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The Center is “Roughin’ It” All Summer Long at Summer Camp!

By Zach Shultz

In her famous breakthrough essay written in 1964, “Notes on Camp,” American writer and cultural critic Susan Sontag contends that the artistic sensibility known as camp is characterized by “its love of the unnatural: of artifice and exaggeration.” Now, nearly 50 years later, the LGBT Community Center continues to keep this spirit alive with its annual Summer “Camp” Festival, an entire month of events planned to celebrate this elusively queer aesthetic. This past weekend, the Center launched this year’s Summer “Camp” Festival on the streets of the East Village through a series of outrageously over-the-top performances, titled “Roughin’ It,” held underneath a tent at the New Museum’s IDEAS City StreetFest. The day was filled with a variety of performers and styles, all brought together because of their common appeal to campy tastes.

During the festival, passersby enjoying the wonderful New York spring weather would stop as they approached the Center’s tent, alternately puzzled and amused, yet utterly transfixed by performances running the gamut from a deranged cheerleader to a dandy teller of homosexual horror tales. The wildly hilarious amalgam of performances spaced throughout the day was curated by the New Museum’s Assistant Manager of Visitor Services, Rick Herron, who worked with Paul Menard, the Center’s Director of Cultural Programs, to make the event possible.

This self-consciously ironic take on the experience of childhood summer camp brought together quite the motley crew. The designated Camp Counselor, Dandy Darkly, spent the large part of the day prancing around the sidewalk decked out in Victorian garb, ghoulish makeup and a black lace umbrella casting a menacing shade over his affected airs. Meanwhile, back in the tent Penelope Labradoodle Rockefeller—think of a bearded, grotesque, drag version of Dorothy in Oz—told groups of small children revised fairy tales to instill in them the lesson of valuing true beauty in all of its myriad, if somewhat contorted, forms.

After encouraging a group of sidewalk spectators to join in on a choreographed hoedown to One Direction’s “What Makes You Beautiful,” Penelope then introduced the next performer, Jenn Harris. Equipped with a plastic toy headset, pigtails, cheerleading leotard and horn-rimmed glasses, Jenn burst out of the tent in a frenzy to perform a hyped-up cheer routine to Lil Jon and LMFAO’s hit single, “Shots.” Afterwards, she brought her collection of dismembered Barbie dolls and tattered My Little Ponies for children to play with while she read excerpts from the classic 80s etiquette manual, “Girl Talk.” Becca Blackwell and her crew served up a gender-queer reading of Edward Albee’s “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf,” offering a new tongue-in-cheek interpretation to his classic play. The day was topped off by a campfire sing-along, led by Jeffrey Marsh, as summer “campers” crooned the theme song to The Golden Girls and Petula Clark’s classic, “Downtown.”

If you missed the inauguration of Summer “Camp,” don’t fret. Camp goes till June 13 and is jam-packed with a number of events that are certain to make you say, “Oh girl… That’s so bad, it’s good!” If you’re in on the joke, check out gaycenter.org/camp for upcoming Summer “Camp” happenings.

Zach Shultz is a Guest Blogger for the LGBT Community Center and works in Communications and Development at AID FOR AIDS. You can follow him on Twitter @zach_shultz.

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NYPD to up Presence After Bias Killing…

A spate of hate-fueled attacks on gay men in New York, including a killing in the heart of one of its most gay-friendly neighborhoods, is stirring up anxiety, disbelief and outrage heading into what is usually a time of gay pride celebration.

In the wake of last weekend’s deadly shooting on a street in Greenwich Village, officials said Monday that police would increase their presence in the Village and nearby neighborhoods through the end of June — gay pride month.

A group that combats anti-gay violence planned to fan out to various areas on Friday nights through June to talk to people about safety. And public schools are being asked to hold assemblies or other discussions of hate crimes and bullying, before summer break.

City officials, gay-rights advocates and others planned to march to the shooting scene Monday evening to denounce a rise in hate crime reports in a city that generally sees itself as a capital of diversity and tolerance.

“I don’t know why it feels like we have taken a step backward, but that is the case, and what we’re going to do with that is push forward,” said City Council Speaker Christine Quinn — the first openly gay person to hold the post.

Officials and advocates can’t pinpoint a reason for the recent rash of attacks, or even whether it reflects more violence or more reporting of it. Police called the killing of Mark Carson early Saturday a hate crime.

In announcing plans for additional police attention, Quinn said she thought anti-gay crime “got to a level of violence I thought was behind us.”

The city and especially the Village have long been seen as beacons for gay people. The gay rights movement crystallized in the Village in June 1969, when a police raid at the Stonewall Inn touched off a riot and demonstrations that came to symbolize gays’ resistance to being relegated to society’s shadows.

Yet gay-bashing has continued to flare up in New York at times in recent years. In one particularly sinister case, three men connected with a 28-year-old man online in 2006, lured him to a rest stop off a Brooklyn highway with a promise of a date and mugged him, chasing him into traffic; he was hit and killed.

In 2010, authorities said Bronx gang members beat and tortured four people in an anti-gay rage, two men were accused of a gay-bashing beating at the Stonewall Inn itself and a man spewed homophobic insults while throwing a punch at another Village bar — all assaults that happened within little more than a week.

Police say there has been a rise in bias-related crimes overall so far this year, to 22 from 13 during the same period last year. The New York City Anti-Violence Project, a nonprofit group that tracks police and other reports of hate attacks against gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people, says its numbers rose 13 percent in 2011 and 11 percent the previous year. The 2012 figures were not yet available.

Advocates see the incidents in the context of a culture that has grown more accepting of gays in some ways — 12 states have now legalized gay marriage — but doesn’t universally ban discrimination based on sexual orientation; some jurisdictions do, but others don’t.

“We have to ground this in the fact that, first, LGBT people still are without full equality in this country,” said Sharon Stapel, the Anti-Violence Project’s executive director.

Fancy Showbiz at The Ho_se // Midnight Magic and Slow Knights at Music Hall

(Midnight Magic)

We love drag queens, we love drag shows and we… like pop music (sometimes) but we want you to know that there’s more to queer performance in New York than drag, you don’t need wigs and Ke$sha to have your world rocked. Let’s have an adventure this weekend!

Fancy @ The Ho_se

Shane Shane’s Fancy is one of the glittering diamonds of our fabulously weird Brooklyn queer performance scene. We love descending into the basement of the The Ho_se and supporting fellow emerging artists as they share their work in an inviting and intimate atmosphere.

This month’s cheesy theme is “showbiz” and we can’t wait to see Shane Shane go full-on old Hollywood glamor. The magnificent Big Dipper will be back to bring the beef with his salty bear rap. Brooklyn nightlife queens Jonathan and Bpro are bringing their energetic electropop and we can’t wait to dance. Kaioni has environmental dance music to share, we’re guessing that’s some sort of experimental music and not music about saving the rainforest. We don’t know anything about Dee Dee Rex but we love surprises.

Now that it’s getting warm the H_os basement is sure to be getting steamy with all those beautiful, young, creative and strange creatures. If that sounds like you than meet us in Bushwick tonight!

Fancy at The Ho_se, 28 Lawton St. #1 (Brooklyn) May 17; 8pm-1am; $6 at the door

Spank + Midnight Magic + Slow Knights at Music Hall of Williamsburg

This show is going to be absolutely magical! We saw Midnight Magic play at a Spank party last summer and lost control. The Brooklyn-based band calls themselves “the secret love children of Donna Summer and George Clinton serving up an orgasmic feast of funk, disco, electro and soul.” This description could not be more accurate. You will be living for them after Saturday night.

The brand new funky soul collective, Slow Knights is like a dream come true. Organized by Derek Gruen (a.k.a. Del Marquis from Scissor Sisters), the group is designed to be all about the music. “Musicians interchange roles as lead and backup singer, as writer and performer-guests vocalists include Rod Thomas (Bright Light Bright Light), Xavier, Chrissie Poland, Bridget Barkan and Mykal Kilgore.” We saw them do a preview performance at Xanadude a few weeks ago and got lost in the groove.

Spank DJ’s Sean B and Will Automagic will hold it all together with sexy beats that will keep you dancing for days. This is a night to usher in a sexy summer alive with infinite possibilities. Get your tickets now, because the last couple Spank shows at Music Hall of Williamsburg have sold out!

Spank + Midnight Magic + Slow Knights at Music Hall of Williamsburg (66 N 6th Street, Brooklyn) May 18, 10pm; Tickets $15 in advance; $20 day of show if available

Paul Leopold and Mark Dommu are writers for The Culture Whore, a Brooklyn-based blog dedicated to getting slutty for the arts.

The Center is “Roughin’ It” All Summer Long at Summer Camp!

By Zach Shultz

In her famous breakthrough essay written in 1964, “Notes on Camp,” American writer and cultural critic Susan Sontag contends that the artistic sensibility known as camp is characterized by “its love of the unnatural: of artifice and exaggeration.” Now, nearly 50 years later, the LGBT Community Center continues to keep this spirit alive with its annual Summer “Camp” Festival, an entire month of events planned to celebrate this elusively queer aesthetic. This past weekend, the Center launched this year’s Summer “Camp” Festival on the streets of the East Village through a series of outrageously over-the-top performances, titled “Roughin’ It,” held underneath a tent at the New Museum’s IDEAS City StreetFest. The day was filled with a variety of performers and styles, all brought together because of their common appeal to campy tastes.

During the festival, passersby enjoying the wonderful New York spring weather would stop as they approached the Center’s tent, alternately puzzled and amused, yet utterly transfixed by performances running the gamut from a deranged cheerleader to a dandy teller of homosexual horror tales. The wildly hilarious amalgam of performances spaced throughout the day was curated by the New Museum’s Assistant Manager of Visitor Services, Rick Herron, who worked with Paul Menard, the Center’s Director of Cultural Programs, to make the event possible.

This self-consciously ironic take on the experience of childhood summer camp brought together quite the motley crew. The designated Camp Counselor, Dandy Darkly, spent the large part of the day prancing around the sidewalk decked out in Victorian garb, ghoulish makeup and a black lace umbrella casting a menacing shade over his affected airs. Meanwhile, back in the tent Penelope Labradoodle Rockefeller—think of a bearded, grotesque, drag version of Dorothy in Oz—told groups of small children revised fairy tales to instill in them the lesson of valuing true beauty in all of its myriad, if somewhat contorted, forms.

After encouraging a group of sidewalk spectators to join in on a choreographed hoedown to One Direction’s “What Makes You Beautiful,” Penelope then introduced the next performer, Jenn Harris. Equipped with a plastic toy headset, pigtails, cheerleading leotard and horn-rimmed glasses, Jenn burst out of the tent in a frenzy to perform a hyped-up cheer routine to Lil Jon and LMFAO’s hit single, “Shots.” Afterwards, she brought her collection of dismembered Barbie dolls and tattered My Little Ponies for children to play with while she read excerpts from the classic 80s etiquette manual, “Girl Talk.” Becca Blackwell and her crew served up a gender-queer reading of Edward Albee’s “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf,” offering a new tongue-in-cheek interpretation to his classic play. The day was topped off by a campfire sing-along, led by Jeffrey Marsh, as summer “campers” crooned the theme song to The Golden Girls and Petula Clark’s classic, “Downtown.”

If you missed the inauguration of Summer “Camp,” don’t fret. Camp goes till June 13 and is jam-packed with a number of events that are certain to make you say, “Oh girl… That’s so bad, it’s good!” If you’re in on the joke, check out gaycenter.org/camp for upcoming Summer “Camp” happenings.

Zach Shultz is a Guest Blogger for the LGBT Community Center and works in Communications and Development at AID FOR AIDS. You can follow him on Twitter @zach_shultz.

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Slow Response by Georgians to Mob Attack on Gay Rally

Some of the priests leading the rock-throwing throngs who stormed past police cordons could be seen participating in the melee; one repeatedly slammed a stool into the windshield of one of several minibuses trying to carry the marchers to safety, while another punched marchers and tried to drag a driver out of a bus. Some gave their names in interviews.

But as of Sunday, the Georgian police have made no arrests, and there are few signs that the investigation is moving forward.

Instead, a bishop who helped to organize the mass turnout — ostensibly a counterprotest — said from the pulpit that while the violence was “regrettable” and those who committed it should be punished, the Georgian Orthodox Church was obligated to protest the gay rights rally and would “not allow anyone to humiliate us.”

“When there are so many people, it is difficult to speak only about Christianity and morals,” said the bishop, Iakob Iakobashvili, in his Sunday sermon in Tbilisi. “Many were not able to overcome their nature and saw enemies in the others, said bad words and punched them. I was told clergymen were among them. I am not able to either condemn or justify them. They are also humans.”

Georgia’s prime minister, Bidzina Ivanishvili, has benefited from the support of the church, which exercises enormous power in the country, though usually behind the scenes. His decision on whether to pursue prosecutions will serve as a test of that relationship.

On Friday evening, with crowds of men still roaming downtown Tbilisi in search of gays, Mr. Ivanishvili promised a quick response to the violence. Yet on Sunday, at a parade for a local police force, he made no mention of either arrests or an investigation. Instead, his comments celebrated the role of the police in preventing worse injuries to the marchers. Several officers were among those hospitalized, including one with a broken leg; and a number of marchers and a journalist suffered head or chest injuries from being hit with rocks, according to Georgian news reports.

“When the question arose about saving the minority,” Mr. Ivanishvili said, “police bravely acted in their defense, and were able to lead them away from the raving masses.”

Zviad Koridze, a veteran local journalist at the Tbilisi-based Council of Ethics for Journalists, called the slow pace a reminder of the church’s influence.

“The government is acting very carefully, one could say ineffectively,” said Mr. Koridze in a telephone interview. “Everyone is simply waiting. Because in three days they should have made arrests and given some sort of answer to the events in Tbilisi.”

While the Georgian Orthodox Church usually wields its power discreetly, it has occasionally, and effectively, taken overt political or social action. In 2010, Orthodox activists began picketing a television station over “Night with Shorena,” a television show run by a former Georgian Playboy cover model who advocated sex before marriage. The show was closed down after several months. In 2011, the church protested a law granting minority religions legal standing. In 2012, the church joined protests over the torture of prison inmates. Ilia II, the Georgian Orthodox patriarch, has warned Georgians that placing their children in foreign schools would harm them morally.

Ilia II is widely acknowledged to be the most popular figure in the country. He offered no sermon on Sunday, but on Friday, after the violence, he urged protesters to leave the streets and for both sides “to pray for one another.”

“We do not accept violence,” he said, according to Interfax. “But it’s also unacceptable to give propaganda” to homosexuality.

A day earlier, he had urged the Georgian government to ban the gay rights march, writing that the majority of Georgians saw gay activism as “an insult.”

Outside of the Tbilisi church where Bishop Iakobashvili spoke Sunday, Elza Kurtanidze, 34, a former schoolteacher, said that she had spent the last days “hotly” debating if those who attacked the marchers should be punished.

“We have already gone too far by having gays and lesbians openly promoting their way of life,” she said. “This is unacceptable! By allowing things like this, we let Georgia turn from the road of its traditional destiny.”

“Arrests will be too much; it will help to further excite the situation in Georgia,” she added.

Also outside the church was Leila Dzneladze, 16, who said that while she opposed the violence, she believed that the “truth was on the side of the church.”

“No one should be punished for this,” she said. “This is for God to judge them, not us.”

Andrew Roth reported from Moscow, and Olesya Vartanyan from Tbilisi, Georgia.

Fancy Showbiz at The Ho_se // Midnight Magic and Slow Knights at Music Hall

(Midnight Magic)

We love drag queens, we love drag shows and we… like pop music (sometimes) but we want you to know that there’s more to queer performance in New York than drag, you don’t need wigs and Ke$sha to have your world rocked. Let’s have an adventure this weekend!

Fancy @ The Ho_se

Shane Shane’s Fancy is one of the glittering diamonds of our fabulously weird Brooklyn queer performance scene. We love descending into the basement of the The Ho_se and supporting fellow emerging artists as they share their work in an inviting and intimate atmosphere.

This month’s cheesy theme is “showbiz” and we can’t wait to see Shane Shane go full-on old Hollywood glamor. The magnificent Big Dipper will be back to bring the beef with his salty bear rap. Brooklyn nightlife queens Jonathan and Bpro are bringing their energetic electropop and we can’t wait to dance. Kaioni has environmental dance music to share, we’re guessing that’s some sort of experimental music and not music about saving the rainforest. We don’t know anything about Dee Dee Rex but we love surprises.

Now that it’s getting warm the H_os basement is sure to be getting steamy with all those beautiful, young, creative and strange creatures. If that sounds like you than meet us in Bushwick tonight!

Fancy at The Ho_se, 28 Lawton St. #1 (Brooklyn) May 17; 8pm-1am; $6 at the door

Spank + Midnight Magic + Slow Knights at Music Hall of Williamsburg

This show is going to be absolutely magical! We saw Midnight Magic play at a Spank party last summer and lost control. The Brooklyn-based band calls themselves “the secret love children of Donna Summer and George Clinton serving up an orgasmic feast of funk, disco, electro and soul.” This description could not be more accurate. You will be living for them after Saturday night.

The brand new funky soul collective, Slow Knights is like a dream come true. Organized by Derek Gruen (a.k.a. Del Marquis from Scissor Sisters), the group is designed to be all about the music. “Musicians interchange roles as lead and backup singer, as writer and performer-guests vocalists include Rod Thomas (Bright Light Bright Light), Xavier, Chrissie Poland, Bridget Barkan and Mykal Kilgore.” We saw them do a preview performance at Xanadude a few weeks ago and got lost in the groove.

Spank DJ’s Sean B and Will Automagic will hold it all together with sexy beats that will keep you dancing for days. This is a night to usher in a sexy summer alive with infinite possibilities. Get your tickets now, because the last couple Spank shows at Music Hall of Williamsburg have sold out!

Spank + Midnight Magic + Slow Knights at Music Hall of Williamsburg (66 N 6th Street, Brooklyn) May 18, 10pm; Tickets $15 in advance; $20 day of show if available

Paul Leopold and Mark Dommu are writers for The Culture Whore, a Brooklyn-based blog dedicated to getting slutty for the arts.

The Center is “Roughin’ It” All Summer Long at Summer Camp!

By Zach Shultz

In her famous breakthrough essay written in 1964, “Notes on Camp,” American writer and cultural critic Susan Sontag contends that the artistic sensibility known as camp is characterized by “its love of the unnatural: of artifice and exaggeration.” Now, nearly 50 years later, the LGBT Community Center continues to keep this spirit alive with its annual Summer “Camp” Festival, an entire month of events planned to celebrate this elusively queer aesthetic. This past weekend, the Center launched this year’s Summer “Camp” Festival on the streets of the East Village through a series of outrageously over-the-top performances, titled “Roughin’ It,” held underneath a tent at the New Museum’s IDEAS City StreetFest. The day was filled with a variety of performers and styles, all brought together because of their common appeal to campy tastes.

During the festival, passersby enjoying the wonderful New York spring weather would stop as they approached the Center’s tent, alternately puzzled and amused, yet utterly transfixed by performances running the gamut from a deranged cheerleader to a dandy teller of homosexual horror tales. The wildly hilarious amalgam of performances spaced throughout the day was curated by the New Museum’s Assistant Manager of Visitor Services, Rick Herron, who worked with Paul Menard, the Center’s Director of Cultural Programs, to make the event possible.

This self-consciously ironic take on the experience of childhood summer camp brought together quite the motley crew. The designated Camp Counselor, Dandy Darkly, spent the large part of the day prancing around the sidewalk decked out in Victorian garb, ghoulish makeup and a black lace umbrella casting a menacing shade over his affected airs. Meanwhile, back in the tent Penelope Labradoodle Rockefeller—think of a bearded, grotesque, drag version of Dorothy in Oz—told groups of small children revised fairy tales to instill in them the lesson of valuing true beauty in all of its myriad, if somewhat contorted, forms.

After encouraging a group of sidewalk spectators to join in on a choreographed hoedown to One Direction’s “What Makes You Beautiful,” Penelope then introduced the next performer, Jenn Harris. Equipped with a plastic toy headset, pigtails, cheerleading leotard and horn-rimmed glasses, Jenn burst out of the tent in a frenzy to perform a hyped-up cheer routine to Lil Jon and LMFAO’s hit single, “Shots.” Afterwards, she brought her collection of dismembered Barbie dolls and tattered My Little Ponies for children to play with while she read excerpts from the classic 80s etiquette manual, “Girl Talk.” Becca Blackwell and her crew served up a gender-queer reading of Edward Albee’s “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf,” offering a new tongue-in-cheek interpretation to his classic play. The day was topped off by a campfire sing-along, led by Jeffrey Marsh, as summer “campers” crooned the theme song to The Golden Girls and Petula Clark’s classic, “Downtown.”

If you missed the inauguration of Summer “Camp,” don’t fret. Camp goes till June 13 and is jam-packed with a number of events that are certain to make you say, “Oh girl… That’s so bad, it’s good!” If you’re in on the joke, check out gaycenter.org/camp for upcoming Summer “Camp” happenings.

Zach Shultz is a Guest Blogger for the LGBT Community Center and works in Communications and Development at AID FOR AIDS. You can follow him on Twitter @zach_shultz.

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French President Signs Gay Marriage Into…

France will see its first gay weddings within days, after French President Francois Hollande signed a law Saturday authorizing marriage and adoption by same-sex couples and ending months of nationwide protests and wrenching debate.

Hollande’s office said he signed the bill Saturday morning, a day after the Constitutional Council struck down a challenge to the law and ruled it in line with France’s constitution.

Hollande, a Socialist, had made legalizing gay marriage one of his campaign pledges last year. While polls for years have shown majority support for gay marriage in France, adoption by same-sex couples is more controversial.

The parliamentary debate exposed a deep conservatism and attachment to traditional families in France’s rural core that is often eclipsed by and at odds with libertine Paris.

But mostly, it tapped into deep discontent with the Socialist government, largely over Hollande’s handling of the economy. Months of anti-gay marriage protests became a flashpoint for frustrations with Hollande, and occasionally degenerated into violence.

In addition, gay rights groups reported a rise in attacks on homosexuals as the parliamentary debate was under way. Protest organizers distanced themselves from the trouble-makers.

The opposition isn’t ready to give up. It plans a protest May 26 that aims to parlay the success of the anti-gay marriage movement into a broader anti-Hollande one. Among those expected to attend is Jean-Francois Cope, the leader of the opposition UMP party, riven by divisions and struggling for direction since Nicolas Sarkozy lost the presidency last year.

Hollande warned that he wouldn’t accept any disruption of France’s first gay marriages.

One couple signed up Saturday to tie the knot on May 29 in the gay-friendly southern French city of Montpellier.

“We’re very happy that today we can finally talk of love after all the talk of legislation and political battles,” one of the future newlyweds, Vincent Autin, said on France-Info radio.

According to French law, couples must register to marry in city hall and wait at least 10 days before holding a ceremony so that anyone objecting to the union — such as an existing spouse — has time to intervene.

Marketing whizzes are already preparing lesbian and gay cake toppers, his-and-his wedding bands, and other services for France’s gay weddings.

Despite the protests, the law passed easily in both houses of parliament, which are dominated by Hollande’s Socialists. And the Constitutional Council said, “Marriage as a union between a man and a woman cannot be considered a fundamental principle.”

France is the most populous country to have legal gay marriages, and the 14th country worldwide. In the United States, Minnesota became the 12th state in the country to legalize same-sex unions on Tuesday.

In neighboring Belgium, thousands of people took to the confetti-covered streets of Brussels to take part in an annual gay pride march on Saturday. Trucks blasting music and carrying dance floors made their way through cheering crowds. Belgium legalized gay marriage 10 years ago and permitted adoption for same-sex couples seven years ago.

Fancy Showbiz at The Ho_se // Midnight Magic and Slow Knights at Music Hall

(Midnight Magic)

We love drag queens, we love drag shows and we… like pop music (sometimes) but we want you to know that there’s more to queer performance in New York than drag, you don’t need wigs and Ke$sha to have your world rocked. Let’s have an adventure this weekend!

Fancy @ The Ho_se

Shane Shane’s Fancy is one of the glittering diamonds of our fabulously weird Brooklyn queer performance scene. We love descending into the basement of the The Ho_se and supporting fellow emerging artists as they share their work in an inviting and intimate atmosphere.

This month’s cheesy theme is “showbiz” and we can’t wait to see Shane Shane go full-on old Hollywood glamor. The magnificent Big Dipper will be back to bring the beef with his salty bear rap. Brooklyn nightlife queens Jonathan and Bpro are bringing their energetic electropop and we can’t wait to dance. Kaioni has environmental dance music to share, we’re guessing that’s some sort of experimental music and not music about saving the rainforest. We don’t know anything about Dee Dee Rex but we love surprises.

Now that it’s getting warm the H_os basement is sure to be getting steamy with all those beautiful, young, creative and strange creatures. If that sounds like you than meet us in Bushwick tonight!

Fancy at The Ho_se, 28 Lawton St. #1 (Brooklyn) May 17; 8pm-1am; $6 at the door

Spank + Midnight Magic + Slow Knights at Music Hall of Williamsburg

This show is going to be absolutely magical! We saw Midnight Magic play at a Spank party last summer and lost control. The Brooklyn-based band calls themselves “the secret love children of Donna Summer and George Clinton serving up an orgasmic feast of funk, disco, electro and soul.” This description could not be more accurate. You will be living for them after Saturday night.

The brand new funky soul collective, Slow Knights is like a dream come true. Organized by Derek Gruen (a.k.a. Del Marquis from Scissor Sisters), the group is designed to be all about the music. “Musicians interchange roles as lead and backup singer, as writer and performer-guests vocalists include Rod Thomas (Bright Light Bright Light), Xavier, Chrissie Poland, Bridget Barkan and Mykal Kilgore.” We saw them do a preview performance at Xanadude a few weeks ago and got lost in the groove.

Spank DJ’s Sean B and Will Automagic will hold it all together with sexy beats that will keep you dancing for days. This is a night to usher in a sexy summer alive with infinite possibilities. Get your tickets now, because the last couple Spank shows at Music Hall of Williamsburg have sold out!

Spank + Midnight Magic + Slow Knights at Music Hall of Williamsburg (66 N 6th Street, Brooklyn) May 18, 10pm; Tickets $15 in advance; $20 day of show if available

Paul Leopold and Mark Dommu are writers for The Culture Whore, a Brooklyn-based blog dedicated to getting slutty for the arts.

The Center is “Roughin’ It” All Summer Long at Summer Camp!

By Zach Shultz

In her famous breakthrough essay written in 1964, “Notes on Camp,” American writer and cultural critic Susan Sontag contends that the artistic sensibility known as camp is characterized by “its love of the unnatural: of artifice and exaggeration.” Now, nearly 50 years later, the LGBT Community Center continues to keep this spirit alive with its annual Summer “Camp” Festival, an entire month of events planned to celebrate this elusively queer aesthetic. This past weekend, the Center launched this year’s Summer “Camp” Festival on the streets of the East Village through a series of outrageously over-the-top performances, titled “Roughin’ It,” held underneath a tent at the New Museum’s IDEAS City StreetFest. The day was filled with a variety of performers and styles, all brought together because of their common appeal to campy tastes.

During the festival, passersby enjoying the wonderful New York spring weather would stop as they approached the Center’s tent, alternately puzzled and amused, yet utterly transfixed by performances running the gamut from a deranged cheerleader to a dandy teller of homosexual horror tales. The wildly hilarious amalgam of performances spaced throughout the day was curated by the New Museum’s Assistant Manager of Visitor Services, Rick Herron, who worked with Paul Menard, the Center’s Director of Cultural Programs, to make the event possible.

This self-consciously ironic take on the experience of childhood summer camp brought together quite the motley crew. The designated Camp Counselor, Dandy Darkly, spent the large part of the day prancing around the sidewalk decked out in Victorian garb, ghoulish makeup and a black lace umbrella casting a menacing shade over his affected airs. Meanwhile, back in the tent Penelope Labradoodle Rockefeller—think of a bearded, grotesque, drag version of Dorothy in Oz—told groups of small children revised fairy tales to instill in them the lesson of valuing true beauty in all of its myriad, if somewhat contorted, forms.

After encouraging a group of sidewalk spectators to join in on a choreographed hoedown to One Direction’s “What Makes You Beautiful,” Penelope then introduced the next performer, Jenn Harris. Equipped with a plastic toy headset, pigtails, cheerleading leotard and horn-rimmed glasses, Jenn burst out of the tent in a frenzy to perform a hyped-up cheer routine to Lil Jon and LMFAO’s hit single, “Shots.” Afterwards, she brought her collection of dismembered Barbie dolls and tattered My Little Ponies for children to play with while she read excerpts from the classic 80s etiquette manual, “Girl Talk.” Becca Blackwell and her crew served up a gender-queer reading of Edward Albee’s “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf,” offering a new tongue-in-cheek interpretation to his classic play. The day was topped off by a campfire sing-along, led by Jeffrey Marsh, as summer “campers” crooned the theme song to The Golden Girls and Petula Clark’s classic, “Downtown.”

If you missed the inauguration of Summer “Camp,” don’t fret. Camp goes till June 13 and is jam-packed with a number of events that are certain to make you say, “Oh girl… That’s so bad, it’s good!” If you’re in on the joke, check out gaycenter.org/camp for upcoming Summer “Camp” happenings.

Zach Shultz is a Guest Blogger for the LGBT Community Center and works in Communications and Development at AID FOR AIDS. You can follow him on Twitter @zach_shultz.

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