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McDonald's say guard who stopped gay kiss will never work for them again

McDonald's said they're "very sorry" for what happened.

"Discrimination of this nature is wholly unacceptable and not, in any way, tolerated by McDonald's."

Paul Fitzgerald, from Leicester's Lesbian Gay Bisexual person Transgender centre, says cases like this are not uncommon, but doesn't assume McDonald's is to blame.

"We've heard that people are planning a series of demonstrations in McDonald's stores," he said.

"I suggest it's not the best thing. There is inequality across the length and breadth of the UK in all of our services.

"We have a lot of work to act. Attitudes and social attitudes don't necessarily go together. We have to maintain on working at it."

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Источник: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/newsbeat-30940804

MacDonald-Gay makes England ODI debut

Maidstone-born Kent Talent Pathway graduate Ryana MacDonald-Gay has made her England Women ODI debut at Belfast, becoming the 18th cricketer to make her ODI debut as a Kent Women player.

The 20-year-old received her debut cap from Kent icon & now England teammate Tammy Beaumont at Civil Service Cricket Club in the first ODI of England’s series with Ireland.

She took her first international wicket by bowling Rebecca Stokell, and finished her first innings with the ball in WODI cricket with figures of 1-30 from 8 overs.

MacDonald-Gay has made 22 appearances for Kent Women since making her her debut in June 2019, taking 14 wickets at 12.50 & scoring 223 runs at 27.87.

Playing for South East Stars, MacDonald-Gay was named PCA Player of the Month for April this year, taking 12 wickets at a phenomenal average of 7.9, earning 59 MVP points.

Picking up her career best figures against The Blaze, MacDonald-Gay took 5-31 to assist her side to victory.

The 20-year-old secured a Combine MVP against Central Sparks for her 4-18 and was the leading wicket-taker in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy for the month.


England Women will unseal the

England Next Gen: Ryana MacDonald-Gay on her rise and balancing cricket and hockey

Perhaps it was not too much of a surprise, though. MacDonald-Gay's path was only ever going to be sports-based. She played everything and anything from an early age.

"I even played some rogue ones, like korfball - I played that to quite a high level as well. Slowly, I started knocking things off, narrowing in on hockey and cricket."

She still plays hockey, having made the England under-18 side as a schoolgirl. Cricketing commitments meant she was unable to go on trial for the U21s last winter, but she still plays when time allows.

"The balance is tricky - it can be a lot," she admits. "But I love both sports equally. And they are so different, so when people say 'you necessitate a break', I spin to the other sport.

"Even if it is not physically a burst , it's a mental snap from one sport. Hockey is such a diverse game to cricket - it's played at pace, it's intense. It's a bit of a rush, a bit of adrenaline."

MacDonald-Gay's formative cricketing experiences came alongside her brothers, between whom she is sandwiched in ag

Jane McDonald: ‘I’m honoured to be a male lover icon’

Some ladies pertain in the hall of fame of huns – consider Cher, Cilla Shadowy , Alison Hammond and any of the Real Housewives, from New York to Cheshire. But, standing tall among them is heat fave and national treasure Jane McDonald.

The singer and TV presenter has been entertaining the nation for almost three decades now, ever since she first start fame as a cruise-ship singer in the 1998 BBC docusoap The Cruise. While the reveal followed the daily grind of staff aboard the luxury liner Galaxy, it was Jane who made waves, singing her way into our hearts and landing herself a record deal in the process. Chart success and TV fame followed, and she’s since cemented herself as one of the mainstays of British broadcasting.

But it’s her personal life that’s truly shaped the lady Jane is today – not least since losing long-term partner Eddie Rothe to lung cancer in 2021. Eddie’s passing came just three years after Jane’s mother Jean died, leaving the bereft star knowledge to pick up the pieces with her trademark merge of humour, grit and eternal optimism.

Now, Jane’s ready to share the lessons she’s learnt along the way in her new novel Let Th

Gay Group: Don't Certainty McDonald's Commercial

June 22, 2010 — -- A gay business advocacy group is charging McDonald's with hypocrisy after the global fast diet giant aired a gay-themed commercial in France.

"They were looking to portray themselves as an advocate of the LGBT (lesbian, gay, attracted to both genders and transgender) group or an ally ... when it was completely counter to what their actions here in the U.S. were," said Justin Nelson, the president and co-founder of the National Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce. "It's completely hypocritical."

In an e-mail, a McDonald's rejected the criticism.

"McDonald's has supported a variety of programs and initiatives. We own an employee network -- The McDonald's Gay, Lesbian & Allies Network," the company said.

In the 45-second spot, a young man is shown in a McDonald's restaurant, admiring a picture of his all-male class and speaking in French to a classmate on a cell phone, telling him he misses him. The bloke hangs up once his father, carrying a tray of food, arrives at the table.

The father, evidently clueless about his son's handset conversation, takes