Another week and another unfinished 1000 event. So while we await the winners of Sinner vs. Alcaraz and Swiatek vs. Paolini, enjoy all the ATP beef that's fit to post BELOW.
Sunday, August 17, 2025
'Deeply Superficial': Mad About the Boy: The Noël Coward Story
Last night we watched "Mad About the Boy: The Noël Coward Story," Barnaby Thompson's new documentary now streaming on Dekkoo. It's an enjoyable piece of work -- Alan Cumming and Rupert Everett do a wonderful job narrating while Adam Lambert brings a contemporary twist to some of Coward's best-known songs. I guess the only way I might have enjoyed it more is if it had dug a little deeper. Billed as a "lively and affectionate new documentary" celebrating "the extraordinary life and legacy of [the famed] playwright, singer, actor, composer and director," it didn't exactly shy away from his humble background (of which he was deeply ashamed) or his barely veiled homosexuality. Yet when it was over it still somehow felt deeply superficial, although I can't exactly say why. Still, a great introduction to the legendary wit.
BELOW: Watch Cary Grant present Coward with a Tony for lifetime achievement in 1970:
Friday, August 15, 2025
Remains of the Day (08/15)
Washington Blade: Two students murdered at Nigerian boarding school because they were gay
Saturday 'Stache: My heart belongs to Daddy
New Yorker: The lives and loves of James Baldwin
The Guardian: Another idiotic TERF war
Out: All about Netflix's new gay Marines show "Boots," based on my pal Greg Cope's "Pink Marine" memoir
Mahomet Daily: State Department releases scaled-back human rights report, removes sections on women and LGBTQ rights, among others
Esquire: Lee Pace makes his own luck
The Advocate: David Geffen responds to estranged husband Donovan Michaels's lawsuit, denies "exploitation"
Speedo Sunday: I see red
Hot Cat of the Day: Cutest ball kid ever!
Moises Mendez II: Not everyone is happy to see "And Just like That..." end
Thursday, August 14, 2025
On the Rag, Vol. 870
This week's rag 'n' mag roundup features Tom Holland, Noah Way, Brad Goreski, Hasan Piker and more BELOW.
Wednesday, August 13, 2025
Remains of the Day (08/13)
Attitude: "Moderate" Indonesia -- the world's largest Muslim-majority nation -- strikes again ... 80 times
Wrestle Wednesday: A whiter -- and thicker -- shade of pale
Broadway World: I don't know who Matt Magnusson is, but I'm pretty sure he's my favorite actor of all time
Queerty: A theater kid crushes on the hunky handyman in the coming-of-age charmer "Griffin in Summer"
The Real Deal: Jake Gyllenhaal trades Tribeca condo for $14 million, a cool $6 million more than he paid in 2017
PinkNews: Anti-LGBTQ lawmaker in South Carolina resigns after arrest on child sexual abuse material charges
Boy Culture: "The Gilded Age" co-stars Morgan Spector and Carrie Coon like you've never seen them before
People: How Joyce DeWitt and Priscilla Barnes became actual roommates after "Three’s Company" wrapped
Pop Matters: Carlene Carter, Pointer Sisters, Fleetwood Mac, Shaun Cassidy make list of "20 of the Best New Wave Albums by Rock/Pop Artists" ... I picked Carlene's "C'est C Bon" -- rather than "Musical Shapes" -- when I made a similar list a few years ago HERE. P.S. Carlene Carter says her memoir -- "Cartwheels in High Heels" is complete and she hopes to have it out in 2026.
Hot Cat of the Day: A Facebook friend announced that he'd adopted this little cutie -- Spooky, "a sweet 10 month old Siamese rescue kitty who's a purr machine and snuggle puss who loves to play -- especially at 3 a.m." As if her face weren't enough, this additional comment made my night: "I thought it might be too soon after Penelope passed away to adopt another cat, but Spooky needed a home and I had one to give. It was the right thing to do."
Pop Thruster: All 351 "Key & Peele" sketches ranked!
RIP: Heartbroken over the death of Danielle Spencer, who played TV's greatest kid sister on "What's Happening!!" before embarking on a successful career as a veterinarian. Side note: People talk a lot about representation, which is undoubtedly important. But I don't think it's as straightforward as academics think: I saw myself in Spencer's wisecracking Dee (before my self-consciousness over being gay fundamentally changed who I was) and Oprah saw herself in Mary Richards -- and my husband did just fine without a single Argentine American family on TV -- so let's give humans a little more credit, at least where this topic is concerned.
Tuesday, August 12, 2025
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