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The Golden Quiz – who’s top of the class in 2019!

The first Golden Handbag of the season is up for grabs at the Golden Quiz on Tuesday, May 21 at Charles Street Tap.

LAST year 26 teams put aside their rivalries, filled Charles Street Tap to the rafters and gave us one of the best community events of the year, all to become the brainiest LGBT+ team in the city.

Go along and find out about the new voting categories at this years Golden Handbag Awards.

Hostess for the evening Lola Lasagne
Hostess for the evening Lola Lasagne

Lola Lasagne will once again host the biggest quiz in town to find out who has the brainiest LGBT+ bar staff and volunteers in the city.

Will last years winners Rainbow Chorus hold onto their crown? Once again, the winners of the Quiz this year will take over a front cover of Gscene for a month (value £2,000).

This year the number of teams are being restricted to 20 to give everyone plenty of room to spread out and enjoy themselves.

To register your team of six players for the evening email: info@gscene.com

Tables will be issued on a first come, first served basis, by return email:

The Golden Quiz kick starts the voting season for The Golden Handbag Awards 2019 which culminates in a star studded ceremony at the Hilton Brighton Metropole on Sunday, June 23 when the voluntary and business sectors come together to celebrate everything fabulous about the LGBT+ communities in Brighton and Hove.


Last years winners, The Rainbow Chorus
Last years winners, The Rainbow Chorus

Event: The Golden Quiz

Where: Charles Street Tap, 8 Marine Parade, Brighton

When: Tuesday, May 21

Time: Registration from 7pm for an 8pm start

Cost: £20 per team of 6 players. Pay Lola on the night. All entry money goes to the Rainbow Fund for distribution in the October Grants Round.

Forty transgender athletes volunteer for Brighton research

University of Brighton scientists research how to resolve international controversy over whether transgender sportswomen are competing fairly.

Prof Yannis Pitsiladis
Prof Yannis Pitsiladis

PROFESSOR Yannis Pitsiladis and colleagues are conducting a study of more than 40 individuals going through transition, with the aim of determining the fairest way of integrating transgender athletes into elite sport.

Testosterone increases muscle mass and under International Olympic Committee (IOC) guidelines athletes who have transitioned from male to female are required to keep their levels of testosterone under 10 nanomoles per litre.

Some top athletes and former Olympian are questioning the current limit. Paula Radcliffe, Dame Kelly Holmes and Sharron Davies, are campaigning for the IOC to provide more data on the ‘residual benefits’ of being a transgender athlete and whether the testosterone level is appropriate.

Professor Pitsiladis, the University’s Professor of Sport and Exercise Science who specialises in molecular biology, physiology and bioinformatics currently is working with the IOC before it publishes updated transgender guidelines.

He is collaborating with Dr James Barrett, Lead Clinician at the Gender Identity Clinic based at London’s Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust and Senior Lecturer at the Imperial College of Science and Medicine, Dr Leighton Seal, Consultant Endocrinologist at the Tavistock and Portman Charing Cross Gender Identity Clinic and Reader at St George’s University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and project lead, Dr Jonathan Ospina-Betancurt, Visiting Researcher in the University of Brighton’s School of Sport and Service Management.

They will be closely monitoring 40 trans women going through the hormone treatment part of transition, using their state-of-the-art facilities at the University of Brighton’s Eastbourne campus.

Professor Pitsiladis, a member of the IOC Medical and Scientific Commission, said: “We are immensely proud to initiate this important research that has been designed to generate the biological data needed to inform the inclusion of transgender and intersex athletes into competitive sports that is also consistent with international law, the Olympic Charter and the rights of all.”

Dr Barrett added: “We welcome this opportunity to learn more about the effect of testosterone levels on muscle function. We are excited to work with Professor Yannis Pitsiladis and Dr Jonathan Ospina-Betancurt, informing standards that will support future transgender athletes to compete in a fair way, without the current level of negative media attention.”

For more about Professor Pitsiladis, click here:

Charity donates £1,000 to Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain for London Pride 2019

Pink Triangle Trust makes donation to Council of Ex-Muslims (CEMB) of Britain in order to help it raise its profile at this year’s Pride event in London on July 6.

THE Pink Triangle Trust was established in 1992 to advance the education of the public, and particularly of lesbians and gay men, in the principles and practice of humanism, and to advance the education of the public, and particularly of humanists, about all aspects of homosexuality.

The CEMB will not only take part in Pride parade, but will also stage an evening event on LGBT+ Rights, Apostasy and Blasphemy in London on July 4.

The CEMB has fought to continue its participation in Pride after two Islamist bodies – the  East London Mosque and Mend  – filed official complaints in 2017 with Pride organisers for its Islamophobic posters and placards. It took Pride eight months to finally allow them to march again in 2018.

Thanking The Pink Triangle Trust for its strong defence of their work the CEMB said: “Since our first participation in Pride, we have worked hard to explain the difference between apostasy/blasphemy and bigotry, show how cultural relativism denies universal human rights, highlight how homophobia is a pillar of the Islamist movement and that LGBT+ rights are intrinsically linked to the rights of other minorities, like ex-Muslims, and women. We have also tried to reach out to Muslim LGBT+ groups.

“CEMB works with a large number of refugees and asylum seekers, all of whom are apostates and some of whom are LGBT+. Ana Gonzalez, a partner at Wilsons Law Firm said at our last event that we were the best of all the refugee support groups that she has ever worked with. Pride is particularly important to our members as one of the few public spaces where ex-Muslim and gay members can openly assert themselves without fear.”

The July 4 event will include a screening of No Longer without You, by Nazmiye Oral followed by a discussion with Nazmiye on her conversations with her conservative Muslim mother on everything from LGBT+ rights to free thought and abortion.

This discussion will be followed by a panel discussion with Jimmy Bangash (LGBT ex-Muslim), Nadia El Fani (Gay Tunisian Filmmaker) as well as others. Responses are still expected from Muslim and ex-Muslim LGBT speakers.

The event will end with a poetry reading by Kenyan Somali poet Halima Salat.

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