This week's rag 'n' mag roundup features Wyatt Dorion, Pietro Boselli, Tommy Paul, Lorenzo Musetti, Jack Tracy, Mike Maimone and more BELOW.
Thursday, January 22, 2026
Wednesday, January 21, 2026
Remains of the Day (01/21)
Socialite Life: Try to guess if Alexander Skarsgaard isn't really bisexual, as he hinted while promoting a gay movie
The Athletic: Bill Kennedy, Robin Roberts, Jason Collins highlight LGBTQ Sports Hall of Fame inductees
Wrestle Wednesday: When XL met XS
Gr8er Days: The enduring beauty of Guy Madison
NYT Opinion: Americans are turning against gay people
Hot Cat of the Day: Wishing Larry the cat at Downing Street a belated 19th birthday!
Final Chapter: You may have read that pioneering gay book publisher Don Weise died unexpectedly last week at just 59. Although his old-school ways left him largely unprepared for the 21st century take on the industry, I'll always be grateful to him for signing me in 2013 to write my memoir, "Wasn't Tomorrow Wonderful?" My deepest condolences to those who adored him, and there were many. xo
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
Even More 'Tubular' Festival Coming This Summer
As I've mentioned, I generally hate music festivals. But where was this line-up -- even sans Dave Ball (RIP) -- when I let my guard down for the Totally Tubular Festival last month?! I quickly ran afoul of the male singer from Animotion when I mentioned that these things typically attract the "wrong" nostalgia acts. (No word on how Astrid Plane feels.) But if I'm honest, I just as easily could have cited "headliners" Men Without Hats and A Flock of Seagulls, especially when compared with the Human League, Soft Cell and Alison F**king Moyet. All I can say is I doubt tickets will go for 22 bucks the day before!
Am I his obsession?
Monday, January 19, 2026
Broadway, Booze and a 'Blizzard'
Was a little MIA these past few days because we had my brother Terence in town to celebrate his 61st birthday.
It was a bit of a whirlwind, including but not limited to:
Two plays: "All Out" at the Nederlander Theatre (sort of "Laugh In" meets "SNL" with a band playing in between sketches) and "The Honey Trap" at the Irish Repertory Theatre (suspenseful and thought-provoking)
And he wasn't even the honey trap!
Five restaurants (Viand Cafe, Westside diner, Friend of a Farmer, Rosa Mexicano, Elmo)
Three bars (Dublin House, P.J. Clarke's, Central Park Tavern)
and
One reunion with our former colleagues from our college jobs answering phones in the Arizona Republic and Phoenix Gazette circulation department.
Photo highlights below:
Thursday: Toasting the birthday boy on the Upper West Side
Friday: Catching Simon Rich's latest, which consists of live readings of short stories about "ego, envy, greed, and basically just New Yorkers in general." Simon is the son of my former NYT colleague Frank Rich.
Have been friends with these two lovelies since 1986, sisters Mary (far left) and Kristin, who happened to be in town from Arizona and Italy for their uncle's 96th birthday. On weekends we would sometimes arrive to work at the Republic & Gazette's circulation call center having been out partying all night -- still lightly drunk or in the early stages of a hangover -- to field calls from angry subscribers whose papers weren't delivered or even worse: were missing the coupons on Sunday!
Mary and Kenny
Terence
"Circulation, may I help you?"
Terence left on Sunday and Damian and I even managed to go to the gym despite another snowfall!
From my Instagram HERE.
'Injustice Anywhere Is a Threat to Justice Everywhere'
Martin Luther King Jr. was arrested 29 times.
Not for crimes, but for conscience -- acts of civil disobedience and the kind of trumped-up charges designed to slow a movement: loitering, minor traffic violations, existing while demanding justice.
It was from an Alabama jail cell, on April 16, 1963, that King wrote his "Letter From Birmingham Jail," laying out a truth that still makes people uncomfortable: that unjust laws deserve to be broken, and that waiting politely for justice often means waiting forever.
King understood that progress doesn’t arrive on schedule, and it certainly doesn’t come from silence.
As he put it, with clarity that still cuts:
“Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.”
On MLK Day -- and every day -- it feels less like a quote and more like a warning Americans are needlessly living inside.
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