Thursday, June 2, 2011

PBS to show OUT IN AMERICA for Gay Pride Month



Copy and pasted from Best Gay News Magazine
Gay pride month is observed every June to commemorate the "Stonewall riots," an uprising that took place in 1969 when police tried to arrest gay patrons at the Stonewall Inn in New York City. The bar is shown here on the 25th anniversary of those events -- widely viewed as the beginning of the modern gay rights movement.
 -  And if you don't  know that, I WILL SLAP YOU!
Emmy award-winning director Andrew Goldberg and PBS, in association with Oregon Public Broadcasting, today announced a new national PBS special, OUT in America.   The one-hour film will make its national
premiere on Wednesday, June 8 at 8:00 pm ET/PT on PBS, in conjunction with National Gay & Lesbian Pride Month.

OUT in America is an uplifting collection of unique, transformative stories and inspiring personal narratives told through the lens of the country’s most prominent LGBT figures and pioneers, as well as many
average, yet extraordinary, citizens from Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender communities. The program weaves together diverse stories -

from urban and rural America, from the heartland to New England, from
San Francisco to Harlem. Deeply moving and often humorous, viewers
will get a glimpse of awakenings, first crushes, unlikely soul mates,
intimacy and liberation. While separated by circumstance and
upbringing, the film’s subjects are all united in their shared
experiences of self-discovery, coming out, pride and love as well as a
triumph over adversity and a true sense of belonging. Against the
backdrop of historical events, each also traces their own hopes,
struggles, influences and contributions towards advancements in
equality and broad social change.

Featured interviews include TV personality Andy Cohen (Bravo TV Host), famed Tales of the City author Armistead Maupin, country music star Chely Wright, humorist Kate Clinton, as well as legendary LGBT
activists James Hormel (philanthropist), Urvashi Vaid (former Executive Director of the pre-eminent civil rights organization National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, recently cited in Out Magazine’s
list of most influential men and women in America) and Dr. Patricia Hawkins (psychologist renowned for her early work with HIV patients).

Other influential lesbians, gay men, bisexuals and transgender people in the film include: Reverend Peter Gomes, who came out on the steps of Memorial Church at Harvard; PJ Serrano, Puerto Rico’s first openly
gay and HIV positive political candidate; a transgender police lieutenant, who transitioned while on active duty; a Muslim lesbian from the country of Mauritius; a gay rancher;   the organizer of Capital Queer Prom; a Latino rapper; a West Point graduate and former Captain in the US Army; a drag queen; a great-grandmother; and “The Harolds,” a giddy bi-racial couple in their 80s, who reminisce, in unison, about their five decades together.

GAY GAY GAY!  This is going to be great!

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