2B Magazine l 1 - Guide Gai du Québec
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2B Magazine l 1 - Guide Gai du Québec
2B Magazine l 1 .COM PRe Party 2011 renown For tickets or more information, visit: DJS s Joe Gauthreaux Patrick Guay 2 l 2B Magazine August 20 , 2011 Moncton, NB www.citypridecelebration.com * Must be 19 years or older. <bmr Ikb]^ <^e^[kZmbhgl p^e\hf^l ma^ _Zfhnl ;eZ\d;en^ iZkmr mh :meZgmb\ <ZgZ]Z _hk ma^ _bklm mbf^ ^o^k Pbma ma^ [^lm=ClZg]ma^fhlmbgm^gl^[^Zml%mabl ik^&iZkmrpbee[^ng_hkm`^mZ[e^ Index ...8 News ...10 Curative Therapies ...14 Nepal Gets Gayer Montréal Fierté City Pride Moncton Capital Pride Film ...18 10 ...20 ...24 ...34 inkedKenny @ G. Dentair e...36 ...42 Martin Douvil ...54 Changing Suits Daniel Baylis in Morocco ...46 Outdoor Sex Hot Spots 4 l 2B Magazine ...56 ...62 18 24 42 54 2B Magazine l 5 Credits Publisher André Gagnon andregagnon@2bmag.com Editor Jordan Arseneault jordan@2bmag.com Contributors Rex Wockner, Antoine Aubert, Jordan Coulombe, Mark Ambrose Harris, Danny Légaré, Tim Webber, Matthew Harris, Stéfane Campbell, Indu Vashist, Art Director & Photography César Ochoa 514.439.4636 publicite@communicationsetre.com Graphic Design Carolina Ramírez carolina@communicationsetre.com Graphic Design Étienne Desforges Junior etienne@communicationsetre.com Sales Pierre Druelle pierre@communicationsetre.com 514.523.9463 Cover Photo Illustration Martin Douvil Title (Don’t) Hurt Me Luc Barrette 514.439.4737 / 1.866.521.3873 luc@communicationsetre.com Sean Mackenzie 514.439.4447 sean@communicationsetre.com Web Arnaud Baty arnaud@2bmag.com Admin Michel Masse 514.521.3873 arturo@communicationsetre.com 2B Magazine A division of HMX Group Vol.9 No.4 Unauthorized reproduction, in whole or in part, without the written consent of the publisher is prohibited. All rights reserved. ISSN 1917-2761 6 l 2B Magazine Montréal Postal Address P.O. Box 222, Station C Montréal, QC H2L-4K1 Montréal: 514.521.3873 Ottawa: 1.866.521.3873 2B Magazine l 7 Uganda ‘kill the gays’ bill to return Vancouver 2011 Outgames Human Rights Conference: Youth, Sports, and Eurovision © Clint Trahan of Shutterdreams to have over a dozen sessions that explore all kinds of youth issues, and engage that community in continuing the human rights battle started over forty years ago”. Uganda’s ‘kill the gays’ bill is to be reintroduced in Parliament, the U.S.based Center for Constitutional Rights said July 21. The bill -- which was stymied last year via an international outcry -imposed the death penalty for a second conviction of engaging in gay sex, and required family members, medical personnel, clergy and others to report people they suspect of being gay or face prison time. Colombia to have same-sex unions by Rex Wockner According to CCR: “A new version of the Anti-Homosexuality Bill will appear to have removed the death penalty in order to avoid international outcry. In reality, it appears that provisions of the bill will link to other laws that will trigger the death penalty.” The bill had been shelved previously in May, 2011 before obtaining parliamentary approval. “It’s a major commitment,” said Larocque. “Now funding will be dependent on sporting organizations creating a culture of respect. It will truly make a difference.” Jerko Bozilovic, from Antwerp, Belgium, also attended the event to promote his city hosting the Outgames in August 2013. LGBT orgs in Uganda targeted The LBTI group Freedom & Roam Uganda reported Aug. 1 that its offices were burglarized and sensitive information was stolen. Taken were computers, printers, a server, telephones, a microwave oven and documents -- including the database of the group’s members. No members were in the building during the weekend break-in. Colombia’s Constitutional Court on July 26 gave Congress two years to “The mood is very low; members are filled with trauma and worries,” the extend the rights of marriage to same-sex couples and said that if it doesn’t, group said in a statement. then same-sex civil unions will become legal anyway. Police found fingerprints at the scene and told FARUG there is a good The ruling was unanimous. chance of tracking the perpetrators because a rare kind of acid was used during the break-in, apparently to damage locks. “The court curiously delayed the date its ruling takes effect, on the ground that the Congress must legislate on the matter,” said leading activist FARUG said it wonders if the robbery was random or targeted. The Germán Rincón-Perfetti. “In six attempts, Congress has shelved bills on group said that four days earlier, the offices of the LGBT organization homosexual issues because of problems of religious contamination. For Sexual Minorities Uganda also were broken into. FARUG said it needs the seventh time, the process will begin and if there is not a favorable help “financially, technically and emotionally.” decision, then the court’s ruling will enter into force.” A spokesperson said the group needs to hire a security guard, install The court also said that although the nation’s constitution defines security cameras with battery backup, replace equipment, and reinstall marriage as between aman and woman, that doesn’t exclude other the Internet. definitions. “The struggle continues,” the group said. “These kinds of things are just one It further ruled that, legally speaking, same-sex families are families, which way of distracting us. We shall not give in has the effect of opening up various avenues of equal treatment for same- to them.” sex couples. 8 l 2B Magazine To open the conference, Larocque also arranged a provincial declaration. BC Sport, the province’s umbrella sporting organization, as well as six member organizations, committed to ending discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. By Jeremy Dias Greg Larocque smiles with a knowing sense that he succeeded at pulling off a challenge of a lifetime. The conference co-chair, Larocque has been working tirelessly for over a year on the project, organizing hundreds of speakers and dozens of workshops to create an international conference with a broad range of topics that included intersectional topics on youth, seniors, health, law, workplace, spiritualty, and sport. “We are so excited that [Eurovision star] Kate Ryan is our first Ambassador and will write the song for our event,” said Bozilovic. Bozilovic said that their human rights conference would continue the dialogue about inclusivity in sports, and supporting youth, and also add new focuses. Their new focus will reach out to African countries with © Jer Dias historical links to Belgium, and create a declaration of human rights for the European Union. Jeremy Dias is the Founder and Executive Director of Jer’s Vision: The conference is presented by GLISA, the international association Canada’s Youth Diversity Initiative; he is also the Executive Director of the of LGBT sports organizations from around the world. The organization international Day of Pink. presents the World OutGames and Continental OutGames. The Games include friendly sports competition, cultural celebrations, and a human For more information see: www.jersvision.org rights conference. The first World OutGames took place in Montréal in 2006, and its conference led to the creation of the Montréal Declaration was a summary of demands international LGBT movement in the clearest and broadest term possible. Conference participants have come from every continent, and represent business, the academic world, community organizations and the labour community. The event also boasts special guests including current and former Canadian Members of Parliament: Libby Davies, Hedy Fry, and Bill Siksay; BC legislative member Spencer Hebert; and Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson. “There are over 250 conference participants,” Larocque says proudly. “The highlight for me for me however the youth sessions. We are proud 2B Magazine l 9 Editor’s Letter The Curative Curse: Actual pamphlet from www.pfox.org Shining a Light the “Ex-Gay” Movement By Jordan Arseneault ment” which aired in June, to Guardian journalist Patrick Strudwick’s undercover work to expose state-sanctioned curative therapy in the UK (“She tried to make me pray away the gay,” May 2011), the prevalence of reparative therapists who continue the practice has become a hot topic this year, harkening back to darker eras before homosexuality was decriminalized in (much of) the West. Those familiar with queer history are reminded by these stories that the threat of being thrown into the asylum was once second only to the threat of prison as a form of social control and punishment for gay, lesbian and transgender people. In the wake of New York State’s long-awaited gay marriage victory and the reversal of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell (DADT) in the US, there is a troubling counter-theme that has emerged in literature and the mainstream media this year. As if showing the photo-negative of these homo triumphs, media attention has been intensely focused on “curative therapy”, otherwise known as “reparative therapy,” is a discredited form of pseudo-psychology based on the notion of homosexuality is a curable disease. Dozens (some say hundreds) of clinics and therapists across the world, from Latin America to the UK, base their practice on religious doc- Hidden trines that view homosexuality as unnatural, and A catalyst for much of the recent coverage goes a step further claiming that they are able to “cure” children, teens and adults of the aberration was Lambda-nominated author Tomas Mournthat is same-sex desire. From Anderson Cooper’s ian, whose teen runaway novel Hidden tells the 3-part investigation into the “’Sissy Boy’ Experi- story of youth who survive kidnapping, torture, forced medicalization and homelessness. Hidden is based on interviews with youth living in safe houses in California after escaping covert “hospitals” where gays teens were brought by their family against their will to be turned straight. Mournian’s research revealed the frightening conditions and family complicity in these stories of teens undergoing genital torture, solitary confinement, and constant doses of Thorazine, a controlled drug referred to as a “chemical lobotomy,” normally used on disturbed patients. Mournian was commissioned by none other than gay idol George Michael to make the short video Hiding Out, where the reality of gay runaways is 10 l 2B Magazine told with heart-breaking honesty: how they were kidnapped by their own parents and brought to these “hospitals,” and how ineffectual social services and LGBT organizations are in helping them. “I asked for help, I went everywhere I could think of. Social services can’t help us because we have to have our parents’ consent… and gay and lesbian organizations are scared to touch the issue of what to do with an underage kid,” recounts one of the survivors in the video. Mournian’s novel fictionalizes the story by focusing on one character, Ahmed, but is based on the true stories of constant fear, police raids, and vulnerability that define the lives of conversion therapy runaways. to Preventing Homosexuality. While their clinical practice may differ, a similar outlook is to be found in influential anti-gay organizations like Exodus International, which preaches “Freedom from homosexuality through the power of Jesus Christ” and JONAH, Jews Offering New Alternatives to Homosexuality. And, as if sprung from an alternate satirical universe, there is PFOG, a prominent organization for Parents and Friends of ExGays. PFOX scarily echoes certain queer theorists in claiming that “No one should identify themselves based on sexual feelings alone; there is more to your identity than your sexual attractions,” as if making shame about same-sex attraction a positive fact that their approach should “Feelings Change” build on. Their surreal youth-directed pamphlet is entitled “Feelings Change: They are Only One Like many of the anti-gay arguments that par- Part of You!” alleled the growing gay rights movement from the 50’s to the 1973, when homosexuality was Watching CNN’s “’Sissy Boy Experiment’” finally struck from the DSM-II, reparative ther- exposé of so-called therapists associated with apists use fear tactics that associate gay behaviour NARTH, many gay activists’ assumptions about with pathological urges, pedophilia, social aliena- these groups become clear: many conversion tion, and punishment in the afterlife. One major therapists are closeted gays themselves, whose ingroup, the National Association of Research and ternalized homophobia has fuelled their commitTherapy of Homosexuality, or NARTH claims ment to the movement. George Rekers, once one to “offer hope to those who struggle with un- of the most influential conversion therapists in the wanted homosexuality,” i.e. since social stigma US, would later be dismissed from NARTH—of causes people to want to turn straight, then it’s which he was a founder— after a scandal where their role to provide that therapy. NARTH pro- he was caught traveling to Europe with a young motes “research” on conversion practices, as male escort whom he’d hired to “help carry his well as religious-inspired literature on the topic luggage.” (The escort claimed he had given Rekers with titles like Growing Up Straight, Light in the sexual massages on the trip.) Reker’s curative exCloset: Torah, Homosexuality and the Power to periments left one of his patients so emotionally Change, Pure as He is Pure, and A Parent’s Guide damaged that he later committed suicide. In one 2B Magazine l 11 tube videos, petitions, and critical media outlets like the Guardian and The Nation to sound the alarm. In yet another damning undercover report by Truth Wins Out that emerged this July, the husband of US Republican presidential hopeful Michele Bachmann was revealed to be running a clinic, Bachmann & Ass., that “endorses and practices reparative therapy aimed at changing a gay person’s sexual orientation.” The desire to punish and change people for their sexuality continues to be at odds with the countermovement, which seeks to change societal attitudes so that shame has less control over LGBT people’s lives. The debate goes on, but what we have seen from the mountain of coverage this year gives us hope that truth may indeed win out. highly publicized case form this year, Iowa expastor Brent Girouex faced 60 charges of sexual assault against teens for trying to help them “gain sexual purity” by praying and ejaculating while he molested them. This case was an echo of the 2010 downfall of University of Calgary psychiatrist Dr. Aubrey Levin, a.k.a. “Dr. Shock,” a conversion therapist who was charged with sexually assaulting a 36 year-old male patient. Facts would emerge about Levin’s history of using shock therapy in trying to “cure” South African soldiers of homosexuality during the apartheid era, raising questions of how the man was able to obtain his position and keep it for so long up to that point. people struggling with homosexuality and diffuse their inner dilemmas, rewire their mental state as well as propagate the belief that homosexuals can change.” Here at home, the 2010 NFB documentary Cure for Love by Canadian filmmakers Christina Willings and Francine Pelletier followed several fundamentalist Christian “ex-gays” who claimed to have been rescued from the gay lifestyle, revealing the uncertainty and anguish behind their choices. Willings believes there to be ex-gay ministries operating in every province across Canada, and that “mainly they’re found in little non-descript strip malls,” where their practices are entirely unregulated. Cures that Kill Luckily for public perception, the overwhelming opinion of recognized medical and social sciYou can view Francine Pelletier & Christina entists is that reparative therapies do more harm than good. Even groups that support a religious Willings’ Cure for Love for free on the NFB therapeutic approach caution that “There exists website at www.nfb.ca/film/cure_for_love considerable anecdotal evidence of extreme deYou can sign the Cures that Kill petition at pression… and suicide following such therapies,” www.dayagainsthomophobia.org/Sign(religioustolerance.org) an opinion shared by the the-Petition,513 Canadian, American and Royal (British) Colleges of Physicians. Meanwhile, LGBT groups across the globe continue to fight the abuse, manipulation, and misinformation perpetrated by conversion therapy supporters. Groups like BeyondExGay, Ex Gay Watch, and Truth Wins Out use You- Internationally, the IDAHO-led group Cures that Kill / Curas Que Matan (dayagainsthomophobia.org) is trying to bring attention to the ongoing pathologizing of homosexuality in China and Latin America, where medical associations are not as influential in preventing these “therapists” from being seen as legitimate. Cures that Kill came out against social services in Hong Kong for hiring Hong Kwai-Wah, who specialises in “treating unwanted homosexuality,” this past June. Hong is chairman of the New Creation Association, whose mission is “to help 12 l 2B Magazine 2B Magazine l 13 judgment declared that LGBTI people have the same rights as any other person living in Nepal, which meant not only marriage, but also property rights, adoption rights, the non-discrimination clauses, social security, pay and pension rights, etc. The Supreme Court ordered the government to issue citizenship IDs to the trans people (known as third gender) according to their gender identity and to amend or scrap discriminatory law policies against LGBTIs. Additionally, the bench also issued a legal note to the Constituent Assembly to recognize LGBTI rights while drafting the new constitution. After the Supreme Court decision, when the Interim Constitution was formulated, the suggestions were not even tabled. Pant describes, “Implementation is a process. The ideas can be there, but people have to understand them to act on them.” Gay and Trans Revolution in Nepal Special report with parliamentarian Sunil By Indu Vashist In the west, when gay people fight for their rights, it is usually to scrap or change existing laws. But what if we had the opportunity to hit reset on the whole system? Would gay rights look substantially different if we were to start from scratch? What would laws look like if we could write them without the baggage of sodomy laws, or marriage as defined as a contract that occurs between a man and a woman? Nepal, a small, idyllic country nestled in the midst of the Himalayas, got a chance to do exactly that. It was the first country to legally recognise trans people, at the same time as legalising homosexuality and gay marriage. Until 2001, it did not have a single gay organisation, but 6 years later in the midst of political unrest, the LGBT community and other disenfranchised groups received some of the most progressive legislation and soon-to-be constitutional rights in the world. work, instead BDS started chronicling cases of homo- and trans- phobic violence committed by the security forces and rest of society. The journey started when Sunil Babu Pant returned to his native Nepal after stints in Belarus, Japan and Hong Kong where he came to terms with his own sexuality after encountering gay culture there. In Nepal, he saw that there was a vibrant cruising culture that was being targeted by the security forces. “Blackmail and extortion by police was common in those days,” explains Pant. It was the death of a transperson that inspired him to set up the Blue Diamond Society (BDS) as place that provided training, support and resources for the community. Like many places with nascent gay rights movements, BDS worked under the guise of health and human rights, in reality, their work was not just confined to HIV/AIDS related In 2006, the King agreed to reinstate parliament following weeks of violent strikes and protests against direct royal rule. Parliament voted unanimously to curtail the king’s political powers. In 2007, the LGBT community approached the interim parliament to enshrine their rights along with others in the constitution; however, at that time their demands were not met. They ended up taking their case to the Supreme Court of Nepal. In December of 2007, the apex court rendered its decision, “Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual and intersex are natural persons irrespective of their masculine and feminine gender and they have the right to exercise their rights and live an independent life in society.» This phenomenal 14 l 2B Magazine The political background of Nepal during the early 2000s was that there was an insurgency against the monarchy and the government that was acting as the puppet of the monarchy. When the King declared a state of emergency, the attacks against LGBT people by the security forces increased. At this time, the BDS with Sunil Pant at its helm were working with the pro-democracy popular movement. Pant explains the rationale of the LGBT movement’s participation in the popular uprising, “All human rights workers were working together. We advocated democracy for everyone. We [as LGBT people] are credible and concerned citizens, we wanted to play a critical role for the nation as citizens.” LGBTI groups started educating the political parties to ensure that their issues are understood and heard by them. At the last minute, CPN (United), a small communist party asked people from the LGBTI community to run under their banner. Sunil Pant put himself forward and won the election, gaining a seat in the Parliament. From there, the LGBTI activists had the opportunity to sensitize the entire Constituent Assembly and Parliament on sexual minority rights issues, while Pant participated in writing the draft constitution. Within the draft constitution, Pant made sure that LGBTI rights are enshrined in every section. The constitution is slated to be promulgated by August 28, 2011. Since the Supreme Court decision many changes have taken place within Nepal. The first pride parade was held last year. This year, in its census, Central Bureau of Statistics officially recognized a third gender in addition to male and female. People from all over the world go to Nepal to get married. Nepal has been able to market itself as a haven for the gay tourist who does not want to participate in a segregated gay culture. Pant has decided to contribute more time to the Blue Diamond Society. When asked where he sees the LGBTI community in Nepal is headed, he replies, “I do not want to segregate ourselves from society. I don’t want gay neighbourhoods, gay discos, gay stores... I want equality because that is better in the long run. I want LGBT people to contribute and take part in society.” Rights for sexual minorities across the world follow different trajectories. In the west, we are battling to change existing laws. There is social upheaval and regime changes sweeping across, this could usher in a new era for the rights of many oppressed peoples. Nepal remains an inspiration and a wonderful story to ponder on of LGBT rights in a small country in South Asia that took form in the midst of no less than a revolution. For more info on the IGLA award-winning Blue Diamond Society, check out http://www.bds.org.np/ 2B Magazine l 15 Fierté: At It Again By Tom McGraw As Montrealers and tourists alike reel in shock and amazement from this year’s festival frenzy, it’s hard to imagine that there is still so much left to look forward to this summer. From August 9th-14th Montréal Pride Celebrations will be holding their annual rainbow-clad events, but this year, with a vengeance. 2011 marks the 5th anniversary of the Fierté Montréal celebrations. From the original mandate of a pride parade and community day the festival has grown to span six days of culture, celebration and general merry-making. Although Fierté Montréal President Éric Pineault is quick to thank their sponsors, there’s more to this Pride than all the logos on the programme. Co-sponsored by a certain Canadian chartered bank and a certain impotence pill, one glance at the programme and you might think this is just another gay party week (with the essentials of money and, uh, mojo, at the forefront). In spite of this year’s seemingly apolitical “Space Odyssey” theme, Fierté Montréal’s 2011 edition promises to be the “the most extensive, diverse and complete program ever.” Looking over the schedule, there is lot going on, even though the celebratory aspect seems to override any possible social statement for LGBT rights and causes. Montréal was late to the Pride tradition, which started here only in the mid 90’s, and has undergone a few famous structural shifts since Divers/cite gave up on the parade 6 years ago. Is it possible that Québec’s progressive sexual politics has castrated our Pride celebrations in that its organizers feel there is nothing more to demand of their governments and the powers that be? Unlike NYC, we have no recent major political gain to celebrate, and unlike Toronto, no homophobic conservative mayor to rail against. Montréal Fierté’s 2011 slogan “Share the Pride” even seems to suggest that LGBT rights are now a commodity to export elsewhere, since the work is essentially done at home. But is it? And even if it is, what’s with the Space Odyssey theme? Anyway! Though the classics remain— Parade, T-Dance and community day— many new events are making their way into the annual festivities. The 2011 edition presents a series of diverse arts and cultural activities from Photo exhibitions to contemporary dance shows the program really has it all. For the art lover in all of us exhibitions of photography and mixed media art are available at a variety of venues. The Blanc de Memoire photography 16 l 2B Magazine exhibit on HIV/AIDS related personalities will run throughout at the Écomusée du fier monde. In front of Place Émilie-Gamelin, from the 11th until the 14th will be a photo exhibit presented by Fondation Émergence entitled From Apollo to DeGeneres which will feature photos of 50 LGBTA celebrities and their lovers, a reshowing works presented this year for the International Day against Homophobia. The iconic Berri square will also play host from the 11th-14th to the Café des arts, which will feature the works of seven artists who have made a difference for LGBT rights, their works will be on sale within the café section. One of the many Headliners of the festival is the theatre performance of Les Anciennes Odeurs by Michel Tremblay. Performances will be held at the Studio-theatre of Place des arts from the 9th until the 13th tickets are 25$. One of the more off the beaten track events this year will be the Megasession of yoga hosted by POPgayoga on Saturday the 13th from 3-5pm. POPgayoga boasts that the event will be the largest of its kind in Canada and will include movements, music and meditation, so it might be a good place to stop and clear your head before delving into the insanity that will be Sunday the 14th. These cultural events not only class up the festival, but will also help to enlarge the overall appeal of the Montreal Pride Celebrations. The theme Share the Pride is meant to help all of this year’s festival-goers feel included in the festivities, but beyond that, it invites them to feel proud of what we have achieved here. Creating awareness at home, and also for the many parts of the world that still struggle for the freedoms Canadians celebrate and enjoy. As for the main events, this year’s parade promises to be just as wild as ever with the added bonus of inspired competition. Prizes will be awarded for the most crowd pleasing float, best choreography by a group, best costume and make-up, best community group float, and best corporate float. Competition for these awards can only mean that parade participants will be kicking things a notch in a aim to outdo each other, which is always better for us spectators. Community day (August 13) will see St. Catherine east between St-Hubert and Papineau transformed into a giant meet and greet for an enormous selection of the LGBT community’s organizations, groups and sports teams, so feel free to come out and see what Montréal has to offer. Who knows, you might even find the sports organization or line dancing group that your life has been missing. The Mega T-Dance will take place between Sunday august 14th from 2-11pm in place EmilieGamelin, with three DJs Charles Poulin (Québec), DJ Erez Bi (Tel Aviv) and Montréal’s own Stéphan Grondin to set the mood. It promises to be quite the sweaty way to finish off your weekend. In short the 2011 Montréal pride celebrations offer up some class, some glittery ass (as always) and many different ways to express your sense of pride so get out there and live it up because the festival season never really ends in Montréal. For all the info: www.fiertemontrealpride.com 2B Magazine l 17 Homo away from Home: The Gladstone Hotel by Matthew Harris It has continuously operated in Toronto for over 120 years. Its renovation helped spur the redevelopment of a neighbourhood. But for years, the Gladstone Hotel was falling apart in Toronto’s formerly dodgy west end neighbourhood, slowly decaying among the empty lots and car washes. Many of Toronto’s other Victorian grand hotels – like the recently destroyed Empress Hotel – have been lost. Without intervention, the Gladstone Hotel would have soon been one of them. Enter Christina Zeidler. Christina is an openly queer, award-winning filmmaker. Owning the Gladstone was never really part of the plan; she has said she became “an accidental hotelier.” Her family brought the property in 2003, and she was inspired by its potential. “Every town has an old hotel like this that you think, if I could just get my hands on it, it could be so cool,” she has said. “Well, I got my wish, and I had the chance to turn this place around.” While it had been decaying, the Gladstone still had some architecturally beautiful features left. This included its hand-operated elevator: only two of which remain in Toronto. From these good bones, Zeidler added an eclectic touch by bringing in thirty-seven different local artists to individually decorate each of the hotel’s rooms. In 2005, the hotel reopened to general acclaim. Since then, it and the nearby Drake Hotel have become the centrepieces of the transformation of Toronto’s West End from industrial wasteland to cultural hotspot. But while the Drake became a sort of see-and-be-seen place among the glitterati, the Gladstone has consistently maintained a much stronger community orientation. In the process, it has become a central meeting place for Toronto’s West End Queer community. The Gladstone regularly 18 l 2B Magazine throws events ranging from Granny Boots – a queer cabaret night/curated performance event – to art exhibitions such as artist Sholem Krishtalka’s Pride 2011 That’s So Gay exhibition. The hotel also hosted the memorial for Will Munro, one of Toronto’s biggest queer community builders. And it has become a local favourite for same-sex wedding receptions. Its location is smack dab in the centre of the Queer West community: it is two doors down from Queen West’s other major queer bar/restaurant, the Beaver. And it’s a short jaunt down the street from the West End’s lesbian bar, the Hen House. Aside from the owner, many of the Gladstone’s employees are queer, including the Gladstone’s creative director, Jeremy Vandermeij, and bartender, unofficial “mayor” of Queer West, and allaround nice person, Sandy De Almeida. Jeremy says Queen West’s Queer scene and the Gladstone offer something unique for the queer visitor or resident: “a community of creative people who often have very diverse politics, beliefs, gender identities and sexualities.” As Christina herself has said, “It is ‘for real’ gay here. We do not have just a policy of acceptance, but one of true diversity, where staff is openly gay if they want to be and interact in an authentic way with guests.” For those looking to visit, it should be noted that the Melody Bar is being spruced up this summer. Some events may be cancelled, or not running regularly. Vandermeij says that they should – depending on the situation with the contractors – be fully open in September, with a fresh batch of queer event programming. But if you are thinking of visiting, you are advised to phone ahead to make sure you are aware of the renovation situation at this jewel of a gay-friendly hotel. Gladstone Hotel, 1214 Queen Street West, Toronto 416.531.4635 www.gladstonehotel.com © Steffen Downes Moncton : is its central location. Located in the heart of the Maritimes, it is the destination of choice for big events, concerts or festivals that stop in the Atlantic Provinces. “We wanted to reunite people from all over the Maritimes, not only from the city itself,” he explains, adding that if the venture is a success, he will repeat the experience again and again. Small city with fierce pride Joëlle Girard From August 17-21, the city of Moncton, New Brunswick will play host to the largest Pride celebrations ever seen in the Atlantic Provinces. A huge parade, five nights of festivities, six different sites, a dozen DJs, several thousand people set to attend, and yes, even Shangela from RuPaul’s Drag Race will be there. Not bad for a city of only 120,000. The volunteer team of River of Pride, the nonprofit organisation that coordinates the official Pride celebrations for the cities of Moncton, Dieppe, and Riverview, has been working for over ten years to commemorate and celebrate the diversity of New Brunswick. 20 l 2B Magazine As tradition dictates, River of Pride will begin its 12th edition starting with the raising of the rainbow flag at City Hall, followed by a Pride parade and ensuing celebrations. “Every year, more people take part in our activities,” affirms Paul LeBlanc, committee president. This year, however, organisers are particularly optimistic, and with good reason, because they will benefit from another LGBT festival, the City Pride Celebration that will be held on the same dates, from August 17-21. Alex Roberts, president of Modern Vision Events, the private company behind City Pride Celebration, promises an extraordinary first edition. “We want to make Moncton Pride one of the largest in Canada!” One recent addition to their sexy and exciting programme includes Montréal DJ favourites Patrick Guay and Paskal & Vesselinov spinning a Black & Blue-sponsored event August 19 at Casino New Brunswick, followed Saturday night Aug 20 with the Superbia Party headlined by Pierre Fitch and Joe Gauthreaux. What we have here is some circuit party sexiness coming to the Hub City! Steve Foster & Hector Gomez Hector Fonseca, Tony Moran, Shangela Change in mentalities Roberts has brought some big name DJs who have recently acquired international standing, like Pierre Fitch, Tony Moran, and the everfamous Hector Fonesca. Not to mention that Shangela from RuPaul’s Drag Race will be there. Even OUT TV, the popular Canadian gay channel, will be part of the celebrations following the parade. “It’s the first time they will come to the Maritimes,” declares Roberts enthusiastically. For his part, Paul LeBlanc of River of Pride answered our question by pointing out the financial support and the media visibility that has been offered to organisers by municipal officials, current and potential sponsors, and the Moncton media. According to LeBlanc, the inhabitants of New Brunswick are very openminded. The River of Pride committee has been very well received in the community. From the point of view of financing, the positive economic impacts are undeniable. However, one question remains: Seeing as the “People know ‘the brand’ and call us to offer us city has a population of only 120,000 people, sponsorship whereas before we had to take the why Moncton? What is driving the organisers first steps,” declares LeBlanc. of Moncton Pride to want to become one of the At 62 years old, Paul LeBlanc is a regular at largest in the country? LBGT festivities. Throughout the years, he has According to Roberts, he himself from New observed a real change of mentality in terms of Brunswick, the main advantage of Moncton support, be it financial or social. “I’ve been part 2B Magazine l 21 © pierrefitch.com of the Pride committee for a long time and it’s very encouraging to see the positive evolution of attitudes towards the cause,” he notes, adding that after the pride celebrations this year, he will be retiring from community organising. Giving back to the LGBT Community Recently, the president of River of Pride has noticed that there is a certain willingness to create community partnerships on the part of businesses that already offered financial support to Moncton Pride. For instance, the Development Bank of Canada, sponsor of the LGBT festivities, approached the committee to organise discussions with employees about sexual diversity. “More and more, companies want not only to lend financial support, but also want to take something away from this collaboration,” he explains. “It shows an openness and certainly gives rise to a feeling of pride amongst gay and lesbian employees who work for these businesses.” 22 l 2B Magazine Thanks to partnerships with EGALE Canada and the organisation 1n10, River of Pride is also set to implement the program “Report Homophobic Violence, Period” (RHVP) with the Moncton City Police. Another of the organisation’s success stories is the creation of several gay-straight alliances in New Brunswick high schools. © shangela.com If all goes well, Alex Roberts – who is already a proud sponsor of River of Pride – intends to give part of the profits to different organisations. All this depends, of course, on the profits that his venture will make. Among the cited organisations are the CARA Helpline, Paul Leblanc’s organisation, and groups that fight against all forms of harassment. For more information on Moncton Pride: http://www.fiertemonctonpride.ca/ For more info on City Pride Celebration, its program and to buy tickets: http://www.citypridecelebration.com/ 2B Magazine l 23 Capital Pride: Keepin’ it Real By Boísin Murphy When it comes to LGBT Pride celebrations in the mid-sized cities of the world, it’s hard to reinvent the wheel. You have community stuff, the parade, lots of outdoor events, and ideally, a few sexy parties that aren’t too expensive. What Capital Pride has managed to do for its socially savvy 26th edition is to make a pride week that is truly representative of Ottawa’s LGBT community, but still has enough glamour to attract some out-oftown attention. That means you’ll get a BDSM cabaret, a family picnic, some lesbian stand-up, and over 65 events that are sure to make the trip to Ottawa worth your while. As the director of Capital Pride, Doug Saunders-Riggins understands the importance of striking a balance between events that appeal to the rainbow-flagging locals while keeping the sex appeal of a Pride festival in a larger urban centre. “We’re a large festival but at the same time we’re still very grass roots,” says Saunders-Riggins, pointing to the fact that it is entirely volunteer run, with a board elected by members of the community. An annual highlight for this stalwart Pride director is Tuesday’s Picnic in the Park, co-hosted by Ottawa Family Services, which brought out over 200 hungry kids and parents last year, showing the festival’s true “community feel” colours. Five years ago, organizers tried to go big, closing off Bank Street and inviting cash-sucking outta town DJs, and they’re still digging themselves out of that deficit. But looking at the programme and mission for the 2011 edition, Capital Pride ain’t hurting. After a rough start with Ottawa City Major Jim Watssson almost kicking them out of their cherished Marion Dewar Plaza, there’s nothing stopping them this year: Canada’s capital is ready to get their gay on. 24 l 2B Magazine Glancing at the programme, you’ll see a lot of elements that give Capital Pride the big city scale with a small town feel. As if lifted from the calendar of off-pride fests like Pervers/cité, Club SAW’s “reflective talk and discussion” with Toronto Pride boardie and activist bad-boy Roy Mitchell “will cover such topics as Toronto Pride 2010, the G20, Raelians, City Hall, Heterophobia, Funding and Beer Gardens.” Like bigger Prides (and unlike Montréal’s), Ottawa boasts a lusciously well-attended Dyke March (Sat. Aug. 27, 1:30pm), which leaves from the über-central Human Rights Monument and stops at nothing to make the city’s hefty lesbian presence known to one and all. That evening, pride crowd-pleaser Lucas Silveira’s band The Clicks will rev up the main stage before local live act Disco Inferno at Marion Dewar Plaza for a modest $5. Following their decadeold Laugh Out Proud tradition, Ottawa’s comedy embassy Yuk Yuk’s will be hosting three belly-aching nights of stand-up with Ellen Degeneres veteran Thea Vidale and the honestly very funny Jessica Solomon. Keeping it beautifully political, Capital Pride will be unveiling their “We Demand” mural on Friday night at the corner of Bank and Gilmour Streets, commemorating Canada’s first LGBT public protest, followed by a dinner-screening of Stand Together, a documentary on the Ontario queer rights movement at Shanghai Restaurant (651 Somerset W). And one of the things you’ll love about Capital Pride is that although it’s grass roots, she ain’t no prude! Smack-dab in the middle of the programme is the “Fetishini Kinky Cabaret 3” at Breathless (318 Lisgar Street), a venue heretofore unknown to us, which also hosts the “Play As You Like It Night” immediately afterwards. And as if that weren’t enough, Ottawa’s youth NGO Pink Triangle Services and non-profit trollop Jer’s Vision is hosting their Pride Prom that same night at the Falldown Gallery, (288 Bank Street), which is FREE for youth 14-25, but also open to us chicken hawks. I’m already counting how many Red Bulls I’ll need to make it to the POP UNDERWEAR PARTY at 2Bmag’s favourite Ottawa haunt, The Flamingo Nightclub (380 Elgin), which promises “sexy people in their underwear drinking champagne and fierce drag performances.” Event magic-maker Sébastien Provost is sure to deliver a night you’ll want to end up at (while ensuring the appropriate level of exhaustion for the next day). Starting at the Garden of the Provinces and Territories on Sparks and Bronson on Sunday, the Capital Pride Parade will be the culmination of the festival’s community and splashier sides with floats by Flamingo Nightclub and Stroked Ego alongside a myriad of Ottawa-Gatineau’s LGBT social organizations. And, lest we forget to mention, 2Bmag and new sister mag Entre Elles launch their Capital Pride editions at Venus Envy on Wednesday, Aug. 24! The launch will celebrate the new revamped lesbian francophone magazine Entre Elles and give Pride-goers a chance to see what the mags are made of. Featuring a photo exhibit by Rah Illa and Nathan Hoo, free tasty treats and a cash bar to benefit the Venus Envy bursary fund: 320 Lisgar St, Ottawa, 8-10pm. www.venusenvy.ca For the full programme, check out: www.capitalpride.ca 2B Magazine l 25 © Jessica Ruano Orgasmic Tech Support: Venus Envy will boost your sexual IQ By Mark Ambrose Harris There’s a certain charm to the classic sleazy sex shop. Who can deny the allure of penis straws, cheap blow-up dolls, and endless troughs of discount porn? However, if you aren’t hosting a bachelorette party and need quality adult fare, be thankful for establishments like Venus Envy. This bastion of sex-positivity first opened its doors in Halifax in 1998. Conceived of by Shelley Taylor, the business soon expanded, with Taylor opening up a second location in Ottawa in 2001, where she’s been stationed ever since. Though VE began as a store for women and the folks who love them, Taylor soon recognized the diversity of the clientele who appreciated the store’s upbeat vibe, and she broadened the sexual spectrum of VE’s mandate. Now, aside from being a place where knowledgeable staff can help you choose anything from masturbation sleeves to nipple clamps, VE is community oriented. In addition to offering a bursary to women and trans people in need who wish to further their studies, Taylor and her team work tirelessly to bring sexual know-how to the masses. Taylor explains: not a shameful one.” I asked Taylor how she and her co-workers assist clients who are negotiating shame. “Often we’re preaching to the converted, because people who are comfortable coming into the store are pretty comfortable with sex. But every day we meet people at VE who have never been to a sex shop, or who are experiencing some kind of sexual pain or difficulty, and they’ve come in as a last ditch attempt to feel better or work things out. I think it helps that we’re just normal about sex and toys. We can acknowledge that someone is uncomfortable but present the material in a way that normalizes things for them.” Since Taylor has been with VE since the start, I was curious if throughout the years she’s seen blurring between sexual practices and identity categories. “Yes, most people we meet here aren’t too hung up on what parts should go where. It’s still pretty common for us to show a dude the cock-ring section, which is attached to the butt toy section, and have them tell us clearly that that isn’t for them. On the other hand, we see a lot of straight identified men buying anal toys. When we first opened, anal toys were bought “Our goal is to offer sex education in everything we do; one-on-one in primarily by queers, harnesses were only bought by lesbians, and straight the shop, out in the community, through social media and during our in- women always wanted a vibrator. Thankfully, much has changed.” store seminar series.” Join us for the launch of 2Bmag’s Capital Pride edition and new lesbian With sex ed falling off the school curriculum, VE’s role as educator and monthly Entre Elles Wednesday, August 24, 8-10pm bookstore becomes all the more pertinent. Featuring photo exhibit by Rah Illa and Nathan Hoo “As far as I can tell from talking to hundreds of first-year university and colVenus Envy lege students every year, almost nobody is getting decent sex ed in high school.” 320 Lisgar St, Ottawa Take a peak at the VE website, and one phrase pops out as a crucial 613-789-4646 aspect of their mission statement, that “sex should be dirty in a good way, www.venusenvy.ca 26 l2B2BMagazine Magazine 2B Magazine l 27 town-- Flamingo! And they’ve been making sporadic Ladies Nights since their inception last winter in late January. Ladies Nights at Flamingo tend to be a month apart at the least, with out-of-town queer women DJs, gogo dancers, burlesque shows and drag shows. Ottawa has always had to deal with being the middle child between Toronto and Montreal, vying for attention among two historic gay villages renowned for their parties. However, there are at least two other kinds of events in town that can offer refuge to queer women and dykes if they’re not the party-all-night and drink-till-you-drop kind. Ottawa Outings F.C Estrella A resounding question is echoed through Internet forums and whispered behind hands in chance meetings at trendy free trade cafes: “Where are all the dykes at in Ottawa?” Women looking to pick up, hang out, and get to know other women seem to rely on the queer house party/potluck via Facebook invite to lure more L-Word into their lives. But what about the ladies who want to bust a move on dance floors, with breakdancing butches and fashionista femmes? Where can a fresh-faced baby dyke or new-lesbian-in-town go to mingle with the Sapphic masses? It’s slim pickings in this government town. We’ve got two week nights specifically for queer women: Wednesday and Friday. Wednesdays at Mercury Lounge (and Bar 56 directly below it) have the late-night events charmingly called “HUMP” and “Fresh Beaver”. Doors open at 9pm and everyone hits the pavement by 3am, with a drag show squeezed in around midnight. The beats are always fresh and the decor is full of long red drapes and avant-garde gallery calibre paintings. The Friday Fixxx at The Lookout (“Ottawa’s Favourite Gay Bar!”) with DJ Isabelle is the Ladies Social, an evening that goes on till 2am. The bar is smaller and less posh than the Wednesday night venues. Also, the music is uninterrupted as The Lookout drag shows usually happen on Saturday nights. The Lookout’s also added the “Pre-Fixxx” Ladies Cocktail Hour from 8-10pm, where you can watch L-Word on the big screen, have $5 cocktails, and not have to pay cover for the dance party later in the night. Venus Envy’s Shelley Taylor throws an event every season or so for the Venus Envy Bursary Fund. Certain Sort is usually billed as a “A dance party for all kinds of queers”. An upcoming Certain Sort for Ottawa Pride is happening at Club SAW for August 27 with drink specials and a trio of musical disc-jockeying by DJ Bratface (Montreal), DJ Y’alla! Y’alla! (Ottawa), and CPI (Ottawa - thetastates.com). Cover is $5-15 sliding scale. Move over Lookout, Swizzles, and Edge! There’s a new hot pink bar in Divergence Movie Nights (DMN) tend to predominantly attract a female queer crowd, though male-centered movies prove to be the exception. These are monthly events at licensed establishments (Shanghai Restaurant and Raw Sugar Cafe) that screen rare LGBTQ films. A special Pride edition of DMN is slated for August 26 at Shanghai Restaurant, where they’ll be screening “Stand Together”, a documentary on the Ontario gay liberation movement. DMN is one of those great events where you can show up for the movie and then get cozy with someone either physically or intellectually with topics ranging from activism to kink. Speaking of kink, there are seasonal events that the women and trans folk queer kink community look forward to, organized not just by Ottawa folk. The biggest and most notable is An Unholy Harvest (UnholyHarvest. Ca), “Canada’s only annual weekend event for leatherdykes, trans folks and kinky gals of all bent persuasions”. If you’re a kinky dyke and haven’t gone to this event yet, it’s time to strap on your leathers or corsets and party in collars or whips! Unholy Harvest is in its 5th year, and falls from October 7-11. This 2011 kinkfest is circus-themed with prizes given out to the best costumes. Sure, O-Town doesn’t have the constant stream of parties as the neighbouring big cities, projecting its stereotype of a straight-laced civil servant that gays it up only once in awhile, but if you know where to look (and have the right friends on Facebook) you can start finding dyke places and queer spaces to hang out and have fun-- no matter what your interests are. The Buzz Bar & Restaurant 374 Bank St. TheBuzzRestaurant.ca Shanghai Restaurant 651 Somerset St. W. ShanghaiOttawa.com 2 brokers to better advise and serve you 2 brokers to better sell, buy or rent Kent Sanderson Stéphane Costa Real Estate Broker Real Estate Broker 514 710 6620 899 000 $ 514 770 6620 1790 rue Amherst, Montreal Attractive, renovated downtown property, offering 3400 square foot living area and large (2200+ sf) sunny garden with spa. Numerous possibilities for small business or self-employed professional as main floor is zoned commercial/ residential. 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De Gaspé, Villeray (Montréal) The Lookout Bar 41 York St. TheLookoutBar.Com 713 000 $ SOLD 40 Av. du Rhône, app. 601, Saint-Lambert 215 000 $ Attractive triplex with decorative elements preserved located on beautiful, tree-lined street. Spacious ground floor apartment offers 3 bedrooms + a finished basement area with 2 bedrooms, bathroom, kitchenette and dining area. 2 one-bedroom apartments upstairs. Terrace and charming landscaped garden. Excellent location. Double occupancy possible. $ 713,000 Situated in Montreal’s vibrant Latin Quarter, just steps from the major summer festivals on a quiet side-street, this warm contemporary condo features high ceilings, hardwood floors, one closed bedroom, open-plan kitchen, dining and living areas. Private balcony, communal panoramic rooftop terrace. $312,500 Indoor parking space can be purchased for $37,500. 502 Rue St-Jacques, Le Vieux-Longueuil (Longueuil) $380,000 SOLD Ideally situated in Old Longueuil on a quiet, tree-lined street, this outstanding home, recently renovated, offers 3 bedrooms, a gorgeous kitchen opening onto the dining area, 2 living rooms, a large sunny garden, 2 parking spaces, a large basement for storage... Listed at $399,000 A strong Canadian dollar coupled with the continued weak US housing market make investing in a second home in Florida extremely affordable. If you are considering buying a house or condo in Florida, contact us, we can provide assistance! Free protections for buyers and sellers Free estimate of your condo Real Estate agency 2B Magazine l 29 71 month. And this past June 17, the bar was insanely packed for its inaugural Friday night. Visibly satisfied about the success of the first night, Desjardins sees a lot of possibilities in for the bar’s future. “We wanted to open the fastest possible now that it’s done, we’re entering phase 2. We are opening the kitchen in a few days – La Cantine Royale with chef Hugo Desforges – and in two to three weeks, we’ll have a stage to welcome bands.” Open “Minds” The philosophy of the Royal Phoenix Bar – a name that is a cross between the mystic bird and the Royal Sous-marins, the legendary restaurant from next door – is meant to imply openness to diversity and people of all genders and orientations. Val Desjardins insists, “People are queer, but it’s not that that unites us. It’s more art, love of art, love of creative expression.” And effectively, there was a little bit of everything on opening night: gays, lesbians, heteros, queers, curious, arty partiers, yuppies and the beer-can crowd. Finally, a Queer Bar in the Mile-End: Welcome to the Royal Phoenix The event-promoter powerhouse assures us that the programming will also be very diverse. “I’ve been in the business for 10 years. I know who I want to work with,” she says. Between Gay Bash nights, the Queer Slow Dance, and Hipster Karaoke, there is also room for projections of all sorts, rock night and various partnerships with some of the city’s most popular festivals. The Royal Phoenix will also be the locale for a much-anticipated Open Mic night August 9 for the rad young things of Pervers/cite, hosted by Sister An T Horné By Joëlle Girard The Royal Phoenix Bar, located on the corner of Saint-Laurent and Bernard, is the new hotspot for the queer community north of Mont-Royal. For the regulars of Faggity Ass Fridays, fans of the Roller Derby league, looky loos and certainly for those who love a certain artsy eclecticism, the Royal Phoenix is the new party location for the hors-village community. The project was born when a friend of Val Desjardins, champion of Montreal nightlife, told her, “I want to open a queer bar in Mile-end and I won’t do it without you.” Passionate about organising events, Val jumped at the chance to join in the venture and become the artistic director of the establishment, completely revamping the former Klinik in less than a 30 l 2B Magazine We’ll be seeing you at the Royal Phoenix, 5788 Boulevard Saint-Laurent. Check out “Royal Phoenix Bar” on Facebook. 2B Magazine l 31 Mind your manners: Steve Petrow has advice for every occasion from Petrow’s website, www.gaymanners.com. Queery features questions from queer folks, whereas Straight Talk contains dilemmas from allies. When asked what subject people needed the most help with, Petrow divulges that weddings are high on the list. By Mark Ambrose Harris Even the most reputable and referenced etiquette guides tiptoe around anything queer. These omissions are odd, because let’s face it, artful napkin folding has to be the gayest thing this side of Gaga. To remedy the situation, author Steven Petrow compiled a wealth of advice for Steven Petrow’s Complete Gay & Lesbian Manners: The Definitive Guide to LGBT Life. The book addresses an eclectic collection of exclusively queer issues, such as coming out or lesbian motherhood, to more standard etiquette fare, such as place settings. Thrown into the mix are formal conundrums with a bent twist, like verifying if a wedding venue is friendly towards genderqueer brides and grooms, or brides and brides, or… well, you get the idea. There are two reoccurring Q&A segments in the book culled 32 l 2B Magazine “All of these questions come up because there are no other sources to turn to; we’re invisible in mainstream etiquette books. Add to that the fact that we’re undergoing a seismic shift right now when it comes to gay weddings. I hope that folks who are planning their ceremonies will understand that they’re the first generation to be doing so and that their choices are setting the foundation of tradition and etiquette to come. It’s both a lot of responsibility and a great way to express our love and commitment to each other.” It’s safe to say that most etiquette guides don’t include hanky codes. Whereas more traditional tomes on decorum ignore sex altogether, Petrow doesn’t shy away from carnal delights. He writes about public sex guidelines, bathhouse behaviour, and one-night manners. And though weddings are dandy, Petrow also talks about less conventional forms of coupledom, from how to broach the subject of kink, to opening up the relationship and polyamory. Though the book’s subtitle includes the acronym LGBT, the main title, writ large, is Gay & Lesbian. Nonetheless, Petrow addresses early on the variances of identities that are possible, especially under the rubric of queer. Furthermore, the guide also handles trans matters. Petrow explains that throughout the development of the book, he received guidance and feedback from people working in trans issues, including Shannon Minter of NCLR. Petrow illustrates just how much societal mores have shifted. For instance, the chapter on being out at work explains that many organizations now actively seek out queer candidates for their teams. And yet, there will always be someone reluctant to budge. When asked if his guide might incite some sticklers to bend their rules to the bent side, he isn’t so sure. “I actually think these authors don’t understand how much they’ve left out of twenty-first century manners. Beside LGBT matters, think about Facebook, Twitter, GPS dating apps, texting and how these new technologies apply to dating, sexual etiquette, relationships, weddings and so much more. I think Emily Post needs to get an iPad and download some new apps.” Steven Petrow’s Complete Gay & Lesbian Manners: The Definitive Guide to LGBT Life Steven Petrow with Sally Chew Workman Publishing, 2011 417 pages, $21.95 2B Magazine l 33 © paperblog.fr Crocodile Tears: Teen Trouble in Flanders: Bavo Defurne’s North Sea, Texas at the FFM By Jordan Arseneault A coming of age tale set in a sleepy seaside town involving a clueless mother and an impossibly sexy teenage neighbour: no, it’s not a new feature by Thom Fitzgerald or a play by Québec’s Michel-Marc Bouchard. While North Sea, Texas has all the hallmarks of a Canadian art-house drama, it hails from Belgium, and will get its North American première at this year’s Festival des films du monde, Aug. 18-28. Director Bavo Defurne has been making a name for himself on the international festival circuit with such crowd-and-critic pleasing shorts as Campfire (2000) about Boy Scout love. When it came to making a feature, he knew what his backers and potential audience wanted to see. The coming of age tale “is a theme that touches me a lot,” Defurne says, “and one that is very important in people’s lives. A lot of people who see it have that reminiscence,” he adds, revealing his attraction to universal emotions. “You remember your first love more than your seventeenth,” he says factually— making me wonder, who was my seventeenth love? His Campfire is still shown in schools and hailed for showing “the beauty of creation,” even by a certain Catholic priest admirer. Reached by phone on a break from shooting in the North Sea town of Oostende, Defurne is surprisingly cheerful about the hopeful potential for a story about same-sex teen love, which he admits, rarely ends well. In North Sea, Texas, lonely teenage queer Pim, played by blonde freckled ballet dancer Jelle Florizoone, is in love with his scruffy dark-haired neighbor Gino (Mathias Vergels), who luckily turned 18 during the shooting, which makes lusting after him feel a little less taboo. Set in a kind of 1960s Neverland of indeterminate chronology, “before May 1968, in a world where the word gay wasn’t used so often,” Bavo clarifies, the camera follows the characters threw summers of lust, love, and disappointment, until one day, a stranger comes to town... 34 l 2B Magazine Melancholy and Belgian cinema go hand-in-hand—just look at any of the Dardennes brothers’ films—and Defurne is no exception. “It can be very hard to grow up gay, there’s a lot of homophobia and teen suicide. In a way every film that has a sad message and a sad ending is very true [to reality].” Without giving away any of the film’s scant plot elements, Defurne suggests that things might not work out the way we want them to for little Pim. But, he insists “I’m really not into realism; I’m more into memories and the inner world, the things you see when you close your eyes,” muses Defurne, whose setting for the film transcends time and nationality, but recalls the post-WWII Belgian obsession with all things American, which is to say, with dreams. The “Texas” of the title is not the state, but a village pub where Pim’s self-obsessed mother brings him to hang out with adults. “Pim’s mother dreams of exotic countries and a better life. Everybody in the film has a vague sense of longing for a better life in a better time.” The question he wishes to pose with North Sea, Texas, is Will we be strong enough to follow our dreams? It’s a theme that’s sure to strike a chord with Canadian viewers, especially for those of us who grew up in similar noplaces with similar yearnings. But, he admits, it’s important to show that there is hope. “Belgium is one of the few countries in Europe where gays can legally marry,” says the director, making the very current link between legal rights and psycho-social integration of which gay marriage activists are so fond. Still, Bavo had to cope with the casting “hell” of having 220 boys audition for the lead roles, dealing with the homophobic parents who forbade their sons from attending call-backs to act in a gay film. Happily though, young Jelle’s parents were more than supportive, even allowing him to travel to Montréal for its muchanticipated première this month. Bravo, Bavo! See you at the FFM. For the schedule, check out www.ffm-montreal.org www.northseatexas.com Jacob Tierney’s Good Neighbours out on DVD By Mark Ambrose Harris In populating a bleak Montreal winter with vacant hearts, and mixing the tenuous political climate of a province on the cusp of a referendum with few nods to Hitchcock, Jacob Tierney infuses local flavour into film noir with Good Neighbours. The home-grown director/writer/actor/allaround-gem is perhaps best known for his politico high school comedy The Trotsky. However, fans of Tierney’s earlier film Twist, a sombre Dickensian vision of hustler culture, know the filmmaker is no stranger to the sinister (and homo) elements of the human condition. With Good Neighbours, based on a Chrystine Brouillet novel, Tierney explores the relationships between tenants in an NDG apartment building as a serial killer haunts the pre-referendum West-end borough. The trio, perma-smile Spencer (Scott Speedman), feline inclined Louise (Emily Hampshire) and new tenant Victor (Jay Baruchel), debate over bottles of wine while contending with resident crazy kétaine alcoholic neighbour Valérie (a brilliant performance from Anne-Marie Cadieux). Tierney makes a cameo as Victor’s brother, who visits along with his boyfriend played by Xavier Dolan. As Tierney points out in interviews, the queer couple provides a sort of comedic role reversal. While Tierney and Dolan enact a more traditional relationship model, with Dolan calling out repeatedly asking where his grey socks are, the straight protagonists’ litany of neuroses annuls any chance of meaningful human interactions. What’s fun about Good Neighbours is that Tierney provides a plot “reveal” early on in the film. However, this only heightens the plot’s intrigue, and the suspense becomes driven by a question: exactly what depth of amorality will the characters reach? Though Spencer is reticent to speak about his past and Louise cares more about cats than people, even the adorable Victor has a penchant for bending the truth. But these little quirks are only the tip of the sociopathic iceberg. In combining the macabre and the hilarious alongside Tierney’s A-game directorial skills, Good Neighbours will no doubt become one of dark humour’s finest moments. Good Neighbours by Jacob Tierney is out on DVD July, 2011. ©lostinreview.com Beginners: Homage to Father J. Girard With Beginners, director Mike Mills has made a both personal and universal film about himself and his father Hal (played by Christopher Plummer), who came out of the closet at 75 years old. Part drama and part romantic comedy, the film manages to treat some of life’s most difficult moments with humour, authenticity and insight. After 45 years of marriage, the death of his wife allows Hal to finally come out of the closet and live his homosexuality openly. A veritable rebirth takes place as Hal explores the gay world, gains a sense of pride and rediscovers love, sex and celebration, all in front of his son Oliver (played by Ewan McGregor). For five years, Hal lives life to the fullest with a newfound sense of freedom and adventure, before dying of cancer. Fast forward to few months after his father’s death, and Oliver gets his turn at love when he meets Anna (Mélanie Laurent), a charming French actress passing through Los Angeles. The new relationship plunges him back into his past. Between a childhood marked by a heterosexual, yet absent father and a young adulthood punctuated by a surprisingly emotionally accessible and enthusiastic “newly” gay father, Oliver learns to come to terms with his own cynicism in regards to love. Director Mike Mills wanted to preserve the spontaneity of the actors, from rehearsals to set. “None of my conversations with Christopher and Ewan had the tenor of ‘Here’s how we did things,’ or ‘Here’s how it was,” clarifies Mills. “It was more like, ‘Here are these verbs and actions that my Dad and I experienced. Go live them out now in a way that’s real for you, so it will be real for an audience. Take away all the proper nouns and let it be your thing.” His discreet but effective direction allows the plot, and the characters, to take on a life of their own. The natural feel of Beginners is what sets it apart from a simple romantic comedy or typical drama – an authentic film, through and through. 2B Magazine l 35 Well Rounded Pieces: inkedKenny at Galerie Dentaire By Boísin Murphy Tattoos, hair, sweat, beards, smokin’ and tough-looking men are this photographer’s stock in trade. Based in Toronto, with frequent trips to NYC where he is the art director for martial arts clothing company X-gear, Inked Kenny has carved out a niche as one of the hottest homo imagemakers in Canada. Readers may recall seeing a couple of inkedKenny’s sexy beasts in the February issue of 2Bmag, but now he’s back in full force. For his first solo show in Montréal, Kenny will be including a few lovely ladies for the first time, as well as showing off a slew of boner-inducing dudes that populate his textured, sexually charged works. Although the show’s vernissage is August 13, it technically opens on Kenny’s 44th birthday, three days before. “It’s gonna be a nice well-rounded piece of the direction I’m going and what inspires me to photograph men,” Kenny says, reached by phone on a break from a roof-top photoshoot in Toronto. It’s only his third year shooting for a living, but this camera-toting bundle of testosterone has the eye and the talent of a seasoned pro. In addition to having works in group shows like Toronto’s 10x10 and Montréal’s ARTsida, inkedKenny was recently scouted by Bruno Gmünder for their upcoming BRAVE and Turned on Tattoos anthologies. One of the models he recently shot in Montréal will be featured in the German erotic publisher’s 2012 Hair calendar, which has him just one step away from getting his own book. “It’s a process but I’m getting there. You’re always your worst critic,” Kenny confides. For the vernissage, there’s a chance you will get to see a few of his models in the flesh, something inkedKenny says adds to the feeling of the opening being more of an event. “I know quite a few people in Montreal, like bar tenders, who help me find people. In Montréal it’s a lot easier to find 362B Magazine people, whereas Toronto is more conservative and it’s the hardest place to find models,” he says, echoing a long-standing belief in the difference between the two cities. But it’s odd that models would be hesitant, since inkedKenny is adamant that his works are not as overtly pornographic as one might expect: “I don’t like to shoot guys with rock hard dicks. Better to show some bare ass, butt crack and big bulges. It’s sexier to be more suggestive,” which is part of what’s allowed inkedKenny’s work to easily be shown in bars like Toronto’s Black Eagle, as well as in galleries like Dentaire and the White House Studio Project for Toronto Pride, which featured Montréal artist (and tattooed Adonis), Gô. Opening during Montréal’s Pride week is a smart move, as is keeping the show up till early September so that it can be enjoyed over Fetish Weekend by new legions of Inked Kenny fans. “Everything in the show will be very sexual,” Kenny assures us, promising to “push the envelope with the fetish content,” which is sure to make gallery-goers happy, and perhaps, a little horny. Check out more of inkedKenny at www.inkedkenny.com On display at Galerie Dentaire, Aug 10-30th. 1239 rue Amherst, (514) 523-5535 http://www.galeriedentaire.com/ 2B Magazine l 37 © César Ochoa Lemon Cree: Fitness without the Gym her work which was aired on APTN. But their approach extends to a lot of two-spirited and queer people who don’t feel like they fit in at the gym or on a sports team, and that’s where I started to feel right at home. I joined Ducharme’s Bounce Fit class on a humid July evening, along with three other heat-defying participants for a generous hour and 15-minute class that involved a lot of warm-up bouncing and manipulating the exercise ball, moving on to resist-A-band and abdominal work that really stretched my limits, but with an awesome soundtrack to keep you going. “You might not know what’s in store,” she had warned me, and indeed I did not: the class was way more fun and challenging than I had expected, and in the end, I had a small but significant epiphany. Inspired by the Pilates approach, the class winds down after some core-burning sit-ups and ends with lying flat on your back to breathe and “meditate”. I don’t usually like this part of a yoga or Pilates class, and as if she knew what I was thinking, Theresa came over and said “Now Jordan, you have to clear your mind, don’t focus on anything but your breathing, just your breathing,” like she had caught me starting to think about dinner or work (which I was). As I lay there breathing, with no gym queens or fluorescent lights making me feel out of place, I realized that although looking after yourself doesn’t come naturally to many of us, it doesn’t have to be physically and aesthetically painful either. It can be fun, and make you feel whole at the same time. By Jordan Arseneault Check out the $15 drop-in classes or affordable 20-class cards, valid for 6 months. Their new referral programme is another incentive: bring a I have a secret. I hate going to the gym and I always have. This has made friend and get a free class! me feel like bad gay man and has kept from doing anything other than biking and swimming for most of my life. Then, at 30, I started thinking maybe it’s time to get serious. And no sooner than the thought crossed my mind, a flyer for Lemon Cree fitness studio came across my desk, and a few days later I found myself bouncing on an exercise ball shaking my thang to Tina Turner, and wondering where this class had been all my life. In their light-filled studio above Saloon on Ste-Catherine Est, Lemon Cree’s owner and star instructor Theresa Ducharme teaches a kind of modified aerobics with touches of Pilates, incorporating resist-A-bands and exercise ball or resist-A-ball work, focusing on core strength and full-body fitness. Her handsome basket-ball coach son, Christopher Yee, teaches the Strength and Cardio class, which focuses on breathing and body awareness. This mother-son duo is kind of a wellness powerhouse, whether they’re teaching at their studio, or travelling around to train teachers for in First Nations communities. “We’re helping a nation get back to health and wellness,” Ducharme chimes, adding that in her classes “people know they can exercise, feel safe, and get in shape.” With her wide smile and bright eyes, she has all of the charms of the kind of phys ed teacher you wish you’d had in high school. She and her son, along with her daughter, actress and stylist Jessica Yee, have made it their mission to spread their fun, low-impact approach to fitness to Native communities across Québec, including the Mohawk community in Kahnawake, where Ducharme made a documentary about 38 l 2B Magazine © César Ochoa Studio Lemon Cree, 1331A Sainte Catherine Est, 2nd Floor, Montréal 514-567-9887, lemoncree@gmail.com www.lemoncree.com 2B Magazine l 39 No One Puts Baby in the Corner at SCREAM Dance Academy By Boísin Murphy With her bleach-blond locks, bright red lips, and naturally caffeinated vibe (she had a rooibos tea while I chugged a coffee), the first impression you get of Lynsey Billing is here’s a girl I’d like to know. Young, beautiful, and wide-eyed, Billing has been a choreographer and dance instructor for over 14 years, teaching lyrical jazz, hip-hop fusion and that gayest of dance genres, Broadway Jazz out of studios on the Main and at Studio Bizz on av. Mont-Royal. We caught up with Billing on the threshold of opening her own studio at 6598A StHubert, the home of her Scream Dance Academy. But that’s not to say you’re not gonna WERK. Billing’s academy is referred to as a studio school, with a dizzying array of drop-ins, group classes, and troupes working towards various shows throughout the year. In late summer/early fall, she auditions for her show troupes, including the mixed professional/learner show she puts on in February called STAGE, which is like a talent show of what her most committed students and fellow dancers have been working on throughout the year. at Scream. “There are different dance schools for different people, but ours is for the underdog!” she proclaims. And it sounds like a lot of inspirational stories come out that approach, as was the case for Chris, one of her recent protégés who used the skills he learned at Scream to get in touch with his inner drag queen. “She has really helped me to believe in myself,” Chris writes of his mentor. “No matter what came in my way, Lynsey would always tell me to continue to do what I love. I remember telling her that I wanted to do drag and the first thing she said was not ‘ok’ For a first-time dancer, Billing recommends a or ‘That’s nice’, she said ‘ GO FOR IT!’” hip-hop fusion class, which incorporates a lot of music-video-style upper body movement (unlike As a rallying cry to the inner dancer that many break-dancing which is very floor-based), and of us only let out on a Friday night at the club, the basic jazz fusion, which you’ll want to do for Billing beckons you to “Learn ways to dance and a few months before venturing into the more love it! And don’t let anyone tell you you can’t!” demanding Lyrical Jazz, which is her specialty. With a dozen teachers and classes going on For all the info on classes, auditions, schedules 6 days a week, Scream’s goal is really to offer and rates, check out the website and don’t look something for everyone, particularly for people back (unless it’s part of the choreography!). who have been discouraged by learning dance in the past. If you’ve ever taken a dance class, as a teen or an adult, and been scared away by the teacher or because you weren’t getting it, then Billing has the class for you. Over the summer, she offers 16 different drop-in classes from contemporary ballet to waacking to the neo-salsa-inspired and genderliberating stiletto ladystylin’, all of which are geared to making dance fun and accessible. “We want to make every class special for everyone,” Billing enthuses, “every class is like a party, with lots of laughter and mutual encouragement.” In “When I started out,” Billing confides, “people fact, Scream’s motto is NO JUDGMENT!, which told me you’re too fat or not tall enough. All of sums it up, exclamation point and all. that baggage,” she adds, is not what you’ll hear 40 l 2B Magazine Académie de Danse Scream / Scream Dance Academy NEW LOCATION 6598A St-Hubert Suite 200, 514-523-4648 www.academiededansescream.com 2B Magazine l 41 Changing Suits IN BETWEEN MEN is a Change in The Right Direction By Trent Farber “New York passing gay marriage is just one small step,” says Jennifer Gelfer, director of the hot gay web series, In Between Men. “We aim to take the next giant leap.” At first glance, In Between Men doesn’t appear to be groundbreaking television. It’s often compared to Queer as Folk. But that’s a mistake. The important difference is that the Queer as Folk boys lived in an insular gay world where they ate and breathed the LGBT community. In In Between Men, the guys integrate in the mainstream world – the ‘straight’ world. They’re gay and yes, extremely attractive, but they’re everyday guys living real lives with people from all walks of life. They’re how most gay men truly live - and the normalness portrayed on In between Men may just change the way the mainstream world views the gay community. Dalton is the lead character of In Between Men. Played by Nick Mathews, Dalton is a young man at the top of his game who finds little in common with the superficiality of most guys in the city. He struggles with a lonely love life, wondering if he should settle for Mr. Almost-Right or hold out for someone better. Benjamin Reed, played by the Adonis actor Ben Pamies, is the iconic male figure. He is what gay men want to be and be with. Oversexed and promiscuous but also intelligent and successful, Benjamin is a loving friend and family man whose looks outshine everything except his career ambition. The character of Dane, played by Chase Coleman, is the mirror opposite of Reed. He is naïve in love and his pension for chasing after bad boys gets him in trouble. 42 l 2B Magazine 2B Magazine l 43 “So often, gay men look outside themselves for affirmation of worth,” says Gelfer. “Gay men are not taught to love themselves. They’re told they should be something else, namely ‘straight’. Dane is a product of that. He is the American dream – blonde, handsome, and a doctor – but he doesn’t allow himself to realize what a catch he really is.” The show points to the one thing people, gay and straight, have in common. We all live in a perpetual state of in-between: in between jobs, in between relationships, friends, family, lovers… “Everyone is looking for a place to belong, someone to love and a fulfilling career,” continues Gelfer. “The world needs to see that gay men are more than the stereotypical camp characters media has portrayed them to be.” “They need to see that gay men are no different than everyone else.” The first season of In Between Men consists of six ten-minute shows. Watch them now at www.inbetweenmen.com. 442B Magazine 2B Magazine l 45 Traveling and Other Drugs: Daniel Baylis in Marrakesh Chosen by The Advocate as one of the gay world’s “Top 40 Under 40” for his globe-trotting blog The Conversationalist, Montrealer Daniel Baylis has been traveling the world as part of a project to discover offthe-beaten-path places, a socially engaged wayfarer bartering his skills for food and accommodation, reporting back with witty and often spiritual observations. From Marrakesh— a traditional homo hide-away for the likes of Yves Saint-Laurent and certain British authors— Daniel describes the uneasy dreamy quality of a place largely left out of the Arab Spring. www.danielbaylis.ca I’m standing in the middle of plaza Jemaa El-Fna. It’s a form of ordered chaos, with snake charmers to my left, beggars approaching me on my right and a constant flow of motor-scooters and donkeys whizzing behind me. Every step must be taken with awareness. If I point my camera in the wrong direction, a hoard of men will approach me, demanding money. I try to keep a low profile, but my tall-white-maleness makes any attempts at flying below the radar virtually impossible. A handsome man walks past me. I lock eyes with him, not intentionally cruising, but subtly is not always my strong point. He has a beautiful Arabic complexion, and hazel eyes that arouse me. He sees me seeing him, and pauses. I look away nonchalantly. He approaches, throws his chin forward and asks/interrogates, “Hashish?” I’ve discovered rather quickly that, with my western-ness and alone-ness, I flawlessly match the demographic profile of “Dudes-wanting-drugs.” But I don’t want hashish. Or any other drug. Or even sex for that matter. 46 l 2B Magazine As I stand here, in the cultural heart of Morocco, I’m not really sure what I want. I’ve been on the road, backpacking, for six months. It’s been stimulating and lonely and enlightening and exhausting. Sex has not been a priority during my travels. Or so I tell myself. And it’s not. That doesn’t necessarily mean that I am without desire, but my head is such a mess of geo-spatial-cultural-confusion that I’m not sure what I want anymore. This includes an uncertainty in determining what I desire sexually. The hypnotic-eyed drug-dealer realizes that I am useless to him, and moves on. In my belly, the evening’s tajine churns. After hearing regurgitation horror stories of travelers eating at the food stalls, I wonder if tonight will be my date with the toilet. If it happens, it won’t be the first time that I’ve vomited in a foreign country, alone. My stomach has an ability to clearly tell me what it wants and doesn’t want. I wish my heart would take notes. I start walking towards a group of men hovering around a storyteller. I have the impression that this place, Jemaa El-Fna, was once deeply mystical, but due to globalization and tourism and mobile phones and all the other offerings of this contemporary age, it’s now a fragment of what it once was. I suppose that some things are lost, some things are gained. The storyteller circles are predominantly male spaces. In tight circles, the Moroccan men watch with light flickering in their eyes. I’m captivated by the intense attention they give to the storyteller. He speaks in animated Arabic, and I understand nothing. But for me it’s enough to simply watch the faces of the spectators. The men drape arms around each other. It’s intimate, but not specifically sexual. There is a loyalty between friends that is expressed with the holding of hands and kisses on the cheek. The explicit male intimacy is not to be confused with homosexuality, I am told. I am also told that Morocco is changing. The entire Arab world is starting to detonate towards democracy. The King of Morocco is supposedly set to relinquish his stronghold on the nation, thus permitting a shift towards a more egalitarian state. I wonder what this means for the queers of the country. I wonder where are the queers of the country? In the west we’ve made convenient labels for these people: lesbians, gays, bisexuals, transfolk. It helps people understand tendencies that went label-less and generally unacknowledged for most of history. What it means to be ‘gay’ in the west is an entirely nouveau construct. And that construct doesn’t apply here in Jemaa El-Fna, or in most parts of the Arab world. Equity Point (http://www.equity-point.com/en)- A fusion between chic boutique hotel and affordable backpacker’s hostel, Equity Point is in the heart of the medina and features a swimming pool. Plus they host a traditional Moroccan dinner once a week. I take a final gaze at the men in the storyteller’s circle. They seem impenetrable, but I know they are not. Hidden under their jeballas and faux designer jeans are private parts, and private stories of a sexual world that is foreign to me. And it’s a world where a visitor’s visa is difficult, if not impossible, to attain. And I don’t have enough energy to attempt to enter. It’s not a priority. Or so I tell myself. Eating: And so I turn my back and continue walking. I have no specific destination in mind. And maybe, if I keep walking, I’ll come across something that I unambiguously desire. Perhaps I will be struck with a clarity of lust and intention and accessibility. Sleeping: Getting there: ONCF (http://www.oncf.ma/) - Morocco has a comprehensive system of trains, and to get from Casablanca to Marrakech, the train is the best option. If you’re feeling like a princess, there’s a first-class option. Plaza Jemaa El-Fna - The heart of the medina comes alive each night with food stands offering everything from traditional tanjine and couscous dishes. If you’re feeling adventurous, try the sheep brains. If you need some western comforts (read: alcohol), Café Arabe (http://www.cafearabe.com/) is one of the few places in the medina that offers a cold beer or a cocktail. Until then, I will wonder. 2B Magazine l 47 Museum of Experience: Christopher Paul Schuller on Berlin’s Schwules Museum The Schwules Museum, (Gay Peoples’ Museum) in Berlin’s Kreuzberg district houses a permanent collection dedicated to homo history and culture that until recently was unrivaled the world over (thank you, San Francisco). An arrestingly broad and detailed archive of photographs, books, letters, and publications documents the gay history of Germany from the Middle Ages to the present day. Museum connoisseurs may find the exhibits wordy and cramped; to follow them from the barbaric persecutions of the feudal era through the underground scenes of Berlin at the dawn of modernity back through persecution again into the relative enlightenment of the turn of this century is in some ways to experience the claustrophobia that even now characterizes the lives of people stigmatized as “other”. The Schwules Museum’s archives record a hidden history: Karl von Zastow’s insistence in 1869 that he belonged to a “third gender,” neither man nor woman; Magnus Hirschfeld’s Institute for Sexual Science in 1920s Berlin; gay Holocaust victims; and less well-known local narratives. There are century-old porn photos (cocks, by all available evidence, looked weird in 1890), breakfast invitations from the Prince of Prussia, and gowns from the drag queens of sequined antiquity. Where the museum shines is in the depiction of homosexuality in its societal context. The story of gay rights in Germany is a sad one of two steps forward, one step back: the Enlightenment overshadowed by Prussian pathologizing; Isherwood’s Berlin torn apart by the Holocaust; the liberating impulses of the 1960s reined in by the scourge of AIDS. Far from a schoolbook narrative of slouching toward equality, the journey through this museum is a reminder of the enduring strength of fear and hatred and that liberalism, for all its fundamental appeal, is fragile and fleeting. Schwules Museum, Mehringdamm 61, www.schwulesmuseum. de (Opening hours are very Berlin: Wed-Fri. 2-6pm, Sat. 2-7pm, entrance 5€) Christopher Schuller is an arrestingly attractive and intelligent homosexual academic living and teaching in Berlin. 482B Magazine 2B Magazine l 49 party every Thursday” was the place to be was the trio of branché Montrealers who showed up just in time for the show, and stayed dancing until 6am (did we mention there is no last call in Berlin?). Bassy: expensive drinks/cover (boo), great music/show/crowd (yay). Berlin: Poor but Sexy (and rich in gayness) By Boísin Murphy Berlin ist arm, aber sexy, “Berlin is poor, but sexy” or so declared the reunited city’s openly gay mayor Klaus Wowereit in 2004 when interviewed on the city’s tremendous reliance on federal funding and staggering unemployment rate. Even now, 22 years after reunification, Berlin is one of the least prosperous parts of Germany, but relishes in state supported infrastructure and culture that attracts so-called “creatives” from the world over. As gay culture is concerned, Berlin has something for every flavour and stripe, from anti-capitalist queers squatting in caravans, to the trust-funded hipsters glutting the bars of Kreutzberg and Prenzlauer Berg, two respectively hip and less hip neighbourhoods. Indeed, Berlin is a city obsessed with its own hip-ness, and if you can get over that, you will have a very, very sexy time. For travelers more familiar with European capitals like Paris and Rome, you will be struck by two things when you visit Berlin: so much of it is new or reconstructed; and there are gays everywhere. Berlin is one of the rare cities in the world where the gays have so thoroughly infiltrated all levels of culture and society that they no longer see the need to restrict themselves to a Village. Indeed, the very idea of restricting goes against the zeitgeist of this impossibly vibrant and culturally self-aware metropolis: the rem50 l 2B Magazine nants of the demolished wall, both psychological and physical, are everywhere. Almost as soon as it fell, gays (and their brethren artists and social radicals), spread across the city in various pockets defined by cheap rent (or no rent, as was the case for the squatters) and now, there’s no turning back. Staying at the Gay Hostel in Schöneberg was a geil way to get a feel for Berlin’s historic gay village, near the Nollendorfplatz U-Bahn. Resembling in many ways gay villages in North America, the strip of businesses along Motzstraße includes the popular Hafen bar where you can mingle with regulars and other tourists, and the infamous Tom’s Bar, where what goes down in the dark-room stays in the dark-room. Tom’s Hotel, a well-known part of the strip, is the wellto-do daddy of the nifty, tangerine-themed Gay Hostel, which you access off a side street. With only three rooms— spacious as they may be with lockers, high ceilings, and a common room— the Gay Hostel was a relaxing lift-off point to get spiffed up, away from the prying eyes of omnipresent hipsters. And for only 22 € a night in the heart of a European capital, it’s a steal. The concierge was cute too, a Greek-born filmmaker who looked like he would have helped me with more than just directions. The night I was there, my room-mates were an excessively attractive Italian, a Costa Rican boy who spoke 4 languages, and a British couple who were there for the weekend to party. As it so happened, we were all on our way to the same club that night. Bassy, the eclectic and Katacombes-like venue in gentrified Prenzlauer Berg is home to a weekly Thursday performance and club night called Chantal’s House of Shame, which was unanimously chosen by the tourists and insiders alike as the place to be on a Thursday (before which the young gays and trendy-bears might be spotted pre-drinking at Kreutzberg’s green-lit watering hole the Möbel-Olfe). To my utter shock, the cover at Bassey was a whopping 10€ (about $14), which might sound normal for Paris, but was obscenely pricey for Berlin, where cover usually hovered at 3-6€, if there was any at all. But the place delivered, with a British electro vamp (think Katy Perry with a Pet Shop Boys beat) singing live with sexy projections of her new video, backed up by middle-aged guys on lap-tops. Chantal herself was a heavy-drinking, bleach-blonde grande dame whose German I couldn’t understand any better than my Berlin-born fag-hag for the night, Masha. Further proof that this “very gay not pervy I was impressed that I had managed to stay awake that long after really making the most of my day. Starting with the requisite coffee and croissant at Goldhahn and Samson on Helmholtzplatz, I had ventured over to see the land art exhibit at the sprawling Hamburger Bahnhof, a train station which has been converted into one of the world’s foremost contemporary art museums. While the installations were awesome in their own way, the magnificent collection of Keith Haring works in the permanent collection really made my gay day, along with a staggering suuply of Warhols, Rauschenbergs, Naumans, Kiefers and photos by Canadian art-star Jeff Wall. Then for complete contrast, my Québécoise exile friend and I hopped the S-Bahn all the way down to Treptower Park to visit the mythical location of the alt-queer film festival known as Entzaubert. Based in a Wagenplatz, or caravan squat in a bush-shrouded stretch of green space on the outskirts of working class Neuköln, the renegade queers of the Schwartzerkanal host a mighty DIY film festival reminiscent of Radical Queer Semaine or Pervers/cité, with an extensive Canadian programme that featured Montréal’s own Jessica MacCormack, whose collaborations with musician Rae Spoon were part of the short film programme. After a day of wandering the canals of Kreutzberg with an old high school friend, I hopped the U-Bahn and returned to Prenzlauer Berg, ready to accept my fate that I had already partied enough, and thought I would just get some rest to make the most of my last day. But to my surprize, my NGO-consultant friend got her second wind, and before I could say “Ja wol!” we were meeting up at the city’s gayest all-night all-day club: the converted power plant that is the Berghain. Famous throughout the homo universe for its Friday night LAB.oratory all-male sex party, from Saturday at midnight to Monday morning the Berghain is a temple of house and electro dance-mania with a crowd of beautiful, hardcore, dilettante and unflappable hotties, hand- picked by Markus, the dictatorial doorman who chooses who goes in and who doesn’t with a nod or shake of his slicked-back head. Tips for not getting turned away include not looking preppy, and not speaking English too loudly (it helps to go with a native speaker or tag along with one). And the reward is worth the precarious hour-plus line-up: a gigantic dance floor, with adjoining rooms for bars on 3 floors, cushioned lounging “cubes”, and an espresso/ice-cream bar (yay!), as well as a second floor dance club called Panorama Bar, where opening the shutters to let in daylight is used to crowd-rousing effect. Before the outdoor garden opens at 10am, make sure to check out the shadowy back-room on the main dance floor, where the cutest, sexiest onesyou’d-least-expect hound around for sticky play. Needless to say, it made up for missing out on a trip to Tom’s. My last day there amounted to biking around and having one last hang-out at the alt-queer café SilverFuture (Weserstraße 206), following by a final tryst at the absurdly tasteless and purely enjoyable Ficken 3000 (Urbanstraße 70, U-Bahn Hermannplatz), where the Pork nights involve dancey beats, louche regulars, anglo twinks wearing pig snouts, and an authentic downstairs back-room where you can have one last makeout before you’re get back to reality and say auf wiedersehen, mein schwulenfruenden! (See p. 48 for more on Berlin’s gay history museum and homoerotic publishing house Bruno Gmünder.) Gay Hostel: Motzstrasse 28, 10777 Berlin, +49 30 21 00 57 09. www.gay-hostel.de / www.hostelbookers.com Chantal’s House of Shame @ Bassy Club, Schönhauser Allee 176A, U-Bahn Senefelderplatz Hamburger Bahnhof: Invalidenstraße 50-51, S-Bahn Hauptbanhof, www.hamburgerbahnhof.de Tom’s Bar: Motzstraße 19 +49 (0)30-2134570; U-Bahn: Nollendorfplatz www.tomsbar.de Möbel-Olfe: Reichenberger Str. 177 (entrance via Dresdener Straße), U-Bahn: Kottbusser Tor. www.moebel-olfe.de Berghain: Am Wriezener Bahnhof, S-Bahn: Ostbahnhof, www.berghain.de + www.lab-oratory.de/dates 2B 2BMagazine Magazinel 51 Out with 2B ©Zoe Casino ©Divers/cité photos: Sean MacKenzie ©Zoe Casino ©Divers/cité photos: Sean MacKenzie Divers/cité had another big, hot crowded year with throngs of tourists and Montrealers coming out for the New Society and Sunset Parties.Tristan (top) and James (above) were just a couple of smiling cuties thatpopulated July’s monthly POMPe party at Espace des arts. ©Zoe Casino Don’t Hurt him: Martin Douvil comes out of hibernation Boísin Murphy When you look at Martin Douvil’s Boy with Black Shoes, the first thing that strikes you is the immediate sexual charge of seeing a young man’s taut body squatting in nothing but sneakers and a baseball cap. The figure looks away in a three-quarter turn, which as any painter knows is the most challenging pose. The carefully shaded buttocks and right knee further pronounce a claim to the third dimension, while the hands hang limply, painted with an almost perfect attention to detail. This 2010 work is one of the canvases being shown at his upcoming duo exhibit RENCONTRE at contemporary art space Ka Vie Art on rue Beaudry (Aug 5-21). Like many of the oil paintings in this exhibit, the work is a small-scale (10x12”) study, the result of an almost 4-year “hibernation” to explore and fine-tune his technique. (In case you were curious, Douvil harness, I still want the image to be painterly,” he specifies. But that’s not used himself as the model for Boy with Black Shoes). This will be the sexy to say he will hold back from packing a punch: “One of my goals is to find a young painter’s first show since 2007, by invitation from Ka Vie Art. way to depict the intimacy of two men in a fisting scene, without it appearing clichéd or obvious,” he explains. And without copying famous photos “I’m accumulating ideas,” explains the bearded and smiling Douvil at by Robert Mapplethorpe. Indeed, Douvil has given himself the added chalCafé Kg. “I’ve been more interested in doing studies in order to incorpo- lenge of only working from live models, or from photographs he has staged rate them into larger, more robust future works,” he adds. The studies of himself, in order to maintain the authenticity of the final piece. hands, an ear, or feet will make up part of the show’s smaller scale works that represent a concentrated return to the craft of painting and an excelThe next step after this show will be to branch out into larger works with lent opportunity for buyers to get their hands on Douvil’s work while they more elaborate subjects. He also hopes to paint more from live models in can still afford them. (Don’t) Hurt Me, this month’s cover image, and Dans studio, which is something that requires the kind of resources he has not La Douche (2006) are examples of larger-scale works that are more in line had over the past few years. “It was a long time since I’d done a show. It’s with the trend of contemporary oil painting, like that of Canadian art-star really like breaking the ice on the last years of hibernation,” says the painter, Attila Lukacs. thoughtful but somewhat giddy at the prospect. Martin Douvil will be the in attendance at the vernissage for RENCONTRE on Friday, August 12, Like Lukacs—whose Polaroids was featured in 2Bmag’s May edition— from 3-9pm, along with mixed media and tattoo artist Yannick Bertrand. Douvil’s primary preoccupation is with the male form, and with finding KA VIE ART, 1410 de la rue Beaudry, 514.657.3535 nuanced ways to depict male nudes without it looking too pornographic. www.kavieart.com “I don’t want my work to look like a porn screen-shot. If I put a figure in a 542B Magazine 2B Magazine l 55 © Dany Lapierre © Francois Schnell Sex in Public: The Thrill of Risky Business By Mathieu Lévesque Not so long ago, when gay bars and saunas were scarce and the internet had not yet come to dominate human communication, many gays partook in public sex, often out of lack of other options. Parks were one of the most common places for gays to find sex. Today, despite all these new ways for gays to meet up, public sex is growing in popularity and not just for gays. Those who partake in it today do it by choice and for the thrill of it. 2B takes a closer look at the phenomenon. Whether it’s in the public washrooms of a university, a movie theatre, or a shopping mall, in a parking lot, or outdoors in a park, any rarely-frequented spot is an ideal place for public sex. Couples and singles alike are becoming more and more turned on by this 56 l 2B Magazine practice, perhaps due to its thrilling mix of and identifying what goes on there. Very popular with gays, the site squirt.org is a perfect example, voyeurism and exhibitionism. with a section solely devoted to public cruising From the screen to spots for thrill-seekers. the cruising spot Evidently, many single gay men and couples partake in public sex. According to many connoisseurs of the practice, the excitement comes from the risk of getting caught or from the fact that a voyeur might be peeking on the action. Defined by their visitors, these spots can be quite varied: whether it’s a public washroom in a university, a video store or a gym, the quiet corner of a park, train tracks to the east of Montréal, or a theatre, it’s surprising to see the number of places already established in the city. More than a The phenomenon is far from new in the gay hundred cruising spots are already established in community, but what is different now is there Montréal, and the number continues to rise. are so many other ways for gay men to meet other gay men for sex. Whereas before word of Most of these places have been photographed mouth was the primary means of finding out in order to allow new members to easily identify about popular public sex spots, there are now them. Visitors can comment on the accessibility Internet sites devoted to mapping cruising spots of the site, its location and say what they liked 2B Magazine l 57 © GalaDreamCreation.com © Dany Lapierre and disliked about it. Regulars can indicate the The phenomenon is now popular in the U.S. most frequented times and can rate the spot on a and Canada, in Germany and France and conscale of one to five. tinues to grow. In Montreal, there are only two spots that are known for dogging: the parking lot Dogging at Lac aux Castors on the mountain and in the The public sex phenomenon has taken a slightly Botanical Gardens in Parc Maisonneuve. different twist for heteros and even has its own terminology: dogging. Dogging, which is mostly Discretion is Key Evidently, sex in public and exhibitionism are practiced by couples, consists of having sex in a public place where others can view you. For ex- illegal practices in Québec. It is therefore advisample, a couple will have sex in their car, leaving able to be discrete because getting caught could the windows or the doors open to allow voyeurs lead to a fine, or even being arrested, which to watch or even to allow for a third participant could be humiliating. And out of respect, it is to join in. Many couples practice dogging to spice preferable to avoid places where there could be up their sex lives, or to reignite the spark in their children for example. relationship. Also, this type of practice could also be very A happy mix of exhibitionism, voyeurism and risky for the transmission of STIs. One has to be swinging, dogging is a flat-out phenomenon in prudent and protect oneself. And evidently, in Great Britain, where it has grown rapidly in part case of outdoor sex, one has to be prepared for thanks to the internet. The term dogging comes some inconveniences such as mosquito bites or from the fact that certain men would claim that sand getting into uncomfortable places. they were going out to walk their dog when they were really going out for some action. 58 l 2B Magazine © Matin Douvil, collection Etremag Succumb. RECOMMENDED BY French baked bread / Sandwiches / French patisseries / Gelato / Pizzas PA I L L A R D C A F É - B O U L A N G E R I E 10 9 7, r u e S a i n t - J e a n , Vi e u x - Q u é b e c , 4 1 8 6 9 2 . 1 2 2 1 2B Magazine l 59 Get Outta Town! Le Norkik, Nautre Spa By 2B Staff Everybody knows how short the summer season can be, and hot it can get in the city. We love to talk about the city’s big attractions, and be where the people are, but there’s nothing like a weekend or mid-week get-away to really unwind. From country inns and adventure resorts, to day-spas and charming hotels, Québec’s regions offer a wealth of choices for escaping the throngs and humidity of the city. And it’s not just for lovers of peace and quiet either. For a higher adrenaline get-away, horseback riding at Ranch 4 Saisons and zip-lining through the trees at Au Coeur de mon Verger are just the thing to get you going. Québec’s spas have become one the country’s main attractions, so we’ve helped you choose two that are the height of taste and ambiance: Le Nordik, in the Gatineau Region, and Le Montagnais, in the Eastern Townships, both perfect for day-trips outside of Ottawa or Montréal. If you’re taking a trip to Québec City on your way to Charlevoix, or for a weekend trip in the Capital, you’ll be charmed by the Auberge Place d’Armes. Although mostly in the countryside, all of these establishments are proudly featured in the Guide gai du Québec 2011, an insider’s guide to gay destinations from Gatineau to Gaspé, so you know you can bring your boyfriend or girlfriend and get only the best service. Don’t let the summer pass you by without enjoying a nature get-away in one of these superb locations! AUBERGE 3 CANARDS For over 50 years, the Auberge des 3 Canards has garnered repeated praise, boasting a 4-star rating for both its food and accommodation. This resort inn is set in a unique natural environment, classified by UNESCO as a World Biosphere Reserve, and offering stunning views of the St-Laurence seaway and the Charlevoix landscape. With their famous hospitality and fine dining, there is no better place to stay to appreciate the natural beauty of one of the most breathtaking regions of Québec. Auberge des 3 canards 115, Côte Bellevue La Malbaie ( Pointe-au-Pic ), Qc G5A 1Y2 Tel. 418-665-3761 Toll free 1-800-461-3761 www.auberge3canards.com 60 GÎTE DU CHAMPAYEUR : This charming little inn is located in Warwick, Québec’s national fine cheese capital, just a few kilometres from Victoriaville, in Central Québec. Whether you are just passing through, planning a cycling adventure around some of the many bike trails in the region, golfing, skiing, or visiting some of the artisanal cheese-maker to get a taste of Québec’s delicious cheeses, this inn is a delightful place to stay. Four rooms with private bath, and a lovely garden with hot tub (open year round) await you. Le Gîte du Champayeur 5, rue de l’Hôtel de Ville, Warwick, Québec 819 358-9101 info@champayeur.qc.ca www.champayeur.qc.ca/ SPA LE MONTAGNAIS Located at nearly 650 metres above sealevel, at the foot of Mont Métantic in Val-Racine, this Nordic spa has everything you need for a day of rest and relaxation. Complete with hot and cold spas, sauna and steam-room, Spa Le Montagnais also offers massage therapy as well as a wide range of spa treatments. The perfect place to escape the hustle and bustle of the city while enjoying the picturesque Eastern Townships. Spa Le Montagnais 215, chemin de la Forêt enchantée Val-Racine (Québec) G0Y 1E0 email : info@spalemontagnais.com Tél. : 819-657-4777 ou sans frais 1-877-703-4777 Fax. : 819-657-1065 www.spalemontagnais.com/ AU CŒUR DE MON VERGER SPA Montagnais There is no better way to enjoy the natural beauty of the Montérégie by paying a visit to Au Cœur de Mon Verger. Step, climb and zip line your way through their Treego course for a fantastic and fun journey through the boreal forest from above. If you come in the fall, stay to pick your own apples, pears, plums and strawberries from their beautiful orchards. It’s just minutes from Park Safari in Hemmingford, Arnold paintball, several camping sites and local wineries. Au Coeur de Mon verger 551, chemin Covey Hill Havelock, Québec J0S 2C0 (450) 247-2785 aucoeurdemonverger.vpweb.ca/ DOMAINE MONTÉ-BELLO Surrounded by nature and located in the picturesque village of Montebello, the Domain Monté-Bello invites you to discover their comfortable, warm and classic bedrooms, condo apartments, suites and magnificent cottage by the river in the Gatineau region. With over 110 activities just a stone`s throw away, including river cruises, helicopter tours of the Montebello region, white water rafting, paintball, numerous golf courses, illusionist and magician The Enchanteur, and Montbello’s historic sites such as Le Manoir Papineau, The Domain Montebello is the perfect place to relax after a day of adventure. Hôtel Domaine Monté-Bello 696, Notre-Dame Montebello, Québec, J0V 1L0 Telephone: (877) 420-5096 toll free (819) 423-5096 Email: info@domainemontebello.com www.domainemontebello.com/ LE NORDIK – Nature Spa Le Nordik – Nature Spa is a relaxation retreat located in Old Chelsea, a picturesque and friendly town bordering Gatineau Park. With its unique style, the Spa is dedicated to the practice of relaxation techniques from the Scandinavian countries, such as Nordic baths involving hot and cold hydrotherapy. The site’s major asset – one you can’t find in any urban spas – is its magnificent location and natural scenery in a wooded haven with a natural rock face. In every corner of the site, whether it is near the fireplace, in the Finnish sauna built entirely of cedar, or under the outdoor waterfall, guests are always surrounded with the most primitive natural elements: wood, stone, water and fire. passionately serves dishes made from local products. Auberge Place d’Armes 24, rue Sainte-Anne, Vieux Québec Québec, Canada, G1R 3X3 Téléphone : 418 694-9485 Sans frais/Toll Free : 1 866 333-9485 www.aubergeplacedarmes.com/ Le Nordik – Nature spa 16, chemin Nordik Old Chelsea, Québec J9B 2P7 Telephone: 819 827-1111 Toll free: 1 866 575-3700 www.lenordik.com AUBERGE PLACE D’ARMES Located on the corner of Old Québec City’s only two pedestrian streets, the Inn links two historical buildings that once belonged to a 19th premier of Québec and the founder of the Holt Renfrew stores respectively. With the Holy Trinity and Notre-Dame cathedrals next door, Château Frontenac and its fabulous promenade in plain sight, as well as countless boutiques and great restaurants nearby, this warm and inviting inn is the perfect place to discover the charm of Old Québec City. The Inn’s restaurant, Pain Béni will seduce you with delights from Chef Simon Côté-Tremblay who Arbre en arbre, au coeur de mon Verger 61 HOT SPOTS 2B August 2011 / PRIDE edition Sun. Aug. 21 Piknic Electronik at Place de l’Homme, Parc Jean-Drapeau. While PE is probably already on your calendar, this dog-days-of-summer edition will feature sexy sounds by Mtl’s own Black Tiger Sex Machine and LA’s Kraddy. 3-9pm, $12 at the door. www.piknicelectronik.com Sat. Aug. 13 BIG FREEDIA @ Club Soda. Back for a 2nd time this summer, with DJ sets by Lynn T. from Lezzies on X, MHMHMH + MINI, this insane lineup is a lesbionic tribute to the reigning Bounce diva from New Orleans. Presale $18, $23.25 at the door. 10pm @ Club Soda 1225 St-Laurent, with a sweaty afterparty at Espace des arts, 9 Ste-Catherine Est. www.clubsoda.ca / www.bigfreedia.com Aug. 14 Montréal Pride Parade! Starting on the corner of Guy at 1pm, moving east on René-Lévesque through downtown, ending on Sanguinet at the Place Émilie-Gamelin (Berri) where the MEGA T-DANCE and closing show goes down. www.fiertemontrealpride.com Aug 18-28 North Sea, Texas at the World Film Festival. A sweet and realistically told story of Pim, who “dreams of a better life, imagining princesses and beauty queens. But when Pim turns 16 he dreams of Gino, the boy next door, instead.” Heart-breaking without too much coming-of-age sentimentality, Noordzee, Texas is sure to be the queer favourite at this year’s FFM. www.northseatexas.com / www.ffm-montreal.org Sat. Aug. 20 Aug. 19-21 Ottawa Wolves Present: If Looks Can Kill… They Will! Jocks and Knee High Socks @ Café Cleopatra Burlesque, grotesque, and eminently queer, those masters of the inappropriate and glittery ways of underground smut known as Glam Gam Productions are back for 3 nights of murder and mayhem at 1230 St-Laurent (Café Cléopâtre), $13 with non-perishable food donation. www.glamgam.com If you know the rugby bears who make up the Ottawa Wolves team and produce their sexy (and silly) calendar with photos by Dan Ziemkiewicz, you will know that this party is a furry-boy MUST. Advance tickets 8$, at Bode Spa + Stroked Ego, 10$ @ the door. Babylon Nightclub (317 Bank Street), Doors 10pm www.ottawawolves.ca ©Erick Contreras Wed. Aug. 24 2Bmag and new sister mag Entre Elles launch their August editions for Capital Pride at Venus Envy! The launch will celebrate the new revamped Entre Elles and give Pridegoers a chance to see what the mags are made of. Wednesday, August 24, 8-10pm Featuring photo exhibit by Rah Illa and Nathan Hoo 320 Lisgar St, Ottawa. www.venusenvy.ca Sun Aug. 28 Capital Pride Parade! See page 24. 63 l 2B Magazine 62 l 2B Magazine 2B Magazine l 63 Q-6061 Montréal H, 35, 145 lb, 8’’ non circoncis. Beau jeune homme. Gym 3 fois / semaine. Cherche bouche chaude & gorge profonde. C-6063 Cuba Chico sincero, honesto, me gusta la música romántica, los animales, la playa y paser. Busco mi media naranja, si eres mayor que yo mejor. Tengo 26 años Adrián Castellanos L-6060 London H, 33, 5’ 9’’, handsome black guy living in England. Good built body, caring, honest, seek mature Canadian man for friendship and relationship. C-6064 Cuba M, 23, 1,73 m, 85 kg, Cuban. Honest, not complicated, a true friend, romantic, passionate, sexy, 100% masc. I am Yoandy, naturally tanned skin, brown eyes, athtletic and brawny body. I love nature and healthy entertainments. I’m not looking for a perfect physical but a spiritual person. I also seek friendships. 6065 U.S.A M, 49, 5’9’’, 170 lbs, blue eye / blondish hair. Frequent visitor to Montréal. Handsome nature lover, ISO masc. alpha top. Arabs, Turks or hirsute any race, for friendship, poss. +. Photo replies only. 6066 Cuba H, 47, Cubain noir. Cherche des correspondants. J’aime le cinéma, la danse, le yoga, la musique et les langues. Écrire en français, espagnol, anglais, italien, allemand. 6067 Canada H, 46, 5’8’’, masc., ch. court, beau cul, bien équipé, bronzé, sexy, rasé. Mon nom est Jean, cherche H. 30-50 sex, amitié bienvenue. C-6073 Pelo oscuro, piel canela, ojos cafes, Chico de mente abierta, sincero, sencillo y romantico.30 y.o., Espero correspondencia de chicos de entre 30-50, serios, afines a mis caracteristicas para ampliar mi cir6068 Cuba M, 23, Cuban. I study in culo de amigos. university. I have open mind. Please send me a letter. 6074 N.B. Canada Homme début 50e, désire faire la connaissance d’un C-6069 M, 25, 1,73 m, 62 kg, Cuban, bel homme costaud, sportif, poids good looking, dark haired, bright eyes. proportionnel, poilu de préférence, Honest, sincere, I need a relationship âgé entre 18 et 35 ans, non fumeur si 30 to 75. I am versatile. Kisses, Roldy possible. Aimant la nature. But amiC-6070 M, 38, 1,86 m, 86 kg I’m ci- tié et possibilité de relation plus provil enginer. I want to find a serious fonde. Bienvenus aux haltérophiles. couple and that he loves me. I speak 6075 Ghana Sexy, handsome black, Russian, French and English. guy 30, looking for serious man to Q- 6071 Montréal H, 47, 5’12’’, 125 meet soon. lb, 6.5’’ circoncis, look jeune, non 6076 A good-looking, honest, inpoilu. Rocker non sadomaso tendre, telligent, manly Ukrainian boy, 24 affectueux, pas efféminé, instruit, y.o., H. 177 cm, 74 kg, dark-blond fumeur, pas de drogue, ni d’alcool. hair, green eyes, with university eduCherche H. 35-65 sérieux pour re- cation, good health, nice body and lation durable, simple, affectueux, good character. I do not smoke and franc, sens l’humour. Toutes ethnies do not drink alcohol. Seeks my spebienvenues. Obèse, violent, buveur, cial man, real best friend for corresdrogué s’abstenir. pondence, good meetings, holidays G-6072 Ghana M, 28, 5’8’’, 85 kg, together, friendship, romance, love dark skin, short hair, hot, warm and and for happy long relationship. passionate guy, athletic built and 6077 46 ans, 5’6’’, 142 Lbs, 8’’ NonTOP. I’m open minded, intelligent, circoncis, séro+, cherche mec 40-55 great sence of humor. Looking for ans, pas bedonnant, enjoué, cochon, warm and loving long term rela- comme moi : pisse, odeurs naturelles tionship. Interested in music, sports, (cul, aiselles, couilles, sueur), tendre et photographing, cooking, gardering versatile. Black+ Têl XXX bien venus ! and traveling. 6078 40 y/o, 1.80cm, 82 kg, mulato. Cantante profesional, deseo contactar amigos en Canada y el mundo para correspondencia en mi club del amor y la amistad. 6079 Ghana I’m Robert, sexy romantic Black guy looking for any man to be my lover and to treat him cordly, gay friends welcome too. Any age is welcome plus meeting. 6080 Cuba 44 años, bisexual con preferencia por hombres, trigueno, ojos cafés, 1.70m, 65 kg, sagitario. Me gusta la playa, el cine, las discotecas. Busco amistad o relación estable con hombre bisexual o gay completo (activo/pasivo) entre 19 y 50 años. 6081 Cuba 26 y/o, White hair, Black eyes, clear skin. Gay looking for a friend. I need love and peace. I like music, cycling and chocolate. I’m simple and complete. 6082 Rétraité soixantaine, barbu, poilu, chevveux grisonnants, Allure véome et intello. Doux, respecteux, discret, passionné. Cherche homme mur, libre le jour en semaine, pour donner libre tours à un échange de fantasmes…caresser tes rondeurs et lécher tes pieds me conduiront au 7e ciel. 6083 Saguenay 2H, 48 & 52, 165 & 145 lb, 6’ & 5’8 cherchent amis et couples semblables pour profiter des plaisirs à la campagne. Aimons nature, musique, art, livres, voyages. 2B Magazine l 65 66 l 2B Magazine 2B Magazine l 67 68 l 2B Magazine