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Brighton based gay rugby team plays first competitive match

Brighton & Hove Sea Serpents RFC played their inaugural match at Hove Rugby Football Club on Saturday, February 20 against The Kings Cross Steelers 4th XV.

Brighton & Hove Sea Serpents RFC

Despite the miserable weather almost one hundred friends and supporters turned out in the muddy conditions to cheer both teams on, creating the opportunity for gay men to play rugby in Brighton and Hove for the first time.

After a shaky start the Sea Serpents settled down and in the second half had more possession. The Steelers came out winners 25-0 with all the points being gained from tries, there were no conversions.

After the match both teams enjoyed themselves at the Bar at Hove Rugby Club before moving on to entertain their guests from London at the Camelford Arms who are sponsoring the team.

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For more information about the Brighton & Hove Sea Serpents, RFC, click here:

More than 100 people turned up in miserable weather to support the teams play
More than 100 people turned up in miserable weather to support the teams play
Sea Serpents
Sea Serpents RFC celebrate their first game by downing pints of lager and Absinthe, singing ‘What shall we do with a drunk sailor’.

 

Queens Arms raises over £1,000 for Rainbow Fund

Barry Nelson (left) and Chris Gull, Chair of the Rainbow Fund
Barry Nelson (left) and Chris Gull, Chair of the Rainbow Fund

Barry Nelson, manager at the Queens Arms on George Street, hands over a cheque for £1,044.00 to Chris Gull, Chair of the Rainbow Fund. The money was raised during Barry’s Birthday Bash at the Queens Arms on Sunday, January 31.

The Rainbow Fund give grants to LGBT/HIV groups who provide effective services to LGBT people in the city.

At University in Brighton or Kent in 1966?

Where you at University in Kent or Sussex in 1966?

Simon Fanshawe OBE
Simon Fanshawe OBE

The BBC have commissioned a series of regional documentaries about 1966.

Broadcaster Simon Fanshawe OBE is making the one about the South East and will be looking at the year through the lens of the Universities of Kent and Sussex.

He wants to speak to a lesbian or gay man who remembers what it was like to live in Brighton in 1966.

If you can help email Simon at: simon@duckcorp.co.uk

PREVIEW: Sauna the dead: A Fairy Tale

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We’ve had Jane Austin and Zombies, and now, just as camp and twice as funny, comes a new short film about gay men and the way they treat each other, set in a sauna during the Zombie apocalypse.

Writer/Director – Tom Frederic

A fable in the vein of A Christmas Carol, set in a gay sauna, with zombies.

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Jacob (TomFrederic) is a jaded narcissist who stalks the bathhouse halls looking for his next hookup. When he finds himself trapped in a gay sauna in the midst of a zombie outbreak, his survival may depend on the one thing he didn’t come there for: a human connection.

SAUNA THE DEAD – A FAIRY TALE is inspired by mean guys on Grindr and the idea of the sauna as its own little world. Director Frederic fuses a love of 80s fantasy adventure movies, Disney and zombies to  present a genre-hopping modern day fairy tale exploring how the way we treat each other and how that changes online, in saunas and where sex is concerned and how that creates the worlds we live in.

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The world premiere  is being shows as part of the BFI Flare London LGBT Film Festival 2016 Short Film Programme: Hearts: Deeper Understanding  and will be on March 25 and 26.

The BFI are showing all the best new and classic LGBT films from around the world as part of the Flare 2016 LGBT film festival.

For full info about the BFI Flare LGBT film festival and program of events, click here:

Community activist dies in flat fire

Community activist Chris Cooke has died following a fire at Essex Place in Kemptown last night, February 21.

Chris Cooke
Chris Cooke

Chris, a proud community activist was a very decent man. He was also gentle, sensitive, and genuine. He loved nothing better than seeing a practical and positive improvement to St James’ Street and Kemptown especially if he had fought long and hard on behalf of others who had decided something was needed.

Chris trusted everybody, he listened to people’s concerns from wherever they came and, for someone who stood for election as a local councillor, was one of the most apolitical figures you would encounter in public life locally.

Up until a couple of years ago he was most involved with the St James’ Community Action Group as probably the leading founder member and its first Chairperson. He was proud of what SJCAG achieved during its first year and was devastated when a small section of the members organised his replacement.

He was responsible for Kemptown in Bloom for quite a while and the present efforts to revitalise this group will be a fitting tribute to his activities.

Chris chaired the Eastern Road Partnership when it was a vibrant and active association, was a keen supporter of the Gay Business Forum, worked tirelessly on neighbourhood and community policing, and was involved with the Friends of Queen’s Park. He was also the chair of the Brighton and Hove LGBT Community Safety Forum up until 2012, stood for the Labour Party in Queens Park Ward in 2011 and for a period was financial director at the Sussex Beacon.

Chris was a lovely person and far too young to be lost to his community.

Volunteers help Exeter City FC says “no to homophobia”

Volunteers from Exeter Pride, the Football v Homophobia campaign in the South West, and members of Devon Lions, the local gay-friendly football club, helped Exeter City Football Club once again take a stand against homophobia at its home game with Newport County on Saturday, February 20.

Exeter City FC

The match was the club’s annual Football v Homophobia fixture and a number of initiatives to mark the day were organised by the Exeter City Supporters’ Trust and its One Game One Community (OGOC) Group and the Club’s Football in the Community charity.

It was the seventh year Exeter City have held a Football v Homophobia initiative.

Before the game volunteers from Exeter Pride and Devon Lions handed out thousands of leaflets to spectators attending the match.

Players from both teams warmed up in Football v Homophobia T-shirts and the shirts were thrown to the crowd before the start of the game.

The players then walked out for the pre match line-up behind a Football v Homophobia banner.

Articles about the campaign were also be featured in the match programme and anti-discrimination announcements were made before kick-off and at half-time.

Exeter City’s OGOC Ambassador Ollie Watkins supporting the initiative said: “Homophobia like all discrimination has no place in football”.

Alan Quick, a member of the OGOC group, who is also the South West Co-ordinator for Football v Homophobia and a founding trustee of Exeter Pride, said he is pleased that Exeter City has been a long-standing supporter of the Football v Homophobia campaign.

Alan said: “Homophobia, prejudice and discrimination against Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) people in football is unacceptable and I am really pleased that Exeter City is committed to creating safe and inclusive football environments for everyone, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity. Prejudice and discrimination in football affects us all, not just LGBT people.” 

Exeter City’s One Game One Community Group works with the national Kick it Out campaign to address all types of discrimination in football including race, disability, gender, age and sexual orientation.

Exeter Pride is currently organising its eighth annual pride event for the various LGBT communities of Exeter and the South West.

The event will take place on Saturday, May 7 and include a parade down Exeter High Street from the St Sidwell’s Centre to Exeter Phoenix where there will be a programme of events, including workshops, stalls, a panel discussion and entertainment.

For more information about Exeter Pride, click here:

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Drag Queen receives special award from Sussex Police

Entertainer Jason Sutton aka Miss Jason has been presented with a special community award by Chief Superintendent Nev Kemp from Sussex Police acknowledging the help he gave police officers during a bomb scare at the start of the Brighton Pride Parade in 2015.

Miss Jason

The start of the Pride Parade was delayed by two hours while police investigated a suspicious package strapped to a lamppost outside the Brighton Hotel, opposite the Bandstand on Brighton seafront.

Jason who had been hosting a Pride breakfast at the Brighton Hotel, kept the crowds outside calm and entertained while police investigated the package and then evacuated the crowd while bomb squad officers carried out a controlled explosion.

The package turned out to be a pinhole camera intended to take photographs over an extended period of time.

The citation on the award, reads: “Miss Jason is thanked by Sussex Police for assisting in the evacuation of a large number of people during Brighton & Hove’s Pride 2015 celebrations following the discovery of a suspicious package. Miss Jason displayed great professionalism and helped to ensure a calm and organised evacuation putting the safety of the local community first.”

Chief Super Nev Kemp, said: “My officers reported that Miss Jason was a considerable help in keeping people calm and in a good mood during the long wait to establish if the package was dangerous. We did not want to let his contribution in keeping the crowd good-tempered and safe go unrecognised.”

Miss Jason added: “It was so camp my dears! I had a wonderful time keeping everyone entertained in the long wait to establish how serious the situation was. Everyone played their part and the most important thing is that no one was hurt, everyone had a great day and I am very happy to have played my part.”

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