Recently in Bisexual Issues Category

TilaTequila.jpgBisexual video vixen Tila Tequila tells Us Magazine.com that her hit MTV series, A Shot at Love, played a part in helping gays and lesbians marry in California.

"Before [my show] came out, everyone was still a little apprehensive about [same sex relationships]," she said. "Then they realized, 'Wow, everyone is really into this stuff, and it is fine.' The next thing you know, [marriage] is legal."

Tila Tequila: Changing hearts and minds, one alcohol-drenched episode at a time.

Watch the season finale of A Shot at Love II on Tuesday, June 17 at 10 PM to see if Tila chooses Bo, Brittany or Kristy as her true love.


Is Bisexuality a Good Career Move for Women?

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lindsay lohan.jpgABC News has turned speculation about Lindsay Lohan coming out as bi into an interesting take: “Bisexual in Hollywood: OK for Girls, Not Guys,” which examines the level of comfort in openness between male and female bisexuals.

Reporter Sheila Marikar observes, “Female stars, including Angelina Jolie and Drew Barrymore, have revealed past relationships with women and haven't seen their careers hurt in the least because of it. But among male actors, owning up to experimentation is all but verboten. Why the double standard?”

Marikar notes how bisexual love scenes between Denise Richards and Neve Campbell in Wild Things, and Scarlett Johansson and Penelope Cruz in Woody Allen’s upcoming Vicky Cristina Barcelona are found to be “titillating” by industry and audience alike. The same blanket statement, she says, cannot be made about the love scenes in Brokeback Mountain.

While the reporter cites actors whose careers have not been adversely affected since coming out (T.R. Knight, Neil Patrick Harris, David Hyde Pierce) she quotes E! online gossip columnist Ted Casablanca’s claims that A-list male actors "absolutely" engage in sexual activity with both men and women equally. "The public just doesn't know about it," he says, "It's still Hollywood's biggest, dirtiest secret."

"In Lohan's case," Marikar writes, "revealing a relationship with a woman probably wouldn't affect her career one way or another. She's made so many headlines over the past year and a half that coming out as bisexual would just be another drop in the bucket."

Knight Rider Inclusive!

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Having grown up watching the original Knight Rider (and having my own KITT Matchbox car!), I was excited to catch the new 2-hour update of the series from NBC, if only for nostalgia and kitsch value. While some of the pacing was reminiscent of the original (Mission: Impossible it ain't), a welcome twist occurred during the opening title sequence for the tele-film. As the various characters are established, we see young Michael Knight (Justin Bruening) in bed with two young ladies in Vegas. While at a beach house we see a surf diva get ready for work as an FBI special ops agent, saying goodbye to a young lady she's leaving behind in her bed. This isn't the '80s Knight Rider!

34-year-old actress Sydney Tamiia Poitier — the biracial daughter of Oscar winning actor Sidney Poitier and Joanna Shimkus — plays FBI agent Carrie Ruvai. If Knight Rider returns as a series, it will be interesting to see if the character continues to be lesbian or bisexual, or if this plot point is conveniently overlooked to create future sexual tension between Carrie and Michael.

For years, I've said how refreshingly inclusive it would be if just one of the crimefighters on a network procedural show like Law & Order and CSI was also gay. HBO's The Wire figured it out long ago. Now NBC has a chance to show just how inclusive it can be: If Knight Rider becomes a series, its Agent Ruvai may be the only queer leading lady of color on scripted network television. And as AfterEllen.com points out, if Cashmere Mafia doesn't return next season, she may be the only LGBT leading lady on network TV.

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