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Heroes Run returns this summer in aid of RISE

It’s back! Brighton’s much-loved HEROES RUN returns on Sunday, May 13 in aid of the children’s therapy service at local domestic abuse charity RISE.

Participants are encouraged to dress in their favourite hero costume and run along Hove seafront in aid of charity.

The event was started in 2005 by the charity Pass It On Africa and ran for thirteen fantastic years. This year Pass It On Africa is doing exactly that – passing on the event to RISE to continue the event’s charitable aims.

There are four races on the day: an adult’s 5K and 10K, a Youth Mile and Kids 500m Dash, with races starting from 10am.

RISE is offering all runners who enter between now and February 14, the chance to claim an early bird discount of 10% – simply enter the code ‘HEROESRISE’ when registering.

All money raised from the event will help RISE fund their children’s therapy service, which will help local children affected by domestic abuse.

Matt Lambert, co-founder of Pass It On Africa, said: “We’ve done great things together since the beginning in 2005 but now feel it’s time to hand the baton and HEROES legacy to RISE, our great local domestic abuse charity. They do fantastic work, and always supported us, freely sharing resources and experience. Their focus for HEROES RUN is child mental health – a cause I’m sure people will champion.”

Jo Gough, CEO at RISE, added: “We’re delighted to take on the mantle of the HEROES RUN this year. All the money raised from the run will go directly to the RISE Therapy Team to help fund our much-needed children’s counselling service. Seeing, hearing and experiencing abuse can have a profound effect on children. 90% of them will be in the same or next room when something happens. They might be anxious and scared, wet the bed, be angry or depressed or find it hard to make friends. Children often don’t have the language to express what’s happening to them, what they’ve seen and how they feel, which is why they need specialist help. If every HERO raises just £20 RISE can fund a Child Psychotherapist for 2018/19.”

From seasoned runners to complete beginners, mini athletes to those who just fancy an excuse to dress as their favourite superhero, the event is open to everyone. So grab a mask and cape, put your pants over your trousers and be a HERO for domestic abuse.

To find out more about the race or register to enter, click here:

Take a queer bus tour at National Student Pride

National Student Pride, now in its thirteenth year returns to the University of Westminster’s Marylebone campus in London, from February 9-11.

The centre piece of the event for the 1,700 people attending will be the main daytime festival on Saturday, February 10 featuring discussion panels, performances and a careers fair.

The evening entertainment will be hosted by the infamous G-A-Y night clubs, culminating with a party at G-A-Y Heaven.

As the UK marks 30 years since the introduction of the of Section 28, which banned the promotion of queer lifestyles in schools – we should all be questioning how much we know about queer liberation history.

This year you can hop on board a queer bus tour of London hosted by a queer performer and experience the queerest tour of the capitol ever.

National Student Pride’s massively discounted bus tour is an exclusive – with the route being especially created for National Student Pride.

The tour will take students around important education and queer sex landmarks, whilst Dan de la Motte discusses how LGBT+ rights have progressed since on a fun but informative journey of the UK’s capital city’s queer culture.

Queer Tours of London – A Mince Through Time’s organiser and renowned sex activist Dan Glass says: When we are growing up gay, confused, awkward and hormones a rush – the power of knowing that queer people exist is immeasurable. In an important anniversary year for Section 28 educating LGBT+ students about their history when they might still be questioning their identity, tells them that they is OK. That’s why we’re collaborating on the tour.”

The tour will tell the stories of London’s queer history, shedding light on the lives, spaces, identities, repression and resistance that form the backdrop of LGBT+ lives today.

Hatti Smart
Hatti Smart

Hatti Smart from National Student Pride, added: “We are really excited this year to be putting on a bus tour for students from all around the UK to explore their queer history and London. For many student’s this is the first time they’ve been to London or the only opportunity they get, so it will be great for them to see the LGBT+ history in the city.”

The tour, sets off  from Baker Street on Sunday, February 11 at 11am, taking you all around London, from Baker Street to Buckingham Palace, pointing out the best queer safe spaces, venues and LGBT+ history that have taken place in the city.

Every stop will explore different aspects of our LGBT+ history including the origins of Pride in Trafalgar Square; the History of the HIV+ epidemic at former hospitals; resistance to Section 28 in the House of Lords; Queer Dance Halls of the 1930’s; legendary LGBT+ nightclubs of the 70’s (Club Bang); spaces for love and sex – from cottaging and cruising to underground lesbian bars, sites of resistance to oppression and how LGBT+ migrants fought in the House of Lords and Gay Liberation Front activists confronted the medical establishments’ homophobia – and so much more!

To purchase tickets for the bus tour online, click here:

Britney Spears to headline Brighton Pride

Megastar Britney Spears kicks off her European Tour by headlining the main stage at Brighton And Hove Pride on Pride Saturday, August 4, 2018.

Legendary pop icon Britney Spears, one of the most successful and celebrated entertainers in pop history with nearly 150 million records sales worldwide to her name, will be the headline act for Brighton and Hove Pride on Saturday, August 4 2018!

Brighton Pride will be the first place in Europe to see the global megastar on her 2018 tour performing complete her spectacular Las Vegas show ‘Britney – Piece of Me’.

Britney says: “I’m so excited to be kicking off my UK tour this summer at Brighton Pride! I guarantee it’s going to be a night to remember and can’t wait to sing and dance with all of my LGBT+ fans.”

The Grammy Award-winning superstar will perform the exclusive show at Brighton and Hove Pride following her record-breaking, four-year headlining Las Vegas residency Britney: Piece of Me at The AXIS at Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino.

Britney will be performing in the UK for the first time since the residency’s completion in her only UK pride appearance!

Firmly established as the UK’s most popular international Pride Festival, Attitude magazine call Brighton Pride the “Gay Glastonbury”.

Alongside the smiles, sunshine and good times, Brighton Pride’s sole ethos through their inclusive events is to promote tolerance and diversity within all communities.

Supporting local charities and good causes through fundraising is the cornerstone of Brighton and Hove Pride, a ‘Pride with Purpose’ raising over £450,000 for local good causes in the last four years.

Pride organisers are urging local residents to purchase their tickets as soon as possible as tickets will sell very quickly.

To book your tickets to see Britney on August 4, click here:

BOOK REVIEW: First Year Out by Sabrina Symington

First Year Out

A Transition Story

Sabrina Symington

This intimate graphic novel with its warmly illustrated and humorous drawings follows Lily, as she transitions to her true self. It’s an honest story of the day to day experiences of transition, from the extraordinary to the mundane, depicted with humour, fortitude and intuition.  Depicting her experiences from coming out right through to gender reassignment surgery, Lily’s story provides vital candid advice on the social, emotional and medical aspects of transitioning and will empower anyone questioning their gender.

The illustrations and pastel colour scheme works well to promote a feeling of presence and believably in the characters. There was a few times when I thought the explanations and set up’s for Lily to question and educate curious (or hostile) characters could have been more deftly and naturally handled but overall the narrative works well enough. Dodging nothing and allowing us real understanding of the changes and adjustments needed on a regular basis this books is an utterly charming journey into a new life which allowed the reader –tans or  cis ally- to gain understanding whilst connecting with a protagonist who is likable, everyday but utterly themselves at every step of the way.

Based on the author’s experiences, from laser hair removal and coming out to her parents, through to dating, voice training and gender reassignment surgery, this intimate and witty book is a testament to being who you are and a celebration of gender diversity.

Author  Symington is an illustrator, graphic novelist and blogger from Vancouver who publishes a cool web comic Life of Bria.

Jessica Kingsley Publishers continue to produce a seriously interesting and engaging range of books that make a difference and it’s well worth a peruse of their books lists if you’re not already familiar with this excellent British publishing house.

Out Now

£15.99

For more info or to buy the book see the publishers website here

Nile Rodgers & CHIC to headline new ‘LoveBn1Fest’ on Pride Sunday

Multi Grammy award-winning superstar Nile Rodgers & CHIC to headline Brighton Pride LoveBn1Fest On Sunday August 5, 2018.

Grammy-winning composer, producer, arranger, guitarist Nile Rodgers and his multi-platinum selling band CHIC are confirmed to headline Brighton Pride’s LoveBN1Fest on Sunday, August 5 in Preston Park.

LoveBN1Fest is the brand new Pride Sunday Festival on Preston Park celebrating everything Brighton & Hove and helping raise extra funds for the Pride Social Impact Fund while bringing all our communities together.

Famed for tracks such as Le Freak, I Want Your Love and Good Times, Nile Rodgers has written and produced for some of the most illustrious artists in the world including Madonna, Diana Ross, David Bowie and Eric Clapton.

They will perform a unique set featuring some of the greatest collaborations of Nile’s four-decade career including David Bowie, Madonna and Diana Ross, whose collaborations with Nile have sold over 300 million albums and 50 million singles worldwide while his innovative, trendsetting collaborations with Daft Punk, Avicii, Sigala, Disclosure and Sam Smith reflect the vanguard of contemporary music.

Their set, one of the highlights of Glastonbury Festival 2017, will reverberate at the LoveBN1Fest to hit records produced by Nile Rodgers such as Pharrell Williams’ Get LuckyDiana Ross’s I’m Coming OutDavid Bowie’s Let’s dance and a raft of CHIC hits including Good Times and Le Freak.

With more artists to be announced… LoveBN1Fest will feature performance and dance tents, family tent, circus skills, cabaret and theatre, spoken word, community stalls and food village, accessibility tent and WellBeing area. LoveBN1Fest has something for everyone and, with children under 11 going free, it’s the perfect Sunday In The Park for Pride.

Pride organisers urge local people to get their tickets early this year as sales expectations are very high.

To book tickets for LoveBN1Fest, £27.50 & £37.50, click here: 

To book joint tickets with Pride Saturday, click here:

Children under 11 are free (but still require a ticket)

Click for highlights of Chic’s set at Glastonbury 2017

Celebrities support Barnardo’s urgent carer appeal

Celebrities share images of family and friends to support Barnardo’s urgent carer appeal.

Celebrities are backing a Barnardo’s campaign highlighting the importance of having someone to support you in aid of the charity’s urgent campaign to find thousands of foster carers to look after the UK’s most vulnerable children.

Singer Paloma Faith, former TOWIE TV stars Lydia Bright and Debbie Douglas, Cold Feet actress Fay Ripley, Love Island’s Marcel Somerville, Gogglebox vicar Kate Bottley and gold medallist sprinter Jamie Baulch are using #wesupportfostering to share personal images of their families and the people who have supported them through thick and thin for Barnardo’s Fostering week launched today (Monday, January 22).

Dr Thomas Barnardo started fostering children more than 130 years ago and since then the charity has helped hundreds of thousands of the UK’s most vulnerable children to grow up happy and healthy.

Now, the UK’s leading children’s charity is calling for more people to consider providing caring, stable home environments to help transform young lives as there’s a pressing need to find more than 7,000 foster carers in the next 12 months to support children desperately in need of loving families.

The foster carer drive comes as new YouGov research for the charity reveals nearly half (46%) of people think a lack of support from fostering agencies is likely to put people off fostering. While 62% say they think people may not be confident they can look after a foster child, and 45% believe not having any training on how to be a foster carer could be an issue.

In stark contrast, a poll by Barnardo’s of their own foster carers reveals that more than 8 in 10 carers (82%) are happy with the level of support and advice they receive from their Barnardo’s fostering service and believed it was excellent or good, while three quarters (75%) said they would recommend their Barnardo’s fostering service to others.

Barnardo’s foster carers rate the support and training they receive highly, with almost 80 per cent telling us that our out of hours support was either good or very good.  Almost 90 per cent of them also rated Barnardo’s supervising social workers as good or very good.

The State of the Nation’s Foster Care survey is a UK benchmarking survey of foster carers conducted by the Fostering Network, which works with fostering services and the wider sector to develop and share best practices.

In comparison to the Barnardo’s survey, just 44 per cent of the survey’s respondents rated the out of hours support provided by their agency, as good or very good. Nearly three quarters (73%) rated their supervising social workers as good or very good.

Barnardo’s support includes a dedicated 24-hour access to a qualified social worker, training, access to foster carer support groups, short breaks and a generous financial fee.

Paloma and her mother
Paloma and her mother

Mum-of-one Paloma Faith, who shares the above archive image of her and her mum as a toddler, is keen to emphasise the importance of having support while bringing up a child.

Paloma said: “Raising a child is so rewarding but it can also be a challenge, so knowing you have someone to help you when you need it makes such a difference. Barnardo’s is special because they provide their foster carers with continual support and advice, no matter how big or small the problem.”

Debbie Douglas
Debbie Douglas

Barnardo’s ambassador Debbie Douglas, who has fostered more than 200 children over the 25 years, added: “I would urge people to consider fostering as opening your heart and home to a vulnerable child is one of the most rewarding things you can do.

“It can be challenging but the satisfaction of knowing you have helped transform a child’s life for the better is wonderful.”

Debbie’s foster daughter Ellie highlights how important it is for a foster child to feel supported by their foster carer.

She said: “Being in care can be hard but having a loving and supportive foster family makes a huge difference. Life is so much better knowing that you have their support when you need it; someone to care for you, to love you, to help you solve problems and to help you grow up.”

Fay Ripley
Fay Ripley

Actress Fay Ripley believes it is important for parents and carers to know they are not alone.

She said:  “Caring for a child is wonderful yet all parents know it can also be challenging at times. No matter if you’re a parent or a carer, everyone needs someone to turn to when things get tough. That’s why the continuous support Barnardo’s provide to carers is essential during a foster carers journey – it gives them the tools to help children achieve the best possible outcomes.”

Javed Khan
Javed Khan

Barnardo’s Chief Executive, Javed Khan, said: “Children who have been taken into care have sometimes experienced trauma or difficult circumstances making everyday challenges more difficult to overcome.

“Having a foster carer to support them through the difficult times can help enormously but our carers can only do this if they’re properly supported too. That’s why we ensure they have everything they need whether that’s advice, training or peer support, to feel confident they can help transform a young life.”

To find out more about becoming a foster carer, or the support Barnardo’s can offer, click here:

Homophobic terminology and religious profanity commonly appears online

New research reveals religious profanity and homophobic terminology among most common swearwords used online.

Religious swearwords and homophobic phrases are among the most common profanity used in online blogs, new research suggests.

Researchers Dr Andrew Kehoe, Deputy Head of Birmingham City University’s School of English, and Dr Ursula Lutzky, Assistant Professor at Vienna University of Economics and Business, searched through more than 180 million words online to find out more about people’s patterns of swearing and which words are most commonly used.

The research showed that the most frequently used words were phrases of religious profanity such as God, Jesus, Christ and hell, which made up four of the top five most frequent potential swearwords.

The academics also looked into which words most often accompanied swearwords, to reveal the most common phrases used in the 9,000 blogs, more than 220,000 blog posts and over 2.2 million comments they trawled.

Among the findings the study showed that people online are more likely to call each other a “sick ba***rd” than an “evil ba***rd’’ and more likely to be considered a “poor ba***rd’’ than a “lucky ba***rd.”

Potentially homophobic terminology was also ranked among the most regularly used words– appearing almost twice as frequently as the word idiot .

Swearing was also found to be used more often when referring to men than women.

Dr Andrew Kehoe
Dr Andrew Kehoe

Dr Andrew Kehoe, Deputy Head of Birmingham City University’s School of English, said: “This was the first large-scale study of online swearing to consider the context in which the words are used. This allowed us to go beyond simple lists of ‘banned words’ typically used in profanity filters and offer a more comprehensive approach.”

The findings have been published in a paper titled Your blog is (the) sh*t, with the academics explaining how the same swearwords can often have completely different connotations in different contexts, with some being positive (as in ‘the sh*t’), some negative (as in ‘sh*t’) and some neutral (as in ‘get my sh*t together’).

The work also identified a group of core swearwords which are regularly used in close proximity to each other, including f**k, sh*t, and crap.

Dr Ursula Lutzky
Dr Ursula Lutzky

Dr Ursula Lutzky, Assistant Professor at Vienna University of Economics and Business, added: “Our study provides new insights into the swearing behaviour of bloggers. By studying potential swearwords with the help of computer-assisted methodologies, our research offers a deeper understanding of online interactions. This could ultimately lead to the enhancement of profanity filters and could reduce exposure to potentially offensive language online.”

To read the report, click here:

Illinois Office of Tourism renew Gay Star News partnership

Gay Star News (GSN) and Illinois Office of Tourism renew partnership, now in second year, to deliver campaign welcoming LGBT+ tourists to the American state.

The new campaign will take a pioneering new direction in having a dedicated page delivering exclusive Illinois content on the GSN website.

GSN and the Illinois Office of Tourism’s partnership holds great significance in today’s social climate. It was created because Illinois’ government believes in equality for all, and the state also holds many amazing LGBT+ events each year, such as the Chicago Pride Parade.

In July 1961, Illinois became the first state in America to decriminalise homosexuality. Marriage equality came to the state in 2014.

Illinois content also lies on Gay Star Travel, one of GSN’s most popular sections, sponsored by Heathrow Airport; other travel-related sponsors of Gay Star News include Hoseasons, Cottages.com and Celebrity Cruises.

Chicago, Illinois
Chicago, Illinois

Travel editor for Gay Star News, Jamie Tabberer, says: “I’m delighted that GSN and the Illinois Office of Tourism’s partnership continues to thrive. The state’s efforts to attract queer tourists is unparalleled. Illinois is one of the most LGBT+-friendly states I’ve ever visited, and Chicago is one of my favorite destinations in the world.

“I look forward to encouraging more LGBT+ travellers to visit Illinois, from the bright lights of the Windy City to the underrated state capital of Springfield and the picturesque town of Galena.”

Cory Jobe, Director of Illinois Office of Tourism, added: “Illinois is one of the first states in the Great Lakes region to target LGBT+ travellers. Our message is clear, everyone is welcome here in Illinois. We’re proud of all the amazing experiences Illinois has to offer and we want the LGBT+ community to know we see the amazing in everyone who comes to visit.”

 

Survey for LGBTQ people affected by cancer launched

Macmillan Cancer Support and Brighton & Hove LGBT Switchboard are working together to engage with the local communities to learn about the experiences and needs of LGBTQ people in Brighton and Hove and Sussex who are affected by cancer.

This engagement work will be used to inform how LGBTQ people affected by cancer can be best supported; and to identify areas where improvements to patient experience can be made through Macmillan and in collaboration.

Switchboard has created two surveys as part of the project and would love to hear from as many people as possible.  One is for LBGTQ community members affected by cancer (including partners, carers and family members of people with cancer); the other is for professionals (including volunteers) supporting LGBTQ people affected by cancer.

Switchboard is also holding two focus groups to learn more about the experiences of these community members and professionals.  Take either of the surveys to receive details of the focus groups, or email: chris.brown@switchboard.org.uk

Daniel Cheesman
Daniel Cheesman

Daniel Cheesman, CEO of Brighton & Hove LGBT Switchboard, said: “Working with Macmillan on this project is really important for Switchboard as we know that LGBTQ people face additional barriers when it comes to accessing health care and support. We want to understand what this looks like for LGBTQ people who are affected by and living with cancer. We are keen to hear from those who identify as LGBTQ who have been affected by cancer.”

 

To complete the LGBTQ community members survey, click here:

To complete professionals supporting LGBTQ people survey, click here:

 

Every year, more than 10,000 people in the Sussex area find out they have cancer. There are at least 48,000 people living with cancer in Sussex, and the sad truth is, this number could increase to an estimated 93,000 by 20303.

One in two people in the UK are likely to get cancer in their lifetime. Cancer can affect everything, including a person’s body, relationships and finances.

Macmillan Cancer Support provides practical, emotional and personal support to people affected by cancer every year. The charity is there to support people during treatment, help with work and money worries, and listen when people need to talk about their feelings.

In 2016, there were around 200 Macmillan health and social care professional posts, often based at hospitals and in the community in Sussex, to support people with cancer and their families through difficult times. 2,000 people in the county phoned the Macmillan Support Line for information and support.  Macmillan mobile information buses were out and about in supermarkets, town centres, faith centres and workplaces in the Sussex area, visited by around 2,100 local people for support.

To help with money worries, around £1,460,400 in unclaimed benefits was unlocked for people in Sussex, and 620 people received Macmillan Grants, totalling over £215,000.5

Macmillan receives no government funding and relies on generous donations from the public. People up and down the country show their support for Macmillan – from hosting or attending a World’s Biggest Coffee Morning to running a marathon or giving up alcohol – so the charity can help more and more people affected by cancer every year.

Life with cancer is still your life and Macmillan is there to help you live it.

If you want information or just to chat, call 0808 808 00 00 (Monday to Friday, 9am–8pm) or visit www.macmillan.org.uk.

To get involved or make a donation please call 0300 1000 200. 

BOOK REVIEW: Wanting In Arabic by Trish Salah

Wanting In Arabic

Trish Salah

Canadian author Trish Salah’s poetry collection Wanting In Arabic is just into its second edition and if you’re unfamiliar with her work, I’d ask you politely to stop reading that twaddle on your phone and go get a copy of this creative, energetic and beautiful poetry.

Salah is clever, not just intelligent but has the fury of lightning in her work, and her lyric form is ancient and yet has an urgent vibrancy which is utterly modern and sexy with it. There’s a lot of sexy queer/lesbian eroticism in this work, but it squirms, writhes and boldly takes its stance just about anywhere the words can go. Salah is furious and gentle, shocking and so,so tender it moved me, and I felt I didn’t understand some of her work. Always a powerful tool of the poet, to draw you back to their lathe of meaning and whittle some more of your mind away with their sharp edged observations.

Braiding theoretical concerns with the ambivalences of sexed and raced identity, with profound romanticism, Wanting in Arabic attempts to traverse the fantasies of loss and aggressive nostalgia in order to further a poetics of generous struggle and comic rather than tragic misrecognition.

Beautiful and with sotto Canadian echos of Elizabeth Smart’s intertwining of spontanitey and propriety, of place and thought, the melding and moulding of words here feels plastic still, forming under the pins of our eyes but still wriggling to move and express again, Salah’s work is a subtle explosion of images and ideas that are compulsively interesting.

A treat!

Track down a copy if you can

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