SNL's New Cast Member: Sasheer Zamata

Following criticism earlier this season for its lack of a black female cast member (and 39 years of previous criticism intermittently interrupted by occasional bursts of sorta diversity), Saturday Night Live has hired Sasheer Zamata, who is the show's first black female cast member in five years.

Zamata will make her debut on the venerable NBC late-night sketch comedy series on its next live show slated for January 18 with Drake as host and musical guest. Zamata, who trained at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre in New York, becomes the first black female Saturday Night Live cast member in five years since the departure of Maya Rudolph. ...She will now be a featured player on the show that has launched the careers of a slew of young comedians.
Good luck, Sasheer! I am looking forward to your debut!

You know, it's really too fucking bad that the show didn't have the foresight to hire Zamata before there was a whole huge fucking thing about the dearth of black female cast members that started with another cast member yammering about the alleged unreadiness of black female comics. It's tough enough to step onto that stage, and into a work environment which has historically been deeply hostile to women (especially women of color), without the added pressure of disproving a widely-discussed theory about the quality of black female comics.

The thing about a lack of meaningful diversity is that not only does privilege deny the equal chance to succeed; it denies the equal chance to fail, too.

There are countless white male comics who have come and gone at SNL without any attached symbolism. Zamata's performance is burdened with narrative and the responsibility of representation, and she will be aggressively scrutinized for whether she "deserves" her spot, in a way other cast members aren't.

She knows all of this going in, and she's doing it anyway. I'll be rooting for her, but she's already a champ.

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What in Assvertising Hell Is This?

[Content Note: Misogyny; sexuality policing; stalking; heterocentrism.]

This is a new ad from Old Spice, which is getting all kinds of media attention at the moment, featuring a series of moms who are "hilariously" lamenting their sons becoming men by wearing Old Spice:

Video Description: A young thin white man stands shirtless in his bedroom applying Old Spice body spray. Tinkly piano music. As he walks out of his bedroom and closes the door behind him, his in-betweenie white middle-aged mom is revealed hiding behind the door. She sings, "Oh I didn't see it coming / But it came in a can." Cut to the young man strolling in a park under an umbrella with a young thin white woman. His mother emerges from the bushes. "Now my sweet son's sprayed into a man."

Cut to another young thin white couple driving down the highway in a red convertible. His in-betweenie white middle-aged mother is clinging to the rear bumper while riding in a laundry basket. She sings, "Mine, too, and hey we know just who to blame..."

Cut to another young thin white couple eating lunch together in a cafeteria. His in-betweenie white middle-aged mom pops up between them. A janitor sweeping nearby turns around, revealing another white middle-aged mom, spying on her son. A chorus of moms sings, "...when our sons have fun with women and misbehave."

Cut to a black middle-aged mom poking her head out of the sand on a beach where her young thin black son is lying on a blanket with his young thin black girlfriend. The mom sings, "Old Spice made a man of my son..." The couple stroll down the beach and she follows them, burrowing through the sand. Cut to another young thin white couple sitting on the beach at the edge of the water. A thin white middle-aged mom washes up on shore near them. She sings, "...now he's kissing all the women and his chores aren't done."

Cut to another young thin white couple at whom his mom is peeking through cut-outs in the living room blinds. A chorus of moms sings, "He was just my little sweetie / Tiny fingers, hands, and feeties / Now he's touching, kissing, feeling all women because OLD SPICE!"

A white mom peeks through bushes. A white mom throws a tray of cookies into the sand. A white mom's fist punches a chocolate cake. A white mom peers through a window from outside in the rain and cries. A white mom, playing a violin, falls out of the sky into a park just behind her son and his girlfriend. The first white mom slides out from under the couch cushion beside where her son is making out with his girlfriend; the mom slides on her back across the carpet and into another room and up onto another sofa where she picks up knitting.

The mom sings, "Old Spice sprayed a man of my son / Now he smells like a man / And they treat him like one." She cries. Old Spice logo etc.
WHUT.

I mean, look, I'm a fan of absurdery as much as anyone, but what the shit is this mess? So, Old Spice "sprays" boys into men, and what constitutes being a man is making out with girls (because only straight men are men, natch), and mothers lose their everloving fucking minds at the idea of their sons being sexually active so they have to stalk them and weep and destroy baked goods, and WHAT IS THIS I DON'T EVEN UNDERSTAND.

Of course, I don't find anything funny about possessive, over-protective parents who meddle in and police their children's sexuality, whether it's "jokes" about fathers violently policing their daughters' sexuality or "jokes" about mothers overbearingly interfering in their sons' relationships, because, as we all know, I'm the Most Humorless Feminist in all of Nofunnington. So it's no surprise that my ribs aren't tickled by adding a kooky song and some weird graphics to what is essentially a narrative about how women's entire identity is wrapped up in children so mothers of sons lose their shit when their boys turn into men and REPLACE THEIR MOTHERS WITH GIRLS TO HAVE ALL THE SEX WITH.

Oh, I know. It's only a commercial. It's just good fun! Except for how the normalization of this sort of sexuality policing, the wide cultural acceptance of parents having an unhealthy investment in their children's relationship and sex choices, causes harm to lots and lots of people. Yuk yuk.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Bill Murray: "Star Wars"

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The Monday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by icicles.

Recommended Reading:

Pam: [Content Note: Privilege; white supremacy; emotional policing] On Calling Out the Shit in the Middle of the Room

Trudy: [CN: White supremacy] 2013: A Year of White Supremacy and Racism in Mainstream Feminism

Paul: Our Top 10 Wins in 2013

Summer: A New Idea for a New Year

Rosana: A Racial Justice Bucket List for 2014

Batocchio: Jon Swift Memorial Roundup 2013 [Please note that there are not content notes or trigger warnings for individual posts.]

Fat Discrimination: [CN: Fat hatred] The Normalization of Fat Hate

Jess: [CN: Rape culture] On Bill O'Brien and the Benefits of Coaching at Penn State

Andy: [CN: Homophobia] Former NFL Punter Chris Kluwe Says He Has Witnesses to Homophobia at the Vikings

Finally: [CN: White supremacy] Emi Koyama has had great coverage of the Ani DiFranco's retreat for songwriters and performers at Nottoway Plantation and Resort, subsequent ass-showing, and bullshit apology. Part One is here. Part Two is here. Part Three is here.

Leave your links and recommendations in comments...

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt sitting in our living room and grinning widely
Happy Dog is happy.

In fact, even when Zelda is sound asleep, draped across my lap being the bestest blanket in the whole wide world, she is still smiling.

image of Zelly lying across my lap, asleep and grinning
"I dream of treats."

As always, please feel welcome and encouraged to share pix of the fuzzy, feathered, or scaled members of your family in comments.

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Whoops Your "Progressive" Pope

[Content Note: Homophobia; Christian Supremacy.]

Over our holiday, there came the news that Pope Francis was "shocked" by legislation which would allow same-sex couples to adopt children in Malta, and urged Maltese Bishop Charles Scicluna "to speak out against it."

Today, there is news that, in November, Pope Francis said in a speech to the Catholic Union of Superiors General that the Catholic Church should rethink its approach toward children of gay parents, warning against "administering a vaccine against faith."

My point about the improved PR at the Holy See, here it is.

This pope is better at careful framing, but he is no more interested in meaningful inclusivity than any of his reprehensible predecessors. Buried in this story headlined "Pope calls for fresh Church approach to children of gay parents" is, for example, the following:

"On an educational level, gay unions raise challenges for us today which for us are sometimes difficult to understand," Francis said in a speech to the Catholic Union of Superiors General in November, extracts of which were published on Italian media websites on Saturday.

..."I remember a case in which a sad little girl confessed to her teacher: 'my mother's girlfriend doesn't love me'," he was quoted as saying.
What a neat anecdote! It really drives home the unique challenges of families with same-sex parents, doesn't it? Because no child has ever been sad about feeling unloved by a straight step-parent. Or a straight biological parent. It's good for all of us to consider the very specific sadnesses caused to children only by gay parents, and thank Maude for Pope Francis and his awareness-raising about this important issue.

Ahem.

I have been urged to see Pope Francis' rhetoric as a "good thing," or a "step forward," or some evidence of some sort of decency. They are admonishments that would not be made if Pope Francis were not a new pontiff, but a new CEO of a massive, influential, international corporate conglomerate which had been institutionally homophobic, misogynist, rape-abetting, racist, transphobic, classist, Christian supremacist, and politically aggressive in having its positions globally legislated.

If a corporate CEO were offering this weak garbage as ostensible evidence of broadening views, I would not be asked to commend it. But because it is a prominent religious leader, I am asked why I do not applaud "progress" that consists of self-serving pablum wrapped around othering anecdotes.

That's Christian privilege, right there. An entirely different standard for Pope Francis than would be granted to someone who did not lead a powerful Christian organization.

For a moment, just try to imagine what my response would be if some corporate crony of Mitt Romney's leaked a rumor that he sneaks out of his mansion at night to work at a soup kitchen. And then try to answer why my response should be any different for Pope Francis, why it is that I am expected to lavish him with praise and declare him a beacon of progress and a new kind of pope and a symbol for a changing Catholic Church.

Evidence of a more sophisticated spin machine is not evidence of progress.

I refuse to credit as progress what is a cynical bid for a better reputation on the same old shitty policies of bigotry. When I expect more, I actually expect more.

Otherwise, I'm just giving cover to continued oppression. Including my own. And asking me to participate in my own marginalization is (still) a request I cannot accommodate.

[Related Reading: Time's Person of the Year; The Advocate's Person of the Year.]

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today!

Good news! CeCe McDonald will be released from prison this month.

[Content Note: Racism; homophobia; misogyny; rape culture] Welp, despite engaging in racism and homophobia, Duck Dynasty patriarch Phil Robertson will be back on the show, following A&E's decision to lift his suspension, because principles. Immediately thereafter, a video surfaced of Robertson saying it's a good idea to marry teenage girls, because he's a good Christian or whatever. In other Duck Dynasty news, the family launched a branded line of guns, because of course they did, and ha ha everyone was SO SURPRISED to find out that the Duck Dynasty dudes looked like the Romneys before they got their own TV show where it was way cooler to look like people they exploited on their way to the 1%.

[CN: War on agency] Rachel Benson Gold and Elizabeth Nash of the indispensable Guttmacher Institute: More Abortion Restrictions Were Enacted from 2011 to 2013 than in the Entire Previous Decade. It would be really helpful if the dudes who scream at me about Roe every election if I even hint at not voting for a Democratic candidate would give a fuck about reproductive rights beyond their value during attempts to bully me into voting the way privileged dudes think I should.

This sounds neat: "In room-size metal boxes ­secure against electromagnetic leaks, the National Security Agency is racing to build a computer that could break nearly every kind of encryption used to protect banking, medical, business and government records around the world. According to documents provided by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, the effort to build 'a cryptologically useful quantum computer'—a machine exponentially faster than classical computers—is part of a $79.7 million research program titled 'Penetrating Hard Targets.'" Insert all the jokes here.

[CN: Disablism] The White House "is proposing two more executive actions that it says will help prevent individuals who are prohibited from having a gun for mental health reasons from obtaining a firearm," one of which is "a regulation that would clarify who is ineligible to possess a firearm for specific situations related to mental health, like commitment to a mental institution." I'm pretty sure that exactly zero of the mass shooters in the past couple of years would have been prevented from owning a gun under this provision. And I don't have anything else to say about this garbage that I didn't already say here.

[CN: Homophobia] Opponents of same-sex marriage in Utah are calling for an uprising in response to the legalization of same-sex marriage. What a bunch of contemptible fools. Meanwhile: "The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday put same-sex marriages in Utah on hold, granting the state's request for a stay while it appeals a ruling that laws banning such marriages was unconstitutional." Fuck.

Mitt Romney wishes he could "turn back the clock" to take another run at the presidency. Ha ha I bet he also wishes he could turn back the clock to a time when he wasn't being sued for criminal racketeering. Whoops!

[CN: Addiction] Tom Hardy is very blunt about his addiction and being afraid. I mean, y'all know how I feel about Tom Hardy blah blah, but I find it really compelling when anyone speaks honestly and vulnerably about being afraid, when there's so much cultural pressure to never admit any kind of fear.

Cool: In 2013, Failing the Bechdel Test Was Bad for Your Movie's Bottom Line. Take note, film industry!

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Transcript Update!

So I am really excited about all we got done over the holidays and my holiday break from my day job. We finished the transcripts for HB2 and SB1 in time to hand them off to the editor and I spliced 132 citizen testimony videos and have started sending them out to people. That means we have officially spliced all the videos and that was a huge milestone to check off the list!

Lookit all that progress since last time! And that's in less than one month's time. We are officially awesome the end. 


Record
Splice
Transcribe
Proof (Vol.)
Proof (Prof.)
ePubify
ePublish
Paper Layout
Paper Publish
SB5 Video
complete
complete
complete
complete
complete
not started
not started
not started
not started
HB2 Video
complete
complete
complete
complete
working
not started
not started
not started
not started
SB1 Video
complete
Complete
complete
complete
working
not started
not started
not started
not started
Citizen (1)
complete
complete
working
working
not started
not started
not started
not started
not started
Citizen (2)
complete
complete
working
working
not started
not started
not started
not started
not started

But! We could still use a lot of help. Out of my original ~99 volunteers, I have lost 46 people to life stuff that couldn't be helped. I currently have assignments out to almost everyone on my list, which means that (a) if you're a volunteer and you don't have an assignment, please let me know because I will happily give you one, and (b) if you're not a volunteer and you would like an assignment, omg email me and I will cover you in happy thanks.

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Today in Rape Culture

[Content Note: Sexual violence; rape apologia.]

Via Mary comes the terrible (but hardly surprising, of course) news that one of the convicted Steubenville rapists has been released from juvenile detention. He was sentenced to one year, and served about nine months.

Upon his release, Ma'lik Richmond's attorney released a statement, which reads in part:

The past sixteen months have been extremely challenging for Ma'lik and his extended family. At sixteen years old, Ma'lik and his family endured hardness beyond imagine for any adult yet alone child.
By way of reminder, Richmond's victim Jane Doe was 16 years old at the time of the assault. The statement did not mention her at all.

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The Weather Outside Is Frightful

image of a weather center in our home showing -13°F

Welp.

So, it's -13°F here. With the wind chill (and it is currently very windy), it feels like -45°. We had 13 inches of snow yesterday, on top of the several inches we already had lying on the ground. Our storm door is covered in a solid sheet of ice. A state of emergency was called for Northwest Indiana last night. All roads were closed, except to emergency vehicles. Trains stopped. Schools closed. Trash collection canceled. Warming centers opened. Everyone advised to stay indoors. Jury still out on climate change.

I hope everyone affected by this cold snap is able to find someplace warm to be.

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Open Thread

Rosie the Riveter wielding a giant teaspoon.

Hosted by Rosie the Riveter.

Happy 2014, Shakers! The Radical Gay Secular Fat Feminazi Cooter Agenda ain't gonna promulgate itself, people. Let's get to work!

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Slàinte mhor a h-uile là a chi 's nach fhaic!

image of a teaspoon in a snow globe, with the words 'Happy Teaspoons to all...and to all a good fight.'

Thank you for another great year, Shakers.

Many of the contributors and mods are (or will be) traveling and holidaying over the next week and a half, and we all need a nice long break. So we're taking some time off to rest and renew, and we will return Monday, January 6, at which time we will resume your regularly scheduled abundance of feminist commentary, political snark, pop culture deconstruction, cute things, pretty pictures, and sundry shenanigans.

Next year will see a mid-term election in the US and the start of another presidential primary season (OMG), so we're going to need to restore our vigor in preparation for the usual mayhem and foolery.

As they say, see you next year!

[My thanks to Shaker JupiterPluvius for the phrase used in the image.]

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I Feel the Breeze

Every year, Batocchio solicits submissions for the Jon Swift Memorial Roundup (The Best Posts of the Year), a tradition started by Jon Swift/Al Weisel, who, before his death, did an annual round-up of the "Best Posts of the Year, Chosen by the Bloggers Themselves." Batocchio says: "Jon/Al left behind some wonderful satire, but was also a nice guy and a strong supporter of small blogs. (Here's Jon/Al's 2007 and 2008 editions and the revivals from 2010, 2011 and 2012.)" I always submit something to what turns out to be an amazing collection of writing. This year, I submitted the below piece, originally published in July. I'm not sure it's strictly the best thing I wrote all year, but it was definitely one of the most meaningful to me.



[Content Note: Fat bias; body policing.]

2008. I wear a bathing suit in public for the first time in many years, because Iain surprises me with a holiday for my birthday on which there will be swimming. Which I love. I haven't been swimming in years. I have been to the beach—there is a beautiful beach just minutes from our house. But I have gone to the beach in shorts and a t-shirt, and I have waded in the water, and I have not swam.

I am tired of not swimming.

I put on my new bathing suit, and I walk outdoors, and I feel the breeze on my skin. It is like a memory coming back to me. My skin reacts with goosebumps, although I am not chilled. I stand for a moment, with my face lifted toward the sun, and let my skin reacquaint itself with the breeze crawling around me. My entire body feels like a foot freed from a too-tight sock at the end of a long day.

I walk to the water and I slip into its cool embrace and I float. The wind caresses me, welcomes me back. I feel tears begin to slip down my cheeks, and I quickly wipe them away, so no one will see my private regret that I have denied myself this pleasure, this permission to feel the breeze, for so many years.

2010. I am running errands, and it is the middle of summer, and it is hot. So hot. I am wearing a tank top I love, knit chevrons of turquoise and navy and white and gold, covered by a cropped sweater. I cannot bear the heat, but I don't go out with uncovered arms in public. My arms are too fat.

Suddenly the urge to be less hot overwhelms my self-consciousness about my fat arms. I ditch the sweater and walk across the parking lot with my arms uncovered. A black woman who is almost my exact same size, wearing a tank top under a jean jacket on this hot day, is walking to her car, parked beside mine. We smile at each other. "Cute top!" she says. I tell her thank you so much, and I give her a grateful smile that she understands. I want to hug her. I want to tell her that she can never know what it means that she said that exact thing in that exact moment.

I walk to the front door of the store, swinging my fat arms with the stride of a person who is allowed to take up space in the world. Like a person who is wearing a cute top. I feel the breeze on my bare arms.

2011. I cut off my hair. I tell my hairdresser I am okay with accentuating my round face, and I am okay with my double chin being more prominent, and I am okay with the melasmas on my cheeks and neck, and I want short hair. I advocate for the short haircut I've been told fat women aren't supposed to have.

I walk out of the salon with my fancy $20 haircut, and I feel the breeze on the back of my neck.

2013. I get my first tattoo. And then my second. They are places where they are seen, seen on my fat body, and I have the uncustomary experience of having people look at my fat body with admiration. I didn't expect this, and I'm not prepared for it. I am shy when people touch my arms and tell me that something on my body is beautiful.

A few weeks ago, I go to the doctor, and two of the nurses admire my tattoos. They ask for the tattoo artist's name and information, which I happily share.

I leave the doctor's office and go to the drugstore to fill a prescription, where the pharmacist admires my tattoos. On the way home, I go through a drive-through at a cafe for iced coffee. When I reach out my arm to pay, the young white girl working the window asks if she can see my tattoo, the one with the Virginia Woolf quote. I extend my arm and she leans in to look at it. She takes my hand between hers and holds it, my arm extended from my car window to the drive-through window, and I feel the breeze drifting across my skin as she tells me that my tattoo is beautiful.

She passes me paper and a pen through the window, and I write down the artist's name and number for her.

I drive home with the windows down. The warm air comes through the windows. I feel it on my bare arms, my tattooed arms, and on my face, and on the back of my neck. All of this skin that I hid under hair and clothes, because I was told that I should. Because I believed that I should. Because I was apologizing to people who hate my body, who want to deny me the breeze.

I love the breeze. I missed it so.

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Discussion Thread: Favorite Things of 2013

At this time of year, lots of people do Top Ten lists or Best/Worst Of compilations or write holiday newsletters recounting what happened during the year, and I don't do any of those things, but I do like thinking about my favorite things that happened during the previously 12 months, even (and sometimes especially) in a year that wasn't so great. So here's a thread to talk about our Favorite Things of 2013—things that we did, people we met, new family members through choice or birth or marriage, gifts that we got or gave, movies we loved, books we adored, legislation that made our lives better, trips we took, things we saw, music we heard, whatever!

What were your Favorite Things of 2013?

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Dudley hiding his face beneath his yellow blanket

"It's too cold to live!"

From November 2010, a video of Dudley wrestling heroically with his fuzzy yellow blanket, set to a piece of Beethoven's Symphony No. 3, Op. 55 Eroica Symphony. Spoiler Alert: The blanket wins!


* * *

As always, please feel welcome and encouraged to share pix of the fuzzy, feathered, or scaled members of your family in comments.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Cocteau Twins: "Frosty the Snowman"

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Photo of the Day

an extremely close-up image of an individual snowflake

A single snowflake, captured in extreme detail, by photographer Alexey Kljatov, who explains: "I capture snowflakes at open balcony of my house, mostly on glass surface, lighted by LED flashlight from opposite side of glass, and sometimes in natural light, using dark woolen fabrics as background." There are so many more stunning images at the link, as well as additional information on how he shoots the photos.

Via Digital Photography School. Hat tip to Shaker GoldFishy.

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today!

About 380,000 homes and businesses in Michigan, New York, Vermont, and Maine are currently without power. Crews are working frantically to try to restore power as quickly as possible. I'm just west of the Michigan border, and it is currently 2 degrees Fahrenheit here. This is an incredibly serious utility fail.

[Content Note: Homophobia; violence; self-harm] Queen Elizabeth posthumously pardons Alan Turing, "the computing and mathematics pioneer whose chemical castration for being gay drove him to suicide almost 60 years ago. Turing was one of the leading scientific geniuses of the 20th century—the man who cracked the supposedly uncrackable Enigma code used by Nazi Germany in World War II and the man many scholars consider the father of modern computer science. By the time he was 23, Turing had hypothesized what would become today's computers—the Turing machine, which could emulate any computing device or program. Almost 80 years later, Turing machines are still used in theoretical computation."

[CN: War on agency; misogyny; end-of-life decisions] Erick Munoz is not allowed to fulfill his wife Marlise Munoz's stated wishes of not being kept alive by a ventilator, because she is pregnant, and Texas law "prohibits withdrawing or withholding life-sustaining treatment from a pregnant patient, regardless of her wishes." Of course it does.

Edward Snowden says he has accomplished his mission: "I already won. As soon as the journalists were able to work, everything that I had been trying to do was validated. Because, remember, I didn't want to change society. I wanted to give society a chance to determine if it should change itself. All I wanted was for the public to be able to have a say in how they are governed."

[CN: War; violence] The political situation in South Sudan has deteriorated quickly, and the people are now facing a brutal civil war.

A New Way of Life: "Bill Moyers shares an excerpt from a film by Tessa Blake and Emma Hewitt about the life of Susan Burton, a former California inmate who started A New Way of Life, an organization devoted to helping formerly-incarcerated women rebuild their lives." Please note there's a dropdown transcript just below the video at the link.

A federal judge has ruled Ohio must recognize same-sex couples' out-of-state marriages on death certificates. A small step, but the dominoes, they are falling.

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Open Thread

image of a pink piglet snuggling with a white rabbit, tucked under its large, floppy ear

Hosted by a piglet and a rabbit.

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Question of the Day


What's for dinner? Or whatever the next meal of the day is in your part of the world.

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