| Editor’s teen lesbian Blog -
Everyone who’s popped into the Scarlet office this week has surmised hot lesbians that there must be some truth to the notion teen lesbian that masturbation makes you go blind. This is because as editor of Scarlet I have to do an awful lot of ‘research’ with sex toys, and tranny I have also become partially blind. I’ve even had to wear an eye lesbian sex patch!
If you don’t believe me just read Jonathan Gornall’s column in today’s Times (Times2 supplement, page 15). Fortunately this ailment is (a) temporary and (b) nothing to do with masturbation (though it did happen in bed and that’s all I’m saying).
Another thing that Gornall mentions is that our Cliterature is perhaps more appealing to men than women. I would love to know Cliterature readers’ thoughts on this, so please drop me a line at Letters@ScarletMagazine.co.uk and have your say.
Sarah, Editor of Scarlet Magazine |
| Issue 11 - Now available in WHSmith's and all good newsagents. -
Click here to get this issue
Lost exclusive
Boone gives us a flash.
50 Sex tips to try before you die.
...if you dare
His porn passions Exposed
What men really get off on.
The five man plan
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Coming backdoor for more.
Sexual Healing
Examining the link between sex and tragedy.
Parting Shot
Nicky Falkof on being a full-figured woman.
For Scarlet back issues call - 0870 220 6398 |
| Issue 12 -
12 months on and still gagging for it
A sizzling sex move for each month of Scarlet's first year
Would you let a man take care of contraception
And we're not talking about nine pints of Stella and a kebab
Milf it
Employ the seduction tricks of women who are older, wiser and sexier, and rejoice in the 12 reasons why it's good to get old
The Vibrator Monologues
Celebrities confess their shemale sex toy secrets
10 things about...Losing your virginity
If only we'd known
Gratuitous letch
Jake Gyllenhaal - talent in every sense of the word
Parting shot
Victoria Ufondu gets sweet about sugar daddies
For Scarlet back issues call - 0870 220 6398 |
| Gay hardcore porn & Lesbian: An Advertising Impasse - An African-American newspaper in Baltimore still won't run a controversial ad depicting anti-gay religious protestors, but the paper's representatives say the concern is about the images, not the pro-gay message.
The rejected ad from the National Black Justice Coalition (NBJC), which included a photo of protesters with a sign reading ''No Fags In King's Dream,'' was designed to bring attention to religion-based bigotry against gay people. As reported last week in Metro Weekly, the Afro American declined to run the ad in its Baltimore edition.
Representatives from NBJC, the only national organization advocating solely for GLBT African Americans, and the Afro American Newspapers company met Wednesday, May 24, to discuss the company's decision.
''When we got ready to push the envelope, they weren't prepared to do that,'' says H. Alexander Robinson, CEO and executive director of NBJC, who was at the meeting. ''When we got to that level...we saw in the vip some push back.''
The newspaper did run a version of the ad with text, but no photo. Susan Warshaw, the advertising manager for the Afro American Baltimore edition, who was also at the meeting, confirms that she and other senior staff within the company did have reservations about running NBJC's ad.
''We had a concern over the picture, that it might be offensive to some readers,'' she says. "But the message, we've always felt was very important.''
Though both sides were able to delve deeper into their firm positions about the advertisement, Robinson says the scope of the meeting went beyond the ad, allowing him to lobby for greater GLBT coverage in the company's papers, in whose pages NBJC has been advertising its message since founding in 2004.
''There was no relenting on the ad,'' says Robinson. ''[But] I would say that they were receptive to our message. I think it was a useful meeting. We talked about the special editions they have coming up -- profiling leaders, for example. We want to make sure some of those are gay and lesbian people."
Robinson says that although they remain unhappy with the decision to nix the ad, NBJC considers the Afro American's decision to meet with them a positive one.
"It's still a good relationship," he says.
Says Warshaw, ''We simply explained our position, and they explained theirs. Hopefully they understand the concern has never been with teen lesbians them or their message.... Our concern was with the photo, never with the message. The message has always been welcome here.''
The rejected ads are posted on the NBJC Web site at www.nbjcoalition.org.
Source: Metro Weekly |
| Gay & Lesbian: CSW Special Community Award - Last night, I accepted the Christopher Street West L.A. Pride Special Community Award at a reception given my the Mayor of bang bros West Hollywood.
Other honorees included NAACP’s Alice Huffman, Phill Wilson, executive director of the Black AIDS Institute, and Ella Matthews, publisher of Lesbian News.
L.A. Pride will officially kick off on Friday, June 9th in the City of West Hollywood and continue through Sunday. I will be riding in the parade on Sunday with my good friend Marquita Thomas of Out and About (pictured). Also pictured friend Louisa.
For more info on L.A. Pride, visit www.lapride.org. |
| Politics: Black Democrats Expected to Take 3 Assembly Seats - African Americans were poised to make their greatest gain yet in the Legislature, with three black Democrats winning their party's nomination in new districts where their success in November's general election is practically a sure bet.
Their election would increase the number of African Americans in the Legislature teen lesbian from six to nine, the highest ever at a time when the percentage of blacks in California is slipping. It would also increase the shemale number of black women in the Legislature from one to three.
"That's historic and I think it's reflective of the fact that African Americans can win in non-African American districts," said Assembly Speaker Fabian Nuñez (D-Los Angeles).
In the 62nd Assembly District in San Bernardino County, longtime Rialto school board member Wilmer Amina Carter (pictured) defeated Jeremy Baca, the youngest son of local Democratic Rep. Joe Baca, 58% to 42%. In the 55th Assembly District, Long Beach City Councilwoman Laura Richardson beat Warren Furutani, an Assembly consultant. And in Oakland, retired congressional staffer Sandre Swanson defeated three people for the 16th Assembly District seat, which has not been held by a black person in inthevip
a decade.
Carter, Richardson and Swanson are expected to win in November because the three Assembly districts are dominated by Democratic voters.
Black political strategists said they learned a lesson from Latinos and backed qualified candidates in diverse districts running on issues other than civil rights.
"There will be no more so-called black districts," said Assemblyman Mervyn Dymally (D-Compton), chairman of the Legislature's Black Caucus. He helped raise $40,000 from the Morongo Band of Mission Indians that paid for mailers on behalf of Richardson and Swanson.
An African American will likely retain the 48th Assembly District seat in South-Central Los Angeles, now held by Mark Ridley-Thomas, where Mike Davis beat Anthony Willoughby and Edward R. cumshot Turner in the Democratic primary.
Similarly, the two Democrats locked in a race too close to call for the 51st Assembly District, which includes Inglewood and Gardena, are black: Steve Bradford, a utility manager, and Inglewood City Councilman Curren D. Price.
One of the few competitive teen lesbian legislative seats in November will include a black candidate: Maxine Sherard, a retired professor, won the Democratic primary for the 78th Assembly District in inland San Diego County. She will face incumbent Republican Shirley Horton in November cumshots in a district where 42% of voters are registered Democratic and 35% are registered Republican.
The current Legislature is dominated by liberal Democrats allied with unions and trial lawyers, and businesses have invested millions of dollars to try to elect Democrats sympathetic to their concerns.
Tuesday's results will temper the Legislature's liberalism less than business interests had hoped, with several moderate Democrats losing to more liberal opponents.
Still, four moderate Democrats won nominations for Senate seats and are considered shoo-ins for the November general election, promising to make the Senate a riskier place for bills that would increase business regulation or litigation."Is the business community better off today than it was at the start of the day yesterday? The answer is yes," said Darry Sragow, a Democratic strategist who advised the California Chamber of Commerce on targeting campaign donations.Key losses for business on
Tuesday were former Assemblyman George Nakano of Torrance, who was defeated by Assemblywoman Jenny Oropeza for Senate District 28, which includes Long Beach, and former Assemblyman John Dutra, who, despite abundant campaign money, was beat by former Assemblywoman Ellen Corbett for an lesbian orgy East Bay Senate seat.Other Democratic winners backed by business in the Senate include Los Angeles City Councilman Alex Padilla, who beat Assemblywoman Cindy Montañez in District 20 in the San Fernando Valley, and Orange County Supervisor Lou Correa, who soundly defeated Assemblyman Tom Umberg 59% to 41% for District lesbian porn 34, which covers inland Orange County. Assemblywoman Gloria big
mouthfulls Negrete-McLeod, also a moderate, easily beat colleague Joe Baca Jr. of Rialto for Senate District mr camel toe 32 in western San Bernardino County.Assemblyman Ronald S. Calderon, a frequent ally of the banking and insurance industries, is locked in a tight race against colleague Rudy Bermudez of Norwalk for Senate District 30 in southeastern L.A. County. A few hundred votes separated the candidates, and a final result could take weeks.Having
a spouse in the Legislature was no guarantee of a candidate's success. All three wives running lost and one husband won.
Source: Los Angeles Times |
| Another Question - Is there a book (or song or video) that your kid loves that you hate?
My lesbian orgy least favorite books that we own are the Barney books. I don't how or know why we have them in the house! Hand-me-downs, most likely. In my spare time (ha ha), I plan to confiscate them!
A close friend of mine once told me that Barney (the TV version) was the best form of birth control ever invented. However the effectiveness of this method is apparently short-lived because a year after she told me that, her husband got a vasectomy.
As the world turns.... |
| Baba Talks - I'm on a panel of women bloggers at The Menil Collection tomorrow (Tuesday) night at 7 p.m. The event is sponsored by the Women's Studies Department at the University of Houston. If you're interested and in the area, please join us.
The University of Houston
Friends of Women’s Studies
present
The 2005-2006 Living Archives
Series
Women
Who Blog
Panelists: Latisha Johnson-Wallace, Young
Negro Girl in America
Kyrie O’Connor, MeMo
Robin Reagler, The OTHER Mother
Anita Wadhwa, Outta My Butt
Moderator:
MaryScott Hagle, Community Manager, ParentsConnect.com
Tuesday, May 23, 2006
at 7:00 pm
Menil Collection, 1515 Sul Ross
Admission: $5 for the
general public, free for Friends of Women’s Studies and students. Join or
renew membership at the event. Reception
following.
|
| Carrie in Love -
Thought you'd want to be the first to know about Carrie's first crush. Yes, it's RIAH. Unrequited love , I can assure you.
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