Friday, October 8, 2010

CQA & MAGNET present "'Where's the "T" in Media?". Panel Discussion October 13th @ Columbia University


New York LGBT Community & Students Host Panel Discussion on Images of Trans People in the Media at Columbia University


What: “Where’s the “T” In Media: Exploring the Mis(representation) of transsexual, transgender and intersex People In the Media” is a panel discussion presented by Columbia Queer Alliance (CQA), Media Advocates Giving National Equality to Transsexual & Transgender People (MAGNET), Quam 2010 and GendeRevolution. After the panel discussion there will be a Q & A from the audience


Who: Panelists:

· Ashley Love - an organizer w/ MAGNET -Media Advocates Giving National Equality to Transsexual & Transgender People
· Noah Lewis - Staff Attorney at Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund
· Deb Sprague -Writer-Producer: Premiere Radio Network
· Kyle Lukoff - Barnard alum

When: Wednesday October 13, 2010 @ 7pm


Where: 304 Barnard Hall, Columbia University, NYC (see directions below)


Why: In honor of Gender Rights Week, this discussion will focus on the depictions of transsexual, transgender and intersex images in the media. With an abundance of trans images in the last 5 years, are these images affirming trans people, or dehumanizing them? Noted trans leaders and college students offer the facts, and their opinions.

refreshments will be served

RSVP is not mandatory, but is appreciated. RSVP to magnet_right_now@yahoo.com


For more info or press inquires: magnet_right_now@yahoo.com


MAGNET’s website: http://www.themagnetsource.blogspot.com/
Columbia Queer Alliance’s website: http://www.cqanyc.com/


DIRECTIONS:
(1) Take the 1 train to the 116th St stop.

(2) Cross to the west side of Broadway Avenue, opposite the entrance to Columbia University's main campus.

(3) Walk north, until you reach a set of open gates on your left. Barnard Hall will be inside the gates, immediately to your left

Friday, July 16, 2010

MAGNET Panel about Misrepresentation and Exploitation of Transsexual Women Inspires Healthy Community Discussion.

Post Event Release

MAGNET’s positive panel discussion ‘Women Demanding Change Now’ has successful outcome.

‘Women Demanding Change Now: The Dehumanization of Transsexual Women through the Gay Male Hollywood Lens’ was a controversial, yet healthy and much needed discussion concerning the stigmatizing portrayals of transsexual women in the media, particularly those produced by Gay Male Hollywood.

An extremely diverse group of LGBTQI and allies spoke on the panel such as teachers, activists, film/TV producers, journalists, writers and actors.

Though the topics were confrontational, we needed to be honest about the realities affecting the most vulnerable portion of the LGBT community.

The reality is that there are very few opportunities for trans roles in Hollywood, so when gay men get into positions of power to make those few times count, it is extremely disappointing, stigmatizing and hierarchy creating when they put images of “trans face” into the public eye, therefore dehumanizing and marginalizing transsexual women in mainstream society.

Some of the footage from the event will be in Ashley Love’s upcoming documentary concerning media reform for transsexual women.

A outline of what was discussed at the event will be available next week.

The reason MAGNET elected to specifically target the negative images created by gay men is since transsexual women are listed under the LGBT umbrella, then it is even more damaging when the most privileged part of the LGBT community (affluent gay men) gives mainstream society ‘permission’ to oppress us. Transsexual women are not ‘property’ of the privileged white gay (or straight) men who continue to makes millions off exploiting them in the media. They do not have the right to make a minstrel show out of of transsexual women's lives. Gay Male Hollywood's "trans face" images are causing harm at a time when trans women are trying to gain acceptance and civil rights.

Thank you to all supported the trans community’s protest against defamation, misrepresentation and exploitation

Friday, July 9, 2010

Women Demanding Change Now panel discussion- July 15th in Los Angeles


Date:
Thursday, July 15, 2010
Time:
7:00pm - 9:30pm
Location:
Plummer Park Community Center- Room # 6, West Hollywood, California
Women Demanding Change Now:
The Dehumanizing Misrepresentation of Transsexual Women through the Gay Male Hollywood Lens.

Hosted by MAGNET- Media Advocates Giving National Equality to Transsexual & Transgender People
(MAGNET)

MAGNET is an anti-defamation organization dedicated to educating the media about transsexual and transgender issues, as well as pushing for more authentic and positive portrayals of trans people in the media.

Event will be filmed, so attendees must be okay with this

Some topics which be discussed:

• Finding solutions to build authentic unity and trust within LGBT community

• Spiritual/mental/physical violence incited by messages in film and TV

• Gay males producing stigmatizing, over the top & unkind images of transsexual women

• Gay Inc. and some transgender activists co-opting the medical condition transsexualism

• Inaccurately depicting transsexual women as “drag queens”, “caricatures of femininity”

• Dangerous propaganda that miseducates public and assaults transsexual women

There will be an opportunity for the audience to ask the panelists questions.



- Kiana Moore (transsexual woman, Hollywood producer- VH1,MTV, Bravo, Oxygen, Logo)--
- Arianna Davis (transsexual woman & intersex- Founder of Gender ID Empowerment Coalition)
- Cary Harrison (gay male, radio personality, award winning journalist.)
- Mannee McMurray (LGBT activist, writer, MAGNET volunteer)
- Hannah Howard (trans activist, Gender Justice LA board member)

- Also with Talia Bettcher, PHD - Matt Palazzolo - Libby Freeman

Moderated by Ashley Love- (trans rights advocate, writer and an organizer with MAGNET)


Please let us know your thoughts on this epidemic so we can include them in the planning and discussion.

FOR INFO, contact MAGNET organizer: Ashley Love @ MAGNET @ magnet_right_now@yahoo.com.


Media Advocates Giving National Equality to Transsexual & Transgender People (MAGNET)

www.TheMAGNETSource.blogspot.com
Ashley Love's blog: www.TransFormingMedia.blogspot.com

MAGNET is an anti-defamation organization dedicated to educating the media about transsexual and transgender issues, as well as pushing for more authentic and positive portrayals of trans people in the media.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

MAGNET Changes Name of Panel Discussion to Acknowledge Allies of Trans People in LGB Community


Media Advocates Giving National Equality to Transsexual & Transgender People

July 7, 2010

MAGNET Changes Name of Panel Discussion to Acknowledge Allies of Transsexual People in the Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Community.

On July 15th Media Advocates Giving National Equality to Transsexual & Transgender People (MAGNET) is hosting a panel discussion concerning the trend of gay male producers creating negative and transphobic media images that harm transsexual women called “Women Demanding Change Now”. The prior subtitle was “The Dehumanizing Misrepresentation of Transsexual Women through a Gay Male Media Mafia Lens”. Due to MAGNET wanting to rebuild trust between the trans and LGB community, and because of community feedback pertaining to our confrontational title, we are now exchanging the part “Gay Male Media Mafia” to “Gay Male Hollywood”.

MAGNET has received input from community leaders concerned with many in the LGBT activist community’s language and terms, such as “Gay Inc.” and “Gay Male Media Mafia”.
We acknowledge these terms are confrontational, but are they even a small fraction as confrontational as the spiritually & mentally violent and inhumane images that Gay Hollywood continues to make of transsexual women which hold many of them hostage in segregation, depression and dangerous vulnerability? Is “mafia” an inaccurate word when one considers that for decades on end the gay establishment has continued to marginalize the transsexual, transgender and intersex communities for their own gain? Gay Hollywood has bombarded the trans community with abuse by irresponsibly green lighting and producing content with dangerous messaging. The gay press deliberately (sometimes unintentionally) mis-gendering, silencing and stigmatizing trans women during this current uprising of Trans Americans is another reason we chose the word “mafia”. This is not us “picking a fight”; this is actually us defending ourselves from a fight waged on us from those in the LGB community who feel “oppressing our own” is just. While some LGB people harm us out of “ignorance”, we won’t ignore the alarming truth that many gay and lesbian decision makers harbor conscious transphobic ideals which impact Trans Americans, and us seeking accountability is not “divisive”, it’s us calling out “divisiveness”.

However, because we want nothing more than to make this a “LGBT family meeting” in hopes of inspiring the gay community to stop exploiting and impeding trans people’s progress, we feel that it’s best to change the name so we will not alienate those in the gay community who truly want to be allies with the trans community. The pursuit of happiness and human rights are also beholden to Trans Americans, and the defamation against them is a road block to these goals, and it must be resolved.

Moving forward, the main goal of our panel is to address this current crisis of propaganda in the media which assaults transsexual women. While we note that many of these images are made by gay men, we acknowledge that many gay men understand our honest hurt, and truly want to help us foster understanding in society, humanize our images and be allies in ACTION (not just allies in words or acronyms.) Therefore we are making this concession because we have faith that as these conversations about media reform continue that more and more LGBT people will realize that “bad visibility” IS NOT better than “no visibility”. While many people in the trans community are calling to break away from the LGB community because they feel they are deliberately holding them back, MAGNET believes that LGBT UNITY is best, but it has to be honest unity, or it’s not unity at all.

Bill, a gay man and ally to the liberation of transsexual, transgender and intersex people, wrote us: "As a white, male, gay American, I understand where you are coming from. All too often, the LGTB community 'forgets' about the 'T' in that acronym. I have always found that particularly odd, as those are the people in our community who are treated the worst. They are treated with disdain and with open, celebratory abuse. Many LGB people participate in this abuse. I have seen it firsthand. I always speak up about it. Trans people NEED us. They NEED our support & our inclusion. What they do not need is our abandonment of them in favor of our OWN civil equality."

This inspiring message from a gay men reinstills ours faith that the LGBT community does have a chance of staying together. If Gay Inc. would listen, educate themselves and understand more, then that hope can become a reality.

We hope to see you at the panel!

July 15th. 7:00-9:30pm Women Demanding Change Now: The Dehumanizing Misrepresentation of Transsexual Women through the Gay Male Hollywood Lens.”

For panel info: http://www.facebook.com/loveashleylove#!/event.php?eid=138251619535256&ref=mf

Friday, July 2, 2010

MAGNET Honors Sylvia Rivera's Birthday Today

Sylvia Rivera never stopped exposing Gay Inc for excluding trans people, impoverished LGBT people, homeless LGBT youth and queer people of color.


Media Advocates Giving National Equality to Transsexual & Transgender People


July 2nd, 2010

MAGNET Honors Sylvia Rivera’s Birthday


Today, July 2nd, is LGBT pioneer Sylvia Rivera’s birthday. MAGNET honors this heroic woman, who is credited by historians as being the person who “threw the first heel” in the Stonewall Inn that fateful night in 1969, when the LGBT community decided to fight back against police brutality. Rivera and many other transgender and gender non-conforming people of color at the inn that night were “guilty” of having “gender inappropriate” clothing, which is the excuse the police used to exercise their prejudice with violence. The police were surprised when the guests at the bar decided to fight back! This riot catapulted the modern LGBT movement, and Rivera and other trans people were responsible for kicking things off.


Rivera continued to advocate for LGBT equality, particularly those disenfranchised and homeless. Sadly, after the gay establishment was done using her to get publicity to raise money, she was abandoned by the gay community, and actually died impoverished. They expressed that “transgender issues are too extreme”. Even the lesbian separatism “angry feminist” community would exclude her from women’s conferences, and she was one time escorted out of a queer women’s conference by enraged lesbian separatists who were transphobic. She was banned from the New York Gay Center for publicly asking them to take better care of homeless queer youth . When Rivera used her voice to call out the oppression of trans, poor and/or people of color from Gay Inc, she was blacklisted from many organizations, media outlets and social circles. Though the Gay Male Media Mafia tried to silence her truth telling, shortly before she died she foretold the future saying, “One of our main goals now is to destroy the Human Rights Campaign because I'm tired of sitting on the back of the bumper. It's not even the back of the bus anymore — it's the back of the bumper. The bitch on wheels is back.”


Today, a new documentary is making the festival circuit called “Stonewall Uprising”. Not surprisingly, the white gay and lesbian people primarily responsible for making the film totally “white washed” what really happened, by mainly interviewing white subjects, to having only white men on the promo poster. And it gets even more inaccurate and appalling, the films totally belittles the involvement not only LGBT people of color had in initiating our movement, but it downplays the significant role trans people had in igniting the flame that Stonewall accomplished. Sorry Gay Inc, no matter how hard you try, your desperate attempt to rewrite history, therefore oppressing trans folk and people of color, will not work. There’s a new Stonewall happening, and this “oppress our own pattern” is getting harder to maintain as the people continue to speak out. Before there was Harvey Milk, there was Sylvia Rivera.


If Sylvia Rivera were alive today, how would she feel about the current status of transsexual, transgender and intersex people in the LGBTQ community? How would she feel about the cries of LGBT people of color (www.getequalnow.org) who are protesting that their voices and needs are not being appreciated or included by the gay hierarchy?


On this special day honoring Sylvia Rivera’s birthday, MAGNET calls on all gay and lesbian people to remember who started Stonewall, and to try to be more understanding of your trans brothers and sisters. MAGNET calls on Gay Inc to remember that it was not the privileged assimilationists who first stormed the gates making it possible for this 40 year campaign for equality, it was lower income people of color who bravely returned transphobic and homophobic violence with such a resistance that the whole world knew the LGBT community had had enough.


Happy Birthday Sylvia Rivera, and thank you for taking a stand!


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sylvia_Rivera

Friday, April 30, 2010

Ashley Love's Huffington Post Critique of "Ticked Off" Film



Read MAGNET Organizer's Ashley Love's critique of transphobic film "Ticked Off With Knives" published on The Huffington Post:

Ashley Love
Trans Advocate and writer
Posted: April 23, 2010 03:54 PM
BIO Become a Fan
Comments 10
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ashley-love/an-image-id-rather-forget_b_549995.html

An Image I'd Rather Forget: A Critique of Ticked Off Tra**ies With Knives

The film Ticked Off Tra**ies With Knives (TOTWK), spreads fear, misogyny, and hateful ideology. I have seen the film and it's very upsetting that people unfamiliar with transsexual and transgender women will walk away from the film with a stigmatizing perception of trans women. This film is dangerous propaganda, whether intentional or not. TOTWK leaves the viewer with the false impression that transsexual and transgender women are unauthentic in their gender identity and really "gay men in drag." The film portrays all trans women as hyper sexualized, jokes, murderous and/or unstable. This is not only inaccurate; it's offensive and incites further misunderstanding and violence.

A student of oppression in the media, I'm an organizer with a trans anti-defamation group named MAGNET-Media Advocates Giving National Equality to Trans People. MAGNET supports the thousands of people who signed GLAAD's petition urging Tribeca to remove this film or who joined the Boycott TOTWK Group. They're warranted in their protest/boycott of this film whether or not they saw the entire movie. The clips available to the public were reason enough to take action. Here's why:

• Use of the dehumanizing pejorative and anti-trans slur "tra**ie" in the title.• Insensitively mentioning real trans victim's of hate crimes names in the trailer (A reedited trailer removes the victim's names).• Exploiting, devaluing and making light of the crisis of violence against trans women.• Director Israel Luna's misrepresentation that the film's about "transgender women" but often insinuates that the characters are not women - but rather men drag performers, "caricatures" & "impersonators."

While we have great respect and admiration for some of the actors in the film, we have great concerns with the director misappropriating oppressed minorities for entertainment, and with Tribeca's irresponsible decision to showcase this film. GLAAD's analysis of the film maintained the following:

Because of its positioning as a transgender film, viewers unfamiliar with the
lives of transgender women will likely leave this film with the impression that
transgender women are ridiculous caricatures of 'real women.' It demeans actual
transgender women who struggle for acceptance and respect in their day-to-day
lives and to be valued for their contributions to our society.

Many stand with GLAAD's statement. Trans women are just that: women. They're fighting to pass ENDA, gain APA/GID reform and health care rights, and establish acceptance in society. TOTWK threatens that acceptance immensely. The unhealthy stigma that this film encourages generates misunderstanding and resistance against trans Americans in a country that seriously lacks education, rights and acceptance of trans people.

Tribeca would never present a film with a title having the "n" word, an anti-Semitic slur, the misogynistic "c" word, or many other pejoratives. Tribeca considers the content of films they give a platform to. It's disappointing that the humanity and safety of trans women was devalued by Tribeca's programming department. It's a sad sign of the times that our concerns about depiction and well being are not considered on par with other minorities. Trans people need the same anti-defamation protections other oppressed minorities receive from Tribeca. We are exercising our freedom of speech by boycotting this film. "Cries of censorship" are just a diversion to take attention off the true issues, which are responsibility, accountability, humanity and oppression.

I find it biased and unethical that many male journalists/bloggers have failed to address the feminist side of this debate. The violence, objectification and dehumanization of women in this film are also being protested. It's disappointing that this film's controversy has spotlighted the issues of ignorance, transphobia and misogyny internalized within some in the gay men's community who have opposed our protest, as well as society at large.

Characters in the film, performers in a drag queen show, explain: "We have female qualities and characteristics... [and] straight male personalities." This description isn't the definition of a transgender woman, and provokes prejudice. That idea is one of the roots of anti-trans sentiment: the falsehood that trans women's gender identity is "fake". This propaganda is the same that the religious right has been preaching in their campaign to slander trans Americans, denying them equal rights (for instance, their "Do you want men in dresses teaching your children?" campaign), and now this film is doing their job for them! This isn't a "women's clothes fetish movement" for crying out loud! It's about "internal" gender. Luna would have had fewer problems if he would have named his film "Ticked Off Drag Queens With Knives" (yet there would still be issues). Inaccurately, he decided to market the film saying it was about transgender "women," yet portrayed them as over-the-top "impersonators" - actually mocking femininity. It stands to reason that transsexual and transgender feminists feel slighted, their identities misrepresented and attacked.

Merriam Webster defines a drag queen as "a male homosexual who dresses as a woman especially for comic or theatrical effect." On the contrary, a woman of transsexual experience is "a woman in which the sex-related structures of the brain that define gender identity are exactly opposite the physical sex organs of the body. Put even more simply, a transsexual woman has a mind that is literally, physically, trapped in a body of the opposite sex." A person from the "transgender umbrella" is "someone whose personal idea of gender does not correlate with his or her assigned gender role." The sociopolitical identity umbrella term "transgender" is good for gaining legislation to protect the broad community, yet the diversity of sub groups (who are equal, but different) within the broad community cannot be ignored. Certainly diversity is the spice of life!

Much of the dialog in the film is not only offensive, but effectively teaches the viewer an inaccurate perception of transgender individuals. At one point the performers allege that when God created Adam and Eve, he allegedly "created a third creature named Ava." Most trans women I know identify as "Eve's daughter," or with the "woman gender," not a "3rd gender," or as Luna writes, "a 3rd creature." Depicting trans women as "others," "neither, ors," "creatures" and "impersonators" is influential in adding to the segregation and misrepresentation of trans women. While some people identify as "gender queer and 3rd gender," none would wish to be characterized as a non-human creature. The film even introduces a new term - "tran-imal" (trans person = animal = not human) which may be the newest trend slur of the season!

One of the characters expresses that sexual assault "turns her on." This is sickly morbid and disturbingly insensitive, especially given the high rate of sexual attacks and violence against trans women. In another scene a nurse is sexually inappropriate with another character who is recuperating in the hospital after surviving a hate crime attack. In this way Luna's script trivializes the crisis of violence against trans women which is horrifying and disempowering to all women.

Some of the drag queen characters have a "trans face" act that is comparable to "black face" of decades past, when white men painted their faces and depicted black people as minstrels and subhuman. Likewise, "trans face" is just as dehumanizing to actual trans WOMEN. Their "trans face" act is "hyper sexualized, vile talking, flamboyant, gay man with women's clothes on. "By the end of the film, most of the characters are dead or brutalized. The film ends with a "drag diva" asking the others, "Do you know what the difference is between us and them [the dead men on the ground]?" The answer expressed: "I don't know. me either" And the film ends.

So there you have it folks, "transgender women" are no different than "murdered men."

And that last sentence pretty much sums up the message of the film.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Info For Today's Education Rally

PRESS ADVISORY

April 23, 2010CONTACT:Ashley Love, Media Advocates Giving National Equality to Trans People (MAGNET)Email: magnet_right_now@yahoo.com

Advocates hold Education Rally @ Tribeca Film “Ticked Off Tra**ies with Knives” Premiere

WHAT: An education rally to raise awareness about the anti-trans film “Ticked Off Tra**ies With Knives” (TOTWK). LGBT advocates and allies to speak out against the film which is set to appear at the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival. A candlelight vigil to honor victims of anti-trans violence will be held after the rally.

WHO: Melissa Sklarz, Director of New York Trans Rights Organization, Ashley Love- Organizer of MAGNET & Trans Advocate, Jay Kallio from Transgender Legal Defense & Education Fund (TLDF),

WHEN/WHERE: Friday April 23. Location: 181 2nd Ave NYC- Village East Cinemas8pm-10pm- rally, speakers, vigil11-30pm - re-gather and rally12am- Movie premiere starts, but we will be passing out educational flyers

WHY: TOTWK makes light of anti-trans violence and rape, promotes the pejorative, anti-trans slur ‘tra**y’, and misrepresents, stigmatizes & dehumanizes the lives of transsexual and transgender women everywhere. Despite staunch outcry from the trans community, the film is set to appear at this year’s coveted Tribeca Film Festival.Tribeca Film Festival officials have refused to remove TOTWK from its 2010 program. MAGNET is now organizing an education rally, in association with New York Trans Rights Organization and Transcend Boston, that will draw attention to the injustices and oppression trans people face every day.

“The unhealthy stigma and misrepresentation that this film inspires generates misunderstanding and resistance against trans Americans in a country that seriously lacks education, rights and acceptance of trans people”, states Ashley Love, Organizer of MAGNET.
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Media Advocates Giving National Equality to Trans People (MAGNET) is an anti-defamation organization dedicated to educating the media about transsexual and transgender issues, as well as pushing for more authentic and positive portrayals of trans people in the media.