Welcome to the online home of Boston Spirit, New England's premier LGBT magazine.
Select one of the following links to subscribe to the print-version, shipped free to your address, for info on our special IRL events, to reach us, or to find more about advertising online and in print.
Welcome to the online home of Boston Spirit, New England's premier LGBT magazine.
Select one of the following links to subscribe to the print-version, shipped free to your address, for info on our special IRL events, to reach us, or to find more about advertising online and in print.
Receive the coffee-table-ready, glossy, print edition of Boston Spirit Magazine every two months by filling out this form.
Fill out the form which the address you'd like the subscription mailed to and your email address, so we can confirm the subscription.
We also send out a simple email newsletter once month (you can always opt-out).
Be assured, we don't sell our email lists or your personal data to anyone.
Welcome to the online home of Boston Spirit, New England's premier LGBT magazine.
Select one of the following links to subscribe to the print-version, shipped free to your address, for info on our special IRL events, to reach us, or to find more about advertising online and in print.
Receive the coffee-table-ready, glossy, print edition of Boston Spirit Magazine every two months by filling out this form.
Fill out the form which the address you'd like the subscription mailed to and your email address, so we can confirm the subscription.
We also send out a simple email newsletter once month (you can always opt-out).
Be assured, we don't sell our email lists or your personal data to anyone.
Welcome to the online home of Boston Spirit, New England's premier LGBT magazine.
Select one of the following links to subscribe to the print-version, shipped free to your address, for info on our special IRL events, to reach us, or to find more about advertising online and in print.
On May 17, 2004, history was made. Massachusetts became the first state in the country to honor legal same-sex marriages. And when one considers the ripple effect that had—catalyzing greater acceptance that permeated everything from pop culture to politics—it is no exaggeration to say that for gay men and women, America changed forever.
And it happened because of “Goodridge v. Dept. of Public Health,” the landmark court case argued by GLAD’s Mary Bonauto. Together, seven couples shared their lives with the world in the hopes that they might change it. And a decade later, we revisited each of them to reflect on the case, its impact, how it changed their lives.
Read our interview with Michelle Kosilek here.
1/22/14
Dear LGBT Family,
When David Zimmerman graciously offered to let me write an open letter to accompany the article...
Michelle Kosilek is an unlikely advocate for LGBT equality.
Convicted for murder and spending time in a designated all-male prison, Kosilek is suing for her right to receive gender reassignment surgery, to allow her physical body to match who she has discovered herself to be: a woman. The Commonwealth of Massachusetts refuses to pay for the medical procedure. Most recently, on January 17, 2014, the U.S. First Circuit Court of Appeals declared in favor of Kosilek’s surgery, stating, “DOC has violated Kosilek’s Eighth Amendment rights.” The state is appealing the verdict.
Fifty years ago this month, on the afternoon of November 22, 1963, Lem Billings had just returned from lunch when he heard the news. He was an advertising executive at Lennen and Newell in New York and as he approached his office building at 380 Madison Avenue, Billings saw immediately that something was wrong. Waves of people rolled out of the building onto the street, some looked confused, others wept. According to David Pitts, author of Jack and Lem: The Untold Story of an Extraordinary Friendship, a face in the crowd approached Billings and said, “I’m so sorry about the president.”
For the first time in years, a troop of Boston mayoral candidates sift city neighborhoods for votes. At T stops and in coffee shops candidates reach for every hand, seeking just enough votes to lift them into the final when the bulky field shrinks to a two-person runoff. It’s hard work. After so many years with the same mayor, Bostonians are not used to choosing from such a large field. For the longest time, it was either the Mayor or the fly in the ointment. And the mayor won, no problem.
He may just be the most influential gay rights pioneer you’ve never heard of
Prescott Townsend may be the most influential Boston gay rights pioneer you have never heard of. If so, hang on; before we’re through, Townsend will cross paths with Andre Gide, 1960s hippies, John Waters and his star, Mink Stole. And that’s not counting the army of young men who lived with him on Beacon Hill and in Provincetown, as long as their waist sizes hovered very close to 30-inches.
On October 13, Ribaudo will marry his longtime partner Joe Posa. They’ll celebrate their reception, which after certain hours will be open to the whole community, at Club Café. That’s because their wedding coincides with a second reason to celebrate. October marks the 30th anniversary of Club Café, which has become iconic in New England’s gay scene. For one generation, it has been a community center: a comfortable second home filled with old friends. For another, it’s a party palace: where stepping inside, grabbing your first drink, and scoring your first date has become a veritable rite of passage. And Club Café shows no sign of slowing down.
For some designers, haute couture is what turns their head. But for John Robb, co-owner of Jamaica Plain-based Inseam, the perfect fit, precise cut, and sharp shape of a well-made garment is what really gets his sewing machine’s motor running.
Boston Police Department LGBT Liaison Javier Pagan details his experience as a first responder at the Boston Marathon blasts
Javier Pagan was just feet from...
Maine is the most recent state to allow gay marriage, and the first in the nation to have the law approved by a majority of voters at the polls. Following the passage of the gay marriage law, many in the state have wondered: “What’s next?” After all, marriage is the default panacea of gay rights, and Maine ranks in the top ten states in the nation for gay-friendly laws. Another distinction? Maine has the oldest population in the U.S. with more than 300,000 elders age 60 and over. It is estimated that 15,000 of them are gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender. For many, the reality of old age comes, hits when one is faced with the reality of what it means to be senior.
Green Mountain State Update
Coalition against bullying
A coalition of the state’s nonprofits, Vermont Narratives for Change, organized a news conference at the State House in...
Leading Maine lawmakers — including US Congresswoman Chellie Pingree, US Congressman Jared Golden and US Senators Angus King and Susan Collins — have teamed...
Transhealth Northampton — the independent, comprehensive, trans-led and gender-affirming healthcare center in Northampton, Mass. — hit its 500 patient milestone this week, just six months...