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Showing posts with label lgbt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lgbt. Show all posts

Sunday, September 16, 2018

Oakland. Celebrates. Pride.

On Sunday, September 8, 2018, the city of Oakland celebrated the annual LGBT Pride event small town style.



I've attended this pride event off and on over the years and I have never been disappointed in the vibrancy of the city's attendees, the activities, and intimacy of the pride street venue. Although Oakland's population is over 400,000 people, it seems to embrace and enjoy the added population on the yearly September festival. Normally pride events are held in the month of June. It's so refreshing to have one at the end of summer to ease the arrival of the fall season.

At this year's event, a number of event stages were filled with lots of music, dance, and rallies. Some stages included the Latin and women themed stages. Clearly the diversity of this city and population warranted the stages to be packed with joyful and inspired brothers and sisters of pride.

Every year, I've always taken in at least one pride event for many different reasons. One would be to celebrate our "coming out" in public in a more dignified way. Another would be to recognize that we are allowed to celebrate who we are and who we choose to love. It's a constant reminder that once we leave the pride grounds, we deal with reality of knowing we are still a minority even in 2018. We are not fully recognized; granted we are more visible and are able to "come out" a little more easily, but the nation is yet to fully embrace us, and fully accept us.

Yes, we have same sex marriages, yes, equal rights, civil unions, but clearly these are slow gains towards acceptance that we still need to keep striving. Clearly, pride events are needed to celebrate our community and the gains we've made. I'm very hopeful that each year after coming out of the closet, each of us who battles discrimination on a daily basis, we hope we can say we've finally arrived.


Happy. Pride. LGBT!

Source: Oakland Pride

Friday, April 13, 2018

Billie Jean King in town for LGBTQ advocacy benefit ~ April 12, 2018

Kate Kendell, executive director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights in San Francisco, is looking forward to talking with tennis legend and gay rights activist Billie Jean King.

“I am beyond excited. For the first time in 57 years, I will be able to meet her face-to-face, and I’m sure I’ll gush appropriately like a schoolgirl,” says Kendell, who’s appearing in “Serving Up the Ace,” a benefit for NCLR, a legal LGBTQ advocacy organization, at Brava in The City on Thursday.

The program includes a conversation between King and Kendell and a screening of “Battle of the Sexes,” the 2017 movie with Emma Stone and Steve Carell about the famed 1973 match between World No. 1 tennis star King and ex-champ and hustler Bobby Riggs.

In her talk with King, Kendell says, “I want to find out how she had the fortitude to blaze the path that she did, when really she stood alone. At the time, there were very few other female tennis players beating drum about pay equity.”

Read more in the San Francisco Examiner








Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Dining Out. To. Save Lives!

I'm making it a point to help where I can!



Enjoy a night out at a participating Dining Out For Life restaurant on Tuesday, April 24 and you automatically support San Francisco AIDS Foundation! It's a win-win!

Double your impact and get a chance to win big through the Dining Out For Life sweepstakes! This year's packages include a VIP trip to Las Vegas, a week stay in the Russian River Wine Valley, four nights in Palm Springs, club-level tickets to a Giants game, and more!


There are two ways to get in on the fun:


• Visit a participating Dining Out For Life restaurant on Tuesday, April 24 and ask the Dining Out For Life Ambassador at that location to accept your sweepstakes entry.
• Enter online at doflsf.org, select an ambassador to support or donate directly to Dining Out For Life. Ambassador: Edgar Micua


Take your impact even further: Make a donation of any amount and our partner Tito's Handmade Vodka will contribute the same amount, up to a total of $10,000!


ENTER SWEEPSTAKES


Amici's East Coast Pizzeria Marina
Bistro Boudin
Chouquet's
Curbside Cafe
Parigo
PASTA POP-UP
Precita Park Cafe
Stock in Trade
The Castro Fountain

Sunday, April 8, 2018

Coco Movie Review - Delightful. Hopeful. Entertaining.

The university I work for featured a free screening of Disney's critically-acclaimed and 2018 Academy Award nominee for Best Animated Feature & Best Song: COCO


http://movies.disney.com/coco

This screening was sponsored by UCSF's CLCA (Chicano Latino Campus Association), CHE (Chicanos/Latinos in Health Education), LMSA (Latino Medical Student Association), HSDA (Hispanic Dental Student Association), LAPS (Latino Association of Pharmacy Students), Voces Latinas Nursing Student Association, SACNAS (Society for Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science), LGBT Resource Center, Multicultural Resource Center and Family Services.
I thought, why not, a free screening, I didn't really know anything about the film, but when the lights went out and the movie started, wow, it's been awhile since a film really "moved" me to tears. 
The film was about a young Latino boy named Miguel who has a secret desire to be a musician despite his family's efforts to erase any inclination of any enjoymement of music. The movie quickly sets a tone of what this young boy's expectations are and that no desire for music is part of it.

As the story develops, the protagonist desire strengthens to go against the wishes of his family. Morals sets in from "should I do it" or "follow my family's expectations of me". We all go through some type of pressure to follow what's expected versus to follow our true desires in life. In Miguel's case, music. He secretly honors his hero, Ernesto de la Cruz who was the most famous musician in all of Mexico.
In Miguel's desire to follow his dreams, he learns more about his family, his hero, and his own capabilities. 

Thoroughly entertaining film for both young and old, it gives the viewer their own opportunity to reflect on a passing of a loved one and embrace who they currently have. 

Kudos to Disney and Pixar to bring on the big screen a hopeful and at the same time a delightful story. 






More Coco info click on image