Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Let It Be

At a memorial for an Asians and Friends Board member, former Joel Hall Dancer Angel Abcede performed an improptu dance to The Beatle's "Let It Be."

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Filipino Dinner





Asians and Friends Chicago had a taste of the Phillippines last week as they dined at Little Quiapo on the city's northwest side. Among the dishes were the traditional "blood stew" and a popular oxtail peanut dish. Food is often a defining piece of culture and many experienced Filipino food for the first time.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Climbing the Drag Ladder

Finding Asian faces in prominent roles in gay, mainstream productions is always a plus. More and more, we are asserting ourselves not just as visual elements of diversity, but as solid performers deserving of major roles. All these weighty words to compliment Ed, who performs as the Wicked Queen in Snow White and the Seven Drag Queens at Chicago's Hydrate night club. Congrats to a commanding performance.



Thursday, May 7, 2009

Washington Gay Asians Celebrate Anniversary

Here's news from the Washington (D.C.) Blade:

Asian gays mark milestone

Pride & Heritage celebrates 10th anniversary this weekend

May 01, 2009
By Amy Cavanaugh

One month before Capital Pride celebrations turn D.C. into a glittery rainbow, gay Asian Americans are coming together to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Pride & Heritage as part of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month in May.

Pride & Heritage is a coalition of four local groups for LGBT Asian/Pacific Islanders: API Queer Sisters, an organization for gay Asian and Pacific Islander women; API Queer United for Action, a group that predominantly caters to Asian men and works to promote advocacy, education, outreach and social events; KhushDC, a support, social and political group for gays who have ties to South Asia; and the National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum which is not LGBT but includes a lesbian, bisexual and transgender arm that addresses issues of importance to gay Asian-American women.

When the coalition formed 10 years ago, it was a chance for organizers to bring the API community together in discussions about sexuality and heritage.

“When we first started, it was always a challenge of invisibility,” Ben de Guzman of the Pride & Heritage committee says. “The first guest speaker at the first event was Helen Zia … who talked about how Asian/Pacific Islanders have always been missing in history.”

He says the community has dealt with “Asian Americans who would rather be in denial about the LGBT people in their communities or LGBT organizations who aren’t willing to look at what constitutes gay issues,” but now “in many ways I think we have moved past that. I think people are beginning to realize that all gay folks aren’t white and that all Asian people aren’t straight.”

Friday, May 1, 2009

Are Asians Cool?

The bottom-tier sexual ranking of gay, Asian men comes from an unspoken hierarchy that faces all Asian men in mainstream America. The rant from this young Asian man speaks to the point.