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Saturday
Feb182012

DADT AT TGSW

[TRAVEL] Uwern Jong unravels the acronyms, asks and tells about the USA's top gay ski week.


So a whole year has passed since we got involved with Telluride Gay Ski Week and 2012's event promises to be all of last years and more. It starts February 25th, so if you want to get there, you need to check out www.telluridegayskiweek.com sooner rather than later.

This year, there is some new news at Telluride. The TGSW will celebrate the repeal of the discriminatory Don’t Ask Don’t Tell (DADT) policy with free VIP party passes (“T-Passes”) for the week for active service members and a special military themed, “Do Ask Do Tell” dance party. Reichen Lehmkuhl, former USAF Captain, star of A:List New York and winner of Amazing Race, will serve a celebrity host of the “Do Ask – Do Tell” party that will take place during the middle of the Telluride Gay Ski Week. Lehmkuhl authored the book “Here’s What We’ll Say” that chronicled his time at the U.S. Air Force Academy as a closeted service member.

The Do Ask Do Tell party will include a special display of images from the “We Can Do It!” photography campaign produced by the Open Artist Movement www.openartistmovement.com and courtesy of its founder Brad Bilanin. The campaign, which was photographed by John Ganun, brings to life modern, iconic individuals, by depicting them as powerful figures and not victims in the global LGBT movement.

Considered one of the world’s most popular ski weeks and ranked “Top Gay Ski Week” in the U.S.A. by gay.com, Telluride Gay Ski Week brings together gay and lesbian skiers and snowboarders from around the world; including New York, Dallas, Los Angeles, Miami, Hawaii, Australia and the United Kingdom. Now in its ninth year, this annual event is the third busiest winter week in Telluride, Colorado after the Christmas and President’s Day Weekend.

Telluride Gay Ski Week 2012

When: Saturday, February 25, 2012 – Saturday, March 3, 2012
Where: Towns of Mountain Village and Telluride, CO and Telluride Ski Resort
Info: Event schedule and ticket information available at www.telluridegayskiweek.com

 

Saturday
Feb042012

42ND STREET

[TRAVEL] Uwern Jong checks out dancing feet of a totally different kind on 42nd street.

The infamous lyrics from that Broadway number have never rung truer...

"In the heart of little old New York, You'll find a thoroughfare. It's the part of little old New York, That runs into Times Square."

There's something new afoot on 42nd Street, particularly on the west end, around 10th Ave - an area that Manhattan natives raise their brow when you mention that you're going there. But redevelopment is taking on the street usually famous for its Broadway-ish shows. Gone are the tired warehouse buildings and sleazy sex shops and rebirthed are glass commercial and residential buildings, edgy, sophisticated - but without forgetting the area's roots.

"Come and meet those dancing feet, On the avenue I'm taking you to, Forty-Second Street."

My journey to 42nd Street and 10th coincides with the launch of XL, a brand new gay super-club. The previous Chelsea venue of the same name has gone through some re-imagining and re-opened, a little later than originally anticipated, but with a mega-dancefloor, theater and event space, underneath what is to be (if it ever opens) New Yorks's first gay hotel The Out NYC.

(In the meantime, if you're looking for a place to stay in the area, you can check into new ultra-futuristic Yotel, literally just across the street from the venue. Don't forget to check out Out There's good friend Patrick Duffy's Sunday event EAT YO BRUNCH at the Yotel and stay tuned for more exciting developments to come as Patrick gets installed as Director of Programming at the hotel).

"Where the underworld can meet the elite, 42nd Street"

Back to XL, its first Friday night party sees Rokit from FornabioVoss taking resident there, with its usual stable of pretty, up for it club-kids. It was busy, with the queue going round the block with revellers waiting in the longest line in the world, some making it past the velvet ropes, others waving their membership cards in the cold New York night outside. John Blair, the man behind the club is after all, notorious for starting a system in the 90s of giving patrons cards which ranked them by attractiveness: white for the average people, gold for the above average, and VIP for the hot.

That's New York hype for you, but I'm not quite sure what the fuss is all about. Yes, the club is super trendy, but I can't help but wonder, with New York gays being such followers of fashion, if it has the legs to stand the years to come. That said, that's what many critics said about Heaven in London when it opened in the seventies and it's still going strong now. I guess only time will tell.

Nevertheless, we had a lot of fun and I wasn't short of subjects wanting to be photographed in celebration of the venue's launch. So heres it is Ladies and Gentlemen (and those in between), check out our photos from the night and don't forget to tag yourself...

Thursday
Jan262012

TRAINS, PLANES AND...

[TRAVEL] Uwern Jong heads for the Southernmost point in Florida for a gay ol' celebration.

It may be hard to believe, but on Sunday 21st January 2012, Key West, Florida celebrated one hundred years of its railway connecting the mainland - opening the island to tourism.

Back before 1912, Key West was totally isolated apart from the military activity to protect the South Eastern seas of the United States. A entrepreneural man called Henry Flager extended the Florida East Coast Railway and connected the island to the mainland, creating much needed commerce for the island. Although much of the railroad was destroyed by a hurricane in 1935, clearly the importance of the island became apparant to the government who turned the rail route into part of the United States Highway 1. The island is now proud to be the start and end of this infamous route.

Skip forward a century and I find myself on Highway 1 heading south. My visit to Key West was for a very special celebration of our own - a dear friend's special birthday. But unlike the railway travel to the land of the Conchs (an affectionate term for 'natives' of the island) of old, as the title of this post may lead you to believe, we opted for a short, 3 hour United/Continental flight from Newark to Miami and a not-so-short but extremely comfortable and unbelievably scenic 4 hour drive in our fully loaded hire car from Miami to the Keys. I was one of a group of 40 gay men descending on this small island - like a queer ol' hurricane... can you imagine. Look out, Key West! But this is one island that can certainly take it, it has done for nearly a hundred years.

Having got to Key West, I found out about the railway's centenary by fortuitous accident, only when I worked out why the staff (and some patrons) at our hotel, The Casa Marina - A Waldorf Astoria resort we're dressed up in Victorian costumes and train-engineers' hats. A little odd I had thought to start, but on working out why, I figured they were celebrating as it is an auspicious date for the island's numerous hoteliers and leisure providers - the birth of tourism to this otherwise secret hideaway.

The Casa Marina itself was a charming hotel, a heritage property on the National Register of Historic Places that has been welcoming guests to its tropical stylings since the 1920s. Today, the property has been contemporised but retains its colonial charm, even in the modern annexes. The rooms were comfy, although our sea-view room was appointed a little oddly, making the room feel smaller than it really was. One couldn't complain with balconies facing the Atlantic, but there was a slight privacy issue with balconies not having much separation between them - from neighbours who were smokers or just uber-loud city-people who didn't quite seem to get the concept of 'getting-away-from-it-all' whist they shouted down their Blackberries.

The grander suites we saw in the main building were lovely, with big sun terraces overlooking the pool area - simple and understated, but luxurious. Choose your rooms carefully though, we had friends put in a standard room that overlooked the valet parking lot. There are a number of these rooms in the property and despite the poor aspect, the hotel still charges a high rate for these views, which I personally think is a little outrageous.

The Hilton group, by which the hotel is managed has a good track record in gay-friendliness, but you need to understand that this resort is a family getaway resort and gay couples may not feel immediately at home in the more communal areas. (But if you want a true dose (or overdose) of gay, there is always the Island House up the road) However, this does not take away from the charm and uber-friendly and helpful hotel staff. Add to that some amazing concession activities, a special shout out to Barefoot Billy's jet-ski rental - who were truly brilliant and ultimately accommodating for our party's 2 hour jetski tour of the island.

Key West itself is not what I had expected. Having visited other parts of Florida a number of times before, I wasn't prepared to be taken in by its unique island charm, colonial old town and super-friendly residents. But from the very moment I walked up to Duval Street, I felt it. I felt what so many others from Tenessee Williams to Leonard Bernstein to Gore Vidal to Truman Capote found inspiring about the place. I felt the island's vitality, history and diversity. I felt its spirit and was entranced by the stories of the people I met and hung-out with who arrived from big jobs in big cities and fell in love with the place; some of whom came to the island and never actually left - those who now own restaurants, property businesses, guesthouses and those who came to just escape and contribute back to the island's diverse community.

And for gays and lesbians, Key West is seductive, beautiful and safe - a place where you can be open, relaxed, make new friends, and savour this small town’s live-and-let-live philosophy. And despite being a small town with an island vibe, Key West offers a huge range of cosmopolitan options when it comes to eating, drinking and being Mary (I stole this one from the tourist office!) - from local delicacies including fresh-off-the-boat seafood to the Key lime pie, to sushi and Mediteranian cuisine. And the nightlife, like the food, offers something for everyone. Sure - there are no superclubs and zhi-zhi bars by any means, but there's enough there for a couple of crazy and fun nights out on the town.

There's a hell of a lot to say about a place so small, but I will say this: experience it for yourself. Bring good company, or escape on your own. Don't let your preconceptions of this island get the better of you. And like me, you'll be very pleasantly suprised...

For more information on gay and lesbian Key West, visit the Florida Keys Tourist Board's LGBT pages.

IMAGE: The unfurling of the world's longest rainbow flag spanning Key West's Duval Street - from the Gulf to Atlantic. Special thanks to John, Steve and Cordey for showing us the video about it all.

Sunday
Jan152012

WE WERE WANDERERS...

[TRAVEL] James W. Griffiths presents this amazing video shot in the rainforests of Malaysia.


On a cold day like today, I often think of home. Check out this wonderful video by James W. Griffiths, with narration adapted from excerpts from Heart of Darkness, written by Joseph Conrad, published 1899. - Uwern Jong

We Were Wanderers On A Prehistoric Earth from James W Griffiths on Vimeo.

Director/Producer/Editor - James W. Griffiths
Director of Photography - Christopher Moon
Sound Design and Mix - Mauricio d'Orey
Music - Lennert Busch
Narrator - Terry Burns

For more videos from James, visit: http://vimeo.com/jwgriffiths