Live in LA

Austin was back in LA and very much his charming self on KTLA this morning talking about not only the River River, but Beautiful Boy too. An being The CW affiliate they had to kick it off with a little bit about OTH.



Austin gives a little fashion commentary about the KTLA crew, pretty much confirms that the baker's dozen is it for OTH, shares a clip of him in Beautiful Boy, and invites everyone to join him for a ride this Sunday. He does say he wants to shoot the gun off as Grand Marshal.

See what your impressions are when he's talking about OTH.


Austin's sporting some arm charm too.

It's Two Wheel Tuesday so get out and ride.

Of course some OMGers confused it with Sneaker/Sandal Saturday and didn't get too far.

Bird Booze Evolution?

Wild Turkey - - Grey Goose - - Plastered Pelican

Sounds like a drink menu for a theme bar called Empty Nest (Park Overall could play the sassy bartender)
Who's that lucky duck who hanging with him out behind those Ray -Bans? And check out the long arm of that bouncer.

Foucault's Pendulum

A couple of weeks ago we saw an awesome optical illusion created by a series of pendulums of gradually increasing length. Today we focus on a single pendulum, Foucault's pendulum, and the incredible insights (scientific and philosophical) that it can reveal.

The idea behind this kind of pendulum is quite simple: if you simply release it so that gravity does all the work, a pendulum will swing back and forth in a straight line. Foucault took this simple fact about pendulums and used it to prove empirically that the Earth rotates on its own axis: because the pendulum really does swing back and forth in a straight line and the Earth rotates below it as usual, the pendulum should produce the illusion of slowly rotating around the plane of the Earth, but that's just an illusion created by our point of view, being as we are, standing on a rotating planet!

But the awesomeness doesn't stop there. Because Foucault's pendulum is an instrument to measure rotation, you can always ask what the rotation is relative to... and then things can get spooky, as Darmouth physics professor Jim LaBelle explains:



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I Remember Tiananmen, Spring 1989 (Part 3 of 3)

By 1 June 1989, tens of thousands of protesters had gathered in Beijing's Tiananmen Square to call for an end to political oppression. In the statue 'Goddess of Democracy,' a monument created by several creative art students out of papier mache and foam, the aspirations of hundreds of millions of Chinese were symbolized. Two nights later, the government ordered the military to clear the square by force. From 3-5 June, thousands of the unarmed Tiananmen protesters were arrested, shot and wounded or killed in the streets. For the last twenty-two years, the massacre that occurred over that forty-eight hour period has not only been omitted from Chinese history books (it is mendaciously dubbed 'The 4 June Incident') but it has also been expediently shelved by the US government and other democracies around the world in pursuit of 'larger' foreign policy objectives and corporate profits.
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In the years after Tiananmen, policymakers on both sides of the Atlantic repeatedly claimed that turning China into a free market economy would usher in democratic reforms. In short, this has not happened. Today's capitalist China, which still officially clings to a communist ideology, is no closer to democracy than two decades ago. In fact, the government of China has become more despotic since Tiananmen and is now one of the most tyrannical regimes in the world.
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Last month (8 April 2011), the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor of the US Department of State released an exhaustive report on China. This report is a compilation of information gathered from news outlets, NGOs focused on human rights and other verifiable, corroborative sources. The following paragraphs contain directly quoted passages from the report. While reading these facts, please consider one simple question, 'Should the West (including Japan and South Korea) continue to overlook the character of the regime in Beijing for larger economic and geopolitical considerations?'
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Selections from 'US State Department 2010 Country Report on Human Rights Practices: China'
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"A negative trend in key areas of the country's human rights record continued, as the government took additional steps to rein in civil society, particularly organizations and individuals involved in rights advocacy and public interest issues, and increased attempts to limit freedom of speech and to control the press, the Internet and Internet access. Efforts to silence political activists were stepped up, and increasingly the government resorted to extralegal measures including enforced disappearance, 'soft detention,' and strict house arrest, including house arrest of family members, to prevent the public of independent opinions. Public interest law firms that took on sensitive cases also continued to face harassment, disbarment of legal staff and closure."
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"During the year, security forces reportedly committed arbitrary or unlawful killings."
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"According to official media reports, 197 persons died and 1,700 were injured during the July 2009 rioting in Urumqi (northwest China). In November 2009, eight ethnic Uighurs and one ethnic Han were executed without due process for crimes committed during the riots."
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"In an October 2009 report, the NGO Human Rights Watch documented the disappearances of hundreds of Uighurmen and boys following the July 2009 protest in Urumqui."
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"According to a July 7 NGO report, democracy activist Xu Wanping, who founded the China Action Party after the 1989 Tiananmen massacre and was serving a 12-year sentence for 'inciting subversion of state power' was repeatedly subjected to solitary confinement in Yuzhou Prison, Jiangbei District, Chongquing. The longest period of such confinement reportedly lasted 11 months. Xu's mental and physical health have deteriorated, and he reportedly has not received adequate medical attention while incarcerated. Xu has been denied release on medical parole."
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"Government officials continued to deny holding any political prisoners...Tens of thousands of political prisoners remain incarcerated."
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"During the year, the government increased censorship and manipulation of the press and the Internet during sensitive anniversaries." (i.e. Tiananmen)
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"A 2005 state council regulation deemed personal blogs, computer bulletin boards, and cellphone text messages as part of the news media, which subjected these media to state restrictions on content. Internet service providers were instructed to use only domestic media-news postings, to record information useful for tracking users and their viewing habits, to install software capable of copying e-mails, and to end immediately transmission of 'subversive material'."
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"The government continued restrictions on academic and artistic freedom and political and social discourse at colleges, universities and research institutes. Instructors were told not to raise certain sensitive topics in class, such as the 1989 Tiananmen massacre."
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Toward A New Foreign Policy On China
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That was but a small portion of the State Department report. If read in its entirety (a copy of the report has been included in the link below), it further documents other abuses carried out the by Chinese government including torture, forced labor in prisons, arbitrary arrests, expansive police powers, 'arbitrary interference with privacy, family, home and correspondence' and censorship.
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Aside from its rapacious rule at home, Beijing also supports a number of dictatorships around the world. In 2007, China used its vote in the United Nations Security Council to defeat an attempt to impose sanctions on Sudan for conducting genocide in Darfur. Why? Sudan is a significant provider of oil to the rapidly growing Chinese economy. That action should not have been surprising to anyone. If Beijing has no compunction about murdering its own people, why would it place African lives over a barrel of oil?
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In a recent speech, President Obama praised the recent economic growth of Brazil, China and India as millions of destitute people in these countries have been lifted out of poverty. His statement was only partially correct. First, China has become a nation of two classes in recent years - the rich and the poor. In recent articles (including one in The Telegraph (UK), the disparity of wealth is at its highest level in thirty-one years - even the government has publicly stated its concern about its potential effect on 'stability.' Hence, the wealth earned by Chinese businesses largely winds up in the hands of the monied elites and the government. Secondly, China, unlike Brazil and India, is very nearly if not in fact a fascist state. Any material gains made by the people of China have come at the price of individual freedom.
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The West must restructure its foreign policy toward China. Rather than continuing to depend on China as a cheap manufacturing base and purchaser of US debt, it is time to divest from China and relocate industries to developing nations that are democratic, respect the rule of law and uphold the standards of the international community. Are not India, Brazil and several emerging African countries far more deserving of Western capital? Western divestment led to the end of South Africa's brutally racist apartheid government, and it can lead to an end of the post-Tiananmen police state in China.
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By looking the other way, ignoring the violent nature of the regime in Beijing and legitimizing the Chinese government through trade, we are betraying both the Chinese people and everything we stand for as people dedicated to a world where 'right makes might' rather than vice versa. In remembering the Tiananmen massacre of 3-5 June 1989, we are not simply recalling a past crime. We are also considering the present reality of China today - a reality fraught with repression and violence.
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History has many lessons, and one of those lessons is quite clear. Those who collaborate with tyranny - ultimately come to ruin.
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J Roquen
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Photo: A Tibetan Monk being harassed by Chinese security forces. China invaded Tibet in 1950, and it remains under the military control of China today.
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To read the Department of State Human Rights Report on China, please click onto the following link: http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2010/eap/154382.htm
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To watch the compiled footage of the Tiananmen massacre by a CBS reporter on 4 June 1989, please click onto the following link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aAjxssiUa_

Square One

Although we got a small glimpse of the guys early last year. At where else, A farmers market (Thanks again the special OMG friend who shared it with us )

It was a year ago today we got clear shot of Jake and Austin together after a long time being out of the camera sights.

We didn't know when we would see them together again, but then we got a little unexpected surprise later in the summer.

But all this, would not have happen if one movie that opened 7 years hadn't happen.

It was said that during casting, as soon as they met they couldn't take their eyes off each other.

There must have been some kinds instant chemistry because just weeks after casting they were in New York together months before filming began. And Austin had already met one member of the G clan, Maggie.

But before we knew that it was well known how well they got along during filming. They themselves couldn't help but talking about the other.

Austin talking about on set with Jake for TDAT and cooking together in YM magazine.

The online link is gone. But ANJ had a transcript in their archives. (Thanks Spooky and Vespy!)

Hardest part to film: His scenes with Jake. "He was always making faces at me, trying to crack me up," says Austin. "It usually worked too. I was trying to be all serious and I'd see him sticking his tongue out and I'd lose it."

Fave on-set pastime: Cooking with Jake. They usually make Mexican food, but Austin's most proud of their make-it-up-as-you-go-along chicken dish. "We put three full chickens in a huge pan with shallots, garlic, onions, radishes, and seasoning." Sounds tasty.


YM Magazine April 2004 - The Day After Tomorrow - ANJ

And Jake owning up to making it hard for Austin.

This is from YM - June 2004 again courtesy of ANJ.

Jake : I especially love messing with Austin [Nichols, who plays a rich kid who also wants to date Laura]. He'll do a take and I'll say, "you're not reallly going to do that are you?"

ANJ - I especially love messing with Austin ; )


And it was evident in the outtakes and special features.





And Roland saw something special, expanding Austin's part and framing the two together on the screen.

And even the guys themselves made it special with just the little things they sneaked on screen as mementos of them together.

Still wonder about the combustible trailer and who ending having to buddy up until they got a new one. (Let's see Arjay said it wasn't him and Emmy has never said anything, and you'd think if it was Dennis he would have told that story at least once... hmmm who's left? )

And the mysteries continued even two after making the movie at the premiere 7 years ago this weekend.

Austin's watchful eyes on Jake. Jake's throwing snowballs at Austin. Yet as we know, they were mere feet from each other and had pictures taken with everyone else there, there is not one picture of them together or in a group.

It is amazing how just one moment in time can change lives and touches so many others is so many ways.

Jake was showing some color during his run yesterday.

After going with the Black Ops look on Friday night.

Not only was he showing off the guns he was flashing some metal.

Still be able to keep it close and not be too noticeable.




Happy Memorial Day!
Thank you to all who serve and have served.

Out Spotlight

It is Memorial Day weekend this weekend here in the US, and it is when we stop and remember those who served, fought and died for their country.

Unfortunately those who have served in the US Military have never been able to serve out and proud, but that is not to say that many of the LGBT have not served their country proudly.

Today's Out Spotlight is about two such men, who served and found a much more. Today's Out Spotlight is Jack Reavley and Bob Claunch, US Army.

"A half century ago an Army sergeant started going out with his commanding officer.

The two men came out by confronting the troops in their unit.

They've been together ever since..." - Bob and Jack's 52 Year Adventure.

In 1951, Lt.Jack Reavley and Army Sgt.Bob Claunch both were stationed in Munich during the Korean War. It was that same year that the U.S. military had declared homosexuality as an "unacceptable risk" and dishonorably discharged approximately 2,000 men and women from all branches of the armed services.

It was also the same year Bob and his commanding officer, Jack fell in love.

Jack had served World War II had remained in the Army Reserve, was called back to duty during the Korean War. He was Bob's commanding officer at Armed Forces Radio in Munich, Germany.

It was love at first sight, Bob said.

They may have found love, but it wasn't easy for the pair to be in love. "They couldn't be seen alone together without raising eyebrows or risking the scrutiny of military police." And then there was the matter that Jack had a wife and two young daughters back in Texas. Both were weighed down with guilt.

After keeping their relationship quiet for close to a year, others in the unit began to notice their relationship and rumors grew. If they were found out it meant the possibility of being court-martialed. Instead of denying it to the troops in the unit they confronted them about it.

Lt.Reavley called a meeting. He had his secretary, Olga, a lesbian who had helped conceal their romance, pretend to phone AFR headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany.

"I said, if anybody has anything to say about Sgt. Claunch and Lt. Reavley's association . . . now's your chance," Jack said. No one said a word.



"We didn't admit guilt, and we didn't say we weren't. So case closed. And the rumors stopped."

Soon after Jack and Bob finished their hitch and returned to the US with honorable discharges.

Jack chose not to head home to Texas, but joined Bob in his native Los Angeles. They came out to Bob's mother and sister and told them they were going to be together. His family did not approve. And that was the easier of the two family situations.

It was harder when it came to Jack's family. Jack went back to his family in Texas to explain things while Bob waited for him in New Orleans.

Still to this day, emotional about what he did, Jack said, "Morally, it wasn't the right thing for me to do, to leave her. She was such a sweet girl -- I hated to hurt her."

After several months in Texas, Jack wrote a letter to his wife when she was out of town. By the time she came home, he was gone.

"That was the only way to do it. A clean break and for me to get the heck out of there, and out of the way so she could go on with her life."

His wife went on to remarry and Jack had a relationship with both of his daughters for many many years. It was only until a son-in law asked about Jack's inheritance (and that it would left to Bob if Bob survived him), that has caused a rift in the relationships.



Jack and Bob jumped all over the US following radio jobs. Eventually, settling in Raymond, Washington, where they purchased KAPA-AM., They next 27 years broadcasting music, sports and local news.



Retiring and moving back to LA they came into a second career in film and television. For the twenty years, they were extras in "General Hospital," "The Bold and the Beautiful" and "Pretty Woman."

In 2006, Stu Maddux produced the documentary "Bob and Jack's 52-Year Adventure," about their life long romance.

For most of their lives, marriage was not an option. But when same-sex marriage became legal in California they considered tying the knot, and announced on NPR they would, but reconsidered.

"I know that we've been together a long time," Claunch said, "but the idea of cementing this relationship seems unnecessary."

"I suppose it's because for so many, many, many years and centuries, men have not married men, and women have not married women," Claunch said. "We've been brought up not having anything like that, not wanting anything like that. . . . We've always been given the impression that it was a horrible kind of situation, and it is not easy to cross over that line."

They are registered domestic partners in California, but even getting married would not allow them federal marriage benefits including Social Security and survivor benefits that other couples are granted.

But they are reconsidering marriage if opportunity happens again, "If the opportunity to marry comes again, they said they probably would take advantage of it -- and hope that federal marriage benefits would someday follow."



After more than 58 years years together, they now live in Triangle Square, a 104-unit complex in Hollywood of mostly low income LGBT seniors. They have also become advocates for gay senior adults.



We recognize those individuals who served in silence and those who spoke up to bring change to the opinions of the armed services and the citizens of the United States that all can serve no matter be race, creed, gender, or orientation. And especially for those who sacrificed their lives for freedom for ALL.

"When Americans remember and honor those who gave their lives fighting it never occurs to them that some of the strongest, bravest, and most heroic were a
It is time for us, as a community, to remedy that.”
– Leonard Matlovich
The Advocate, 1987.

Let Freedom Ride, 1961-2011

Nearly a century after the adoption of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution on 6 December 1865, racial segregation, quite similar in many respects to the former apartheid of South Africa, still existed throughout much of the American south. After the US Supreme Court declared segregation in public schools unconstitutional in the landmark case Brown v. Board of Education in 1954, the burgeoning civil rights movement began to gather steam and confidence in its agenda to break racial barriers from Boston, Massachusetts to Biloxi, Mississippi.
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In 1961, two organizations, CORE (Congress Of Racial Equality) and SNCC (Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee), decided to act on a court ruling one year earlier that prohibited racial segregation in businesses that catered to interstate travelers. Restaurants at bus terminals in the south, for example, could not refuse service or segregate black visitors passing through on public transportation from northern states - where segregation was not officially practiced (although it certainly existed unofficially).
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On 4 May, the first of many 'Freedom Rides' took off from Washington, DC with six white and seven black people ultimately bound for New Orleans. The plan was both simple and powerful. Freedom Riders would get off the bus in the segregated south at various stops during the trip, walk into a restaurant, sit down together and attempt to order food. If asked to separate or leave, they would refuse. Why should they leave or separate? Common sense, truth and even the law was now on their side.
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The forces of bigotry and hatred mounted a vigorous counteroffensive. In Alabama, Freedom Riders were refused service and physically attacked by the Ku Klux Klan (a violent racist organization). In Mississippi, they were arrested and thrown in jail. These ugly intimidation tactics were completely counterproductive, however. Millions of Americans gravitated to the cause of the Freedom Riders after seeing these acts of brutality committed by bigoted law enforcement officials on television, and white Americans became ever-more conscious that Thomas Jefferson's revolutionary ideal of 'life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness' had not been truly fulfilled for everyone.
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The Freedom Riders of Saudi Arabia, 2011
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Fifty years have passed since that momentous summer, and now another generation of Freedom Riders stands poised to challenge the forces of ignorance and oppression. Rather than the United States, freedom rides are being carried out and planned throughout Saudi Arabia to protest against nonsensical laws denying women the right to drive.
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Manal al-Sharif, a 32 year-old computer consultant, recently posted a YouTube video criticizing Riyadh's ban on female drivers while driving (illegally) herself. In the short clip, she called on her sisters over the Arabian Peninsula to drive en masse on 17 June to defy the prohibition. As soon as the government discovered her Internet activism, censors had her YouTube post removed. Even more audaciously, the government broke into her Twitter account and modified her call for action. Fortunately, however, her YouTube video and posted campaign plans were saved by followers and can be seen and read all over the worldwide web due to being picked up by the mainstream media.
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As we were all on the bus with the American Freedom Riders to gain justice for an underprivileged and oppressed group of people (either historically or in our spirits today), we must now be in the car with Manal and her sisters in their campaign for 'dignity' (a word Manal uses in her video) - the same dignity that the Freedom Riders of 1961 struggled to achieve.
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We are one people and one world, and it is our obligation to stand up for anyone being denied his or her human rights. Humanity has been on the road to a world without prejudice for centuries, and the race to the finish line will require uncommon tenacity and an unshakable faith in a better future.
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As such, we must say to these brave women of Saudi Arabia, who are fighting not only for themselves but on behalf of all people oppressed around the globe, 'Ladies, start your engines.'
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(Photo: A 'Freedom Rider' bus set on fire by forces of intolerance in Alabama, 1961)
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To watch Manal's YouTube video, which carries subtitles in English, please click onto the following link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sowNSH_W2r0ink:
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J Roquen

Mulitple Choice

Jake had a busy morning yesterday.

First up a haircut.

Not much to cut but all the same he got it ship shape.

He and Austin both got it taken off the sides.
Now it's just losing the beards.

Next up for Jake lunch at the L'Ermitage in Beverly Hills.Link
Looks like it's was a business kind of lunch meeting. But it was a place that cuisine wise
is right up Jake's alley.

Displaying an ardor for French and California cuisine, The Restaurant at L’Ermitage Beverly Hills piques the palate with tantalizing new combinations of time-honored flavors. Sourced from area farmer’s markets and local farms, the seasonal and specialty items come together in unexpected preparations to produce extraordinary flavors, while the vitrines allow guests to view a vast, expertly chosen collection of vintage and reserve wines.

Making sure to tip the valet.

And his other hand? Double cell phones.

Who'da thunk? ; )

Looks like multiples runs in the family.

Cars


Candy

Phones

And speaking of the big black family truckster, those windows are so dark it looks like they are solid steel like the rest of the car door.

Looks like there was more to do yesterday too, with a trip to the Medical Offices in Beverly Hills too.

Now you see it.

Now you don't.
Makes you wonder who's texting him.

Update 2: More pictures from Jake's Big Day of Out and About this time with his not so full gym bag.

There's a 70's kind of vibe between the belt buckle and the hemp bracelet.

How close was the pap who got this. Check out the perspective.