Welcome to the aids circus you gay clown
Grant is the Chair Emeritus of Event Toronto’s Board of Directors, serving since February 2021, and has served as a Director on the Board since September 2020.
His control priorities include strategic planning, financial oversight, policy development, and reviews, board handling and coordination, engaging in meaningful support, supporting year-round people programming, and providing strategic advice to the Executive Director.
He is a government and stakeholder relations professional, with 10 years of encounter. An active group member, Grant is a former President of the Davenport-Perth Neighbourhood and Society Health Centre and is a Co-Founder of the Filipino Canadian Political Association. A civically engaged resident, he was a 2021 CivicAction DiverseCity Fellow.
Grant participates in several 2SLGBTQI+ athletic leagues, including Downtown Dodgeball, Dodgeball Society, and the Toronto United Flag Football League. He is dad to Miko, a Samoyed troublemaker.
Have an event coming up? Email your information to Managing Editor Tammye Nash at nash@dallasvoice.com or Senior Staff Writer
David Taffet at taffet@dallasvoice.com by Wednesday at 5 p.m. for that week’s issue.
• Weekly: Lambda Weekly every Sunday at 1 p.m. on 89.3 KNON-FM. AIDS Arms CEO John Carlo is this week’s guest; United Ebony Ellument hosts discussion on HIV/AIDS in the black collective (UBE Connected) at 7 p.m. every fourth Tuesday of the month at 3116 Commerce St., Suite C; Core Group Meeting every 1st and 3rd Tuesday of the month at 7 p.m.; Fuse game night every Monday evening except the last of the month at 8 p.m. at the Fuse space in the Treymore Building, 4038 Lemmon Ave, Suite 101; FuseConnect every Wednesday from 7 p.m. For more information phone or e-mail Jalenzski at 214-760-9718 ext 3 or Jalenzski@myresourcecenter.org.
OCTOBER
• Through Oct. 29: Screams
Three haunted houses, Carnevil, clown maze and zombie wasteland. 7:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. on Friday and Saturday nights at Scarborough Faire site, Waxahachie.
• Oct. 22: Ranch Hand Rescue fundraiser
Help for the counseling center that uses equine and other rescued farm animals in therapy to he
Elderberries April Newsletter
Regular events, extraordinary events & news
Read...Turret Photo Plan Fundraiser
Artist Liam Ross and archivist Dan want to take some photos, produce some photographic art, and record some stories of The Turret before a massive reno starts in a few weeks, and we need a several hundred bucks for hazmat suits.
Read...Storytime & Orchestra with Rouge at the Library
On April 16, 2023, Rouge Fatale joins the Chebucto Symphony Orchestra to narrate Peter And The Wolf at the Halifax Library!
Read...Wayves Reboot Week 2
It’s been a busy week with more work on the website's content manager, "Drupal", new advertisers, new ideas, new stories… and fresh writers!
Read...Transgender 🏳️⚧️ and gender diverse folk soccer fun
There are LOTS of events queued up for Gender nonconforming Awareness Day on Friday, April 1, 2023!
Read...The People's March Celebrates Life On Earth
On April 22, 2023 communities will come together for a grassroots community march, a joyful celebration, of Mother Earth, of Moisture which is Life, of our beautiful communities and our continu
Feeling the Love for L.A.’s Dearly Departed Circus Disco
In a forsaken block of Santa Monica Boulevard, off the street and through an imposing industrial streetway, a Hollywood disco opened in the late 1970s that made promises the other gay clubs were loathe to keep.
The two-story face of a clown, with an enormous, yawning mouth serving as the front doorway, stood sentry. There were no rules for entrance, no discerning bouncers selecting the successful ones, no outfits to be appraised. Anyone who scraped together the cover charge was welcome.
That club was Circus Disco.
Across town in the shining queer mecca of West Hollywood, dance clubs and bars like Studio One and Mother Lode pulsated with the new, synthesized overcome of Donna Summer. Her mind-blowing dancefloor smash, “I Feel Love,” played on a seemingly endless loop. But love was often conditional in those clubs, which were populated by gay men with impossibly muscled bodies and skin only as dark as a California tan would allow. Love had standards.
Circus Disco — along with the Los Angeles inky gay club, Jewel’s Trap One — practiced a truer level of acceptance, filling its dance floor with a largely Latino and black client
Before It Was Dazai Creature A Cute Man Whore, Now He's Just Lgbtq+.
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