Day: 5 May 2016

  • Towie Star Shows A Lot Of Peen Outline

    Towie Star Shows A Lot Of Peen Outline

    TOWIE superstar Joey Essex has published a picture which leaves very little to the imagination.

    CREDIT: Joey Essex/ Instagram

     

    Celebrities take note… you don’t actually need to get naked for your audience to see everything, as demonstrated by Joey Essex.

    Taking to Instagram, Joey Essex gave his fans an eyeful after sharing a picture from a forthcoming photo – but kept tight-lipped about who the shoot was for.


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    https://www.instagram.com/p/BE9ROfIlYCM/?taken-by=joeyessex90&hl=en

     

    I mean the peen outline is one thing, but what is going on with Joey’s toes. How long are they?

     


    ALSO READ: You won’t believe what this Harry Potter Star looks like now

    ALSO READ: Whoops… John Barrowman just exposed his husband’s penis to the world…


     

  • Homophobia Is Still A Major Issue On Twitter

    Homophobia Is Still A Major Issue On Twitter

    Anti-gay or homophobic slurs are still a big issue on social media.

    Homophobic words like faggot, “no homo”, “so gay” and Dyke are used being used over 13,000 times a day or 541 insults an hour, on Twitter alone.

    Nohomophobes.com a website set up in September 2012 to log all uses of the words faggot, “no homo”, “so gay” and Dyke on Twitter in real-time, is reporting that those words have been used nearly 61,000,000 times in 3 and a half years.


    ALSO READ: Celebrity Big Brother’s Most Shocking Homophobic Moments.

    ALSO READ: Homophobic crimes up 20 per cent in London, year on year.


    The word faggot accounts for over half of all of the homophobic language that is Tweeted on Twitter.

    Although the trend has been downward since January 2014, alarmingly the use of the word faggot is used thousands of times a day on the social media platform.

    Since around June 2015, the levels at which the anti-gay slurs are tweeted have levelled out but still remain shockingly high.

    When the site was launched in September 2012, Dr. Kristopher Wells from NoHomophobes.com told us,

    “We no longer tolerate racist language, weʼre getting better at dealing with sexist language, but sadly we still see and hear homophobic and transphobic language in our society,

    “While this language might not always be meant to be hurtful, we must not forget that words like “faggot” contribute greatly to the continued alienation and isolation of sexual and gender (LGBTQ) people, especially our youth.”

  • What Will Katie Hopkins Do If Labour Wins London?

    What Will Katie Hopkins Do If Labour Wins London?

    Katie Hopkins has warned if Labour’s Sadiq Khan wins the London Mayoral elections today she’ll do something drastic.

    CREDIT: LBC
    CREDIT: LBC

    Michelle Visage’s ex-bestie, Katie Hopkins has taken to social media to say that if Labour mayoral candidate Sadiq Khan should win the election today that she’ll strip naked… and stick a sausage up her bum in protest.

    Just that vision… let it meld in your mind for a moment…

    The outspoken radio presenter and columnist has nailed her flag to the mast and she definitely doesn’t want a Labour winner.

    She hasn’t commented on the type of sausage she’d use, some are speculating on whether it would be a Linda McCartney veggie or a good old British pork.

     


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    Across London today, voters will be taking to the polls to elect a new mayor for London as Boris Johnson’s term comes to an end.

    Along with Sadiq Khan, who is standing for Labour, the other candidate are:

    1. Sian Berry, Green Party of England and Wales
    2. David Furness, British National Party
    3. George Galloway, Respect Party
    4. Paul Golding, Britain First
    5. Lee Harris, Cannabis Is Safer Than Alcohol
    6. Ankit Love, One Love Party
    7. Caroline Pidgeon, Liberal Democrats
    8. Sophie Walker, Women’s Equality Party
    9. Peter Whittle, UK Independent Party
    10. Prince Zylinski, Independent
  • THEATRE REVIEW | Abominations

    THEATRE REVIEW | Abominations

    ★★ | Abominations

    CREDIT: Robert Piwko / www.robertpiwko.co.uk

    CREDIT: Robert Piwko / www.robertpiwko.co.uk

    Jeff is a married man with a fetish for wrestling. He’s walked out on his religious but shrewish wife and is hiding out in his hometown in southern England where he’s having a fumble with grieving youngster Malcolm. By coincidence, Malcolm’s boss is Jeff’s Biblical claptrap spouting father.

    Is a play about a secretly gay married man still relevant in 2016? Sadly it is. It’d be naïve to think that being gay in contemporary British society was accepted by everyone and that gay men weren’t still suppressing their sexuality and trying to hide in plain sight. Any foray into gay life will tell you that the phenomenon of the closeted gay man is still very much present. You can’t spend more than five minutes on a hook-up app, the Internet or in a sauna without tripping over a married man or two. The issues in the play are still prevalent. Gay men might be able to marry and public opinion might have moved on but people are still prejudiced and still spout obscure parts of religious tracts to justify this. Some people are still so affected by the prejudices of others that they suppress their natures and try to be things that they aren’t.

    In spite of this there’s something dated feeling about “Abominations”.

    The problem with the play isn’t the subject matter but the dialogue and characterisation. Whilst Jeff feels generally convincingly drawn and credible, his wife feels like a two-dimensional throwback to a dated sit-com. Malcolm is an earnest ukulele-playing buffoon who reveals few other character traits than naivety and rather than endearing, is more of an irritant. The dialogue is stilted and quaint at times. Scenes are short with awkward shuffling pauses. In spite of some well-drawn sections the sum of the play is much less than its parts and fails to gel. The comedy often falls flat and sits awkwardly with the more intense and better-written scenes.

    The saving grace of the piece has to be the stunning central performance from Alexander Hulme as Jeff. He handles the part with style, imbuing the character with credibility and hinting at the shifting emotional landscape of a man unravelling. He’s all swagger and brittle chav charm but manages to give glimpses of something deeper and darker with a softer core. He’s also very easy on the eye and displays a lot of flesh that distracts the viewer. In the midst of the play there are some genuinely moving scenes between Jeff and his father and Gary Heron displays some fine acting that ably supports Hulme in his role.

    This is definitely a play that had potential and there are glimpses of unrealised style and impact. The well-written lines stand out and there are scenes that have real power. Sadly, the finished overall product felt almost as tired and lacklustre as the location of the theatre: Camden High Street.

    Abominations plays at the Etcetera Theatre Until the 29th of May 2016