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OPINION: Craig’s Thoughts 

A Christmas Tale or Baby Jesus Will Save Us (again) by Craig Hanlon-Smith @craigscontinuum.

And lo, as another seasonal winter of good cheer loomed ahead like a Nazarean census, Joseph and his Mary set out once more on their quest to deliver the son of God to save mankind. Salvation would come in the form of a donkey, a few worried sheep and ultimately by womb-dropping a baby into an unremarkable feeding trough, hidden in the corner of a derelict shed.

If that was the master plan, is it any wonder we’re all in the shit? However, it is not for us to argue on the origins of an internationally-renowned religion, and besides who doesn’t get their cockles warmed by the tale of Baby Jesus, or at least the John Lewis Christmas ad?

It had been a funny old year for our disillusioned yet once hopeful couple. Joseph, never the centre of the attention, was resigned to Mary’s so-called immaculate conception because although he had restrained himself nightly, it turns out every bugger in the Palace of Westminster or perhaps Hollywood had probably had a turn, and so Mary’s not being with child would have been the real Christmas miracle.

In order to protect Mary’s honour, they invented some shit about the angel of the Lord visiting in the dead of night, and as Catholic Priests with loose cassocks had been getting away with it in children’s homes for years, billions, yes billions, fell for it.

Mary might have told her story to a local media outlet, but in those days by the time the palava had been etched onto some ancient parchment, the populace had swiftly moved on, and were now more concerned with which remote island King Herod was shoving his stash of bitcoin. And so, our Mary’s needs once again pushed to the side, she accepted her lot, straddled the Christmas mule and set out upon the dusty road as per usual. The story was, after all, probably bollocks.

Their odyssey was no longer the smooth ride it had been in previous tellings of the Christmas story. Our heroes were both dark of skin, and the face of Joseph half disguised behind a heavy-set beard. And whilst facial hair would have made Joseph a real man and considerably more attractive to a wider range of homosexuals on Instagram, in reality it meant that stupid people could shout “Muslim Go Home” whilst frightening yet equally idiotic folk, with money and a shudder of global authority, could shove him in a detention centre whilst the local Judiciary argued the toss as to whether or not he should travel internationally ever again. “If only the world had a Baby Jesus to sort this mess out,” he thought to himself as he direct messaged a picture of his penis to 375 followers, only six of whom replied.

As Joseph and his Mary trekked through the land of Judea, they had a strange feeling that they might be heading in the wrong direction, as they met hoards of people leaving. This seemed strange to them as these were skilled house-builders, carpenters, inn-keepers and local health-care workers, but as our protagonists arrived in their homeland, all became clear.

The local officials were carving up great segments of the green and pleasant land, shovelling it into wheelbarrows or whatever the BC equivalent was, and hunkering down in lonely corners, barricaded into isolation behind great mounds of pointless earth, waving a crumpled disintegrating flag whilst whistling a discordant national anthem and dressed up in the faded costumes of Dad’s Army. And although some were convinced they were to make their tiny separatist corner of Christendom great again, Joseph and his Mary didn’t even bother attempting to book into a local hostelry, there was after all undoubtedly no room, and headed straight for the stable with the pigs and ducks.
Shepherds in the field, expecting a whole and holy host of angels to illuminate the night’s sky and proclaim the birth of the Christ child, were disappointed to be met with hundreds of headless chickens leaping from cloud to cloud whilst screaming, and yet saying, well, not very much at all.

Meanwhile, nestled amongst the piggies, Joseph and his Mary had finally given birth to their saviour and awaited the arrival of the wise men. They waited, and they waited, and still they waited but no wise men appeared. “Christ alive!” wailed an exasperated Mary, “I thought we’d find at least three wise men in the centre of the known world.” But what our protagonists would soon discover was that not only were their community leaders not wise, they actually appeared not to know what the f**k they were doing at all.

Even King Herod was not consistent with his  Christmas story duties. Oh he did threaten to kill all of the first-born within the Kingdom of Judea, and ‘to totally destroy Pyongyang’, although as most assumed this was bravado regarding an unpleasant sex act performed upon a Taiwanese prostitute, no-one took it seriously. Besides, he was too busy teeing off at hole number 12 to get his shit together.

Craig Hanlon-Smith
Craig Hanlon-Smith

Had Jesus himself at this point not been such a baby, he may have led his own revolution, inspired a few million people to follow him, at least on twitter, or perhaps suggested a second referendum, but as recent elections had suggested that democracy was clearly a terrible idea and that the public should no longer be allowed near a polling station, no one really would have bought into that one.

And so Baby Jesus cried. And he cried. And he cried. For this time, even he could not save mankind. They would just have to get on with it, until the robots came.

OPINION: Grindr diversifies and the gay men are scared! 

Ms. Sugar Swan tries out the latest update from the (until recently) gay hook up app for men, Grindr.

When people ask me, “Do you miss anything from your old life?” the only answer I ever have for them is simply, “Grindr”. Now that may sound odd asking a trans woman if she misses anything that she had pre-transition and her answer is a gay male hook up app, but let me explain.

Grindr has been around since 2009, so for 8 years. Being an early adopter, I have been using that app for 6 years. That’s a long time. It has seen men fly from foreign lands to come and spend a weekend with me, it has brought beautiful people into my life, some of which became partners, it has brought me heartache and upset and caused me to cry, and eventually, as I transitioned it broke up with me as I was no longer its user demographic. That is until now!

Three days ago Grindr released the following tweet “We’re celebrating Trans Awareness Month with new features to help trans and gender non conforming [people] connect better.”

Today those new features went live and for the first time in a couple of years, I logged onto Grindr. I’ve obviously missed a few updates but the principle is the same. I started to face all the usual boring drop down boxes, weight, height, body shape, ethnicity but then it became interesting.

The next set of boxes were labeled ‘Identity’ and here you can choose from an array of genders from cis man, trans man, cis woman, trans woman, non-binary, non-conforming or it asks you if you would like to type in your own personal gender identity.

At this point I was completely blown away. Grindr has opened its doors to all of us, we are all finally welcome into one space to explore each other, no more sexual segregation, just as it should be, let us all set our search parameters to what tickles our fancy on that particular day and not be boxed in by only having part of your dating pool available to you on one app. Just as I thought my wide on was at its fullest, I came to the next box and it asked me if I wanted to use She/Her, They/Them or He/Him pronouns. Brava Grindr! Exquisite!

Now this next part is just brilliant. When somebody comes across a profile like mine, if they read it, they will see that my Gender Identity is Trans Woman and my Pronouns are She/Her. Next to these fields on my profile there is a small information button. When you select this it takes you to the ‘Gender Identity Help Centre’ which is basically an FAQ for cis people who are a bit confused by the changes. Not is it only really informative, it has the possibility, if cis people read it, to take some of the emotional labour off of trans people. It answers all the standard questions like explaining what cisgender, transgender and non-binary mean but it goes way beyond that. The FAQ’s include questions more specific to the nature of the app such as “How can I respectfully ask a trans person what they like sexually” “Is it ok to ask a trans person about surgeries” “Is it offensive to tell a trans person they don’t look trans” “Can a trans person be gay” The answers are just brilliant and I could not have written a better guide myself. Grindr have really done their research here and have been working with trans people to make sure they have got it right, and I really think they have.

As I started to use the app I had a very high uptake. 400+ messages in 12 hours. Obviously I haven’t been able to read them all but they follow a pattern. There are many confused cis gay men sending me nasty messages asking me why I am here and telling me I shouldn’t be. These only make up for about 10% of my messages so are the minority. I think most gay men can’t be bothered to insult me, or don’t feel the need to as they are secure enough not to.

Most messages are from the bisexual cis and trans men and masculine aligned enbies that already held profiles before the changes of the last few days, these messages make up about 60% of my messages, but the other 30% are from brand new profiles.

I have messages from other trans women, trans lesbians specifically (woo-hoo! – I LOVE my sisters). I have been messaged by many cis guys who state in their profile bio that they are straight and are only looking for girls (this one is really going to upset the gays!) yep! you’re actually going to have to read someones bio before you send them that cock pic they are not up for.

The messages I am receiving from the new profiles are distinctly more respectful than the ones I am receiving from the old. The way the men in the existing profiles treat me is akin to how two gay men would interact, something that feels little more than a business transaction where compliments are standardised instead of specific to you, where pictures I really don’t want to see are sent, where I am asked “What u up 2?”, where there is expressed disappointment that whilst I will send some tasteful nudes, I will not send photos of my genitalia. Where there is an expectation that I must be looking to have sex in the next hour. Now there is nothing wrong with that and if that works for you, great. Personally, it actually made me feel like I was being treated like a man and I found it quite disrespectful, especially when I am expressing that isn’t how I want to interact with you and trying to point you to the FAQ’s in how to interact with me.

I need a slightly different approach and I am very lucky that the straight men who are as new to Grindr as I am are very respectful. They are just as mesmorised by the boobs as the rest of them, but they know the best way to gain access to them is to pay me individual well thought out compliments, take time to think of things to speak about that would be of interest, go and read the FAQ’s when they bring up something inappropriate and then come back to me, and come back to me they do, enlightened and thankful that I pointed them out and they are straight in there testing out their new-found empowerment of how to flirt with me. The end result of both sets of profiles is the same, sex, it’s just one set of guys are likely to get it, and one set aren’t.

Grindr’s latest press release states that they have reviewed their website and they have removed all gendered terminology for gender neutral terminology in its readiness for having girls amongst its userbase. However, in the short time I have spent using it I have found that more work needs to be done on the app.

As amazing as all the things I have described are, there is still work to be done on the app. The built in emoji part of Grindr is hugely problematic. It’s emojis contain Ru Paul quotes and pictures of drag queens which are seen as oppressive by many trans women.

It also contains loads of emojis of men, just men, and drag queens, who are men. There is the Twink, The Bear, The Jock, etc. Where is the Nerdy girl? The Cool Girl? The butch lesbian looking trans girl with the short haircut and the tattoos? Yes, I am talking about myself. The point I am getting at is that there is no diverse representation here and that needs to be addressed.

Another problem is with some of the terminology on the app. It still asks you if you want to upgrade to “see more guys” rather than the promised gender-neutral terminology of something, I don’t know, off the top of my head, “see more profiles”. You see this stuff really isn’t hard, It’s pretty straight forward. Including everyone is something that is so so simple and so important to build bridges in our communities in a time when it is terribly torn apart.

Now I am not under any illusions that Grindr is going to become a truly inclusive dating app overnight. It may never do that. I have yet to see any profiles from cis girls, lesbian or straight which is something that I hope will pick up over time. What I am more inclined to predict is that it may become a place where everyone who falls under the Queer community is welcome and feels safe to use the app as we have a lot of romantic and sexual crossover in the LGBTQIA community. I am excited to what will happen over the coming months,

I would love it if everyone on the app stated their gender and pronouns as that makes cross-community dating a lot easier. (That feature isn’t just for me, you’re average user could state, Cis Male, He/Him). In the mean time, I am enjoying separating the wheat from the chaff and I have moved to WhatsApp (which is like 3rd base I suppose) with 2 girls and 3 guys and I am enjoying my interactions. All in the name of science, for this article, of course.

Blueprint 22 celebrate achievements of young people in Sussex

Blueprint 22 youth project held their annual Youth Awards ceremony on Sunday, October 29 at the East Worthing Community Centre, professionally hosted by one of their young people, Sergio McKellen, aka Myelin Sheath.

Awards were presented in recognition of those attending the project as well as businesses and organisations supporting the project.

Entertainment was provided by young people at the project and included the performance of original poetry and singing.

 

FILM REVIEW: You Were Never Really Here

If I had to sum up Lynne Ramsay’s style of filmmaking in a word it would be ‘concentrated’. Important clues about a character, or a vital link in a chain of events, might be expressed in a single shot or a couple of words. Don’t expect any long scenes of expositionary dialogue. Or, to be honest, short ones. After the credits rolled for You Were Never Really Here it took me and my friend Nick a good 20 minutes to work out to our respective satisfaction roughly what had gone on. Though we were still a bit iffy on the why. A stranger in front of us offered up a theory on one of the characters that we hadn’t even considered. But this isn’t meant as carping – though I did miss one big reveal due to some actorly mumbling – more a reflection on a very intense, occasionally fragmentary, way of telling a story.

In the first five minutes Ramsay effectively sets out her stall. Motes of dust, a man auto asphyxiating himself, a hammer covered in thick congealing blood, a terrified half-naked boy. Although you couldn’t piece together a coherent narrative you get the main idea: brutality, terror and the loss of innocence. The film proceeds as a particularly American form of nightmare with nods to other giants of the genre. Early on Joe (Joaquin Phoenix) jokingly performs the staccato Psycho shower music to his mother whilst the plot bears similarities to Taxi Driver; and it links politics to sexual depravity as effectively as Chinatown.

Joe works for some kind of agency which tracks down lost children. He gets an assignment from a Senator whose daughter has gone missing. Though the Senator has been texted the address of a house which turns out to be a child brothel where his daughter is being kept. Joe seems strangely incurious about who exactly solved the case for him, though this is just one of the mysteries which never seem to get resolved. Which doesn’t particularly matter as the film is genuinely brilliant on almost everything else. From the dowdy, depressing interiors, to the queasy sense of violence that permeates almost every scene, to Phoenix’s completely committed performance Ramsay doesn’t lose your attention for a second.

Phoenix’s portrayal is pretty much a meditation on human suffering. With his unkempt beard and basically inscrutable stare – which occasionally cracks into crying jags of anguish – he seems to alternate between Charles Manson and Jesus. What kind of person is he? Even with clues to the abuse he suffered as a kid, and the horrors he witnessed as a soldier, it’s hard to tell. Though in one scene, perhaps one of his hallucinations, there’s a comparatively long shot of a young girl who looks into his eyes and starts to cry. Whether it’s in sympathy or fear or both, it’s a brilliantly ambiguous judgement on this grizzled wreck of a human being.

Shown as part of the Cinecity Festival.

BAR PERSON PROFILE: Michael David @Legends

The first person many LGBT+ folk meet when they arrive in the city is the bar person at their local LGBT+ venue. These gatekeepers to the community provide an important role both befriending and signposting new arrivals to the city. Gscene finds out a bit more about them and what makes them special.

Where do you come from? Well I’m half English half Arabic so spent the early part of my life in Baghdad. Since then I’ve cruised round Manchester and Brighton.

What brought you to Brighton?  I heard Madonna lived here.

How long have your worked at Legends? On and off for 132 years now.

Oddest thing you’ve been asked behind the bar? Why is Madonna playing again. And that’s from my colleagues

What’s the worst kind of punter? Homophobic, indecisive, racist and those who don’t like Madonna are the worst punters.

What do you do when it’s quiet in the bar? Clean. If there’s time to lean, there’s time to clean. I’m often found on my knees scrubbing. I find it very therapeutic.

Do you know the difference between Ale and Beer? Ale and beer, its to do with the fermenting process isn’t it? Have a lager it’s just easier.

Can you pull a pint?  Yes. Best in town. I mean Kemptown….maybe.

Do you prefer to be shaken or stirred? Stirred all the way babes.

Whats your favourite tipple? Champagne, followed by a few G&Ts with fever free tonic.

What makes you roll your eyes? Stupid people. And those who don’t like Madonna.

Are those really your photos on Grindr?  I’ve been with my Andy for years so not on it.

What makes a perfect barman/girl? Somebody friendly, proactive and hard-working.

Where do you like to go out when you’re not working? When I’m not propping up the bar at Legends it’s the other Kemptown Bars or the nice straight bars.

Tell us a secret about yourself. I’m straight.

Your Favourite Book? Anything based on a true story.

Your favourite artists? Madonna, Cher, George Michael, Whitney.. basically all the gay icons.

What’s your nickname behind the bar? Baaaaaaaabes.

What gets you swinging your hips? DJ Claire’s Disney treats on a Wednesday night at Legends. It’s a blast, everyone should come!

Christmas on the streets with MCC

Metropolitan Community Church Brighton (MCC Brighton), the church that takes its worship onto the Old Steine every Wednesday, will hold it’s Christmas eve service this year at the Clock Tower in the very heart of Brighton on Sunday, December 24 starting at 4pm.

Last year, MCC Brighton gave away bags of gifts to the homeless at the Carol Service they hosted. This year they will be offering carols, communion and refreshment and once again will have gift bags to give away.

Pastor Andrew Ramage, say: “We believe that church should have no boundaries, that Christmas is for everyone and so we bring church out of the building to where it was always meant to be, in the very heart of the community. We believe that church should be accessible to everyone, whatever their situation. I am inviting everyone to come along between 4 and 6pm by the Clock Tower on Sunday, December 24.

“Take a break from the frenzy of last-minute shopping and join us.”

For more information about MCC Brighton, click here:

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