Tag Archives: BosGuy

South End Open Market starts May 1

South End Open MarketLast week the South End Open Market released a long list of participating food trucks for their upcoming season which starts in just eight weeks on Sunday, May 1, 2016. Look for the Food Trucks to assemble alongside the Arts and Farmer’s Markets in the Ming’s Market parking lot between Harrison Ave and Washington Street (official address is 375 Harrison Avenue).

If taking the T, the location is easily accessible from the East Berkeley Silver Line stop and just a 5 minute walk from the Orange line Tufts NE Medical Center stop or the Red line Broadway station. For more information about this year’s South End Open Market visit their website newenglandopenmarkets.com/southend.

Temptation Tuesday

Temptation Tuesday, gay super heroAdding a little Marvel Comics inspired temptation into this week’s post.

Past Temptation Tuesday Posts

It’s Supah Tuesday, go vote

voteOne of the very few remaining civic duties is voting. If you are a registered voter and you live in one of the following states listed below, you owe it to yourself and your community to vote.

I don’t care if you vote for a candidate I support or someone I detest. For more than two centuries men and women have fought to preserve this right; you do their memory and their sacrifice a disservice when you walk away and choose not to participate in the election process.Super Tuesday states

Off to Austin, Texas

Work will bring me to Texas next week so I decided to use the opportunity to fly out later this week to visit a good friend who lives in Austin before I have to go to Dallas. Unfortunately, Sergio won’t be able to join me while I am visiting Laura and Brian, but I will be joining a former college roommate and friend who will also be in Austin visiting at the same time.

Brian Northridge, Laura Northridge, Friends

October 2009 – Austin, Texas

I’ve visited Austin, TX a handful of times since that first visit in October 2009 and always have fun.  The tiny city has grown significantly in the seven years since I first visited but it retains a quirky charm that distinguishes itself from the rest of the state.  The city’s obsession with large cows which are the University of Texas mascot is puzzling but they can make for fun pieces of public art. Austin TexasWhenever I visit Austin, I stay with my friends in a leafy neighborhood of Austin called Westlake that is really just a well situated suburb. I’m sure we will get out for a night or two but most of our time will be spent relaxing at my friend’s beautiful home; maybe poolside if it is warm enough.

Massachusetts drag queen Laila McQueen joins RuPaul Season 8

Laila McQueen RuPaul Drag Race Season 8

Last month Logo announced RuPaul’s latest cast of drag queens for the upcoming eighth season which starts next week. Included in the cast of 12 is a local drag queen from the north shore, Laila McQueen, from Gloucester, MA.

You can check out her “Meet the Queen” introductory video where Laila describes herself as, “a cross between a cute stripper and a punk rock girl“. Set your DVRs for the season premiere on Monday, March 7 at 9PM ET/PT.

Tweet of the day: Bernie Sanders

Tweet of the Day Bernie SandersIt has been quite some time since I’ve featured a Tweet of the Day and this particular Tweet actually took place over the weekend but I thought it bears sharing.  The fact this is an issue is an indictment on the Republican Party and the hatred they’ve allowed to fester. One doesn’t get to this point overnight.

What to do this week February 29 – March 6

TOSE

Taste of The South End is Tuesday, March 1, 2016

What to do this week: February 29th – March 6th

Taste of the South End is one of my favorite fundraisers in Boston and it takes place this Tuesday, March 1 at the BCA in Boston

Geek Trivia is guaranteed fun and has lots of prizes (trivia starts at 8pm) hosted every Tuesday at Club Cafe in Boston

Stump Trivia lets you impress your friends with all the trivia you know from 5PM – 10PM every Wednesday at Cathedral Station in Boston

Karaoke Kween is a lot of fun and if you’re good you may nab the $75 cash prize – hosted every Wednesday at Club Cafe in Boston

ICA Boston every Thursday from 4PM – 9PM admission is free in Boston

SoWa First Fridays artists and galleries open their doors to the public for an evening of art, culture and inspiration from 5PM-9PM in Boston

Mainestreet Karaoke party starts at 9PM every Friday in Ogunquit

LGBTQ Conference at Harvard Law School is open to the public from 8AM – 6PM on Saturday, March 5 in Cambridge

Get Leid Beach Party will have a Speedo contest and plenty of great music at dbar on Saturday, March 5 in Boston

EGO Saturdays with DJ Richie LaDue and your host Katya  on Saturday, March 5 in Providence

NUNCH: The Nun Brunch helps raise funds for Boston’s Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence at Club Cafe on Sunday, March 6 in Boston

Back 2 Basics Tea Dance never has a cover and always has great music from 70s 80s & 90s, starting at 5PM no cover every Sunday at Club Cafe in Boston

Send me information about your upcoming programs and events in my blog’s comment section or message me the details on Facebook.

Spawtlight

spawtlightMuch thanks to BosGuy reader, Jordan, for sharing this spoof on the Oscar nominated film, Spotlight. The video pokes fun at Boston for everything from terrible coffee (courtesy of DD) to the MBTA which they describe as “a silly little trolley”. Based on recent problems with the T, who am I to refute that criticism?

The Nun Brunch: NUNCH is March 6th

Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, BostonShow your support for Boston’s Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence

Nunch is the annual fundraiser brunch of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence. As many of you know there are many events and charitable organizations that the Sisters of Perpeptual Indulgence support and volunteer.

It is now your chance to pay it forward by attending their FUNdraiser on Sunday, March 6th from 11am – 3pm.  Proceeds raised will help to support the Sister Grant Fund for 2017, which supports non-profit organizations that do good in the Greater Boston community.

Click here to learn more and purchase your tickets here!

Scruffy Sunday

Boys next door, gay men in bed, handsome, couplePrevious Scruffy Sunday Posts

Brazilian Photographer/Model Joao Victor Lisboa

Joao Victor Lisboa, photography

Joao Victor Lisboa – Brazilian Model / Photographer

This weekend I was pleasantly surprised to see Homotography featuring self-portraits of a friend of mine. Joao Victor Lisboa (not Lisbon as they printed) is a young, talented model/photographer based in Sao Paulo.

I can tell you that Joao Victor is every bit as handsome in person as he appears in his photos. He has a wicked smile and a sense of humor to match.  You can see Joao Victor’s full portfolio online here, joaovictorlisboa.com.

Story originally via Homotography.

Another blog I respect and enjoy, Accidental Bear, has also put several of his self portraits on view.

Fenway Men’s Event is March 19

Fenway Health 2016 Mens EventIn three weeks Fenway Health will host one of the LGBT community’s largest fundraisers in New England.  The Men’s Event, which takes place on Saturday, March 19th will draw more than 1,300 supporters of Fenway Health to raise funds for one of the nation’s largest LGBT clinics and to bring our community together to celebrate our accomplishments.

Tickets remain available for the 2016 Men’s Event on Saturday, March 19. To learn more about the event or to purchase tickets visit, mensevent.org.

Boston’s slow but certain swing towards modernism

Photo Credit: Liza Voll

Photo Credit: Liza Voll

The following was written by BosGuy friend and occasional blog contributer, Michael C.

RANT – Ask anyone living in Boston and they’ll agree that it is a city with an almost fetishistic fixation on the old-school. The traditional colonial esthetic and the often misguided notion of deference to historical accuracy. In fact, this fixation has earned Boston the reputation among its more avant-garde residents as the city where everything is forced to “blend in”. No esthetic deviations from Victorian and Beaux Arts allowed here! Although most of my friends have already listened to my spiel, for the benefit of everyone else who hasn’t, I’ll say again that the most glaring example of Boston’s mentality has manifested itself through the new Liberty Mutual building – causing every modernist hair on this guy’s head to stand on its root. The way I see it, we had an opportunity that in a big city comes about once – maybe twice – every fifty years or so: to build a major landmark from the ground up. And how did we respond to that challenge? Perhaps by creating something exciting that will go on to become an architectural reference point for generations of future architects – an architectural icon? Oh no – instead, we thought it was a better idea to erect – again, from the ground up – a monolith that’s deliberately intended to mimic its neighbor, the original Hancock building, completed in 1922. Cutting edge, eh? These are the moments I catch myself exclaiming, sometimes out loud, “Seriously?!

While we’re at it, can we talk about the MFA and Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum? We commissioned two starchitects, Norman Foster and Renzo Piano, to design the state-of-the-art additions to the respective museum buildings. Several years of much-publicized mega construction and anticipation later and all we have is two boxy, painfully unimaginative, boring stone and glass cubes. Why bother commissioning celebrity architects only to stifle their creativity and compromise their vision? Excuse me, but has anyone seen the new wing at Toronto’s Royal Ontario Museum? Oh I’m sorry, I forgot – that’s a “monstrosity” by Boston standards. Oh quit your grumbling, you say. What about the ICA, our museum dedicated to modern art? Do you mean, that token modern building that’s banished to Fan Pier, like a petulant child in time-out since 2006, because out there in the wilderness there’s nothing to make it conform to. That building, designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro, that happens to be conveniently hidden out of immediate sight so as not to upset our Quaker sensibilities? Yes, that one.

END OF RANT – But lest you think I’m judgmental grouch, let me clarify the rationale behind my grouching. I’m actually going somewhere with this. You see, having resigned to the expectation that Boston will remain the city that says no to 21st century esthetics, I’ve found myself pleasantly surprised and my spirits lifted by my recent string of experiences in our fair city’s cultural scene. Let me share a few.

THE PERFORMING ARTS – As a passionate lover of opera, that decidedly old-school art form, I’ve always felt frustrated with the Boston Lyric Opera company’s reluctance to recognize that, in the absence of a hefty endowment and production budget like the Met’s, grand opera on limited funding is miserable. Miserable in look and feel. Miserable in creativity. Generally, pretty pathetic. But by George, recently BLO’s got it! As they demonstrated through their last couple of seasons, when one embraces Modern like one means it, the results can be quite astonishing, and with no fewer octogenarian patrons than in past seasons. Wagner’s Flying Dutchman, performed amid raw scaffolding and moving rough seas projected on the massive stage wall. La Traviata and Cosi Fan Tutte, both operas in period costume albeit on dreamy, Dali-esque sets. And of course La Bohème, the bread and butter of the global lyric stage, still set in Paris, but moved from late 19th century to the 1960s with bell-bottom denim and shaggy shearling vests. To boot, embracing a modern production typically carries the added bonus of freeing up budget, which allows focus on what matters the most – the music – while forcing beauty to shine through simplicity and minimalism without polluting it with shoddy ornamentation and kitschy embellishment. So, kudos to BLO from your humble young(er) patron! As an afterthought however, one does have to wonder whether those schlocky sets and school-play costumes of the past were more a result of bowing to the demands of a visually conservative audience rather than the work of a narrow-minded production team.

THE PUBLIC ART– Another breath of fresh air is the large-scale, 10-floor tall “swimmer” mural by secretive French artist JR on the southwestern side of 200 Clarendon, formerly the Hancock Tower. A man on a diving raft, floating in the middle of a “sea” of glass. How cool is that? Spectacular in its appearance and so clever in its simplicity (why didn’t I think of that?). Then there’s Janet Echelman’s hypnotic aerial sculpture As If It Were Already Here that for six months graced the space above the Rose Kennedy Greenway outside South Station. Does this art installation represent art in the sense that it depicts a person or a flower or a landscape? Who cares? The question we should be asking ourselves is “does it make me think?” Even if that means scratching my head trying to understand what the hell I’m looking at, the piece has fulfilled its purpose. You may never figure it out and that’s perfectly fine, but consider this: it’s in the financial district. It’s a part of town crowded with men in pleated pants and shirts that fit looser than a tent. Isn’t it just awesome to inject into that habitat something forward-looking, something quirky, something esoteric and different? Don’t answer – it’s a rhetorical question.

THE NEIGHBORHOOD – Have you seen that remarkable home on South End’s Taylor Street, which I’ve dubbed “the Shutter House”? I have no idea what the owners had to do to get the city to OK it (and frankly I’m not even sure I want to know) but whatever they had to do, it was well worth the certain ordeal. For people who love modern architecture the appeal is pretty straightforward. Others may see it as a hideous affront to the neighborhood’s homogeneous character, style and historical integrity and it’s their right and privilege to see it that way. But in fact, that home acts as an enhancer of the quaint charm of the picturesque Victorian one-block street, if not its whole immediately surrounding neighborhood. By its arrival on the block as an alternative modern kid in an overwhelmingly historic environment, Shutter House has achieved a great success: for from attacking history, it complements and elevates it, making it even prettier – and more obvious to appreciate. Personal tastes notwithstanding, the house is esthetically beautiful. Even if you don’t believe in esthetic diversity, period, you may want to read the Globe’s write-up on Shutter House. Getting acquainted with it will almost certainly help you at least appreciate it as the triumph it represents. As long as something is well-made with good taste, meticulous care and obvious passion, it’s beautiful. Get over it and guess what – there are some real eye sores out there and this brave little house isn’t one of them.

THE HIGH HORSE, DISMOUNTED – OK, I’ll stop. Let’s just say that to watch Boston’s esthetic palate evolve over the next 5 years given this glacial shift in direction, will be riveting – and I’ll leave it at that. With the supremely boring but unquestionably modern Millennium Tower nearly finished and the impressively funky (dare I say, gasp, futuristic?) new Government Center T station entrance nearing completion, modernists and eurotrash all over town are holding their collective breath. But let’s not jump the gun here. Baby steps is the name of the game, and that is something even the most enthusiastic modernist must respect. As the traditionalist Bostonian will argue, if you want to see glass high-rises and funky museums getting yanked out of the ground every week, move to Miami. This is Boston. Fair enough, I say. But let me ask you this, traditionalists – yes, you. While busy rolling around in your conformist self-righteousness, have you noticed that the shape of the new Government Center T station is a nod to the Old State House a block down the street? If that’s not the ultimate bow to history by modernism, I don’t know what is – just saying.

Michael CAbout the author:  A former banker, Michael C offsets the sobriety of his professional life with his passion for design, music, the arts and anything beautiful.

© Michael Constantinides 2016 – all rights reserved

Saturday morning comic: Adam and Andy

gay comic strip, gay cartoonClick on the comic strip to enlarge

ADAM & ANDY is set in the fictional New England town of Woodfield, CT. You can learn more about this strip by visiting, adamandandy.com.  To see previous Adam and Andy cartoons link here.

Bonus fur

hairy chest, hunk, denimHave a good weekend and thanks for stopping by to check out my blog.