763 gay
763 Gay StreetWestwood, MA 02090Sale Price: $1,407,410
The property listing numbers and information, or the Images, put forth herein were provided to MLS Property Information Network, Inc. (MLSPIN) from third party sources, including sellers, lessors and public records, and were compiled byMLSPIN. The property listing data and information, and the Images, are for the personal, non-commercial use of consumers having a fine faith interest in purchasing or leasing listed properties of the type displayed to them and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties which such consumers may contain a good faith interest in purchasing or leasing. MLSPIN and its subscribers disclaim any and all representations and warranties as to the accuracy of the property listing data and data, or as to the accuracy of any of the Images, set forth herein.
Written by François Peneaud
The EXILES series was more gay- and lesbian-inclusive than usual in Marvel comics, when it was written by Judd Winick . Jeff Parker, the writer of the latest iteration of the series who’s connected by artists Salva Espin and Casey Jones, continues that tradition with the parallel-earth analog of X-Men’s the Beast, here in his large, blue, furry version.
In the last issue of series, which lasted only for 6 months and is collected in the EXILES: POINT OF NO RETURN tpb, the Beast talks about exiting behind a deceased companion, who’s revealed to be Wonder Man (knowing the Earth 616 history of Wonder Man, one might advise the Beast to go back and inspect whether his boyfriend is really dead). When a girl-crazy teammate of his expresses surprise, he comments “You didn’t notice me rambling on about women, did you?”.
It seems to me this sums up pretty nicely the frustration one experiences with this kind of late, one-off reveal: it’s always pleasant to count one more queer character in comics, but then, this is yet another character most likely to never materialize again – and what really prevented the journalist from giving us
Google has seized over 750 domain names from a cybersquatter who used them to drive traffic to a series of "gay interest" websites and now wants Google's trademark cancelled.
The company has won a complaint covering 763 domains that all included the word "google" followed by the name of another company, keyword or icon, which it called "one of the most hostile campaigns of domain identify infringement that [Google] has ever encountered."
Google is now the proud owner of sites including googletranny.com, googlehonda.com, googlethepiratebay.com, googlegayfacebook.com, googleprophetmuhammad.com, googlekellyclarkson.com and far too many more to mention.
The complaint was filed in Parade with the US National Arbitration Forum under ICANN's Uniform Domain Name Argue Resolution Policy.
According to the NAF decision, these domains all pointed visitors to the adults-only website tgn.xxx, currently a "Coming Soon" page promising a "Gay Network".
Google took this to mean that the squatter, New York-based Chris Gillespie, intended to exploit its good name to promote gay porn, but Gillespie said in his defence that he only redirected the domains to the .xxx site in arrange to measure
763 Gay StreetWestwood, MA 02090Sale Price: $1,407,410
The property listing information and information, or the Images, arrange forth herein were provided to MLS Property Information Network, Inc. (MLSPIN) from third party sources, including sellers, lessors and public records, and were compiled byMLSPIN. The property listing data and information, and the Images, are for the personal, non-commercial use of consumers having a fine faith interest in purchasing or leasing listed properties of the type displayed to them and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties which such consumers may own a good faith interest in purchasing or leasing. MLSPIN and its subscribers disclaim any and all representations and warranties as to the accuracy of the property listing data and communication, or as to the accuracy of any of the Images, set forth herein.
My friend Spencer Smith (age 31, ER attending pharmacist, BYU grad, active LDS) join us to give his story. Spencer (oldest of five; grew up in Sacramento) talks his journey to accept his sexual orientation and coming out to others. Spencer talks about not creature able to make virtual dating work with women and managing the sometimes painful cultural expectations to dine and marry. Spencer talks about deciding that is not going to perform for him (or her) and gradually coming out to others (including a very good experience with his brother and then later with his family). Spencer talks about his decision to attend Harvest in 2023 (felt a lot of anxiety beforehand) and how that transforming experience helped him comprehend that he can be both gay and a Latter-day Saint. Spencer ended up volunteering at Collect and talks about the importance of support and community. Spencer talks about the joy of having his mother attend with him and all the conversations that shared encounter created. Spencer talks about feeling impressed to commence a “Gatherings” in his area and how this helps create support for LGBTQ members/allies in local areas—scalable to help so many. I am so impressed with Spencer who is