Quantcast
Channel: QX Magazine
Viewing all 5030 articles
Browse latest View live

Embracing your flat ass this Pancake Day

$
0
0

For most people out, today is dedicated to a deliciously British desert where you’re invited to try your hand at Delia Smith’s simple recipe for basic pancakes, and load up on lovely sugar. However, for those of us who suffer from an ass deficiency, it’s a painful reminder of our flat behinds. Being a gay man and having your back go right into your legs is not easy, with thick tuchuses plastered all over your socials.

Twitter is also rife with vitriol against us assless creatures:

The butt is of more importance to a gay man, particularly one that likes to take it, because… well… duh. That doesn’t mean that if you haven’t been blessed with a Kardashian ass, you’re any less than any other guy. Let’s face it, not even Kim was ‘blessed’ with that ass. The struggle for a juicy behind is one that has left many a gay man in a desperate situation, from busted implants to padded underwear. How many gay men have you seen killing themselves on that squat machines, squealing as they force themselves into another set? The upwards climb towards a plump rump is one that is wasting gay men’s time, wasting gay men’s money, and wasting gay men’s last nerve. 

It’s time to embrace our flat asses. Away with humiliating padded underwear, and in with the comfortable undies that are comfortable and look cute. You may not be a J.Lo, or a Nickie Minaj, or a Beyonce. That’s okay. Some of us are destined to be a Tailor Swift or a Wendy Williams. THAT’S OKAY. Don’t let those negative Nellies leave you feeling flatter than… well, you know. Be proud of your flat buns. Cover them in golden syrup. HAPPY PANCAKE DAY, BITCHES. 

The post Embracing your flat ass this Pancake Day appeared first on QX Magazine.


This Instagram account is dedicated to the DILFs of Disneyworld

$
0
0

If you’ve ever taken your younger brothers or nephews (or whatever children you’ve found yourself yoked with) to an amusement park, you’ll know full well that the best part of the whole day is checking out the daddy talent. They all come out to play, looking a sexy mix of flustered, ready to lean against some railing why their kids are meeting Spongebob… or whatever. 

Having caught on to this phenomenon of hot fathers in amusement parks, one account is sharing their hottest finds. The Dilfs of Disneyworld account brings together a chronicle of the big burly daddies that travel over to the happiest place on earth. Their collection of images has you seriously thinking of a way of heading over to Disneyworld by yourself without looking creepy. Thankfully, you don’t really have you, as these guys glitter your feed with the hot daddies of Disneyworld. Here are our top picks:

Ripped Daddy

(Source: Instagram @dilfs_of_disneyworld)

We thought that your body went to hell once you had kids? This guy’s keeping that dad bod at bay.

 

Ninja Turtle Dad

(Source: Instagram @dilfs_of_disneyworld)

Even Mickey can’t keep his hands off of those broad shoulders. Turtle Power!

 

Balloon Daddy

(Source: Instagram @dilfs_of_disneyworld)

Tattooed, stubble and wearing ripped jeans. This is a bad boy daddy who still enjoys big balloons and cotton candy.

 

Pink Muscle Daddy

(Source: Instagram @dilfs_of_disneyworld)

It looks like pushing prams is one hell of an exercise. We’d have kids if it meant having arms like this.

 

Daddy Next Door

(Source: Instagram @dilfs_of_disneyworld)

A half smile and a half pint of beer. A lovely sunset is all that this daddy needs to keep him happy.

 

Buzz Cut Daddy

(Source: Instagram @dilfs_of_disneyworld)

Why curl with dumbbells when you can curl with tiny princesses? He’s too busy to have a hairstyle to maintain, but not too busy to let that body slide. 

The post This Instagram account is dedicated to the DILFs of Disneyworld appeared first on QX Magazine.

QX Meets… emerging queer pop artist Myylo

$
0
0

Blending together janky classical guitar with a lo-fi sax sensibility, Myylo is a young talent that has people talking. He’s fresh out of Nashville, and a few days from releasing his first EP I’m a Nice Boy, so we decided to catch up with him to hear what he’s all about. 

Hey there Myylo, where are you at this very moment?

I’m at Bluestone Lane on Greenwich Ave in NYC having a reasonably priced cup of coffee.

Reasonably priced coffee in NYC? It’s unheard of! You’re touring the US this month, how are you finding it?

Honestly, it’s incredible. This is the first time I’ve had fans and I’m floored by how amazing these folks are. They’re driving from 3 hours away, playing tour guide in their cities after the shows, buying my friends and me drinks, and being emotionally supportive of the art I’m making. I’m a happy camper right now.

Do you have any awful touring habits that you’re slipping into?

Gorging on gas station Chex Mex is probably my worst one. Texting and driving feel life threatening too. 

So let’s talk your EP. Where did ‘I’m a Nice Boy’ come from? ARE you a nice boy?

Haha, I AM a nice boy! The title for my EP came from me wanting to control my narrative in a clear-cut way. A declarative statement like “I’m a Nice Boy” felt like a great way to communicate who I am. I think kindness is a hella underrated attribute in 2019 and if I can help elevate the importance of being nice then that’s pretty cool! Most of the songs on this EP see me chronicling diametrically opposed experiences with boys I’ve kissed. Sometimes these autobiographical tunes are tragic and sometimes they’re joyful. I feel like I cracked open my soul – the good, the bad, and the sad – to share it with folks over a hella bop-able soundscape. Despite all I’ve been through, I’m still a nice boy.

If you HAD to choose: who are your top 3 musical influences, and why?

The answer is always changing for me. But, if I HAD to choose I’d say….Beyoncé, Kacey Musgraves, and Chance the Rapper. Beyoncé’s commitment to excellence pushes me to create art that is high calibre. She’s this aspirational figure that I strive to be like one day. Kacey Musgraves is the songwriter and artist who gave me permission to be kitschy in a song. I’d never heard incredible observational, storytelling songs that managed to be witty and biting until I picked up Pageant Material. I practised rewriting her albums so I could figure out how she made lyrics tick. Chance the Rapper has this unabashed, theatrical delivery. He can express a multitude of emotions with his voice. He’s also a master of communicating complicated joy. I’ve always thought happiness was an underrated feeling in the world of art and he’s not afraid to tackle it.

Quite the trio! So did you have any queer role-models growing up?

Yeah! I was lucky to have unsupervised access to the internet as a kid so I obsessively sought out gay content on Youtube. Tyler Oakley’s Youtube Channel and Tumblr feed were cornerstones of my daily teenage life. I also came out fairly early on in high school. My parents were easy going and my mother took me to a screening of a Carole Channing documentary during Outfest, a queer/trans movie festival in LA. I met an awesome queer lawyer at the event and he became my first role model for what an adult gay life could look like. We’re still friends!

That’s adorable. You have a loyal following down in Nashville. Why do you think they, in particular, love your music?

I think Nashville loves my music because I’ve grown up as an artist there. The community is super supportive of new music that’s coming out. So, half of it is that folks like my music and half of it is that Nashville’s default is to be kind and supportive of their local scene. It doesn’t hurt that Nashville’s been my home base for a few years. My friends and local fans do a great job of bringing their friends to tag along to shows I’ve played. 

Your single ‘Jonesing’ explored the breaking down of a long-distance relationship. Do you think they’re destined to fail?

No, not at all! I stayed in Pittsburgh with a lovely married couple who made it work for 2 years. So, it’s totally possible. For me, quality time is really important and it was hard to have that when my dude and I were living worlds apart. I’m glad I tried it and I’m glad I tried it with this particular person, but it’s not for me.

Why do you feel music is so important to queer people, to those making music and those listening to it?

Stretching back centuries, queer/trans folk have been written out of art and erased from most of documented society. This erasure gives our communities a few models or icons to whom we can relate. So, music, especially music being made right now by queer/trans artists, is inserting our stories into a larger narrative from which we’ve been left out. Art – especially art that reflects our own lives – makes us feel worthy, seen, and loved. For all these reasons, making art that addresses our community is important.

Rumours of artists being forced back into the closet are everywhere within the music industry. Do you think that identifying as queer is still a hindrance within the music industry?

Yikes, it really depends on what segment of the industry you’re working in. In Nashville I’ve encountered some backlash from industry folks who have encouraged me to think twice about being out. Country music execs here seem totally scared of bringing queer stories to the forefront. I know of more than a few country artists who are out in their personal lives, but would lose all industry support if they came out (even though I’m confident the public would stand by them). Most other scenes seem pretty receptive to it. Frank Ocean, Tyler The Creator, Troye Sivan, Kim Petras, Brandi Carlisle, Cakes Da Killa, Dorian Electra, and one hundred other artists are showing us that people want this type of art. That really changes the perspective within the industry to support more talent like them. 

So true. Well, thank you for talking to us. Where can we find you to keep up with what you’re getting up to?

You can find me on Instagram @MyyloMusic and follow me on Spotify. Those are the best ways to keep up with what I’m doing. I’m proud to say I’ve got a 100% response rate on my Insta DMs.

I’m a Nice Boy is out on the 8th of March. Listen to Myylo on Spotify HERE:

The post QX Meets… emerging queer pop artist Myylo appeared first on QX Magazine.

SPICY: The true story of one gay man’s life-changing encounter with Victoria Beckham!

$
0
0

By David Montgomery

When I was about twelve years old, and my huge, poor family was sitting down to dinner, my sister said something about a Melissa Etheridge song, because it was the nineties and that’s what people talked about at dinner back then.

My mother turned to her, and she just snapped.

She said, “I wouldn’t listen to her music. She’s a dyke. She’s better off dead, so do not bring her music into this house.”

My emotional growth was stunted by five seconds of dialogue from the one person in the world who is supposed to love me unconditionally. I was a child, and by a transitive property my own mother had just said that I was better off dead. It made me hate myself, which made it really easy for other people to hate me.

I would sit alone in my room at night and cry to myself, thinking, Is this what my whole life is going to be like, just sitting here, never connecting with anyone, while the world outside rages on and laughs and has fun without me?

I was worth less than nothing.

But when I was fourteen years old, I had a deeply meaningful experience, something so real, so raw, almost divine, that I knew it was going to shape who I was to become for the rest of my life.

I saw the Spice Girls on MTV.

When I first saw their debut video, “Wannabe,” my jaw hit the floor in disgust. These five British women, not terribly older than me, were screaming and running around this super-fancy hotel. Were they not concerned about people’s opinions of them? I kept watching, and my disgust turned into awe around the time Sporty Spice did that backflip off the buffet.

I realized this is what I want to do – metaphorically.

I wanted to have a voice.

I wanted to be loud and brash and in-your-face and not care what people thought about me.

I wanted to be Spicy.

Flash forward to 2007.

I was feeling squashed by the heavy weight of adult life. My boss hated me (and I’m a delight). I was making so little money I couldn’t pay my bills, and I was having a hard time meeting friends in a new, big city.

Suddenly I’m that teenager all over again, alone in my room, not connecting, while the world rages on without me.

But one glorious day, I am sitting at my workstation and a colleague comes over to inform me that it was just announced via CNN that the Spice Girls are embarking on a worldwide reunion tour with only eight shows across the globe.

Full disclosure, I’ve always jokingly referred to my savings account as my Spice Girls Reunion Tour Fund, and it became a reality that day when, like a crazy person, I purchased tickets to all three of the American shows.

So I go to talk to my boss, and I ask for a week off (obviously unpaid), and she gave me a soft no.

I returned to my desk, and on my computer screen I still have the Spice Girls tour map up.

I knew my boss had told me no. But like some out-of- body experience, my hand, independent of my body, kept clicking Purchase ticket, Purchase ticket, Purchase ticket, over and over and over again.

Mindlessly, instinctively buying tickets to no less than twenty-two Spice Girls concerts.

Twenty- two Spice Girls concerts.

Let that sink in.

This was every American show they were doing.

I’m obviously not big on sports references – my nickname in high school was “faggot.” But in a matter of minutes, I became the equivalent of a Spice Girls season ticket holder.

Now I have to talk to my boss again.

I walked in and said, “Hey . . .uh, remember that week I needed off? It needs to be four to six months instead.”

Her no was not as soft this time around. I went back to my seat feeling deflated.

I thought to myself, David Montgomery, you’re not being very Spicy right now. What would Ginger Spice do?

For the uninitiated, she left the group at the height of their fame. And, in this momentary rush of inspiration, I walked out of my job that day, becoming the first grown man in world history to leave his big-boy job to follow the Spice Girls around.

At this point in my life, I really want to be a teacher. But I really, really, really wanna zig-a-zig-ah.

I was now broke as a joke, but goddamn it was I being Spicy.

The tour began, and I was everywhere – New York, Vegas, LA, Chicago, everywhere. Just for the bragging rights, I had this little YouTube show documenting my experience in Spice World, and it was kind of a hit, making me pretty notorious in the Spice community (which is an actual thing).

People at every show and every airport were coming up to me and asking for pictures with me. I had people quoting me.

I had this tagline at the end of every episode where I’d say, “Remember, it’s a Spice World. We’re just living in it.”

Strangers are walking up to me saying my stupid words.

I had a bittersweet encounter with someone in New Jersey after a show. This teenage boy, obviously gay, comes up to me, and he tells me a very familiar story. He came to the show by himself because he didn’t have any friends. And he told me how he had to take the bus into the city by himself. His mother wouldn’t give him a ride, because she was worried that driving her son to a Spice Girls concert would make him gay.

(In her defense, that is usually how it happens.)

But he said to me, “I wish that I could be like you. I wish that I could do something that made me so happy and not care what anybody thought about me.”

And I did not know what to say back to him. I wanted to comfort him in some way, but I didn’t want to lie to him.

I could say, “It gets better.”

But does it? At the end of the tour, this money’s not coming back to me, and this feeling of me being liked by everybody is going to be fleeting. Like, at the end of this tour, I might possibly be homeless, but I’m definitely going to go back to being plain old unspecial, next- to- nothing me.

But the tour marches on. I’m still recognized everywhere. Even the Spice Girls recognize me at this point. I mean, granted I’m one of very few adult men with a bleached- blond Posh Spice haircut in the front row every night, but I’ll take it.

Then came a moment that will define my life. Victoria Beckham, Posh Spice, the laziest Spice Girl, my favorite Spice Girl, was doing a signing the morning of their show in Chicago. She was promoting her fashion line. You were only guaranteed to meet her if you had a receipt for like five hundred dollars’ worth of merch from this line. This was not in my tour budget; I was mostly living off coffee and airline peanuts at this point.

But I pushed my luck. I went to the event anyway, and I was very discouraged to find that hundreds, even thousands, of people would eventually get to cut in front of me if they had the receipt for these clothes. Before I know it, the event’s nearly over and, despite being the first one there that morning, I am pretty much dead last in line.

This guy comes up to me out of nowhere and says, “Excuse me, did you already go through the line once, and you’re trying to meet her again?”

I said, “No, I’ve been here since four o’clock this morning, but I don’t have money for these clothes, so I’m not going to get to meet her.”

And he goes, “You’re kidding me. Follow me.”

I followed him down some service hallways and pop-up corridors. And, as we walk and talk, he tells me he’s their tour photographer, and he has recognized me from seeing me every single night. He wants the photo op of Posh Spice with her number- one fan.

Before I know it, I am thrust into brightness, now three feet away from my lazy idol, and she squeals, “Oh, my God, it’s you!”

Like, not only was she not afraid of me, she seemed genuinely excited to see me.

Now, at these events she sits at a little table, and she does not stand up for anyone or anything. If you want to get a picture, you have to lean across the table, and they take a Polaroid from the side, real personal- like.

She asked how many shows I was actually seeing and did not believe me until I pulled out the evidence of the twenty- two ticket stubs. She got up out of her seat, grabbed me by the hands, pulled me to the red carpet, and said, “You are fabulous. We’ve got to get some pictures.”

Mind: blown.

My presence has just moved the laziest Spice Girl to get up out of her seat and do something? What power do these hands hold in Spice World?

We return to her little seating area, and I ask her to sign a CD very specifically.

She agrees, so I dictate the following to her: “Dear David, you’re really thin. You should eat something. Love, Victoria Beckham.”

And this smug pop star, who has made a career out of not laughing or smiling, cackled and then covered her mouth so the press wouldn’t get a picture of her looking happy.

And at that moment, it started to click.

You know what, David? You’re not better off dead.

You might even be special outside of Spice World, too.

But all good things must come to an end. And in February 2008 the Spice Girls called it quits yet again, cutting their tour just a tiny bit short and thus ending my walkabout.

Now what?

The tour was over, but the reviews kept rolling in.

I was doing all right. I waited a really long time, thinking that that feeling of me being someone special was going to go away, and I’m so happy to report that it never did. Because during my little walkabout I learned so much about the world. I gained so much perspective. I realized that when I was a kid, my mother was a young single mother with seven kids. Of course she was angry and stressed out.

She’s since realized that I’m a human being with feelings and worth, no matter who I fall in love with.

I learned that the world wasn’t necessarily hating me while I couldn’t connect. The world was waiting for me to find my voice. (And good luck getting me to shut up now!)

And there’s one more thing that I learned about the world that I think I probably knew all along.

It’s a Spice World.

We’re just living in it.

Taken from “The Moth Presents: Occasional Magic: 50 True Stories of Defying The Impossible”. Published by Serpent’s Tail, £12.99.

David Montgomery’s debut album of standup comedy and storytelling, “Queen of Small Town Gossip” is available now on iTunes and Amazon.

The post SPICY: The true story of one gay man’s life-changing encounter with Victoria Beckham! appeared first on QX Magazine.

A Night At The Musicals

$
0
0

Jonny Woo talks us through his fave musical stuff!


Jonny Woo and Le Gateau Chocolat are twirling and high-kicking into the Soho Theatre later this month for a run of their acclaimed show, A Night At The Musicals!

It’s all your fave musical hits, performed by a pair of drag queens, with a queer drag slant – as if musicals weren’t gay enough!

We got our Musicals Correspondent Ifan Llewelyn to ask Jonny some musical-related questions. We’re not sure what Gateau was doing – probably fighting off Elsa for the last nylon blue princess dress is the kids aisle of Matalan.


What would you say is the first musical you remembering listening to?

I guess something like the Sound Of Music from TV; it was always on at Christmas, but I think Carousel was the first soundtrack I really listened to when I was in it at school.

Who’s the Elphaba and who’s the Glinda out of this duo?

I guess I’m Elphaba, but I’ve not seen Wicked. I always wanted to be the witch in The Wizard Of Oz, so I guess I’m the green one.

If you had to be locked in a room for one hundred twenty five thousand six hundred minutes with a celeb, who would they be?

Oh god I couldn’t be locked in a room with myself for that long. I have no answer, I hate celebs anyway.

Sondheim, Lloyd Webber, Hammerstein. Which one would you pick to compose a musical about your life?

Rogers and Hammerstein of course, like we’d have to go back in time to get them to do it though.

Any new musical that you just can’t stop listening to?

Company! It’s not new, but I’ve literally just discovered Sondheim in a big way.

Turning movies into hit musicals has always made for a hit show. Which movie are you dying to be turned into a musical?

Dogville.

La La Land. Loved it or hated it?

La La loathed it.

Have you ever casually burst into song in real life?

Life is a song dear…right?

If you had to hand pick one character out of the vast musical theatre catalogue that you most identify with, who would it be.

The prostitute in Les Mis who sings…’come on captain you can wear your shoes…’ I’m easy like that too.

Pop. Six. Squish. Uh u. Cicero. Lipschitz. Which merry murderess of murders row would you say is most you?

Myra Hindley.

A Night At The Musicals is at Soho Theatre from Monday 11th March – Saturday 30th March. More tickets and info available sohotheatre.com.

The post A Night At The Musicals appeared first on QX Magazine.

#JULIASAYS – Discerning scene musings from the princess of East London!

$
0
0

Every week, I try to find some interesting and insightful things to do; see, hear take part in and generally look at things from different perspectives. Our creative worlds collide in most amusing ways, from pop culture to high-brow intellect. Stuff that affects us in weird ways is good!

Up at the ICA, Queers Read This on Thursday 7th March is a literature event with a difference and it certainly isn’t boring. I can vouch for that as I’ve been to it, and loved every moment! Presented by artist Richard Porter and writer Isabel Waidner there will be readings, film and performance with special guests from 7pm.

Richard Porter

Then more queerness…Queer is on Friday 8th March at Paper Dress Vintage, in Hackney Central, 352a Mare Street. It’s a punk indie night. DJs Paul Michael Bowden and Sam Fenn play the music, which includes DIY and Queercore from 9pm till 2am.   

Fancy a rave up? Then look who’s in town this weekend – none other than the fabulous DJ Honey Dijon, who presents Blackout on Friday 8th March at Hangar in London Fields. Special guest Carista supports with a ‘mesmeric’ performance. Oh and btw, the DJs will be somewhat ‘hidden’ so you can focus on yer dancing and self-expression. 10pm ‘til 6am!

Then get down to CAMPerVAN 2049 on Saturday afternoon on 9th March from 3pm where the CAMPerVAN collective ponder the year 2049 with a series of performances, panel discussions and film screenings which address the ‘queer future’ of 30 years time. It’s on till 9pm at GROW Tottenham, Ashley House.

Savage on Saturday nights at the Metropolis Strip Club on Cambridge Heath Road are going from strength to strength and on the 9th March I’ll be taking to the decks for a DJ set from 1-4am. Whoop!  Just letting you know!

Then come and see me on Sunday 10th at The Glory for Princess Julia Loves… my special guest this week is Ms Kevin Le Grand who is back for some stunning star turns! I couldn’t be more excited. The Glory opens all day Sunday and I’ll be there from 6pm till 11pm when we shut.

Then after I always suggest a visit to Dalston Superstore if you’re staying east but of course a jaunt to Horse Meat Disco over in Vauxhall is never far from my thoughts on a Sunday night!

Then on Wednesday 13th March, I’ll be guest judging the fab MAN UP drag king competition at The Glory. This is a maje night and I’m super looking forward to it!!!! Check out theglory.co for more details!

The post #JULIASAYS – Discerning scene musings from the princess of East London! appeared first on QX Magazine.

Is it a bird? Is it a plane? No, it’s super-gonorrhoea!

$
0
0

It’s here to stay, so let’s learn about it


As if Brexit, global warming, and general day-to-day death-defying insanity of living in London weren’t enough, we’ve now got brand new unpleasant STI to contend with.

Super gonorrhoea is brand new to the party, and it’s a vile beast. But there’s no point being terrified. It’s here to stay, so the best thing to do is educate ourselves on how best to prevent it, and/or how best to deal with it if we find ourselves stuck with it.

We’re using a bit of a slang term with “super-gonorrhoea” – it’s not a different species of infection in its own right, but rather a strain of your average, everyday gonorrhoea that’s developed a resistance to antibiotics. This means that it is much trickier to get rid of. Normal gonorrhoea is relatively easy to oust – a short course of antibiotics or a quick jab in the bum usually does the trick. But with super-gonorrhoea, more intensive treatments are required, like medical drips, and much stronger drugs over a longer period of time.

Last month, Public Health England issued a warning over the first two cases of it being contracted in the UK. Both cases were straight women, but with gonorrhoea cases high among gay men, it makes logical sense that we’d also be vulnerable to super-gonorrhoea.

Over the past year, gonorrhoea diagnoses in England have risen by 22%. There could be a number of explanations for this – use of condoms has dropped dramatically, especially among young people and gay men. There is also an egregious lack of proper sex education in UK schools, contributing to a rise in STIs and pregnancies among teenagers.

Basically, what we need to do regarding super-gonorrhoea, is put a stop to it before it gets anymore powerful. It’s curable for now, but if it’s allowed to develop more, that may not be the case for much longer.

Unlike HIV, which is actually very difficult to transmit, gonorrhoea can be passed on really easily, through oral or anal sex. But we’re not trying to make you scared of sex. With the advent of PrEP, gay men are just starting to get to the stage where they can have sex free of worry, and that’s GREAT. We wouldn’t want to take that away from anyone. We’re just making sure you know the facts.

Obviously we’re still all going to wank each other off. And let’s be honest, very few people use – or are going to use – condoms for blowjobs and handjobs. But the thing to take away from this, is it’s worth getting tested for gonorrhoea even if you haven’t done anal. As long as it’s caught early, it’s fine!

As all sexual health experts and clinics say – get tested regularly, know your facts, and try not to mentally brush things under the carpet. 

For more info and advice you can trust on gonorrhoea and super-gonorrhoea, head to gmfa.org.uk/gonorrhoea or nhs.uk/conditions/gonorrhoea

The post Is it a bird? Is it a plane? No, it’s super-gonorrhoea! appeared first on QX Magazine.

Celine Dion and Barbra Streisand are playing Hyde Park on the same (Pride) weekend

$
0
0

In an announcement that has shaken London gays to their core, two legendary icons are taking over Hyde Park for a weekend that is sure to go down in the books as the gayest weekend since time began.  

It was announced this morning (7th of March) that Barbra Streisand is to perform in London’s Hyde Park this summer in her first UK performance in 6 years. The 76-year-old has cemented herself as an icon of stage, screen and music having won almost every award within entertainment, from Oscars to Grammys. Streisand has always held a special place within gay culture. She made her start in the gay bars of Manhattan at the age of eighteen back in 1960. Her career spans six decades, 36 albums, 19 movies and one cloned dog. 

She is perhaps best known for her turn as Fanny Brice in the movie musical Funny Girl which brought ‘Don’t Rain on my Parade’ to the masses, and her performance as Katie Morosky in 1973’s The Way We Were. To younger audiences, she is better known as Roz, Ben Stiller’s sex-positive mother in Meet The Fockers

She is to take to the stage, making her British Summer Time debut on Sunday, July 7th, with pre-sale tickets going on Monday, 11th of March. Taking to the stage two days before on Friday the 5th of July is Celine Dion, who will be kicking off the performances of British Summer Time Hyde Park 2019.

The Canadian vocal powerhouse is known across the globe for her vocal prowess and unforgettable stage presence. To date, she has sold over 240 Million records worldwide and has broken records with her Las Vegas residency which will come to an end just a week before her performance at Hyde Park.

This weekends also just so happens to be PRIDE weekend, with the parade set to take place on the 6th of July, making this weekend the gayest weekend in history to take over London. 

Twitter is a buzz with the news:

https://twitter.com/ItsOnlyGriff/status/1103610283740798976

READ MORE:

Wimbledon’s getting its first EVER gay bar

The post Celine Dion and Barbra Streisand are playing Hyde Park on the same (Pride) weekend appeared first on QX Magazine.


Five signs that you’re DEFINITELY in a long-term relationship

$
0
0

There comes a time in every relationship where the veneer of being lovely and nice just falls to shit, revealing the gross creature that you truly really are. It’s different for everyone, but usually happens around the 8-month mark. You’ve met the parents, you’ve met the friends and you see each other as often as you can.

But the romantic strolls down the Southbank have been replaced with Sundays of binging utter crap on Netflix. The two-course dinners at Cote Brasserie have been replaced by a frozen Tesco pizza. How can you tell if you’re in that space yet where comfortable, has become too comfortable? Well, here are five ways of telling you if you actually have sunken into the comfort of your relationship like a crouton into a vat of melted cheese. 

Un-sexy nakedness

“Paint me like one for your French pastries.”

Whether it’s pulling fluff from your bellybutton after a hot shower, or just getting changed, being naked around your other half gets to a point where it ain’t really sexy anymore. In the first months you know that if you’re naked, some hot steamy sex is going to go down, now if you’re naked in front of your boyfriend you might just be checking out a suspicious mole in the mirror. Strutting around your room naked has gone from trying to seduce your partner, to being a Gollum-like crawl rummaging for clean clothes to wear. Hey, remember when you use to suck in your gut when he saw you naked? That was a fun time, wasn’t it. Now you let him see you living your Jabba the Hutt fantasy, serving skin folds for days. Touch these flabby roles honey, touch all of these flabby rolls. 

“My house, my rules”

Gone are the days of “whatever you want, honey”. You want to binge watch an awful Australian reality TV show whether he likes it or not. He’s come over to your place, so he might leverage that against you. He made the effort to come to you so he should be given first choice, right? WRONG. You’re reached a point now where the “oh, I chose last time” days are but a distant memory, and the evening’s entertainment is dictated by whoever gets to the remote first. He wants to check out the latest all action, all cars, all explosions production that Hollywood has shat out, but you’ve sat through one too many of those and you’re DONE. In the words of the undying icon, the Gemma Collins, you’re done playing fucking games.  You’re on the second series of that show where brides-to-be get plastic surgery to please their husbands, and you’re not letting him ruin your sluggish Sunday plans. 

You don’t tidy up when he comes over

We call this one “My Bed”, made by a very hungover us.

It sounds like a simple thing, but it can really speak volumes. Taking just 15 minutes to shove your clothes mountain into a cupboard is all it takes, but you’ve gotten to a point where you no longer worry about him thinking you’re pig. You try and explain that you’re re-creating a Tracy Emin installation, but he sees right through your bullshit. This usually reaches it’s crescendo when you’re nursing a hangover and you invite him over to take care of you. You’re stewing in a nest of last night’s potential outfits and the McDonalds packaging you ravaged before passing out the night before. You invite him over, fall asleep, then get woken up the knock at the door so your answer in your undies and a sweaty tee. 

Welcome to the Windy City

p.s. how fab is this woman? We’d like to imagine her name is Tracy. 

Also known as your flatulent body. Everybody does it every now and then, and eventually, you have to stop blaming your imaginary dog when there’s a distinct pong in the air. This starts off slow with the ever so embarrassing letting one slip in your first few weeks, then it develops to a shoulder shrug “it happens” approach to the whole thing, but eventually, it reaches a “and WHAT!?” attitude where you let them rip like Beyblades of effluvium out of your butthole. There really is no way around this, especially if you’re living together. It’s an undeniably bad experience for your partner, but the flat that you just keep on cuddling really means something. Just be sure to not let it become a thing. It’s not to be done intentionally, or something to be celebrated. That’s weird, unless you’re both into that… nah, still pretty weird.

Trash talking his friends is okay now… sort of

You’re 100% the one on the far right, complaining to your friends via group text.

Meeting the boyfriend’s friends is always a high-pressure situation. You’re forced together like contestants on a Bear Grylls program and there’s a lot riding on you getting along with each other. For the first few months when you all get together it’s pleasant enough, you all get along, you’re all on best behaviour. Then a few months in… something changes. There’s that one friend where every single thing they do, from breathing to sitting down, annoys you to your very core. You’re invited to gatherings and your first thought is are THEY going to be there. You turn down invitations to group trips because you’ve heard THEY’re coming along. You agree to attend a house party only to come to the horrific realisation that THEY are hosting it. Venting your frustration, you can’t help but share with your boyfriend how their friend is really rubbing you up the wrong way. He then gets defensive, which is understandable because you can’t think of an actual solid thing they’ve done wrong. It’s just them. The best thing you can do is make it an in-joke and hope they don’t find out about it. But still, it’s EXHAUSTING.

READ MORE:

Frat bros love kissing other frat bros, study finds

The post Five signs that you’re DEFINITELY in a long-term relationship appeared first on QX Magazine.

REVIEW: Can You Ever Forgive Me?

$
0
0

Melissa McCarthy’s performance is divisive in this detailed etching of a forgotten fraudster.


In a performance that has garnered both ‘Worst’ and ‘Best’ Actress Award nominations, all eyes are on Melissa McCarthy as she takes on the role of writer Lee Israel in the darkest days of her career. Since becoming a household name following the immense success of Bridesmaid, this role comes out of left field for an actress who’s forged a career capitalising on the ‘fat lady falls over’ trope. This transition into weightier subject matter is seamless as McCarthy succeeds in bringing a light touch to this portrait of a washed-up writer.

Bringing with her the rolodex of hilarity that she’s built her career on, McCarthy brings out the comedy of Lee Israel in the true to life Can You Ever Forgive Me?. After a drunken spat with her manager had her out of a day job, she is at the mercy of her agent pleading for an advance despite the failure of her failed Estée Lauder biography. Two months behind on her rent and drinking heavily, she turns to a more creative way of making a living. Leveraging her status as a moderately successful biographer, she swindles traders by selling forged letters from historical celebrities, from Noël Coward to Marlene Dietrich. Along for the ride is her new acquaintance Jack Hock (Richard E. Grant), a nomadic, intellectual British gent living off of the extravagance of an early nineties Manhattan.

Making her return to the big screen after the success of The Diary of a Teenage Girl back in 2015, New York resident Marielle Heller brings the air of an underground, downtown bar to this picture, once again corroborating her panache for nuance. Her take on Israel’s alcoholism and the extant AIDS crisis embellish the film’s development, without becoming cumbersome deviations from its progression. Much like Grant’s portrayal of a gay man navigating life in an epidemic, there is a deep desperation simmering just at the fringes of the film’s literary witticisms. In his turn as Jack Hock, Grant has seen his first Academy Award Nomination which is well deserved as he presents the resilience and gusto of those who persevered through an epidemic littered with death and dismay.

In this detailed etching of literature’s most prolific forgotten fraudster, the performances are undeniably brilliant in playing with this whisky-hazed version of real-life events. Despite not quite looking the part of the haggard, alcoholic writer, McCarthy’s performance is one that has you looking beyond her pore-less skin to the troubled soul she’s portraying. This story of forging letters is one that manages to evoke an authentic sense of literary history.

Can You Ever Forgive Me? is playing in theatres now.

The post REVIEW: Can You Ever Forgive Me? appeared first on QX Magazine.

Power To The Women – We meet the powerful women working on London’s LGBTQ scene

$
0
0

Words by Jason Reid

In a male-dominated world they manage, perform, create, keep us safe and generally run the show. But what is it like to be a woman working on the gay scene in 2017? What challenges do they face and how do they deal with them?

Are women treated fairly and equally in the LGBTQ community? Is there still a culture of misogyny amongst gay men that we don’t talk about enough, or are attitudes changing for the better?

This week, Jason Reid put those questions and more to the experts, the women of the gay scene…

Mzz Kimberley 

Cabaret Performer & Actress

I find that there’s still a lot of misogyny on the gay scene today. You’d expect the LGBTQ community to be a bit more adaptable and open-minded, but I think it’s just in some men’s nature to act this way.

Being a black trans woman can have its ups and downs. When I was working at Heaven, some of my colleagues found it really hard to accept that a black woman could conduct business and be successful, which in turn made money for the club. Unfortunately some Caucasian people just can’t cope with strong and intelligent black women. We are expected to sit in the corner, shut up, and do as we’re told. I don’t go by those rules. It makes me want to work harder and achieve more.

On the topic of women being represented fairly and equally on the scene, let’s not kid ourselves here; they’re not. There’s a song by James Brown called ‘It’s a Man’s Man’s Man’s World’ – that could be the theme tune for so many gay men. Thankfully, things are slowly changing and women are starting to come to the fore. But in order for real change, women need to stick together, be visible and keep creating.

There have been times when I’ve walked into a gay venue and literally every single head has gone up to see who is coming in and I’ve been tempted to scream, ‘SORRY, it’s a woman’. Gay men DO dominate the scene. It’s not their fault, but they can help change attitudes by coming together and not pandering to that pack mentality. There was one occasion when I was asked to take part in a shoot for the cover of a magazine. The theme was ‘the rainbow’ of the gay scene. But apart from me – a trans-woman – there were no other women involved. I was shocked and saddened by that. It’s important to understand that women should be represented and that life is not all about Caucasian men with muscles.

I’m so pleased that the queer scene, the real queer scene, is growing. I feel like I really fit in there. It’s not about your gender, or whether you’re gay, straight or trans, it’s about people coming together. If we really want to see change on the scene we must ALL come together and support each other. Women will always be there for you gay men, even when that attractive twink next door isn’t.

Catia Ciarico 

Head of Light Entertainment, RVT 

I work with everyone and anyone in the spirit of co-operation, respect and collaboration and as long as I get that back, nobody gets hurt. When I first started working on the gay scene (ten years ago), I did encounter some intolerance, which was disappointing. Thankfully things have changed quite radically since then; there are far more women on the scene and in my experience it has become more tolerant, open and inclusive.

There’s still an element of women being mocked for laughs – mocked, that is, for being women and having clichéd behavioural patterns ascribed to them, which are sent up – it’s very uncomfortable to listen to. Women have been the easy butt of jokes for a long time and that really needs to stop. But that isn’t a criticism of the LGBTQ scene, it happens on the straight entertainment scene too.

Although I have experienced some misogyny, generally queer men have an understanding and openness that is strangely lacking on the straight scene. There tends to be much more openness and less editing and coded politeness, which I LOATHE in every day life. That openness can also be explosive but I don’t mind that. There’s nothing wrong with getting a little punchy once in a while.

I’ve worked in entertainment for a long time and the queer scene is my favourite scene to work on because it is open and forward-thinking. This is largely due to the fact that queer/gay people from all walks of life have spent a long time experiencing oppression, whether physical, verbal, legally or mentally, so the scene is far more adept at challenging this and bucking the status quo.

Marnie Scarlet 

Drag Queen & Fetish Wear Designer 

Generally I’ve been quite lucky, most of my experiences have been positive. Any negative comments I do receive usually come from men, sadly, because they need to prove they’re straight by saying something ‘funny’. I defuse the situation by saying something equally funny back, or by just putting them in their place and telling them it’s not okay to say such things.

Sadly, misogyny is ingrained in society, and therefore it does exist on the LGBTQ scene. My main beef would be with the term ‘fishy’, which I know has been addressed by Holestar and Dis Charge. It’s an outdated term that really should not be used by anyone. On the odd occasion I may get bad-humoured, off-the-cuff remarks. If you wouldn’t say it to a non-dragged up woman then you shouldn’t say it to a drag queen. Gender demeaning humour is cheap, and in my opinion shouldn’t be done. Also, just because someone is dressed up, that does not give you license to touch without permission. 

I’ve performed at and hosted many cabaret events over the years and I’ve actually never been asked if I was a woman or not. I feel accepted in the LGBTQ community and I’m extremely blessed to be a part of it. London has a very open and vibrant attitude, and in my experience people are respected regardless of age or persuasion

Vickie Shirley 

Head of Security, Her Upstairs 

I’ve worked in a range of different types of venues, both gay and straight – however, the queer environment at Her Upstairs is completely different. I’ve never felt more comfortable at work than I do there. There’s no expectation for me to be or act a certain way. In the other venues it was mainly homophobia that I had to contend with – from blatant comments in straight venues, to micro-aggressions in gay venues.

I think the main issue is that I’m a female identifier in a stereotypically male-dominated industry. That can be challenging for some. However, in a queer space like Her Upstairs, that doesn’t happen. I have the freedom to run the door and my team in line with the venue’s ethos, which is something I have never been able to do before.

I get to dress how I want, have my piercings out, and I’m encouraged to show off my fabulous hair – landlady George even treats me to the dye job. I don’t really face any problems from the people I work with or the diverse crowd that frequent Her Upstairs. You occasionally get the odd smirk from a passer-by on the streets of Camden but when I’m flanked by Meth and other fabulous creatures, I go into mother mode.

Heather Elliot

General Manager, Halfway to Heaven 

I see the gay scene as a safe place where you can be with friends, enjoy a night out and party freely with no agenda. Without wanting to sound too clichéd, it’s the perfect place to just be yourself.

Working on the scene and managing Halfway to Heaven as a straight woman has made me appreciate why there is such a sense of community. Once you break down barriers and stereotypes, you understand how real the struggles have been over the years. The LGBTQ community has had to fight so hard to be equal and it saddens me that, although massive progress has been made, the fight is still not over.

I’ve had homophobic comments and slurs thrown at me, people making assumptions as to who and what I am based purely on where I work and my circle of friends. This is why Pride is so important – it’s the toughest yet most rewarding time of the year.

It’s important that everyone has a voice in all walks of life. Being part of the scene allows me to able to listen, learn and to also give my opinion when it’s needed. I know I’m not a lone voice out there and this is comforting.

READ MORE:

Celebrating queer allies on #InternationalWomensDay

The post Power To The Women – We meet the powerful women working on London’s LGBTQ scene appeared first on QX Magazine.

Nine of our favourite female queer allies

$
0
0

For those of you who haven’t been on Twitter yet, the 8th of March is International Women’s Day! On this day women across the globe are celebrated for their contribution to our world. The day gives attention to the women’s rights movement, with this year’s theme being Balance for Better.

Despite there being countless queer, trans and lesbian women within our community who have made an unparalleled contribution to our world, we’ve decided to look outward to the women that support and celebrate the queer community, despite not identifying that way themselves. Here are the celebrity allies that we’re celebrating this International Women’s Day! 

Sally Field

We’ve never met Ally Field but she is the quintessential mother of a gay son, so we feel like we know her. She’s very vocal aobut her love for her gay son, and made headlines when she called on skating super-star Adam Rippon to go on a date with him. Our cynisism tells us “oh just because they’re gay they’re suppose to date?”, but our hearts say “Oh my god mum, you’re so embarrassing. We love you”. Sally won the Human Rights Campaign award for being an ‘Ally for Equality’ back in 2012. 

Cher

She’s Cher. She’s singlehandedly and unintentionally made the biggest contribution to drag culture on an unprecedented level. The mark of a good queen is being able to pull out a last minute Cher. She’s also become vocal about her support of trans rights, taking on Trump in Twitter rages, after her son Chaz Bono transitioned. We also feel she should be given a Nobel Peace Prize for her performance in Mamma Mia 2.

Debra Messing

IT’S DEBRA MESSING YOU GAYS. If Sally Fields is ever mother to a gay son, then Debra is every best gal pal to gay men. Will and Grace was a culture-shifting phenomenon which had all of America waking up to the realisation that gay might actually be okay. Taking on the role of Grace was a risky career move, and she was ready to put it all on the line so that openly gay characters could be broadcast weekly into US living rooms. She grabbed a GLAAD award for Excellence in Media back in 2017.

Kerry Washington

You may only know her as the strong-willed White House Director of Communications on Scandal, but it turns out she’s actually an outspoken advocate for LGBT issues. It’s one thing to be an ally, but it’s another to be an advocate. She’s also a GLAAD Award recipient. She took part in a Human Rights Campaign project which told the story of each victim of the 2016 Orlando gay nightclub shooting, you can check that out HERE.

Joan Rivers

Though not a spotless character, she had her flaws, Joan Rivers was tirelessly dedicated to LGBT issues. Her most significant contribution was in her work with HIV/AIDS charities, speaking out in the mid ’80s when the topic was still taboo despite the ravaging devastation that it caused. Her contribution was so great that the queer community in NYC lovingly dubbed her ‘Joan of Arc’. Her second most significant contribution was when she said: “If you don’t want gays in the military, make the uniforms ugly”. Us gays love a camo print. 

Anne Hathaway

Another one who’s a rep for supporting the guys surprised us. We know her as the secret teen princes turned bald French prostitute, but she’s actually dedicated time and money to the cause! She donated funds to support the push for equal marriage in the US by selling her wedding pictures. Anne has one of those strange vibes where she might be hiding some dodgy opinions about things, but thankfully on the issue of LGBT, she gets a well-earned A. 

Dolly Parton

Dolly is the fun aunt we never had. It may take a lot of money to look that cheap, but it also takes a heavy dose of CAMP. Her legacy is one that you really can’t measure by any arbitrary scale, she’s a divine being. As well as making substantial contributions to HIV/AIDS charities, she’s also brought queer acceptance to the more hostile parts of America. She’s near to the hearts of so many in America’s less friendly neighbourhoods, so her celebrating us queer folk is important. Everyone loves Dolly, and Dolly loves the gays! 

Rebecca More

You know what we are…? Okay, hear us out. She deserves her place on this list. Her brand of sex-positive queer-friendly energy is penetrating (lol) the culture she’s become a phenomenon within. Within the community, her fame has her destigmatising salacious sexuality and has men being more open and honest about their desire to ‘destroy cocks’. She’s also done a bunch for the perception of female pornstars, being the quintessential slut with a heart of gold. We also like to think that all those horny straight guys who tune in to see her do what she does best are maybe getting a look into how fun us gays can be.

Whoopi Goldberg

Back in the 90s, gay marriage was a strange concept that is alien to most people. When Whoopi infamously married Patsy and Eddie on THAT episode of Absolutely Fabulous it posed a great question for gay marriage: Heck, why not? She helped Cyndi Lauper out with the launch of the Give a Damn campaign which raised awareness of LGBT discrimination. She walking alongside the queer community at the 1987 March on Washington, where ACT UP activists were given national coverage for the first time. 

The post Nine of our favourite female queer allies appeared first on QX Magazine.

FILM REVIEW: Benjamin

$
0
0

By Dylan B Jones

Simon Amstell’s Benjamin is a film about skinny white boys kissing. It’s also a film about audiences, and the pain or pleasure of being judged by them. It cleverly makes viewers feel – much like the film’s eponymous main character – constantly awkward and guilty.

Benjamin is a filmmaker who lives in East London. He’s got a propensity for self-pity and pretty, artistic men. Following a disastrous Q&A screening of his latest film at Curzon (we’ve all been there babe), he falls into a spiral of self-doubt and romantic complications. Amstell undoubtedly draws on his own experiences in life and love; the film certainly feels at least semi-autobiographical. Morgan very is reminiscent of Amstell – all floppy hair, charming weirdness and shuffling feet.

This is, refreshingly and in a very 2019 way, certainly NOT a gay movie. It’s a gay movie in that its main characters are interested mostly in the same sex, but it’s not a gay movie in that it has nothing to do with gay “issues”. Characters who happen to be gay – Call Me By Your Name took a similar approach in some ways, and it’s great to see. About time too!

As well as main love interest, the predictably beguiling and predictably French Noah (Phénix Brossard), Amstell surrounds Benjamin with a brilliant and raucous cast of supporting characters. Joel Fry is totally charming as his long-suffering, depressive comedian friend Stephen; Ellie Kendrick makes a brief and genuinely funny appearance as conceptual dancer Anna; Nathan Stewart-Jarrett is hilarious as a jilted ex (“I heard you made a movie about us and cast me as a white guy?”)

Perhaps most memorable though is Jessica Raine as his actually quite horrid but weirdly likeable manager Billie; she storms around in heels and fringed jackets, dispensing cigarettes and insults with a mix of privileged arrogance and unstable vulnerability. Always either on her phone or giving insincere praise, her character is a razor sharp and brilliantly accurate portrayal of those sort of people.

This bolschy character aside, it’s a very safe film. There’s not much to challenge viewers. The most we see on the sexual side of things is kissing. There’s a bit of drug use, but it’s sunny, romantic and rain-soaked. And as for the main character Simon – sorry, Benjamin – it’s difficult to know where his anguish stems from.

He’s got a creatively fulfilling job, a lovely flat, and several attractive boys interested in him, but is constantly, and infuriatingly in a state of unaccountable ennui. The film also falls into that Hollywood-esque trap of having even the “nerdy loser” characters played by stunningly beautiful actors, which makes it all a bit unconvincing. Colin Morgan looks like a cross between Cillian Murphy and a Brazilian underwear model.

Benjamin is a perfectly fine film – well written, well acted and at times very funny. It’ll make great viewing for teens in the midst of angst – after all, that’s the audience Amstell excels in pleasing (just look at the brilliant, genre-defining Skins). But discerning adult cinemagoers might need a little more.

Benjamin is out on March 15th.

READ MORE:

Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald Review – straight-washing and telenovella twists

The post FILM REVIEW: Benjamin appeared first on QX Magazine.

Sadiq Khan demands UK government provides immediate full funding for PrEP

$
0
0

In an unprecedented but welcome move, London Mayor Sadiq Khan has called on the government to fully fund the HIV prevention drug PrEP.

“PrEP has been proven to help those at risk of infection,” he said in a heated letter to the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care this morning. “Yet it is still only being trialled in London and local councils have been unable to accept all of the places.”

“If we are to achieve our aim of ending new HIV infections, it is vital that we expand access to proven treatment now.”

“The government must give health providers the support they need and why I will continue to take every opportunity to highlight the damage that cuts to public health funding are making to our ability to keep Londoners healthy and tackle health inequalities across our city.”

Popular opinion is still divided on the HIV-prevention drug, so for a prominent political figure like Sadiq Khan to speak out in support of it, could mean big things for the battle to get it made available for all. 

READ MORE:

London commissioners refuse to double number of places on PrEP trial

 

The post Sadiq Khan demands UK government provides immediate full funding for PrEP appeared first on QX Magazine.

Gay Sex Through The Ages – Have We Met Before?

$
0
0

Chronicling how men meet other men for sex, filmmaker Oliver Mason dove into half a century of the UK’s sexual history, looking at the impact the internet had on our sexual culture.

Through intimate interviews recalling first-hand accounts, he weaves together a brief history of gay sex, from the caravan clubs all the way through to the apps.

We caught up with him ahead of the short film’s premiere to pick his brain about the impact the world wide web has had on our sex lives.


Hey Oli! How did you go about finding your subjects; people that were willing to openly discuss their sexual escapades?

Well, I guess that was one of the problems. I specifically wanted it to cover hooking up through the ages. It wasn’t going to be about romance and partnerships. I’m in my early-mid thirties and I have a lot of gay friends my age with a little bit of variation, so my biggest concern was that I wanted to have a breadth of ages for it to feel reflective of the UK. I started panicking about finding much older gay men, so my mum suggested a friend of hers who I did interview. He opens the whole film.

Must be awkward the next time he’s round for tea.

Yeah! He’s a bit older but I still wanted to try and get men with different stories, say, from the 1950s. I heard a great story from a friend about a couple who met cruising in Piccadilly Circus just after WW2 and stayed together ever since until one of them passed away 10-20 years ago, and the other died last year. A week or two into interviewing men my age and a little older I had a panic of finding people at the younger end of the spectrum. I wanted to cover men around the age of 20 who would have grown up with a mobile phone.

So do you start off in the ‘70s?

There’s a prelude which covers secret gentlemen’s clubs which, from my limited research around them, existed in the ‘20s, until possibly the ‘70s or ‘80s. We start properly in the ‘70s with the Hanky Code and the first Gay Pride in London. The hanky code was a way of singling sexual tastes or interests, where the colour of your hanky might indicate the type of sexual interaction you were looking for, be it anal or fisting, to more complicated fetishes you might want. The original published guide was maybe eight colours, and then by the time it was put on the internet in the ‘90s there were about 50 colours with very specific interests.

Where do you go on from there?

Whilst we move chronologically forwards, I’ve carved out prevalent behaviours from each era. Moving to the 80s you have cottaging and cruising, back to back. I had this phenomenal contributor who was very intelligent and clear in expressing his feelings, saying that mostly when he was cottaging as a teenager in the early ‘80s, for him cottaging wasn’t just a sexual act, it was a form of rebellion. It was a way of fighting against heteronormative society. What he was doing was illegal because the age of consent was 21, he was 17, plus it was a public space. For him, it was a subversive punk act of rebellion. I thought that was fucking awesome.

Then come the nineties!

Then we move on to the arrival of the internet, which was ‘89, but computers weren’t really in the home until the late ‘90s. There was a very clear cut gay use of the internet with the launch of Gaydar.com in ‘99. I was chatting to my mum’s friend who mentioned there were other ways they had of meeting men before Gaydar, with ICQ and other messaging sites, forums and chatrooms. By the ‘90s on forums, you could be a little less coded, a little more obvious in what you were looking for. What I found really interesting with people who were using all these digital spaces, a lot of the time it was for community and connection, as well as being for sex or relationships. Decriminalisation happened back in ‘67 but it only became somewhat socially acceptable in the 80s and 90s, but even then it could be quite isolating.

And after the Internet came the App.

Grindr launched back in 2009. Based on the interviews (and personal experience) the fact that you could have access any time anywhere was very different. It wasn’t a case of only when you were at home at your desktop, or at work as a lot of people did, you could be on the tube, walking down the street, going to the doctors, it was always there. You didn’t have to go to a cruising ground or a toilet. A point quite a few people made was whilst it opened up the access to men having sex with men, it also made it possible to be even more secretive. In the past, you had to physically be there to show you were interested, whereas now you can be as anonymous as you like up until that point of meeting.

Having looked back across the decades, what do you think the future holds for men meeting other men for sex?

Technology is ever changing. I’m sure there will be crazy virtual ways for meeting but not physically meeting men in the future. I personally would always like a physical experience, but who knows, suddenly porn becomes more interactive, a lot more interesting. My personal hope is that the gay community and queer spaces do still exist. It’s interesting seeing that other spaces are trying to open, spaces not just for drinking and clubbing.

Have We Met Before is on BBC 4 at 10pm on Sunday, the 17th of March.

The post Gay Sex Through The Ages – Have We Met Before? appeared first on QX Magazine.


Lube Up! It’s Recon’s Fetish Cabaret

$
0
0

Fetish AND cabaret?! What’s not to love!


After the success of the first Recon cabaret in August and comedy night in November, Recon will be back at the Royal Vauxhall Tavern throughout the year with more fetish social events.

Recon’s first social takes place on Wednesday 27th March bringing you a night of fun, cabaret and fetish. This social event is open to all fetishes, so gear up and put on your latex, leather, sportswear, uniforms or skinhead gear- all fetishes are welcome, although Civilian clothing is fine too.

Hosted by the rancid starlet Baby Lame, who will be thrilling and terrorizing everyone with her twisted brand of punk horror drag, expect dark comedy and bad taste from start to finish.

There will be performances from three great cabaret artists, all bringing acts with a fetish twist.

International multi award winning burlesque and sideshow performer Lou Safire has been performing around the world since 2008 and was voted in the top 50 burlesque performers in the world and top 10 In the UK in 2015 and 2016. Not one to shy away from the heat, Lou’s fire performances and lust for the darker side of vaudeville brings a unique take on traditional freak show stunts.

Fierce, feisty and flabulous! Smashlyn Monroe will be dragging their fat ass out of Hades and back to the RVT for the Recon Fetish Cabaret. Most recently winning the title of Hamburger Queen, this brazen siren of the sideshow underworld will be bringing their own unique performances combining military, fetish and an insight to what happens at home when the husband’s away.

There will also be performances from model and performer Sadiq Ali. Sadiq has previously represented the UK at Mr Gay World in Malta. His solo acts combine circus, theatre and dance, and will be bringing his pole skills set to the RVT.

Expect a night of fantastic performances and games from some of the best in the London cabaret scene, as well as the chance to gear up and socialize with other kinksters.

All genders welcome!

Wednesday 27th March, 7pm-12am. £10 on the door. The Royal Vauxhall Tavern, 372 Kennington Ln, Vauxhall SE11 5HY.

The post Lube Up! It’s Recon’s Fetish Cabaret appeared first on QX Magazine.

Ten fab European gay pop icons you probs haven’t heard of

$
0
0

By Dylan B Jones

We’re crashing out of the EU! Well actually, that’s a bit dramatic – as has been the case for the last year or so, no-one really seems to know what the fuck is going on. Nothing is certain.

What IS certain, is that European pop music is great! Whether you’re clinking tankards along to German schlager, getting euphoric in the tundras of Sweden or feeling your French lolita fantasy, the continent has SO many fab, adventurous artists, who most of us have never heard of. See below!

Sveltana Loboda – Ukraine
Aaah Svetlana. We LOVE Svetlana. She is ultimate fab, ultimate camp! She’s got all the gay icon credentials – a bit ridiculous, a bit of a mess, no inhibitions, no fucks given. She’s a huge star in her native Ukraine, but gained international attention when she entered Eurovision in 2009. The song was called “Anti-Crisis Girl” (?!) and the set was allegedly so extravagant that Svetlana had to remortgage her flat to pay for it. Have a watch of the performance below, it’s quite the spectacle (pay extra attention at around the 1:40 mark, where she performs possibly the most iconic dance move ever).

Emma – Finland
Emma is like Finland’s answer to Diana Vickers – frolicking across fjords barefoot and putting bits of twig in her hair. Shortly after the UK voted to leave the EU back in 2016, she released “Circle Of Light” – a pro-EU anthem! The “circle of light” is the EU flag, geddit? Very clever. 

 

MARINA – Poland
Hello London – this is POLAND CALLING! Marina is a stunning popstar hailing from Baltic climes, one of many fabulous Eastern European popstars none of us have heard of, because we spend way too much time going “yaas Gaga!” Musically, she’s Ke$ha via Krakow, chunky pop beats combined with chilly Eastern European cool.

 

Angie – Sweden
The bad girl of the Swedish pop scene (lol) Angie sings songs about WEED and PUSSY! In fact, she’s actually got a song called “Smoke Weed, Eat Pussy”. In all seriousness though her music’s great, synthy and sexy and ahead of the curve. She predicted the millennial pink trend before anyone else, even before Gaga with that fucking cowboy hat. 

 

ENCA – Turkey
We don’t really know the story behind ENCA – we only know who she is because we Shazamed her in a Turkish cornershop at 4am. But she’s fab.

Inna Modja – France
Good old France! They can always be relied on for mouth-watering cheeses, gorgeously filthy porn, and chic, modern pop music. Inna Modja certainly fits into the latter category (neither of the former, as far as we know). A supermodel turned songstress, she took the French charts by storm a few years ago with “La Fille Du Lido”. The video was shot in London, back when everyone loved the UK and we weren’t an international laughing stock.

M Pokora – France
Another offering from France! There’s actually SO MUCH great French pop music but we’ve refrained from including the obvious ones (Alizée, Carla Bruni, YELLE) because this is after all supposed to be about artists you HAVEN’T heard of. M Pokora is a bit like if David Beckham were French and a bit more fresh, and had a pop career. He’s got a huge gay following across the channel. Can’t imagine why.

Helene Fischer – Germany
German superstar Helene Fischer is quite possibly the best person in the world EVER! She loves the gays, the gays love her. Last year she released a single called “Regenbogenfarben” (Rainbow Colours) for pride. But her best oeuvre is “Atemlos Durch Die Nacht” – which means “breathless through the night”. If that’s not a poppers anthem, we don’t know what is. In the video she looks like a cross between Delta Goodrem and Jenna Maroney from 30 Rock.

Eric Saade – Sweden
A Swedish hunk! Well, “hunk” might not be the right word. He’s more like the sort of boy it’d be nice to bring home to your mum when you were 17. He’d be very polite at dinner. And then DYNAMITE IN THE SHEETS. We can tell from that cheeky grin. We see you Eric! Eric is a TV presenter as well as singer, and enters Eurovision whenever he feels like it, like most Swedish people. This song is called “Manboy” which is a bit of a suspect title. Sounds a bit like a category on Pornhub.

Serebro – Russia
We’re not really sure where this Russian girl group materialised from, or why they exist, but we’re happy they do! From much extensive technological research (trawling YouTube at 3am) we’ve gleaned that they mostly sing songs about SEX and DRINKING. Quite right too! Here’s our fave video from them. They spend a lot of it in a really unfashionable bathroom, singing into a hairbrush. Iconic. 

READ MORE:

QX meets…Dorian Electra

The post Ten fab European gay pop icons you probs haven’t heard of appeared first on QX Magazine.

#JULIASAYS – Discerning scene musings from the princess of East London!

$
0
0

With all these amazing performance platforms going on, the drag stars of tomorrow are living the dream – so let’s support artistes starting out on the fabulous journey of drag!

From MAN UP! to GOLD RUSH and of course LIPSYNC 1000 and that’s just The Glory! Miss Sink The Pink – that’s coming up on 30th March at The Troxy so watch out for that one. And DRAG IDOL 2019 – the national drag competition – starts up across the land with heats going on all over the place!

One of my favourite nights Transmissions is back at The Glory and it’s on Friday 15th. A trans collective and performance group. Transmissions founder and performer Lucia Blake hosts this enlightening night and I’ll be DJing along the way too! From 9pm-2am. 

Lucia Blake

So on Friday 15th March Savage Disco presents Heidi at the Bussey Building, 133 Rye Lane SE15, 10pm till 5am. Okay, this is a huge party with DJs Heidi of course, as well as Joshua James, Jonjo Jury, Tasty Tim and the Savage dance queens.

Savage Disco

Then check this out…Batty Bass presents Virginia, Hannah Holland and Resis’Dance over at Mick’s Garage, 8 Queen’s Yard E9 on Friday 15th from 10pm till 4am. Super rave, with Hannah bringing Batty Base Records back to East London! Really maje!

Best place to go if you want to cause a scene…WIMP which on Friday 15th March is at The Yard, Unit 2a Queen’s Yard in Hackney Wick. This month’s theme is SWAMP, get inspired by all things mystical and murky! DJs Hannah Diamond, Jean Ocide and Adam Frost. Performance from Shrek 666, Miss Hernia and Chub Rub and an array of hosts including Emily After, Charity Kase, Petite Lamé, BloBByBoy, Evil Kebab and Bling Bling! Masterminded by Xoey Fourr…I love all these names haha, get down there to meet everyone IRL. Not joking!

Hannah Diamond

Hold on everybody: Bottom Heavy on Saturday 16th is at Dalston Superstore, with the major Wes Baggaley and Grace Sands in the basement. And I’ll be DJing with the Pxssy Palace party starter TrYb and Karnage on the bar. Hosted by the gorgeous Finn Love. 9pm till 4am.

Back to The Glory for Sodom & Begorrah: St Paddy’s Day X-Travaganza 9pm till 4am on Saturday 16th March. A proper messy knees up with an Irish theme and Xnthony hosting a night of non-stop cabaret, drag artistes, live music, DJ’s and the ‘Culchie Cabaret’ featuring the Irish dancing drag queen Nat West.

Now for a musical interlude and a special mention for Viktor Victoria who releases a new dance floor single PROVE IT. A melodic groove with a catchy hook from our T-Party stunner, whose musical career has spans over a decade! I’m hoping Viktor Victoria will perform it soon!

Hold on to your wigs…Cybil’s House: Good vs. Evil! at BJ’s White Swan, 556 Commercial Road is back on Saturday 16th March 10pm till 4am. Cybil War hosts this legendary night with BB Agressive, Thursday, Fuller Wigs, Sammuel She, Chase, Beverly Shlump and Saffron Slayer. Special guest performances from Rodent, Felix Le Freak, Chiyo and Scarlett O’Hara. DJ’s Viien Mobile Disco, MSC4MASC and Cybil War themselves! What an action packed night! Bloomin’ heck!

Cybil War

Going from strength to strength Sundays at Fabric on Sunday 17th March with ADONIS & LOVE CHILD T-Dance from 4pm till 11pm. DJ’s Violet, SONIKKU, Josh Caffe and our fave Grace Sands. Whoop!

Every Sunday…PRINCESS JULIA LOVES and on Sunday 17th my special guest is the darling Petite Lamé. Come and join us from 7pm till 11pm for an evening soireé like no other at The Glory.

Quiz night at the Retro Bar on Tuesday 19th, CARRY ON QUIZZING… I seem to be hosting this most weeks and what a treat it is! Other quizzes to watch out for are from Mr Ted’s who seems to be hosting quizzes most nights of the week, our fave is at The Cock Tavern on Sunday’s! 

It’s the free film night at the cute and kitsch Bamboo Bar at Fontaine’s up in Stoke Newington – Dalston way. Lobotomy Room Goes to the Movies and present a 1940’s classic Cobra Woman on Wednesday 20th March, 8pm for 8:30pm.

The post #JULIASAYS – Discerning scene musings from the princess of East London! appeared first on QX Magazine.

Look Good, Feel Gorgeous – London Staycation: The Moorgate

$
0
0

An oasis of calm in the centre of the City


There’s something obscenely lavish about overnighting in a hotel in your home city, a seemingly unnecessary extravagance when you could just as easily catch an Uber ride back to your own bed. But the home-city staycation is a thoroughly enjoyable way to get a fresh perspective on a town you think you know inside out and also to enjoy a property you might otherwise have missed out on. QX spent two nights at The Moorgate (www.themoorgate.com) and decided that tourists shouldn’t have all the fun – here are our favourite things about the recently renovated property.


Your Pied À Terre In The City

This boutique property offers 27 elegant suites and apartments in the heart of The City of London. The Moorgate has taken all the comforts and flexibility of your own home and combined them with the very best of serviced apartment living, to create the perfect home away from home for discerning travellers – in an enviable part of town. The Grade II listed building has been completely transformed from the previous offices with design by architect James Parkin of LDS Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands.


The Neighbourhood

The Moorgate offers you the opportunity to be one of the few people who live within The Square Mile, a prestigious part of central London. This is a wonderfully, almost unbelievably central location. It is located within the Bank Conversation Area, known as the commercial heart of the City of London and originally designated as an area of special interest in 2012, due its architectural characteristics and a number of nationally significant, well-known buildings. It’s a stunning area to explore on foot. Also within walking distance you’ll find The City, Old Street and vibrant Shoreditch, with their delectable eateries, upmarket bars, traditional pubs and independent shops.


The Rooms

The Moorgate provides the option of staying in one of their Superior Suites or One Bedroom Apartments. We opted for one of their Superior Suites with fully-fitted kitchen and even more room to unwind, including a bath to soak in after a long day. Smart yet minimalist design creates an atmosphere of elegance. The living area has all the mod-cons that every discerning traveller expects – including Smart TV, Google Chromecast and super-fast free WiFi. A well-equipped kitchen offers everything you need to prepare your favourite supper, and a sumptuous lounge area to work (yeah right!), relax, or even entertain guests in. Snacks and Nespresso machine (with pods) provided, RESULT! Our suite had a king-sized bed for the ultimate night’s sleep as well as an elegant bathroom, complete with shower, bath and underfloor heating. As with the public areas, the apartments have been furnished to a very high specification, with lovely flooring and wall finishes, limited print artwork by Artiq, custom-made furniture by Gubi and Saba Italia, and feature lighting by Flos. Each air-conditioned apartment is double-glazed to a high spec, soundproofing it from the busy area that surrounds the property – creating a real sense of peace and tranquillity.


The Verdict

Whether you’re looking at taking in another perspective of our lovely city or needing a centrally-located long weekend break away from home then this is most certainly the place for you. The Moorgate is contemporary yet homely and will undoubtedly meet all of your needs.

The Moorgate, 34 London Wall, London, EC2M 5QX, London, United Kingdom
T: 02033274715
E: bookings@themoorgate.com

www.mystylemanual.com     @_tonyflynn

The post Look Good, Feel Gorgeous – London Staycation: The Moorgate appeared first on QX Magazine.

Surviving a first encounter with an ex – featuring sweat and sass

$
0
0

It’s like the modern day gladiator sport – two enter, only one can emerge victorious. Considering that we’re likely never going to give birth, running into an ex is probably the most painful thing us queers do. Even though running into someone you’ve slept with is way less intense than it is for our straight counterparts, often marked only by a wink and a crooked smile, running into an ex is just as world-muddling. Running into someone who’s seen your bits? Meh, who cares. Running into the man you trusted implicitly and loved so much that you were willing to lay your life down before his? Yeah…different story.  

One of you will leave knowing you got off better than they did, that’s the laws of physics, whether it’s hot new man candy, a banging new bod, or simply just being happy. Life isn’t a rom-com, so just being content with where you both are in your lives and moving on as friends is not where this is going to end up. It’s going to be uncomfortable, and every word’s going to strike a very raw nerve. Leave that Julia Roberts fantasy at the door, sister. Here’s our guide to surviving the encounter without feeling like you’ve been run over by a rubbish truck full of regret and remorse.

AVOID it if possible

These encounters aren’t for the faint of heart, they can go haywire damn quickly. One minute you’re casually talking about who you’re dating, then all of the sudden they mention who they are dating and you lose control of your tear ducts and the river Nile starts issuing from your face. Not a good look. Certain places are off limits post-breakups, from the neighbourhood around their place of work to the place that does the bagels he likes. You might also like those bagels, but it’s really not worth the risk. 

Look like a hot damn piece of ass.

If an occasion arises that you know that both you and your ex are attending, and there’s no way of getting out of it, then care must be taken with how you look. There should be at least a few hours cast aside to making sure that you look like the perfect boyfriend he’s missing out on, fresh out of the plastic. A haircut a few days before is a good idea, and maybe a facial or two. If you haven’t the time to get yourself looking like a muscled teenage heart-throb then just call in sick, your colleagues will understand. 

If it’s a chance encounter as you’re running around town then there’s really nothing you can do. There’s a lot to be said about the old adage: Dress every day like you’re going to run into an ex. Seems like a lot but you’re going to be damned glad when it’s actually happened and you’re in that top that’s tight and right on the arms, and hides that sticky sweet muffin top.

Underhanded bragging is an art form.

To flaunt your wears without making it look intentional is tricky, but it can be done. Overt bragging of whatever you have going on is tacky and makes you seem a little desperate, so if you’re not confident in your subtlety then don’t attempt. A simple way is to make a strenuous yet seemingly natural link between what they’re saying and what you want to brag about. EXAMPLE:

Him: Oh, so how are things with you?

You: Yeah, actually pretty good actually. You?

Him: Yeah good, I’ve just come from grabbing a coffee for the boss.

You: Oh, that’s so funny! That coffee shop is exactly where my ASSISTANT gets my coffee actually. 

Okay, maybe not so subtle. But who cares, he turned as white as your cafe latte after hearing that you’ve gotten that promotion.

Rush off mid-sentence.

You’d love to stay and chat (we mean, you’d actually really love to stay because every moment you spend in his company you’ve felt that warm glow that has been missing from your empty, empty life ever since he left you in a stinking puddle of your own despair), but you have to run off. If you stick around for the conversation to teeter out then things can get very awkward, so better to leave at the height of the conversation. You don’t really need an excuse, just start talking about something and start walking off. Example:

Him: So I take it you got that promotion?

You: Yeah, I mean it was a long time coming. Having said that, I actually have to, yeah, sorry…

NEVER look back after leaving

No matter how well it went, looking back is admitting crushing defeat. You walked off with a smile on your face, pretending to be in a rush, so looking back at him is not only making it seem that you’re not really in a rush and that the smile faded away the moment he left your sight, just like that warm glow we mentioned before…eyes forward, head up, strut ON. You can wait until you’ve turned a corner to brush away those tears and whipping out your phone to Google Maps the nearest wine bar that does 2-litre bottles. Just like the Lot’s wife, if you turn around and watch the relationship you had crumbling behind you, you’re going to become very salty. 

Five signs that you’re DEFINITELY in a long-term relationship

 

 

The post Surviving a first encounter with an ex – featuring sweat and sass appeared first on QX Magazine.

Viewing all 5030 articles
Browse latest View live