Dead from a house fire. Two hit wonder from 90s with I Kissed A Girl and Supermodel
RIP. I have never heard of her or the song (it does sound familiar maybe) but the period goes back to the contoversial times of Madonna and the ruckus she created in that era. Listening to "I kissed a girl", it's is a catchy tune. She was a few years ahead of her time. Katy Perry raked it in for basically the same song a short while later.Dead from a house fire. Two hit wonder from 90s with I Kissed A Girl and Supermodel
Hard to believe how controversial this song was in 1995
I did not recall the controversy, but nothing fazes me. I recently learned that New Brunswick was the epicenter of gay rights a couple of years before the Stonewall Riots, which is often marked as the new movement of LGBTQ rights in 1969.
However, Manny's Den was a gay bar on Albany Street, where J&J's corporate headquarters now stand. In the early 1960's, NJ Liquor Authority stated that known homosexuals could not congregate in bars without losing their liquor licenses. Woah. Manny's and a couple of other bars fought back and the case made it to the NJ Supreme Court in 1967. The gay bars won, but the language of the decision, particularly Justice who wrote the concurring opinion is quite a time warp.
"I wish to emphasize that, although well-behaved homosexuals cannot be forbidden to patronize taverns, they may not engage in any conduct which would be offensive to public decency. In the record before us it appears that there was evidence of conduct (men kissing each other on the lips, etc.) which would form the basis for disciplinary action at least against One Eleven and Murphy's had they properly been charged. A tavern should not provide an arena for the behavior disclosed by this record."
Fortunately, times and attitudes have changed for the most part. Sadly, however, there is a lot of hate and misdirected anger at LGBTQ people, particularly the T and Q people.
That a cretin like Matt Walsh has a large following is just one example.
Was just there, he's a great guy!Manny was a ZBT.
His son Peter owns Sophie's Bistro
I did not recall the controversy, but nothing fazes me. I recently learned that New Brunswick was the epicenter of gay rights a couple of years before the Stonewall Riots, which is often marked as the new movement of LGBTQ rights in 1969.
However, Manny's Den was a gay bar on Albany Street, where J&J's corporate headquarters now stand. In the early 1960's, NJ Liquor Authority stated that known homosexuals could not congregate in bars without losing their liquor licenses. Woah. Manny's and a couple of other bars fought back and the case made it to the NJ Supreme Court in 1967. The gay bars won, but the language of the decision, particularly Justice who wrote the concurring opinion is quite a time warp.
"I wish to emphasize that, although well-behaved homosexuals cannot be forbidden to patronize taverns, they may not engage in any conduct which would be offensive to public decency. In the record before us it appears that there was evidence of conduct (men kissing each other on the lips, etc.) which would form the basis for disciplinary action at least against One Eleven and Murphy's had they properly been charged. A tavern should not provide an arena for the behavior disclosed by this record."
Fortunately, times and attitudes have changed for the most part. Sadly, however, there is a lot of hate and misdirected anger at LGBTQ people, particularly the T and Q people.
That a cretin like Matt Walsh has a large following is just one example.
I did not recall the controversy, but nothing fazes me. I recently learned that New Brunswick was the epicenter of gay rights a couple of years before the Stonewall Riots, which is often marked as the new movement of LGBTQ rights in 1969.
However, Manny's Den was a gay bar on Albany Street, where J&J's corporate headquarters now stand. In the early 1960's, NJ Liquor Authority stated that known homosexuals could not congregate in bars without losing their liquor licenses. Woah. Manny's and a couple of other bars fought back and the case made it to the NJ Supreme Court in 1967. The gay bars won, but the language of the decision, particularly Justice who wrote the concurring opinion is quite a time warp.
"I wish to emphasize that, although well-behaved homosexuals cannot be forbidden to patronize taverns, they may not engage in any conduct which would be offensive to public decency. In the record before us it appears that there was evidence of conduct (men kissing each other on the lips, etc.) which would form the basis for disciplinary action at least against One Eleven and Murphy's had they properly been charged. A tavern should not provide an arena for the behavior disclosed by this record."
Fortunately, times and attitudes have changed for the most part. Sadly, however, there is a lot of hate and misdirected anger at LGBTQ people, particularly the T and Q people.
That a cretin like Matt Walsh has a large following is just one example.
Sophie's is delicious.Manny was a ZBT.
His son Peter owns Sophie's Bistro
Lumping trans in with gays was a big mistake and many in the gay community are speaking out about this...its creating a divide issueGreat post, wish I could like this 100X. If some have their way, all of the progress we've made as a society for LGBTQ folks will be rolled back. We have a number of gay friends and these days there are many parents with LGBTQ kids and the rhetoric is not only hurtful, but it has made many fear for the future. We also have a few gay/lesbian friends who adopted kids and they've made great parents - to think that someone would rather leave kids like that in terrible conditions rather than have loving parents adopt them is just cruel.
My wife's father, who was a Labor Relations prof at RU from the late 50s to the early 90s and was active politically, used to make a point to go to Manny's back then just to show solidarity (plus he was neighbors and friends with Manny), even bringing his family there a few times, which included my wife and her siblings as young kids. She grew up with Pete (Manny's son) and his sister (name escapes me) and we've been going to Sophie's, which they both owned (I think just Pete owns it now), for 25+ years (one of our favorite places) and Pete always pops by to chat and usually comps us a free dessert or an after dinner drink. Prince of a guy.
My wife's dad was also heavily involved in discussions and negotiations (he was a well-known mediator/arbitrator) in NB between the local government/mayor and black activists in that summer of 1967 when countless cities experienced riots and NB's progressive approach to actually listen to the complaints about rampant racism and to work to defuse some tense confrontations rather than escalating them was a key reason why NB largely avoided the violence that so many other cities saw.
https://www.mycentraljersey.com/sto...alling-1967-new-brunswick-protests/428509001/
Hard to believe how controversial this song was in 1995
Sounds like you have inside info- are you gay?Lumping trans in with gays was a big mistake and many in the gay community are speaking out about this...its creating a divide issue
The feverish fervor over trans has caused backlash
URL unfurl="true"]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stonewall_riots[/Sounds like you have inside info- are you gay?
I have quite a few gay and trans people that I am close to, and the only people creating a divide are knuckleheads like Matt Walsh. Very stupid and ham-handed to wipe out all reference to trans people off all government websites. Strangest thing, is trans was wiped of the .gov website for the Stonewall National Monument. It so happens that several trans people led the charge for the Stonewall rebellion. Stupid is as stupid d
So here are some questi
1. Didn't one side get upset when people were tearing down historical monuments and changing hist
2. Why not take "B" out of LGB
3. Who has the moral authority to make these decisions- should serial cheaters divorced multiple times and who sow children from multiple women, some while unmarried be making these calls? Seems like strange people make more judgments on who should be included under the LGBTQ rights umbrella,
"Before the 1960s, almost everything about living openly as a lesbian, gay, bisexual (LGB)
It truly is a gem, if you like French bistro food and we're huge fans - we go at least 3-4x a year and I think we've tried almost everything on the menu. Favorites are the steak frites, beef bourguignon, coq a vin, the salmon, the roasted chicken (my wife's fave) and the bouillabaise, when they have it and their apps are also fantastic: love the fondue-ish plate with cheese and potatoes and their amazing French bread, as well as the mussels and the cheese plate and pate. I might just have to go tonight, lol.Sophie's is delicious.
I did not recall the controversy, but nothing fazes me. I recently learned that New Brunswick was the epicenter of gay rights a couple of years before the Stonewall Riots, which is often marked as the new movement of LGBTQ rights in 1969.
However, Manny's Den was a gay bar on Albany Street, where J&J's corporate headquarters now stand. In the early 1960's, NJ Liquor Authority stated that known homosexuals could not congregate in bars without losing their liquor licenses. Woah. Manny's and a couple of other bars fought back and the case made it to the NJ Supreme Court in 1967. The gay bars won, but the language of the decision, particularly Justice who wrote the concurring opinion is quite a time warp.
"I wish to emphasize that, although well-behaved homosexuals cannot be forbidden to patronize taverns, they may not engage in any conduct which would be offensive to public decency. In the record before us it appears that there was evidence of conduct (men kissing each other on the lips, etc.) which would form the basis for disciplinary action at least against One Eleven and Murphy's had they properly been charged. A tavern should not provide an arena for the behavior disclosed by this record."
Fortunately, times and attitudes have changed for the most part. Sadly, however, there is a lot of hate and misdirected anger at LGBTQ people, particularly the T and Q people.
That a cretin like Matt Walsh has a large following is just one example.
Peter’s sister is Randi. I went to high school with them. Both are super nice people.Great post, wish I could like this 100X. If some have their way, all of the progress we've made as a society for LGBTQ folks will be rolled back. We have a number of gay friends and these days there are many parents with LGBTQ kids and the rhetoric is not only hurtful, but it has made many fear for the future. We also have a few gay/lesbian friends who adopted kids and they've made great parents - to think that someone would rather leave kids like that in terrible conditions rather than have loving parents adopt them is just cruel.
My wife's father, who was a Labor Relations prof at RU from the late 50s to the early 90s and was active politically, used to make a point to go to Manny's back then just to show solidarity (plus he was neighbors and friends with Manny), even bringing his family there a few times, which included my wife and her siblings as young kids. She grew up with Pete (Manny's son) and his sister (name escapes me) and we've been going to Sophie's, which they both owned (I think just Pete owns it now), for 25+ years (one of our favorite places) and Pete always pops by to chat and usually comps us a free dessert or an after dinner drink. Prince of a guy.
My wife's dad was also heavily involved in discussions and negotiations (he was a well-known mediator/arbitrator) in NB between the local government/mayor and black activists in that summer of 1967 when countless cities experienced riots and NB's progressive approach to actually listen to the complaints about rampant racism and to work to defuse some tense confrontations rather than escalating them was a key reason why NB largely avoided the violence that so many other cities saw.
https://www.mycentraljersey.com/sto...alling-1967-new-brunswick-protests/428509001/
Yes, thanks, I asked my wife and put that in my 2nd post and just updated the first one. I only know them through Sophie's and they've always been great to us, but my wife graduated with Randi from Highland Park HS and they're pretty good friends.Peter’s sister is Randi. I went to high school with them. Both are super nice people.
There are more than a few "knuckleheads" on this board (well another one, really, but I'm not allowed to even say it apparently), social media in general and out there in the world. The only issue I see with the T angle is age: I think there are legitimate reasons why gender hormone treatments and surgery should not be allowed until a certain age and that's generally followed, in practice with most states not allowing the surgeries until 18 and most discouraging hormone therapy until 14-16.Sounds like you have inside info- are you gay?
I have quite a few gay and trans people that I am close to, and the only people creating a divide are knuckleheads like Matt Walsh. Very stupid and ham-handed to wipe out all reference to trans people off all government websites. Strangest thing, is trans was wiped of the .gov website for the Stonewall National Monument. It so happens that several trans people led the charge for the Stonewall rebellion. Stupid is as stupid does.
So here are some questions.
1. Didn't one side get upset when people were tearing down historical monuments and changing history?
2. Why not take "B" out of LGB too?
3. Who has the moral authority to make these decisions- should serial cheaters divorced multiple times and who sow children from multiple women, some while unmarried be making these calls? Seems like strange people make more judgments on who should be included under the LGBTQ rights umbrella, no?
"Before the 1960s, almost everything about living openly as a lesbian, gay, bisexual (LGB). . ."
But there were trans people at Stonewalll . . . .
Yes, there are some thorny issues with T, but they can be handled without proverbially throwing out the baby with the bath water. As far as age, generally agree, except a very close trans friend who is in her 50s and I have known for more than 35 years thinks (and not just her) that surgery should wait until 25 years old.There are more than a few "knuckleheads" on this board (well another one, really, but I'm not allowed to even say it apparently), social media in general and out there in the world. The only issue I see with the T angle is age: I think there are legitimate reasons why gender hormone treatments and surgery should not be allowed until a certain age and that's generally followed, in practice with most states not allowing the surgeries until 18 and most discouraging hormone therapy until 14-16.
The sports issue is a tempest in a teacup, IMO: there are <10 transwomen competing in NCAA sports and very few are successful. It's a far tinier problem than many would have people believe. And the science is unclear, as biological males playing in women's sports are required to be under hormone therapy to level the playing field mostly (except for size, which hormones obviously don't affect).
It is. Her iconic song was about a girl kissing a girl. It spawned a discussion that is relevant to the topic of the song that was more controversial when the song was released.Thought this thread was about a singer who passed away?
And not in a nice way to go either.
Thanks for the civil reply. That reason story is totally whacked:URL unfurl="true"]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stonewall_riots[/
The point is pretty much gays reached point of widely accepted through the last 20 years...the recent lumping of gender identity caused a backlash against the entire community. Some believe trans took it over sexual identity and gender confusion are 2 different things..agree or disagree
Alot of fear mongering about people fearing for their lives is odd.no one is coming for anything or their rights. Matt Wallace is generally a douche who is an example of the pushback. But if you are posting him them you should also post some of the nuttier crew that show up on msnbc to fear monger
The story of Stonewall has been revised over the years to fit intersectionality especially concerning Marsha Johnson People didn't call themselves transgender then...Likely a mixture of transsexuals and transvestite and drag queens and the latter have nothing to do with transge
Not reallyYes, there are some thorny issues with T, but they can be handled without proverbially throwing out the baby with the bath water. As far as age, generally agree, except a very close trans friend who is in her 50s and I have known for more than 35 years thinks (and not just her) that surgery should wait until 25 years old.
Also, and walking a fine line here to keep the thread civil, while there are many purportedly well-meaning people who want to help the T community, some of the approaches in the last 4 years went too far and too fast, and that ignited a backlash. But two wrongs don't make a right. The basic problem with a lot of rollbacks and backlash is that it is not being done thoughtfully (just hamhandedly and harshly) so that they can show that they are doing something. But this is what we wound up with when the choices were both not good ones.
Each side likes to grab their hot button issue to get the most outrage and most clicks, and as usual, they fail to look at the bigger picture and the opportunity for a more middle ground approach that more people would buy into with less objection.
The sad thing is the T people I am extremely close with live exemplary lives. No criminal records, degrees from great universities, highly accomplished and respected in their fields. In loving and caring relationships. Will revert back to the question why should serial cheaters and men who have sown multiple children out of wedlock with different women be moral arbiters of how people live their lives? Why can't society tackle the thornier issues with a scalpel instead coming out full force against an entire community of people with a chain saw and a flame thrower? We know why, and it is sad.
It is. Her iconic song was about a girl kissing a girl. It spawned a discussion that is relevant to the topic of the song that was more controversial when the song was released.
Not really
The song is about a girl kissing a girl..not sure why the topic deviated into other issues
Again I dont think the song was a big deal back then but now with social media we have everyone playing a victim..both sides
Very well said...it's a very complex issue when it gets to sports at a really high level (I liken it to Oscar Pistorius or Casey Martin), but hate that it means that a middling middle/high school trans athlete is shunned at a time where they could really use all of the benefits that team sports provide.The sports issue is a tempest in a teacup, IMO: there are <10 transwomen competing in NCAA sports and very few are successful. It's a far tinier problem than many would have people believe. And the science is unclear, as biological males playing in women's sports are required to be under hormone therapy to level the playing field mostly (except for size, which hormones obviously don't affect).
Hadn't been in awhile, but I really enjoyed it there when I went. Glad to hear it's still good and I need to get back there soon.It truly is a gem, if you like French bistro food and we're huge fans - we go at least 3-4x a year and I think we've tried almost everything on the menu. Favorites are the steak frites, beef bourguignon, coq a vin, the salmon, the roasted chicken (my wife's fave) and the bouillabaise, when they have it and their apps are also fantastic: love the fondue-ish plate with cheese and potatoes and their amazing French bread, as well as the mussels and the cheese plate and pate. I might just have to go tonight, lol.
Gonna put you on my last wishes log for 2024 (God willing) . Need contact info for my admin as I hope I can get one of these threads then.Dead from a house fire. Two hit wonder from 90s with I Kissed A Girl and Supermodel
I did not recall the controversy, but nothing fazes me. I recently learned that New Brunswick was the epicenter of gay rights a couple of years before the Stonewall Riots, which is often marked as the new movement of LGBTQ rights in 1969.
However, Manny's Den was a gay bar on Albany Street, where J&J's corporate headquarters now stand. In the early 1960's, NJ Liquor Authority stated that known homosexuals could not congregate in bars without losing their liquor licenses. Woah. Manny's and a couple of other bars fought back and the case made it to the NJ Supreme Court in 1967. The gay bars won, but the language of the decision, particularly Justice who wrote the concurring opinion is quite a time warp.
"I wish to emphasize that, although well-behaved homosexuals cannot be forbidden to patronize taverns, they may not engage in any conduct which would be offensive to public decency. In the record before us it appears that there was evidence of conduct (men kissing each other on the lips, etc.) which would form the basis for disciplinary action at least against One Eleven and Murphy's had they properly been charged. A tavern should not provide an arena for the behavior disclosed by this record."
Fortunately, times and attitudes have changed for the most part. Sadly, however, there is a lot of hate and misdirected anger at LGBTQ people, particularly the T and Q people.
That a cretin like Matt Walsh has a large following is just one example.