men’s Health Crisis, the founding of the LGBT Center on West 13th Street in Manhattan, and Gay Pride parades and rallies.

The GCN collection acquired by Fales consists of more than 6,100 hours of footage. It was first brought to the attention of Fales director Marvin J. Taylor by Allen Zwickler, NYU alumnus and co-director of the Phil Zwickler Foundation, which helped defray the cost of transferring the collection to Fales. According to Zwickler, the GCN collection is one of the most important civil rights archives of our time and was in danger of being lost. The Zwickler Foundation is named after Allen’s brother, an artist who died of AIDS in 1991.

“This is a major preservation challenge,” said Taylor of the collection. “But it’s one we are ready to meet. NYU Libraries is a leader in moving image preservation, and NYU has one of the most important gender studies programs in the country. GCN had the most significant media program for the queer community during the beginning of the AIDS crisis, and we are committed to preserving this history, so integrally related to New York City.” The GCN Archives compliment Fales’ Downtown New York collection, which documents the arts scenes from the 1970s to 1990s, a world that was decimated by the AIDS epidemic.

“I cannot emphasize enough how valuable this acquisition is to me and those of my students who work in contemporary U.S. sexuality studies,” said Phillip Brian Harper, Erich Maria Professor of Literature, professor of social and cultural analysis, and chair of the Department of English at NYU. “The increasingly ephemeral character of much of the public discourse in this arena makes it very difficult for scholars in the field to construct manageable working archives on which to focus their analyses, and the GCN materials go a very long way toward addressing this problem.”

While NYU has made a commitment to preserving the collection, it will take many years to reformat the tapes. Plans are underway to seek outside funding sources to help preserve the collection.


ABSOLUT® SALUTES 40 YEARS OF PRIDE
WITH LIMITED-EDITION RAINBOW BOTTLE

Even though ABSOLUT® VODKA celebrates pride every day, the world’s most iconic vodka is proud to pay special tribute to four decades of gay pride with a limited-edition ABSOLUT Pride bottle that marks the 40th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots. The special bottle package, which features a hopeful rainbow design that has become an iconic symbol of gay pride, honors the men and women who stepped out of the bars and fought back on the streets of New York City’s West Village during the summer of 1969.

“In An ABSOLUT World, everyone is encouraged to be true to themselves,” said Jeffrey Moran, Vice President of Multicultural Marketing, ABSOLUT Vodka. “That world is more colorful, diverse and respectful. As people celebrate Pride this year, we want them to be proud of who they are and let their true colors shine.”

Since 1981, ABSOLUT has been honoring pride and celebrating the achievements of the GLBT community. Through community-specific advertising, promotions and charitable contributions, ABSOLUT continues to be synonymous with vodka at gay and lesbian bars and living rooms from coast to coast. Now ABSOLUT becomes the first spirits brand to offer an GLBT-specific bottle at retail stores.

"With its history of sponsorship of LGBT advocacy groups and LGBT themed advertisements, ABSOLUT is one of our community's greatest allies," said Neil Giuliano, President of the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD). "This year GLAAD celebrates the twentieth anniversary of our partnership with ABSOLUT, which has directly funded our media advocacy initiatives and enabled us to change hearts and minds with stories about the lives of GLBT people."

The limited-edition ABSOLUT Pride bottle, containing a 750ml bottle of ABSOLUT, is available in select markets.

Support the vodka that supports PRIDE! The Kentuckiana Pride Festival is excited to have ABSOLUT® VODKA as a major sponsor for this year's celebration.

ABSOLUT PRIDE COCKTAILS

Red - ABSOLUT Life
2 parts ABSOLUT Vanilia
1 part Cranberry Juice
Squeeze of Lime

Orange - ABSOLUT Compassion
1 part ABSOLUT Mandrin
2 parts Orange Juice
Splash of cranberry

Yellow - ABSOLUT Sunlight
2 parts ABSOLUT Citron
1 part St. Germaine
2 parts Lemon Lime Soda

Green - ABSOLUT Nature
2 parts ABSOLUT Raspberri
Muddled with mint leaves, lime, sugar, fresh
raspberries and plenty of crushed ice --
Topped with 1 part soda

Blue - ABSOLUT Serenity
1 part ABSOLUT Vodka
2 parts Curacao
Splash of lemon lime soda
Squeeze of lime

Purple - ABSOLUT Spirit
2 parts ABSOLUT Pears
1 part Simple Syrup
Fresh blueberries & raspberries
Lime wedge

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