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LoveNDino

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Everything posted by LoveNDino

  1. http://www.burbujasdeseo.com/wp-content/uploads/Dylan-Powell-Erotic-Dream-Michael-Stokes-Burbujas-De-Deseo-01.jpg http://www.burbujasdeseo.com/wp-content/uploads/Dylan-Powell-Erotic-Dream-Michael-Stokes-Burbujas-De-Deseo-02.jpg
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  5. Dan Amboyer has always kept his sexuality a private matter. But when the Younger actor got engaged to longtime boyfriend Eric P. Berger, he decided it was time to come out as gay. “Being a young actor in the industry, I had a lot of people who strongly advised me to stay quiet,” Amboyer tells PEOPLE. “That was hard to live with. But I’ve never played a gay role before and I didn’t want to be limited by some strange perception.” So as he found Hollywood success, he kept quiet about his decade-long relationship with financial planner Eric P. Berger. “When I went to work on a new show or film, there was always a process of letting people know,” explains Amboyer, who plays twins Thad and Chad on TV Land’s Younger and scored a recurring role on The Blacklist: Redemption. But on Saturday — in front of 115 family and friends — Amboyer, 31, wed Berger, 37, in New York City and is opening up for the first time publicly about his relationship. http://instinctmagazine.com/sites/instinctmagazine.com/files/images/blog_posts/Karim%20Shah/2016/02/17/Screen%20Shot%202016-02-17%20at%203.39.33%20PM.png http://cdn1.sciencefiction.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Dan-Amboyer1.jpg http://cdn1.sciencefiction.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Dan-Amboyer2.jpg http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-iWCdpKZ-F54/VpWJQljLYNI/AAAAAAAC8Og/O7LQm_0NwxY/s1600/Dan%2BAmboyer%2Bnaked.jpg and with husband...
  6. Stefan Palios http://www.yalebulldogs.com/sports/m-track/2010-11/photos/0007/IMG_5924_palios.jpg Sports taught a gay Yale athlete this life lesson he'll never forget Stefan Palios faced ups and downs after coming out on the Yale track and field team. Now he's using his lessons learned there to educate corporations on diversity issues. When I joined the Yale varsity track and field team as a shot put and discus thrower in 2010, I didn't "come out" to my team. I simply stopped denying the questions or rumors. It was my freshman year, and I had just come out to some friends on campus; at Yale, the track and field team was very separate from social life and physically two miles away from campus. I lived in two worlds at Yale before I came out; my friends on campus, and my teammates on the field. When I stopped denying the rumors, questions, and comments, my worlds started to mesh. Suddenly, friends on campus and teammates on the field knew the same things about me. I was brining my true self forward in every area of my life. Despite some trouble, it paved the path for some pretty amazing things. Underneath it all, though, was someone struggling to come to terms with himself. I didn't fit in with some of the guys on the team, and there were occasional nasty comments. I'm proud to say that the coaching staff was very supportive, but they seemed so far away from the day-to-day life of being a student-athlete. I thought about quitting but decided that was a bad choice because I enjoyed the sport. It was weird being in this position after coming out, as I had always heard about these choices and questions happening prior to coming out. What athletics taught me after months of feeling like crap and wondering why I didn't "fit in" was pretty powerful and has guided my life ever since: it didn't matter if other people loved or hated me. If I didn't love myself and own my identity in a confident way then I would never be truly accepted in any social circles. Eventually, I began to really own my sexuality and my identity. I brought one of the first guys I dated to a track party. I wore tacky rainbow things whenever possible (the track team liked having theme parties, and my personal theme just became rainbow). I made no qualms about being gay and even got involved in some LGBT activism on campus (I organized events and acted as co-president of Athletes and Allies, Yale's LGBT athlete group). Coming out was personal, but track and field was the perfect metaphor for understanding myself. In each track and field event, you need someone who is physically completely different, enjoys doing vastly different activities, and has an entirely different mindset. Without those differences, the team cannot function. What gets the 10k runner up for "long runs" is different from what gets me out of bed for morning lift. Extending that to my sexuality and my identity, I learned that my difference is something to leverage for success and personal fulfillment, not something to be hidden away. Just as I would fail miserably as a 10k runner because I do not have the right driving force or passions in life, being gay, for me, became about understanding how I can fit best instead of trying to force myself to fit. Being an athlete taught me a lesson about being gay that I will never forget; it's about fitting into a team environment, but you get to choose how you fit in that environment, just like picking an event in track and field. Either way, it hinges on every person confidently knowing who they are and sharing it with others. We don't know everything about every other event, so we cannot expect others to know everything about our events. No matter your circumstances or personality, being included is an area in which you have a lot of choice. Fast forward to senior winter, my doctor told me my injuries had piled up and it was time to stop throwing. Permanently. I had the team and my athletic career ripped from under me as I was about to enter my last semester as an athlete and a student. Since it was so close to competition time, there was no way to integrate me as an "assistant coach", so I left the team and never got the chance to go back. I had four months left of undergrad, and my social world had been torn away. Throughout my time at Yale I would constantly end up at the Track House on weekends or be away at meets. A lot of my other friends from freshman year had developed their own social lives and interests, which took them away from campus or had them working for hours each evening. We had, during our time there, drifted apart a bit. Suddenly, I was lost. But the lesson track and field taught me about being myself and owning my identity still stuck: Being included in things is an area that you have a lot of control over. I took that lesson with me in those final months at Yale. I reconnected with old friends and made a few new ones, unattached to any social group but feeling more included than I ever had. After graduation I moved to Toronto and began the next chapter in life: being a young professional in a big city. I chose to involved myself in the LGBT-activist space. I even founded my own diversity recruiting and consulting company, called Ziversity, as I hope to share the lessons that I learned through Yale track and field with the corporate world. I didn't have the perfect coming out. I didn't sit my team down, tell them, and then group hug. I was affirmed by some and torn down by others. Coming out can be bumpy. There are still instances where I have to "come out" to people who are curious why I live near Toronto's "gay village." What athletics taught me is that being included is an individual commitment. We have to commit to being inclusive of others, but we also have to commit to being inclusive of ourselves. Stefan Palios graduated from Yale University in 2014 and currently lives in Toronto.
  7. I don't mind...even smelling of cigarettes! http://iv1.lisimg.com/image/7286351/640full-russell-tovey.jpg
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  9. Rafael Rosell http://www.pinoystop.com/images/thumbnails/1392/1392-rafael-rosell-biography-400x252.png http://www.pinoystop.com/images/thumbnails/4794/4794-rafael-rosell-denies-rumored-breakup-with-olivia-medina-400x252.png http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_EvuitIgpQh0/Rz4qoCX651I/AAAAAAAAFKc/macGLI64LP4/s400/rr1.JPG http://iv1.lisimg.com/image/2600786/432full-rafael-rosell.jpg http://manilagayguy.net/wp-content/uploads/2007/05/luisa5.jpg
  10. I agree, in fact, let's read some of the buzz this movie is getting... Luca Guadagnino Call Me by Your Name played so rapturously at the New York Film Festival this week that you would have thought it had world-premiered there. Are we all underestimating this instant classic just because a gay-themed film won Best Picture last year? That’s the only reason I can think of for some pundits to leave Guadagnino off their short lists. The film will be big. Another article stated: Luca Guadagnino‘s “Call Me By Your Name,” which was a sensation at both Sundance and Berlin, just confirmed its Oscar potential with a boffo screening on the opening night of the Toronto film festival. The film charts the stormy course of a 1983 summer romance between Elio (Timothee Chalamet), an Italian teenager, and Oliver (Armie Hammer), an American academic seven years his senior who has come to stay at his parents’ villa. Oscar nominee James Ivory adapted Andre Aciman‘s 2007 bestseller of the same name. Buoyed by these rave notices, the film is sure to inspire passion from some Oscar voters when they are ranking Best Picture contenders. That core support is key to reaping a bid under the preferential ballot system. A small but significant number of first-place votes would be enough to make the cut during the complicated counting process. While Chalamet could break into the Best Actor race for his breakthrough performance, that category tends to recognize more seasoned performers. And while there are rumblings that Hammer should go lead as well, that would be a mistake as it would mean that the two men split the vote. Better that he follow the example of the likes of Viola Davis (“Fences”) and Patricia Arquette (“Boyhood”) and stay in supporting. There he would be all but assured of a nomination and perhaps even the win. However, he might face competition from Michael Stuhlbarg who plays Elio’s father and has several scene-stealing moments, including a lengthy monologue, that make the movie. Guadagino could parlay a Best Picture bid into one for Best Director. He helmed the 2009 Italian language “I Am Love,” which contended at both the Golden Globes and BAFTA, as well as 2015’s “A Bigger Splash,” which featured Ralph Fiennes in a supporting turn that generated some pre-Oscar buzz. The adapted screenplay race at the Academy Awards is relatively light this year, and would be a way to finally reward Ivory, a three-time Oscar also-ran for Best Director (“A Room With a View,” 1985; “Howard’s End,” 1992; “The Remains of the Day,” 1993). And cinematographer Sayombhu Mukdeeprom, best-known for films in his native Thailand such as 2010’s “Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives,” is also a possibility. Of course, I am writing this while eating a peach...
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