Wed 2 Dec 2009
Right On, Sista Baxter
Posted by chris under Homo Issues, TV — No Comments
Wed 2 Dec 2009
Posted by chris under Homo Issues, TV — No Comments
Fri 15 May 2009
Posted by chris under Assholes, Homo Issues, Politics, TV — No Comments
Jon Stewart gives Obama a well-deserved shellacking for his turnaround on the Bush torture doctrine and gays in the military.
Fri 8 May 2009
Posted by chris under Homo Issues, Reasons to be Cheerful — No Comments

Stephen Fry’s letter to his younger self is extremely moving and not to be missed.
Sat 29 Jul 2006
Posted by chris under Book Reviews, Monsters of Computer Science — No Comments

David Leavitt, the author of The Lost Language of Cranes, among others, wrote this excellent biography of computer science legend Alan Turing.
Previous biographies of Turing have tended toward two extremes. At one end, there is the mathematical & philosophical exegesis: these usually focus on his considerable contributions to cryptanalysis, AI, and the practical mechanics of how “thinking machines” would function. These accounts tend to be a bit desexed: Turing’s sexuality is mentioned, as it must be, but usually as a part of his other professorial eccentricities.
The other extreme of Turing biographies soft-soap the mathematics and try to make him into a patron saint of homosexuality.
Leavitt’s book skillfully splits the difference between these poles. The often difficult mathematics are made engrossingly readable, in a manner reminiscent of my man Simon Singh (to whom he respectfully refers). The issues surrounding his sexuality and identity are woven throughout the book in a meaningful way; as opposed to being “tacked on” as they often are in other Turing books (“oh, and he was prosecuted for a homosexual act and committed suicide by eating a poisoned apple…”).
Leavitt, while recognizing the literary possibilities of Turing’s biography and work, doesn’t labor them. He has a light touch that gently leads the reader to these insights.
Tue 25 Jul 2006
Posted by chris under Homo Issues — No Comments
Genius actor and out, loud and proud gay man Sir Ian McKellan has been made an honorary Lt. Colonel in Georgia’s National Guard. I assume they didn’t “ask”, but he has certainly “told”… consistently and confidently.
Take that, Sam Nunn!