There is a silver lining to this dark and twisted plot
development, though: this is one lesbian TV storyline
that I'm fairly certain won't end with the two women deciding
to have a baby.
BECAUSE
EVERY GOOD MURDER MYSTERY NEEDS A LESBIAN BULGARIAN CHORUS
LINE
The
Black Dahlia, opening nationwide this weekend,
is not a lesbian movie whatsoever, but it does feature
bisexual characters played by Mia Kirshner and Hilary
Swank, a performance by k.d.
lang, and police staking out lesbian bars. Director
Brian de Palma talked about this in a recent interview:
"I said, ‘Why not have a Lesbian chorus line
of these drop-dead beautiful girls making out with each
other?’ So I had this choreographer that worked
for me, a French choreographer that worked with me on
Femme
Fatale and she actually had these Bulgarian dancers
and a couple of ringers from Paris." Ah yes, I had
a ringer from Paris once. Good times, good times.
MADE
IN CHINA
China's
first out lesbian singer has released the country's first
lesbian music video. 28-year-old Qiao Qiao's song "Ai
Bu Fen" ("Love Does Not Discriminate")
is the first openly lesbian song in the People's Republic
of China.
The
lyrics, which roughly translate to “Love has no
right or wrong, love is not affected by rumors, I will
never stop looking for you, you are my everything, etc."
aren't going to win any songwriting prizes, and the video's
ending follows in the grand tradition of tragic lesbian
stories. But who cares? It's a good song, and an overdue
milestone.
Watch
it, and then read
about it.
MR & MRS. GAY RIGHTS?
Brad Pitt recently told Esquire magazine in an
interview for their upcoming October edition that he and
Angelina
Jolie won't get married until everyone can. Since
Brad was more than willing to marry Jennifer Aniston,
does anyone else see Angelina's hand behind this? Just
call her the pupPitt master...
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