Jay Leno Apologizes for 'Gayest Look' Comment
Jay Leno Apologizes for 'Gayest Look' Comment Late-night host Jay Leno is apologizing to actor Ryan Philippe and the LGBT community for comments that many, including Philippe, perceived as insensitive, reports Newsday. In a March 19 interview, Leno told Philippe, who played a gay man on the soap opera "One Life to Live," to "look into the camera and give his 'gayest look.'" Philippe refused. In an interview with People magazine, Leno said, "In talking about Ryan's first role, I realize that what I said came out wrong … I certainly didn't mean any malice. I agree it was a dumb thing to say, and I apologize." 40 Years After MLK Death, Small Progress for Forty years after the death of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Oklahoma Rep. Gains Anti-Gay Support Yesterday, supporters of Oklahoma Rep. Sally Kern and her anti-gay comments demonstrated at the Oklahoma Capitol, holding signs that read "We Stand With Kern" reports 365gay.com. Early last month in a speech, Kern told a small group, "The homosexual agenda is destroying this nation; it's just a fact. I'm not gay bashing, but according to God's word that is not the right kind of lifestyle. It has deadly consequences. Studies show that no society that has totally embraced homosexuality has lasted more than a few decades," reports 365gay. LGBT advocacy groups called for state House Speaker Chris Benge to censure Kern, he refused. Bureaucracy Stalls Sentencing Equality Federal sentencing guidelines, aimed at stopping the racial inequality between prison sentences for powder and crack-cocaine offenders, have backlogged, granting very few offenders freedom or reduced sentences, reports the Los Angeles Times. A month into effect, only a handful of inmates have been released, and only 3,000 of the estimated 20,000 have had their sentences reduced, reports the Times. After a nearly two-decade debate on the racial disparity involved in the sentencing, the U.S. Sentencing Commission approved the guidelines in December. The sentencing disparity affects Black men more than any other demographic. Attorneys involved in the cases blame the bottleneck on bureaucracy. Commentator Bashes Children's Movie for Gender Inequality |