ju st o u t ▼ “As a nation, the United States is living McLife. There’s a Starbucks, a Gap and a Borders Bookstore on every comer and a corporate sponsor for everything from gay pride celebrations to foot­ ball stadiums to the Creating Change Confer­ ence.... The gay community is no more immune from the homogenization and flattening of American culture than is the rest of the country. After all, we invented clones. We have McGhettos, McMuscles, McLeather and, logically, McElan- gelo [Signorile] and company. (It’s not a life, as that anachronistic liquor ad claims. Not anymore. It’s a lifestyle.)” — Columnist John Fall writing for the Web site cruisingforsex.com Continued from page 19 “I lived with a sense of shame for a long, long time. Every single interview I did, I dodged that dreaded question ‘Are you gay?’ I tried to be witty, I tried to find ways to get around it, and my answer was always, ‘My private life is my private life.’ And it is, but my sexuality is as much a part of me as my skin color.... I tried for a long time to justi­ fy why it should be hidden, for as long as I could, and then I finally got to a point where it was more important for me to live my life honestly and to be proud of who I am, than my fame. And ironically, as soon as I was honest, I became more famous. So much for those people who said that it would ruin my career.” — Ellen DeGeneres as she received the Human Rights Campaign’s 1997 Civil Rights Leadership Award, Nov. 8 “I saw Ellen [DeGeneres] across a crowded room, not knowing anything at all except how I just was drawn to her. I was not gay before I met her. I never thought about it. Nobody could have been more confused than me. But it was very clear from the second 1 saw her that this was something more powerful than anything I could have con­ trolled.... I fell in love with a person. I don’t think it was immediately a sexual attraction. I think it was just, wow, you are the most incredible person I’ve ever met and I want to be with you. Souls con­ nect, and there are times when souls come togeth­ er and they are just meant to be. It was just incred­ ible.” — Actress Anne Heche on The Oprah Winfrey Show, April 30 BILL AND AL “On issue after issue involving gays and les­ bians, survey after survey shows that the most important determinant of people’s attitude is whether they are aware, whether they knowingly have had a family [situation] or a friendship or a work relation with a gay person.... So I think one of the greatest things we have to do still is just to increase the ability of Americans who do not yet know that gays and lesbians are their fellow Americans, in every sense of the word, to feel that way. I think it’s very important.” — President Clinton in a Nov. 8 address to the Human Rights Campaign’s national dinner “It is time for all Americans to recognize that the issues that face gays and lesbians in this coun­ try are not narrow, special interests, they are mat­ ters of basic human and civil rights.” — Vice President Gore at the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force’s annual awards ceremony, Sept. 15 “We have no intention of pulling this nominee [proposed Luxembourg ambassador James Hormel]. It’s an absolute outrage that any member of the United States Senate would block a nominee based on his or her sexual preference.” — White House spokesman Joe Lockhart, Nov. 15 SEX AND ASSIMILATION “There are those people who wish to make us, quote unquote, palatable to the mainstream. That’s how they think we are going to be able to gain our rights. I don’t believe that. I believe that we have Edm und White our culture and our own way of doing things. I also think that if we had spent half as much time deal­ ing with the government as w e’ve spent yelling at each other, we would have had our rights 20 years ago.” — Comic Lea DeLaria to The New York Times, Aug. 20 “I did not fight all those hideous battles, and watch all those people die, so you young kids could go out there and make the same fucking mis­ takes we made in the first place that killed so many of my, our, brothers. We did not fight those battles so you could get drugged out of your tits and fuck your minds out and dance for three days straight and then go to the gyms and pump your bodies back into some balloon full of hot air and then go to work, go back into the world and just sit on your asses until the following weekend. Is your most important purpose in life to look good without a shirt on the dance floor? That was how my gener­ ation behaved when they were your age and they’re all dead!” — Author/activist Larry Kramer writing in New York City’s LGNY, July 6 1 9 . 1 9 9 7 T 21 girl? Who knows? I don’t know. Maybe. Maybe not. It depends. If I have to just play gay, I’m not unhappy about that either. I don’t have a problem playing a range of gay characters, if that’s what I have to do.” — Gay actor Rupert Everett (My Best F riend’s Wedding) to The Associated Press “ By declaring her homosexuality, Jodie would be an inspiration to thousands and thou­ sands o f others like her. If Jodie is indeed a les­ bian— and I assume she is— she should come out.” — Actress Jodie Foster’s brother Buddy to The National Enquirer, May 27 “Another thing that really disturbs me is the AIDS organizations benefiting from and hosting the Circuit parties. They should not be hosting par­ ties where a lot of destructive action is going on. They need to pull away from these parties and say, ‘As AIDS service and prevention organizations, we must distance ourselves from this scene.’ Instead, they are celebrating and promoting them.” — Author Michelangelo Signorile in the AIDS magazine Art & Understanding, August issue “One thousand forty-nine. That is the number of federal statues that provide benefits, rights and privileges to individuals who have the legal right to marry. I am at the end of my patience with gays who say they’re not interested in obtaining the right to legally marry. Those 1,049 benefits, rights and privileges, which amount to respect, don’t interest them. Dumb, stupid, blind gays opposed to gay marriage obviously have not had to watch helplessly as a lover who has no citizenship or a green card is deported from America like a com­ mon criminal. Demanding legalized gay marriage is a pragmatic decision! It is not about ‘copying’ them. It is about money and rights.” — Author Larry Kramer in the May 27 Advocate IN AND OUT “My parents are very supportive of me. God, I generally don’t like to go into personal issues, I’m pretty private. I was never in the closet, anyway, but I think that, within a family that’s heterosexu­ al, you’re always going to be an outsider if you’re gay. I don’t think it’s easy to grow up gay anywhere, especially with the amount of fear and un- comfortableness that sur­ rounds sexuality, let alone homosexuality. It’s pain­ ful. But I think w e’ve made some big strides now; we don’t have to apologize for being gay. I believe we were created this way by God.” —Jason Gould, son of Barbra Streisand and Elliot Gould, to London’s Gay Times, July issue “ I get very irritated with all the discussions about letting down one’s guard toward safe sex. I mean, when people talk about unprotected sex as the ultimate sign of love, I think that’s just pure folly. I’m not at all for any of that. But I’m also not for fidelity. It seems to me that they are entirely unrelated issues. Either safe sex works, or it doesn’t. If it doesn’t work, then the only solution, logically, is to be totally chaste. If it does work, it doesn’t make much difference whether you’re having safe sex with one person or 10 peo­ ple. If the rate of infection is creeping up again, it’s probably because there’s a younger group that feels that somehow they’re not going to be touched by this or they don’t care.” — Author Edmund White to the San Francisco Chronicle, Oct. 4 Barbra Streisand in 1962 Lea DeLaria “ My own personal in-house w riter— the beautiful, the brilliant, my beloved Jane Wagner— was off writing a pilot...hopefully for me.” — Lily Tomlin, lamenting that her house­ mate was unavailable to write her speech to the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation’s Media Awards in Los Angeles, March 16 MEOW! “It almost seems like actual S/M sex is sec­ ondary to the lifestyle and to the culture that’s built up around clubs and runs and beer busts and contests. T hey’re so boring! Is there anything that makes S/M sex seem less erotic than the fan­ tasy sequences in these contests?... I remember the first leather bars I went to when I was 16 years old. They were gay biker bars. They were dangerous. Now I’m sure there are AIDS quilt­ ing bees and fucking AA meetings in the back of every leather bar!” — Syndicated gay advice columnist Dan Savage to San Francisco’s Cuir Underground, June issue “I freakin’ can’t under­ stand people spending so much time trying to out me. w — Actress Lucy Lawless (Xena, Warrior Princess) to Los Angeles’ Lesbian News, November issue “ [W]hen I told him that job discrimination against gays is legal in 41 states, he actually said to me that that was unconstitutional. While he was a congressman. Frightening.” — Chastity Bono on dad Sonny Bono, a Republican representative from California, to The New York Times, July 9 “Are people going to find me appealing as a homo­ sexual man? Will there be a problem when they see me making out with a “ In fishnet and feathers, h e ’s a unisex w reck.” — Fashion critic Mr. Blackwell naming Chicago Bulls transvestite Dennis Rodman as last year’s “Worst-Dressed Woman,” Jan. 14