FUSE34 : LET YOUR FAITH BE BIGGER THAN YOUR FEAR (Boy Cover)

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FUSE Anthony Callea

RAINBOW NETWORKING ALL MALE CLOCKWORK ORANGE UNMISTAKABLY MOJO JUJU FOUR MORE COUNTRIES SAY ‘I DO’

LIFE LOVE 34 24 EQUALITY

GREENS LEADER

CHRISTINE MILNE

PROUD, 30 and DOing what he loves

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MADE IN AUSTRALIA FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU MAY / JUN 2013

TAKES PRIDE TO THE NEXT ELECTION

MARDI @ GRAS 2013

> LET YOUR FAITH BE BIGGER THAN YOUR FEAR

Canberra Pride



FUSE MAGAZINE MADE IN AUSTRALIA MAY / JUN 2013

LIFE LOVE 34 EQUALITY EDITOR Alexander Thatcher ASSOCIATE EDITOR Yasmin Element

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POLITICAL EDITOR Simon Copland CREATIVE DIRECTOR Christopher Powell PRODUCTION ASSISTANT Linda Djumlija CONTRIBUTORS Scott Malcolm Elizabeth Gorrell Keiran Rossteuscher Robert Henderson Clancy Atkinson Rose Pappalardo Bebe Backhouse Dwayne Lennox Melisa Paz Peter Hitch PHOTOGRAPHERS Doug Robinson Keith Jeffers Lily Chen

34 K OUT CHEC 2013 OUR I GRAS MARDOTOS PH 2 P4

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Mojo Juju is much more than slang for that old black magic — it’s the name of one of Australia’s hottest alternative musicians, who’s making waves everywhere she goes. Elizabeth Gorrell caught up with Mojo to ask this incredible artist about her music, inspirations and travelling lifestyle.

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Filled with powerful and heartfelt songs, Anthony Callea celebrates his own coming of age with his new album Thirty. Bebe Backhouse talks to Anthony about his successful music career and why it’s important to be yourself.

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We talk to proud mum and Federal Senator Christine Milne about being the new leader of the Australian Greens, marching at this year’s Mardi Gras and the ongoing fight for marriage equality in Australia.

02 Editor’s Rant 04 The Flicks 07 What’s On 08 Round Up : News & Politics 12 Footlights : All Male Clockwork Orange

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WWW.FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU 29 All rights reserved. No part of the magazine may be reproduced in whole or in part without written permission from the publisher. The appearance, mention or likeness of any person or organisation in editorial or advertising in no way suggests sexual or political orientation. Photographs used to illustrate editorial do not depict the real lives, behaviour or sexuality of the models. Opinions expressed in the magazine are not necessarily those of the FUSE publisher, editor or staff. Any health, fitness or dietry advice contained in this magazine is for informational purposes only. Consult your physician and a fitness/health professional before changing your diet, doing any exercise program, or taking any supplements or remedies of any kind. Submissions of text, photographs or any other material will be taken as consent to publish said material.

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CONTACT FUSE 0412 309 992 hello@fusemagazine.com.au fusemagazine.com.au PO Box 3577 Manuka ACT 2603 Published + designed by: Lithium Innovation Pty Ltd lithium.net.au ISSN 1836-8387

FUSE FEATURES

19 Money Shot : Rainbow Networking 20 Out & About : OUTBIZ Inaugural Gathering 27 Eat Me : Mushrooms — the Ultimate Food 29 Out & About : Cube Nightclub 31 Ear Candy : Music Reviews 32 Community : Being True to Ourselves 36 Couch Potato : Film & TV 39 Health : Virus Cocktail Anyone? 40 Out & About : Twilight Extravaganza 42 Out & About : Mardi Gras Parade 45 Stargazer : Your Horoscope 46 FUSE Community Directory 48 Dear Rose FUSE34CONTENTS

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❂ RAINBOW REBELLION Alexander Thatcher Editor

As most of you probably know by now, Sydney’s Rainbow Crossing is no longer — torn up by the NSW Government under the cover of darkness. Not even the Independent Member for Sydney Alex Greenwich or the Lord Mayor Clover Moore could save the day. Roads Minister Duncan Gay said it was dangerous and had to go. Although we’re all sad to see it ripped up, this event was a catalyst for something quite wonderful. The very next day, armed with a packet of coloured chalk and a rebellious streak, James Brechney decided to make his very own rainbow crossing in the laneway outside his home and post a photo on Facebook. It was to be the start of a worldwide chalk rainbow rebellion. Within a week his Facebook “DIY Rainbow Crossings” page had over 19,000 likes and prompted thousands of rainbow crossings to pop up all across Australia — including Canberra — and as far away as the United States, France and the UK. Department stores everywhere must be wondering why chalk has suddenly become their biggest seller. James made the following comment on his Facebook page: ‘Our chalk rainbows have overridden the memory of seeing that big ugly machine scraping off our Oxford Street rainbow. Let’s keep our voice loud and beautiful — the world needs a lot of this right now.’

FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU Check out the FUSE Magazine website for daily news, videos, special online features, what’s on listings, the latest community up dates on our popular message board, the FUSE business directory and more!

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EDITOR’SRANT

This is one of the things I love most about humanity: in the face of adversity we can become our most creative. It really is a wonderful and inspiring thing. And talking about people power, another four countries — England, France, Uruguay and closer to home, New Zealand — have now embraced marriage equality. To Australia’s embarrassment, it seems that our Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Liberal Leader Tony Abbott have dug themselves in behind a stance that’s discriminatory, unpopular and just plain silly. Hopefully we won’t end up being one of the last countries to adopt a policy of equality for all its citizens. Australian Marriage Equality advocates will be running a high profile campaign in the 2013 Federal Election and intend to make marriage equality a central issue. Their goal is to achieve a Coalition conscience vote and to encourage as many Labor candidates as possible to support reform. Sadly I don’t see same-sex marriage in Australia this year, but support grows every day and as history demonstrates, with time equality always prevails. Don’t get angry, get chalking. Alex

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IMAGINE A WORLD WITHOUT FACTORY FARMING... Few people realise that factory farming is the single greatest cause of animal cruelty on the planet today. Visit MakeItPossible.com and join thousands of other caring Australians who are making a world without factory farming possible. Watch the film. Sign the pledge. Inspire others.

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FUSEFEATURE

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MOVIES SPRING BREAKERS OPENS 9 MAY

STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS OPENS 9 MAY

FUSE MOVIE PICK OF THE MONTH!

Four years after successfully rebooting the Star Trek franchise, director J.J. Abrams returns with the spunky young crew of the Starship Enterprise, including Captain Kirk (Chris Pine), Spock (Zachary Quinto) and Uhura (Zoe Saldana), for another intergalactic mission. This time around, the villain is played by the ubiquitous yet welcome Brit actor (with the fun name to say), Benedict Cumberbatch, although rumours are still circulating as to whether or not he’s playing Khan or another bad guy from the Star Trek universe. One thing’s for sure, there will be plenty of lens flaring.

‘Disney girls gone wild’ is how the mainstream media is discussing Harmony Korine’s Spring Breakers. And sure it has Selena Gomez and Vanessa Hudgens toting guns, and drinking and drugging to excess (and all the while clad in barely-there bikinis) but the US indie filmmaker, best known for 2009’s Trash Humpers and writing Larry Clark’s Kids (1995), is actually attacking the excess of this annual collegiate Bacchanalian ritual. Sure he seems to be having his hash brownie and eating it too, but with James Franco tearing it up as a Britney-singing, corn-rowed rapper-gangster named Alien, it seems churlish to complain. Spring break!

MAN OF STEEL OPENS 27 JUNE Clark Kent (Henry Cavill) is a young journalist who feels alienated from others because he has powers beyond anyone’s imagination.

THE GREAT GATSBY OPENS 30 MAY Chosen as the opening night film of this year’s Cannes Film Festival, it remains to be seen if Baz Luhrmann’s razzle-dazzle, more-style-than-substance direction successfully marries with F. Scott Fitzgerald’s beloved text, The Great Gatsby. One thing is for sure, this adaptation of Gatsby, filmed here in Australia and in 3D, should look amazing and unlike any other screen version of the 1920s-set novel. And other than leads Tobey Maguire, Carey Mulligan and Leo DiCaprio (as the titular Gatsby), the film boasts an impressive ‘who’s who’ of Australian acting.

Clark, who was transported to Earth from Krypton, struggles with the ultimate question — “Why am I here?” Raised by his adoptive parents Martha (Diane Lane) and Jonathan Kent (Kevin Costner), Clark is shaped by their values and soon discovers that having super abilities means making very difficult decisions. When the world comes under attack, can Clark’s abilities be used to maintain peace or will they ultimately be used to divide and conquer? Clark has to become the hero known as “Superman,” not only to protect his loved ones but to take his place as the world’s last beacon of hope.

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MORE

THE MAJOR MINOR PARTY CANBERRA THEATRE : 29 MAY - 1 JUNE

SEX PARTY P18

Way back in FUSE05 (Sep 2009) we interviewed Fiona Pattern from the Australian Sex Party to talk about their policies regarding censorship and their support for same-sex marriage. Over the past four years they have been making quite the name for themselves. They have contested three elections, winning enough votes to declare themselves “the major minor party” in Australian politics and to the media’s delight if you add one Fiona Pattern to one Wendy Francis (Australian Christian Lobby) you have the making of some fantasitc entertainment.

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CANBERRA THEATRE : 13 - 14 JUNE The ballet Giselle as you’ve never seen it before, G will make you re-think everything you know about dance, and leave you craving more.

The premiere of The Major Minor Party explores the rise of the Australian Sex Party, founded by Fiona Patten and Robbie Swan. Juxtaposed against the rising influence of pseudoreligious and ultra-nationalist movements, the story of the Sex Party is a wild ride through the political landscape — irreverent, hilarious and always thought provoking. If you only see one play this year, we’d make it this one — it’s very provocative, funny, entertaining and innovative.

WHAT’S ON! WANT TO KNOW WHAT ELSE IS HAPPENING, CHECK OUT OUR ‘WHAT’S ON’ SECTION AT WWW.FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU

Garry Stewart, one of the world’s best contemporary choreographers, redefined dance in Australia with his take on Swan Lake in the wry and action packed Birdbrain, which went on to become Australia’s most performed contemporary dance work. Fusing the technical prowess of classical ballet with explosive choreography, the eleven formidable dancers of Australian Dance Theatre embody Giselle’s central themes of hysteria, vulnerability, desire, gender, death and the afterlife. Mania takes over with a thrilling electronic musical score, and a hovering panorama of LED screens, driving the work forward at a phenomenal pace. Don’t miss the work that received critical acclaim on its extensive tour through Europe. “Jaw droppingly physical.” The Guardian (UK) Bookings & tickets at canberratheatrecentre.com.au

QWIRE GALA CONCERT

SATURDAY 22 JUNE AT 7.30PM LLEWELLYN HALL, ANU SCHOOL OF MUSIC The Qwire’s Gala Concert will feature the most popular songs from the Qwire’s 20 years of singing in the community. You will hear favourites such ranging from ‘Everything Possible’ and ‘Deepening Twilight’ to ‘Bad Romance’ and beyond. This will be the biggest concert put on by the Qwire to date and one not to be missed! Tickets and more details at: canberraqwire.org.au WHAT’SON

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By Simon Copland

ROUND UP) POLICE BRUTALITY AT MARDI GRAS Hundreds of people recently marched through Sydney after this year’s Mardi Gras was tarnished by shocking footage of police brutality against 18-year-old Jamie Jackson. Jackson told the media that he believes he could have died, but also told 7News, he has nothing but respect for the police. ‘I’ve got nothing bad to say about them but that one police officer that was just standing on me in the video treating me like a piece of meat, that was just wrong.’ There have been many gay marriage demonstrations in Paris both for and against the bill

FRANCE & URUGUAY SAY ‘I DO’ TO GAY MARRIAGE Led by President Francois Hollande’s Socialists, France’s upper house of parliament has voted to legalise gay marriage. The bill — which was approved with only minor amendments — is now certain to become law after a final vote in the lower house, expected in May. Opponents, mostly conservatives and fervent Roman Catholics, have sought to defend traditional marriage. Australian Marriage Equality national director, Rodney Croome said, ‘France’s message to Australia and the world is that the principles of liberty, equality and fraternity apply equally to same-sex couples.’ The French vote, combined with recent wins in the UK, Uruguay and closer to home New Zealand, highlights how quickly Australia is falling behind other nations. Uruguay is the twelfth nation to allow same-sex couples to marry and the fourth country in Latin America to allow such marriages at a national or local level after Argentina, Mexico and Brazil. Seventy-one of 92 lawmakers in the lower house voted in favour of the proposal, one week after the senate passed it by a wide majority. President Jose Mujica is expected to sign the bill into law. Here in Australia, both Julia Gillard and Tony Abbott oppose marriage equality. About two-thirds of the ruling Labor Party’s MPs have voted for reform. In the absence of a conscience vote, Abbott’s Coalition MPs cannot vote for it.

“I AGREE THAT FAMILY IS THE BASIS OF SOCIETY BUT I ALSO BELIEVE THAT LOVE IS THE BASIS OF FAMILY. AND LOVE IS NEITHER HOMOSEXUAL NOR HETEROSEXUAL.” Fernando Amado of the centre-right Colorado party, Uruguay

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NEWS&POLITICS

The footage uploaded onto YouTube showed a police officer throwing Jackson onto the concrete pavement, and then stepping on his back, restricting his ability to breath. As the video came out, other stories of brutality also emerged. Presenting a worrying pattern, this has brought outrage across the community, which has lead to an internal police investigation. Although calls have been made for a independent investigation, NSW Police Minister Mike Gallacher and Premier Barry O’Farrell have both repeatedly denied the need for the inquiry to be taken out of police hands, saying oversight from the ombudsman will ensure the investigation is independent. Assistant Commissioner Murdoch says he does not believe the incident will permanently damage relationships with the community. ‘Our relationship locally with the gay and lesbian community is first-class,’ he said. A petition has been launched, aimed at forcing a debate in the NSW State Parliament on the legislative framework governing complaints about Police conduct. The petition can be downloaded at mardigras.org.au or requested by mailing The NSW Gay & Lesbian Rights Lobby, PO Box 304, Glebe NSW 2037. FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU


ANTI GAY MARRIAGE PROTESTS IN FRANCE

ADD IT UP

After the announcement that the French government would make same-sex marriage legal, opponents of equality — a mix of Catholic hardliners, social conservatives, Muslims and evangelical Christians — headed for the streets.

453

Tasmanian Christian, James Durston (who says he is a spokesman for God) claims lesbians are 453 times more likely to be murdered than heterosexual women.

Around 70 people were arrested and placed in custody after they tried to set up a campsite outside the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament, near the banks of the Seine river, a police official said. Another 19 protesters were stopped by police for identity checks later as they waited for the French Interior Minister Manuel Valls to leave a concert hall in the capital. Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault called for restraint in Paris’s Latin Quarter where riot police used tear gas to disperse protesters.

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If the reform occurs — an election promise by President Francois Hollande — France will join 11 other countries including Belgium, Portugal, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Norway and South Africa, where same-sex marriage is also legal.

The percentage of gay and lesbian people in China that marry the opposite sex in order to please demanding parents or to save their careers.

ACT GOVERNMENT LGBTI ADVISORY COUNCIL

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The twelve-member council were appointed in March 2013 and include members from fields such as education, business, legal, community support and health services.

The current number of countries worldwide that have legalised same-sex marriage.

13.95

The percentage of males that have had an ‘extensive’ or ‘more than incidental homosexual’ experience.

The newly formed ACT LGBTI Advisory Council met for the first time last month. Its key role is to assist the Government in developing and implementing policies, programs and services that will work towards making Canberra t he most LGBTI friendly city in Australia.

Items on their agenda include the Government’s response to the Beyond the Binary Report, combating transphobia and homophobia in the community, gaps in community service provision and increasing engagement with Canberra’s LGBTI community. Increased consultation with the community is intended to ensure any policies, programs and initiatives by Government positively affect the lives of LGBTI Canberrans. The LGBTI Advisory Council will report its findings directly back to the ACT government.

‘‘

THIS MONTH’S IDIOCY Anti-gay flyers recently distributed in Tasmanian have prompted gay rights advocates to lodge a complaint to the Anti-Discrimination Commission. The flyers — which can be seen on the FUSE website — declare that homosexuality should not be tolerated because of a range of health problems that lead to an allegedly lower life expectancy for gay and lesbian people. The flyers go so far as to make the bewildering claim that lesbians are 307 times more likely to die in accidents than other women and that a third die of cancer. Mr James Durston, who claims to be “a spokesman for God” told The Tasmanian Examiner he does not care about potential legal action and is “equally offended” by same-sex marriage leaflets. Gay Advocate, Mr Croome commented, ‘Some people will dismiss these flyers as a joke but they have a dramatic impact, especially on young people coming to terms with being gay’.

We believe there is an infinite combination of possibilities on the spectrum of sex and gender. We recommend the creation of as few categories and classifications as possible; ideally just one, not two, nor three. The Organisation Intersex International (OII) in response to legislative changes announced by ACT Attorney General Simon Corbell in relation to sex and gender identification. NEWS&POLITICS

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ROUND UP) NEW AUSTRALIAN MEDICAL RESOURCE FOR WOMEN DocLIST is a new online medical resource for lesbians and bisexual women. It currently includes, general practitioners, specialists, mental health professionals and dentists. DocLIST is currently calling for recommendations for doctors and mental health professionals so that a large number of women can benefit. Once a recommendation is received, the health professional is contacted to let them know about the project and asked whether they agree to be added to the list. The health professional is not told who recommended them. DocLIST is run by the Australian Lesbian Medical Association (ALMA) and was set up in response to a clear need from the community. ALMA is frequently asked by women for recommendations of lesbian or bi-friendly doctors in their area. The project aims to make lesbians and bisexual sensitive health care available to as many Australians as possible. Check out doclist.com.au today.

LGBTI PEOPLE AGEING WELL A new website has been launched to find out about ageing from the point of view of LGBTI people, and to help them sustain independent, healthy and active lives. Part of the Outrageous Ageing LGBTI Elders’ Wellbeing project, a survey asks LGBTI people over 50 about what health issues most concern them, what information they need, what activities they’d like to be involved in, and how they would like to connect with other people like themselves. To take part in the survey, go to outrageousageing.org.au Those without internet access can get a paper version of the survey with a reply-paid envelope by contacting Sujay Kentlyn on 0488 035 500. 10

NEWS&POLITICS

New Zealanders celebrate after the country became the first in the Asia-Pacific region to legalise same-sex marriage.

WEDDING BELLS FOR NEW ZEALAND New Zealand has become the first Asia-Pacific country to legalise same sex marriage. The parliament approved the bill — amending the 1955 marriage act — despite fierce opposition from Christian lobby groups who said it would undermine the institution of the family. The new law however, makes it clear that clergy can decline to preside over gay marriages if they conflict with their beliefs. The bill was passed with a large majority — 77 votes in favour to 44 against. People watching from the public gallery and some lawmakers immediately broke into song, singing the New Zealand love song ‘Pokarekare Ana’, AP news agency reported. ‘In our society, the meaning of marriage is universal — it’s a declaration of love and commitment to a special person,’ Labour MP Louisa Wall, who introduced the legislation, said. ‘Nothing could make me more proud to be a New Zealander than passing this bill,’ she added. Bob McCoskrie from Family First had a different take saying, ‘Historically and culturally, marriage is about man and a woman’.

SEX AND GENDER REFORMS The Australian Government has released new guidelines, which will mean that personal records will provide three gender ‘options’: male, female, or X. After similar changes to passport requirements in 2011, these guidelines will also mean that sex reassignment surgery and / or hormone therapy will no longer be pre-requisites for a change of gender on Government records. The guidelines have been placed out for consultation and are due to come into effect on July 1. Meanwhile in the ACT, Attorney General Simon Corbell recently announced the Government’s response to the ACT Law Reform Advisory Council report Beyond the Binary: Legal Recognition of Sex and Gender Diversity in the ACT. Corbell has announced a range of reforms, including removing the requirement for sex reassignment surgery for changing someone’s sex, amending legislation and data collection practices to be more accessible to trans* and intersex people and extending the time allowed for registration of the birth of a child, including registering their sex. FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU


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a s a r e e u Q As Orange

k r o w k c o Cl

erson By Robert Hend

The Director said she wanted to have the audience experience a heavily charged testosterone atmosphere, to lock them in with the sweat and the balls and the smell, to tell a story that is just bursting with it. It’s not a gay play but it is charged with very strong homoerotic overtones, not only during the sex scenes but also in the bravado between the gang members. It’s testosterone charged with lots of male naked flesh and athleticism. It’s hard to believe that fifty years have passed since Anthony Burgess’ searing novel of adolescent mindlessness, punishment, revenge and fatalism was published and that for many years it was considered a failure for him financially and artistically. It was given very bad reviews, ignored by most critics and the American edition cut his last chapter, preferring a darker ending. Now it’s considered one of the top 100 books of the twentieth century.

IN DESCRIBING THE ALL-MALE LONDON PRODUCTION OF A CLOCKWORK ORANGE, REVIEWERS APPROPRIATELY USED TERMS LIKE SEARING AND VISCERAL. THIS IS NO LIGHT DRAWING ROOM COMEDY.

Burgess wrote the original text of the play in a burst of creativity in just three weeks when he thought he only had months to live. He was intrigued by the use of slang by the emerging teen gangs of the time, using the words of these peer groups. But quickly realising it would date even before it was published, he redrafted it, inventing a new slang mixing Russian and American terms with his own invented rhyming slang. But don’t be worried as much of it is clear and understandable, especially when it’s terms like “the old in and out” for sex, or when it makes us the outsider, keeping the meaning of what they are saying secret. In the book the language also has an effect of lessening the violence, or disguising it, whereas in the movie or the play, you can’t help avoiding seeing the brutal violence as the gang stamps on the head of a vagrant.

IT’S TESTOSTERONE CHARGED SHOW DETAILS WITH LOTS OF MALE NAKED Set in the near-future, the story concerns 15-year-old Alex, bored PAGE 6 FLESH AND ATHLETICISM. at school during the day, pumped up on drugs and testosterone, he lives for the nightly thrill of violence and sex committed by his The play presented by London’s ‘Action to the Word’ was gang of teens. He’s a clear leader, not just a thug and one of his written by Burgess many years after the book as he was idiosyncrasies is his love of Beethoven. He lives for the thrills of unhappy with the many amateur productions he had heard sex and extreme violence, and quite brutal it is. In one attack, of making their own versions. Unlike the famous movie, the Alex meets a pair of ten-year-old girls and takes them back play comes firmly from the book and many who’ve only seen to his parents’ flat where he gets them drunk, injects himself the movie will notice many differences. Kubrick’s movie was with hard drugs and then rapes them. After a series of hideous based on the book, was read on the set once but used as violent attacks by his gang, “ultra-violence” Burgess calls it, Alex is the starting point only. For example, the final chapter was all captured and prosecuted for murder. He then undergoes a radical but ignored by him. Music features prominently in the play new form of aversion therapy to “cure” him of his violence, but with and like the movie, Beethoven is pivotal. But fifty years on, to drastic side effects. The teenagers do evil things but the aversion be relevant today, more contemporary music was used as a treatment Alex suffers is just as evil. The Director asked herself, ‘Is soundtrack, including David Bowie, The Gossip, Scissor Sisters, it better to be forced to be good or better to choose to be bad?’ Frankie Goes to Hollywood and Pink Floyd. Director Alexandra Spencer-Jones decided to have an all-male cast. Some of the ten-male cast members play female roles A Clockwork Orange promises to be one of the most exciting at times. We’ve seen quite a few single-gender productions of and essential productions this year. And the title? Burgess late, from the fabulously successful Pirates of Penzance to the claims to have heard the phrase, “as queer as a clockwork infuriatingly confusing Titus Andronicus, so choosing all-male orange” in a London pub in 1945 and loved it ever since. has to make sense — It’s no longer novel. But you’ll have to see the play to see how it’s been used. 12

SPOTLIGHT

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YOU ARE INVITED TO HONOUR SUPPORT ADVOCATE AND SHARE IN A SPECIAL EVENING UNITED IN SOLIDARITY 30 YEARS Please join us for the 30th International AIDS Candlelight Memorial at the

National Gallery of Australia 6.00pm on Sunday 19th May. The event is to honour, support and advocate for those affected by HIV Friends, Family, Colleagues and the community The theme for this the 30th International AIDS Candlelight Memorial is “30 Years in Solidarity”. Please join us for what will be a beautiful evening, including musical performances and some light refreshments.

For more information please contact events@aidsaction.org.au or visit www.aidsaction.org.au/candlelight2013 02 6257 2855

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FUSEFEATURE

FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU


J

MO O JU U AN UNMISTAKABLY UNIQUE ARTIST. MOJO JUJU IS MUCH MORE THAN SLANG FOR ‘THAT OLD BLACK MAGIC’; IT’S THE NAME OF ONE OF AUSTRALIA’S HOTTEST ALTERNATIVE MUSICIANS, WHO IS MAKING WAVES EVERYWHERE SHE GOES. STARTING AS THE FRONT WOMAN FOR THE PUNK SWING BAND MOJO JUJU AND THE SNAKE OIL MERCHANTS SHES GOT A REPUTATION FOR DARK, DIRTY AND SEDUCTIVE LIVE PERFORMANCES. SHE’S NOW GONE SOLO AND IT’S GOING TO BE ONE HELL OF A RIDE.

By Elizabeth Gorrell

Elizabeth Gorrell from FUSE caught up with Mojo Juju during the few spare moments she has between touring, writing and impersonating Elvis to ask this incredible artist about her musical style, inspirations and travelling lifestyle.

COVERFEATURE

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F: Do you feel like your nomadic lifestyle effects the way you make music? M: Of course! I think the constant movement gives you a sense of immediacy in the way you live. The interactions you have with people are urgent because you never have much time. So it definitely shapes the experiences you have… and that in turn affects the way you write. F: Do you gain as much satisfaction from doing covers as you do from performing your own music? M: I don’t do a lot of covers, but occasionally I find a song that resonates in a way that I think, ‘I can probably sing that as if I wrote it myself’. I think that’s the key, you have to be able to completely own it… the sentiment or the emotion behind it and you have to be able to bring something unique to the song. There are three songs on my current album that I did not write. The first is ‘I Put a Spell on You’ by Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, the second, ‘Parisian Rain’ which was written by my brother T-bone. Finally, there’s a song, which is only available on the vinyl edition of the album ‘Psycho’, by Leon Payne. I’m not sure what those song choices say about me…. F: Who is your biggest musical inspiration right now?

FUSE: In your solo career you’ve surrounded yourself with artists you know will contribute positively to your vision. If you could collaborate with anyone, living or dead, who would it be? MOJO: Tom Waits. Because I think he’s one of the greatest songwriters and storytellers that I’ve ever heard. F: What’s the biggest difference between group and solo work when it comes to creating music? M: The booze goes a lot further when you’re working solo. F: Do you have a favourite place to perform? Or a gig that was particularly memorable? M: The Vanguard in Sydney is like a second home to me. But actually there are a lot of venues all over the place that have become like little homes away from home. I couldn’t play “favourites”. My list of memorable gigs is starting to grow long these days! Most recently I have had the great pleasure of touring with Blues legend, Tony Joe White. And just last week we joined Kitty, Daisy & Lewis on stage at Billboards in Melbourne. That was a hoot. F: What are your goals for future tours? M: In July I’m hitting the road with my band for another National tour and then in October I’m heading to Europe for a month and a half of touring over there. Very exciting!

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M: That’s an impossible question. Also, my music is inspired by so many things! Not just other music. I think I cite Tom Waits as major influence pretty regularly, but most recently I’ve been getting into Frank Ocean. And of course a lot of other Aussie bands like Kira Puru & The Bruise, Clairy Browne & The Bangin’ Rackettes, Twincest, Stella Angelico… That’s a lot of powerful women right there. I didn’t even plan that! But yeah the girls are killing it out here at the moment. Nice one ladies! F: You have a very unique dress style; explain to our readers your love affair with Pachuco culture, the inspiration behind your look. M: It’s easy. But firstly, I’m talking about a specific time and a place in Pachuco culture. I’m talking about the 1940s in California; here’s a group of young people with impeccable fashion, incredibly sexy music, standing proudly in their culture in the face of discrimination and adversity. The women were transgressing male fashion in a time when the gender roles were even more divided. They were young and they were Latin, living in the USA. Hence they were doubly marginalised. But they were proud, and they were beautiful and powerfully inspiring. F: How do you cope with discrimination? M: By rising above that type of behaviour. By trying to have empathy for the ignorant who hold on to that kind of mindless hatred. They must be truly sad. F: What do you think is the best way to raise awareness about health and welfare issues for the gay community?

F: Your music has a unique way of creating characters and storylines in a very evocative way; Is your album autobiographical in any sense?

M: Keep talking about it people…

M: All the names and places have been changed to protect the not-so-innocent. Hahaha.

Mojo’s album is available online and in stores and you can catch Mojo at any one of her numerous tour dates around the country.

COVERFEATURE

FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU


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Call 02 6257 5557

money-mechanics.com.au • advice@money-mechanics.com.au

Sex, Religion and the State – an eye-opening ride through the Australian political landscape

cAnbeRRA theAtRe centRe And centenARy of cAnbeRRA pReSent

woRld pRemieRe – A veRSion 1.0 pRoduction

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By Scott Malcolm Director of Money Mechanics

Rainbow Networking CANBERRA KICKS OFF A NEW LGBTI BUSINESS NETWORK! Networking is all about connection: sharing information and ideas, expanding your knowledge, growing your contacts and of course supporting others along the way.

HERE ARE MY TOP NETWORKING TIPS 1. Move Out of Your Comfort Zone As the saying goes, you get back what you put out there. Make the effort not to cancel a networking opportunity after a big day at work, and put yourself out there to meet new people outside of your circle. Over the last few months Alex Thatcher and I have been working to put together OUTBIZ — a new business networking group. Now I often refer to myself as a ‘mainstreamer’ — being gay is a part of who I am but not solely what I am — so I spend a lot of time networking in many varied and diverse groups. Having said that, I do feel there is a real need to draw like-minded LGBTI business people together — enter left OUTBIZ. Our first OUTBIZ networking evening was held at The Tradies in Dickson, with around sixty people attending — a great start. Over the next few months we will begin building a membership from community members from all walks of life. OUTBIZ — Canberra’s LGBTI Business Network will be a place where people can connect with others, expand their business, find new customers or suppliers, socialise and support the local queer business community. Whether you are a member of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans* and intersex community or would like to support and connect with LGBTI businesses, we encourage you to come along and join in on all the fun. Over the years I have had to work hard at building my networking skills as it is something that doesn’t come easy to me. I am quiet shy by nature so I have to put myself out there! Networking can be a great way of meeting new people to build and develop your business and personal relationships. I often have to jump outside of my comfort zone to promote my business and my services in public forums and with the launch of the new OUTBIZ network in Canberra, I thought it worthwhile to put together some of the tips my business coaches have given me over the years as networking, like all skills, can be enhanced and refined.

2. Have Your Introduction and ‘Elevator Pitch’ Planned This is all about how you answer the question, “What do you do?” This takes some skill and practice to master and remember, it is about engaging people rather than selling to them. You need a hook and you need to actively listen to “serve” not “sell”. When people ask me what I do I often say, ‘I help people to sleep well at night’. This leads people to want to ask more or know more about what I am on about and is a great conversation starter! 3. Cherish the Business Card Always have plenty of your cards with you and respect any cards you get from others. I often make a comment on the content or feel of the cards I receive. It’s also a great tool to remember people’s names that you meet as well. Check out some of the phone applications to store copies of cards and jot down details of people you meet (after the event of course not while you are meeting them). 4. Follow Up When you meet some new people and connect, follow up with a phone call or email or arrange a one-on-one coffee if you think there is opportunity to do some business together. If you have committed to do something when you meet people, make sure you follow through. CHECK Networking can be fun; it is purely meeting new people or getting to know people a little more.

OUT ALL THE OUTBIZ PHOTOS P20

If would like to ask Scott any questions, you can email him at scott@money-mechanics.com.au or call 02 6257 5557. (http://money-mechanics.com.au) Scott Malcolm is Director of Money Mechanics who are authorised to provide financial advice through PATRON Financial Advice AFSL 307379. The information provided in this article is of a general nature only. It has been prepared without taking into account your objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on this information you should consider its appropriateness having regard to your own objectives, financial situation and needs.

MONEYSHOT

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OUTBIZ LGBTI BUSINESS NETWORK

CONNECT EXPAND SUPPORT

JOIN CANBERRA’S LGBTI BUSINESS NETWORK The inaugural OUTBIZ networking evening was held at The Tradies in Dickson, with over sixty people attending. OUTBIZ will provide special events where LGBTI business people can connect. If you would like to expand your business, find new customers or suppliers, socialise with other professionals, or even if you’re looking for new employment opportunities, then OUTBIZ is for you. So, whether you are a member of the queer community or would like to support local LGBTI businesses, we encourage you to come along and join in on all the fun. See the FUSE website or Facebook for more details.

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OUT&ABOUT

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Anthony Callea PROUD, 30 and DOing what he loves By Bebe Backhouse

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WE SHOULD ALL CELEBRATE WHO WE ARE

HIS VOICE IS POWERFUL, HIS SONGS ARE HEARTFELT, AND EVEN WHEN HE’S NOT BUSY ON STAGE ENTERTAINING, HE’S STILL ENTERTAINING. Anthony Callea is undoubtedly one of Australia’s finest vocalists and performers. Now he’s back, armed with a new sense of independence and a new album, Thirty. We caught up with the singer to talk about his musical inspiration, working with Tina Arena and being comfortable with who he is.

‘I’ve done a few support tours and I’ve been going back and forth to The States quite a fair bit,’ Anthony tells us. ‘It’s been a while since my last album so I’ve also spent a lot of time working on my music. Being able to work without rules or an A&R person there to tell me, “you need to sound like this, you need to write a song like that” was really great. It allowed me to be myself. COVERFEATURE

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Anthony has been enjoying plenty of creative freedom since parting with Sony Music in 2009. ‘I was going out and I was having fun, I was really just being me and I hope that came through in my last EP The Last to Go. People told me, “It’s got a heavy dance sound, that’s different for you”. But that’s what I first started recording when I was sixteen,’ he admits. ‘But like anyone with any job, there’s an evolvement with what you do.’ Anthony has also discovered that there is so much more to being a free, creative artist. There’s also a hell of a lot of hard work involved. ‘When you’re with a record company, the A&R department is setting up all the song writing and recording sessions — everything’s done for you. Now we have to book the accommodation, we have to book those flights. I went over to L.A. the first time and I sat at my computer and thought, “who do I like? Who am I listening to? Who am I digging in terms of production?” And I simply sent them emails. At the end of the day they can only say “no”. Or they don’t get back to you. But I got quite a few responses and to be able to walk into a room and for them to have no preconceptions of what you’ve done beforehand and no restrictions in terms of creatives, it’s refreshing,’ he says. But Anthony does admit that being broken free from the safety net of his previous record company contract after his mainstream success was a consternating experience. ‘I suppose you’re just on your own all of a sudden, which can be scary. It’s like a relationship — when you’ve been in a relationship for a while and all of a sudden you’re on your own, it’s different.’ On a side note, talking about relationships: for all you boy’s wondering if Anthony is available, sorry, he’s in a relationship with Australian TV Actor and host Tim Campbell, (Remember him from Home and Away and Wheel of Fortune) who came out in 2008. When I asked Anthony about his current love life, he laughed and said, I’m very happy at the moment’. Back to the music, Anthony explains that his new album is indeed a “new chapter” since his last studio album in 2006, A New Chapter. ‘Turning thirty last December was an exciting time and I decided I needed to record an album that encapsulated the past thirty years for me’. ‘Both musically and emotionally, the album is a collection of inspirational songs that embrace the artists and music that have influenced me over the years. I’ve also wanted to record and release a couple of originals that I wrote a while back but have been waiting for the right time, so I’m really excited to have those songs become a part of the album,’ he explains. 24

COVERFEATURE

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IT’S IMPORTANT TO UNDERSTAND THAT A PERSON’S SEXUALITY IS A PART OF WHO THEY ARE BUT IT DOESN’T DEFINE WHO THEY ARE. WHETHER WE’RE GAY, STRAIGHT OR WHATEVER, WE SHOULD ALL CELEBRATE WHO WE ARE AND SUPPORT EACH OTHER. FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU


When asked about the songs on the album, Anthony explained that each song was chosen for different reasons. ‘I wrote ‘My All’ a few years back now with my producer James Kempter. It was written really easily over a glass of champagne and a cheese platter… because that’s how I work in the studio,’ he jokes. ’When you find someone in your life and that moment hits you that they are the one, words are difficult to completely describe this. So being able to express that in a song to share that with the world is a beautiful thing. I was probably the most nervous recording this song as I just wanted it to be perfect.’ It seems that this song was ‘the one’, the song dedicated to his partner, however Anthony went on to explain, ‘a lot of couples have that one song that is “theirs”. ‘Get Here’ is my partner’s and mine. Sometimes through unavoidable circumstances, be it at work or other life commitments, a lot of relationships endure separation for periods of time and this song beautifully sums up the love that remains. I felt it necessary to put my own stamp on this song. It’s definitely been a part of my musical landscape’. Going from Sony Music to ABC Music, there was no room to question Anthony’s choice to sign with the Australian label. ‘I got to a point in my life musically where I wanted to be able to do this really well and honestly [write music]. I wanted to take ownership and control and just be really hands-on. After speaking with ABC Music I felt that they were the right musical family to do that with. We’re all working as a team and so far it’s been great. I’m not a person who sits back and gets told what to do. I’m very stubborn and not very disciplined like that,’ he laughed. ‘From the moment I walked through the ABC Music doors to first meet with the team, I knew they were the right fit for this project.’ Anthony has definitely found comfort within his creativity, something that he has been yearning for since first entering the music industry. ‘I’m really comfortable now with my music, but I suppose it’s something that comes with experience and age. I was young when I came off Australian Idol. It’s not that I didn’t know what I was doing but I went from singing in hotel lobbies and at weddings to one of the highest-profile television shows in the country and it was extremely overwhelming at times. I don’t regret it at all. That show allowed me to do what I’m doing now, even still nine years down the track.’ In August last year, Anthony was invited by Tina Arena to join her as a special guest on her national Australian ‘Symphony of Life’ tour. ‘It was really great to just hang out with her and to talk with her. The best advice she gave me was, “Love, I’m forty-four years old. Just shut up and listen to me!” She says it the way it is and I love that about her. She’s got one of the most phenomenal voices and I’d say that it’s one of the finest in the country.’ When asked how he was approached, Anthony explains that it was hard to not get excited. ‘She called me and was like, “Anth, can you sing with me on my show?” I was like, act cool, Anth, it’s all good. We did seven shows last year in September and came back and did some more shows earlier this year. I think it’s really important that when you’re given an opportunity like that, to work with artists with such a wealth of experience, to just shut up, listen, watch and learn.’ It’s been nine years since his debut on Idol and Anthony feels that he has matured not only in his personality but also in his music. ‘I think that I’m a better performer and a better singer now. With anything you do, you hope that you get better with experience.

I love what I do and I’ve learnt to not sweat the small stuff. You’re not going to be able to control everything so it’s important to not get caught up worrying about what everyone thinks, what everyone says and what everyone does. I think that’s the biggest thing that I’ve learnt.’ Being completely comfortable with who he is, Anthony only encourages everyone else to learn to accept themselves. ‘I think it’s really important to be comfortable within yourself. However long that takes and however you do it, just be true and don’t hurt yourself in the process,’ he says. ‘It’s important to surround ourselves with people who support us and bring out the best in us. It’s also important to understand that a person’s sexuality is a part of who they are but it doesn’t define who they are. Whether we’re gay, straight or whatever, we should all celebrate who we are and support each other.’ Looking back on Anthony’s already amazing career, it’s extraordinary to think how much he’s accomplished in his thirty years — not just through the Australian Idol competition, but through his various musical theatre shows, support roles for international artists, Channel 7’s It Takes Two and countless industry and fan-voted awards. On reflection, especially on the last nine years since his second-place result on Idol, Anthony says there is nothing he would have done differently. ‘Obviously if I did it now nine years down the track, I’d know better. You evolve and you learn things. I remember walking down that red carpet at the Opera House for the finale and it was a complete head-fuck. It was ridiculous, but I wouldn’t change it for the world. If I can wake up every morning and call myself a singer and go out and do what I love, then I’m happy.’ Anthony Callea’s Thirty will be released 26 April 2013 through ABC Music. COVERFEATURE

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Tilley’s

Devine Café Gallery

TILLEY’S IS NESTLED IN TREE LINED LYNEHAM For over 26 years Tilley’s has been a gathering place for the gay and lesbian community. It’s famous for its breakfasts, lunches, dinners and its fabulous coffees. Tilley’s attracts not only ‘regulars’ but visitors from overseas and interstate who enjoy the all-day menu specials, and oh such lovely cake! Internationally renowned for legendary blues, jazz and classical concerts, Tilley’s continues to attract artists of international calibre who prefer the intimacy of a warm theatre atmosphere clad in red velvet, brass and dark timber booths. With a fully licensed bar, one can enjoy champagne with breakfast, or in the evening savour our broad range of wines, spirits or boutique beers on tap.

THE CALL IS YOURS! TILLEY’S CAN DO IT FOR YOU! CORNER OF WATTLE & BRIGALOW STREETS, LYNEHAM 26

Serving you breakfast, lunch and dinner 7 days • Monday to Saturday: 9am – 10pm Sundays: 9am – 6pm • To reserve your favourite table or booth phone us on 6247 7753

NEWS&POLITICS

FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU


By Clancy Atkinson Chef & Food Consultant

Mushrooms : the ultimate food Mushrooms are full of robust earthy flavour, dietary goodness and are extremely versatile. Often referred to as ‘meat for vegetarians’ we eat them for breakfast, lunch and dinner. They are great grilled, roasted, braised, sautéed, pickled and even stuffed. Their textural consistency makes them perfect in soups, stews and stir-fries. Most of us are already acquainted with the common button and field varieties however, there are many other interesting types available to experiment with. ENOKI Also called the ‘golden needle mushroom’, the Enoki is grown in clusters and is easily identified by its long, slim stems and pinhead caps. Enokis have a delicate, almost fruity flavour and are great when eaten raw or lightly sautéed. They are also wonderful when added to broths and soups in the final stages of cooking adding a slightly crunchy texture. OYSTER One of the most beautiful varieties of mushrooms available; Oyster mushrooms have a fluted, shell like appearance that can come in ivory-white or a stunning apricot-pink colour. Believed to lower cholesterol and boost the immune system, Oyster mushrooms have a subtle, creamy flavour and a meaty texture that work wonderfully in stir-fries and egg dishes. SHIITAKE One of the miracle mushrooms, Shiitake’s active ingredient, Lentinan, is a registered cancer treatment in Japan and it has also been proven to lower cholesterol. Used both dried and fresh, they have a chewy texture with a pronounced smoky flavour that works well with soy based dishes. Used extensively in Chinese and Japanese cuisines, the tough stems need to be removed before cooking.

SHIMEJI This highly versatile Japanese mushroom has a succulent texture and when cooked releases an intense, sweet, nutty flavour with soft peppery notes. They grow in clumps and usually have a blue/grey cap and a white stem. The whole mushroom can be utilized when cooking except for the very bottom of the cluster. Shimeji mushrooms are wonderful with noodles and soup. In general, mushrooms require little or no preparation and cook quite quickly. They are best cooked in olive oil and finished with a knob of butter towards the end of the cooking process. Mushrooms are a great vehicle for spices and aromatics such as garlic, nutmeg, lemon, chilli and cumin. They also work wonderfully well with most vegetables, parmesan, goats cheese, pine nuts, hazelnuts, rice and barley. When buying mushrooms look for bright, firm caps that are free of any blemishes. Avoid mushrooms that appear shriveled indicating dehydration and old age. Mushrooms are best stored in a dark, airy place so transfer just-bought mushrooms from plastic bags or containers to brown paper bags. This keeps them firm and fresh. They can be stored like this in the refrigerator for up to a week. A real hero, mushrooms are tasty, easy to use and good for you; what more could you ask for?

MUSHROOM FRITTATA This frittata is perfect road trip food! Quick and easy to make and great hot or cold. Perfect served in a sour dough roll with tomato chutney or simply eaten as is. • 2 tbsp olive oil • 1 leek, thinly sliced • 10 free range eggs • 300g fresh ricotta

• 200g mixed mushrooms, sliced • 1 garlic clove, finely chopped • 2 tbsp finely grated parmesan • 2 tsp thyme leaves, salt & pepper

Preheat oven to 220C. Heat a large frying pan over high heat. Add mushrooms, leek, thyme and garlic — sauté until tender. Whisk eggs in a bowl, then add the cooked mushroom mix, parmesan and ricotta. Fold together and season. Pour mixture back into the frying pan or into individual ramekins and bake until set and golden (8-12 mins). Simply serve with some sautéed mushrooms. EATME

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Registrations: email matt@cubenightclub.com.au

cubenightclub.com.au 28

FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU


FREE ENTRY & HAPPY HOUR

There is nowhere else you should be! Come and join us at Cube nightclub. We do free entry and happy hour every Thursday, Friday and Saturday night until 11pm.

OPENING HOURS • THURSDAY 9PM-5AM • FRIDAY 9PM-5AM • SATURDAY 10PM-5AM • SUNDAY 10PM-LATE 33 PETRIE PLAZA CIVIC, CANBERRA CITY CUBENIGHTCLUB.COM.AU

COME PARTY AT CUBE!!!

Over the last few months Cube has been the home of some fantastic entertainment. We were lucky enough to welcome Willam & Rhea Litré from the US, plus the awesome Christy McNicol & Darlene, the Sister of Sequins and Emily Williams. Don’t miss Cube’s Got Talent 12 July and remember anyone can enter. Hosted by Miss Flangelina Jolie we are sure it will be a great night. For more Cube Photos and our event line up check out cubenightclub.com.au or join us at facebook.com/cube.canberra

OUT&ABOUT

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By Bebe Backhouse

EAR CANDY JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE MIRRORS

GENTLEMEN (AND SOME LADIES) ALL OVER AUSTRALIA HAVE FALLEN IN LOVE WITH THE VOICE AUSTRALIA’S NEW JUDGE, RICKY MARTIN. Filling the shoes of Nic Kidman’s smaller half, Keith Urban, is not going to be an easy task, even if he has the blessing of Australia’s favourite country crooner. With a coaching style of his own, Ricky became an instant hit with the contestants (and one very lucky fiancé). He is kind, cool, calm, sings along to the songs, flirts, encourages and even dances in his chair just like Keith did — only sexier. As addictive as the new kid on the block is, there’s more to the show than the Puerto Rican charmer. It’s about the talent. Nay, the music. From the wacky teenagers to the pub-gig veterans, the judges have selected some of the most incredible singers this country has seen on stage. Even if the contestants don’t do it for you, there’s always Ricky Martin.

MUSIC REVIEWS MINISTRY OF SOUND ELECTRO HOUSE SESSIONS 6 Charging into 2013 and leading the electronic revolution, Ministry of Sound have picked and mixed what is sure to be one of the biggest electro albums of the year. Electro House Sessions 6 explodes through unsuspecting speakers, unleashing 48 of the biggest electro-charged club beats ever created, mixed across two discs. Jumping into the Ministry of Sound studio to deliver the sixth instalment in the iconic series are Ember and Chardy, who lead you through dirty synths, bass lines, double-time beats and electro-flavoured madness. With tracks and remixes by Avicii, Didrick, Danny Howard, The Potbelleez and Dirty Cheap, this is the essential selection of club hits.

Since the single was released on iTunes, I can’t tear my ears away from ‘Mirrors’ — and I find it just as hard to take the song off repeat. Unlike the retro vibes of ‘Suit and Tie’, the new jam reminds me of Justin’s glory days, aka ‘FutureSex/LoveSounds’ with strings, a soaring chorus, layered synths and the ridiculously club-ready pop production courtesy of JT’s main man Timbaland. That said, Justin’s lush, harmony-laden vocals remain the core of the track.

ANTHONY CALLEA THIRTY Recently celebrating his 30th birthday, Anthony Callea releases a brand new album with a brand new attitude to life. Including both covers and original compositions written by Anthony over the years, Thirty discovers and celebrates songs that have influenced him throughout his life. In turn, Anthony delivers his own musical turn on tracks such as Cheap Trick’s ‘The Flame’ and Luther Vandross’ ‘Dance with My Father’, as well as Italian ballads ‘Di Sole E D’azzurro’ and ‘Nella Fantasia’. Thirty delivers some of the most beautiful music from the last, well, 30 years.

PEACE WRAITH Could 2013 be the year that guitars make their return on the landscape of mainstream music? It certainly seems that way. Hailing from Birmingham, Peace successfully adhere to that old guitar-bass-drums format, whilst also having their own identity. After the success of their debut EP Delicious late last year, the momentum continues to flow with the release of their new single, ‘Wraith’. The song ‘is about falling in love with a prostitute,’ says frontman Harrison Koisser, ‘But not really a prostitute and not really falling in love’. Well, whichever it is, thanks to the lyrics ‘blow me like a floating feather’ the band can now add “creative blow job reference” to their CV. MUSICREVIEWS

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By Peter Hitch A Gender Agenda

BEING TRUE TO OURSELVES

A COLLECTION OF SHORT FILMS EXPLORING THE INFINITE POSSIBILITIES OF GENDER.

A Gender Agenda’s newest project — a collection of digital stories made by local transgender and gender diverse community members — was launched on Friday April 12 at the National Film and Sound Archive. The idea for this project came on a cold winter’s night back in 2011 when a group of people sat around a fire in the backyard at the old A Gender Agenda premises sharing stories of transition and self-discovery. It was a truly beautiful evening to be part of; some people just listened and their relief at discovering they were not alone was palpable. But it was also a deeply rewarding experience for the people who chose to share their story. One participant said:

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THIS IS THE FIRST TIME IN 46 YEARS THAT I HAVE TOLD MY STORY; THE FIRST TIME A GROUP OF PEOPLE HAVE WANTED TO HEAR MY WHOLE STORY, INCLUDING MY GENDER CONFUSION. NO LAUGHING, NO RIDICULE, NO CONDEMNATION. JUST ACCEPTANCE AND UNDERSTANDING. That workshop was so well attended, and the evaluations were so powerful that we knew there was a need for a more intensive follow up project — it was clear we were onto something pretty special. Two years later, thanks to funding from the ACT Health Promotion Grants Program, we have just completed the production of a DVD containing seven short films produced by local members of the transgender and gender diverse community. They are stories that each stand powerfully on their own but that as a collection also start to build a picture of the diversity of identities and expressions that exist within the trans community. Jennie Yates, a psychologist who has worked extensively with A Gender Agenda for many years, believes that the DVD is an excellent resource — not only for people questioning their own gender, but also for their partners, parents and children who are looking for valuable insights into this lived experience. After an official launch by Andrew Barr, the 250 people who attended the NSFA were treated to the first ever screening of these films on ‘the big screen’. We received so much positive feedback from so many people that night. It was a deeply moving and emotional night for everyone who was present. Thanks to everyone who came to the launch to support A Gender Agenda and our wonderful local sex and gender diverse community!

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FUSECOMMUNITY

Copies of the DVD are available for $10 (+postage if applicable) by contacting Izzy at A Gender Agenda on events@genderrights.org.au. If you would like support about intersex or gender diversity issues contact A Gender Agenda on 02 6162 1924 or email support@genderrights.org.au. A Gender Agenda offers a range of services including the ACT’s only counselling service for trans and intersex people and their families. Photos by Doug Robinson

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Greens leader and proud mum, Christine Milne marched alongside her son Tom at this year’s Mardi Gras Parade.

IT’S REALLY IMPORTANT THAT LEADERS STAND UP AND SAY I’M HERE. I’M REALLY PROUD OF MY SON AND PROUD TO BE WALKING WITH HIM. SENATOR CHRISTINE MILNE By Simon Copland

CHRISTINE MILNE

TAKES PRIDE TO THE NEXT ELECTION After 16 years, last year Senator Bob Brown announced that he was standing down from the leadership of the Australian Greens. In his time Brown had seen the party that he founded in Tasmania grow to a national force, with ten federal MPs and elected representatives in every state and territory except Queensland and the Northern Territory. Brown’s retirement opened up a big question for many: can The Greens survive without its iconic founder steering the ship? We interviewed the party’s new leader, Senator Christine Milne and proud PFLAG mum, who certainly thinks The Greens have a strong future. ‘Taking over the leadership from Bob Brown is humbling, exciting, but also challenging,’ Milne explains. ‘I knew what to expect in terms of the media saying “well that’s it for the Greens, they’re finished now”’. ‘Of course what the media doesn’t understand about the Greens is that we are bigger than the sum of our parts. The Greens have a very solid base around the country and we have a clear set of principles and policies to which we adhere. And so it is a complete misreading and misunderstanding of the Greens to think that adherence and commitment to the policies of the Greens is around an individual — that’s not the case.’ Milne, like Bob Brown, became prominent in Australian politics during the campaign to stop the damming of the Franklin River in 1983. 34

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‘I’ve always had this coming together of environmental activism and social justice,’ she says. ‘The motivation in my life has been to achieve justice. I was sent to a catholic boarding school when I was ten-years-old. What was absolutely inculcated into me was not only did you have to achieve to the highest level that you were capable, but also that with all the opportunities that we’ve had in life, that we had an obligation to give back. To give back in the public interest and to have the courage of your convictions and to stand up for what you believe in.’ ‘My experience of this was the flooding of Lake Pedder when I was at University. I couldn’t believe that happened in Tasmania and I was determined that the next time they tried to do that I would be fully engaged with the fight — and that was of course the Franklin campaign.’ Following the Franklin campaign, Milne returned home to be a teacher; a career she expected to follow for her entire life. ‘After the Franklin I went back to teaching and probably would still have been teaching until this day if it hadn’t been for the fact that North Broken Hill had decided to build a polluting pulp mill in the farming district in which I was brought up and where my parents still had a farm.’ FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU


‘‘

... I DON’T THINK MARRIAGE EQUALITY IS A FRINGE ISSUE, I THINK THAT IT’S AN ISSUE OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND DECENCY, AND AT A PERSONAL LEVEL I FEEL THAT STRONGLY. SENATOR CHRISTINE MILNE

Milne successfully led the campaign against the mill, a move that catapulted her into the Tasmanian Parliament in 1989. ‘Having got into Tasmanian Parliament in balance of power, we doubled the size of the Tasmanian World Heritage Area, and in Tasmania in the 90s I delivered gun law reform after the Port Arthur massacre; I delivered gay law reform in 1997 with the decriminalisation of homosexuality in Tasmania and I also negotiated with the other political parties for an apology to the stolen generation.’ This passion for justice has seen Milne make GLBTI issues a centre point of her career and this year she joined her son Thomas, who is gay, at the Sydney Mardi Gras. ‘I have been to Mardi Gras a few times, but only in the crowd. And it was just such a fantastic experience to be in the march, and I think an even better experience to be part of the PFLAG team because it was just great for me to meet the parents of other GLBTI kids. And it was so good to be there marching with Thomas and to feel the solidarity with him and all the other parents.’

‘When I was on Q and A last year in Toowoomba, a young man got up to talk about how it was hard to be a young gay man in Queensland. And he was shaking like a leaf and I know he would have been nervous and shaking anyway, but what came through to me was this profound experience of being gay in Queensland. And I thought, I’ve got to get out and try and support him and other young people around the country.’ ‘I felt like this was a good time to stand with the parents to send a signal to those kids whose parents who have disowned them, or are having a hard time around the country, that there is someone who is not only a political leader, but someone who is the parent of a young gay man saying “I’m here to listen, to represent you, to help you and to take you seriously”. I recognise that that is quite an important signal to send.’ It is this passion that Milne will need to bring to the next Federal election. The Greens have had a rough period over the last year, with their vote dropping at both the recent ACT and Western Australian elections. Milne says that she thinks local issues played a major role in those campaigns, but that the Greens are holding up well federally. ‘There are always local considerations that apply at state elections that don’t apply at a federal level. But having said that, there is a wave of conservatism washing across the country and we’ve seen it in changes of State Governments across the country and even though we didn’t see it in the ACT, the levels of conservatism are there.’ ‘After twelve months of very hard work, we had a record high of 11.8 per cent in the most recent election, and we are back to not quite that level, but 11 per cent in the most recent polls. So what you’re seeing is that commitment to the Greens has remained constant over the past year.’ Milne recognises that the next election will be tough, but says that it is more important than ever for people to vote for the Greens to keep a progressive, alternative voice in the Parliament. ‘This election is a huge challenge for people with progressive views in Australia. It is the job of all of us to stand up against the tide of conservatism which I think is sweeping the country.’

‘‘

COMING OUT IS NEVER EASY BUT I’M LUCKY BECAUSE I DID HAVE A REALLY SUPPORTIVE STRUCTURE. TOM MILNE

‘So the challenge for the Greens is to campaign hard so that right away, Australian people understand that the best way to protect the environmental achievements that we have, the climate change platform we have, the industrial relations we have, the social justice laws we have — the best way to protect that is to elect the Greens in force in the Federal Parliament. Unlike Labor, where we wouldn’t know where they would stand on these issues in the face of an Abbott Government, everybody can be fully confident that the Greens will stand up exactly for the views we espouse. We are not about to waiver in the face of conservative attacks. We haven’t done it in the past, and we won’t do it in the future,’ Milne concluded. FUSEFEATURE

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DID YOU KNOW Over two-thirds of students believe that schools respond poorly to bullying, with a high percentage of students believing that adult help is infrequent and ineffective.

By Dwayne Lennox

BULLY Kids can be cruel, and it’s often just a phase but when does standard schoolyard teasing cross the line into full-on bullying? When a child cops regular beatings on the school bus? When they no longer want to go to school so as to avoid their tormentor? Or when, having taken all they can, they hang themselves in their bedroom closet? This doco follows a group of students from various schools and States across America who (as 13 million others do) suffer at the hands of bullies on a daily basis — for being different, for being gay, for simply being — yet who are met with apathy from their school administrators and provided with cold comfort from their perplexed parents. School is supposed to be the best years of your life; Bully reveals it to be a special kind of hell for those kids who dare to be different or merely themselves. This doco will sadden and anger you in equal measure.

}

potato

REAL HUMANS : SEASON 2

As in all the best sci-fi, the ultimate question asked is: what is it to be human? So often our humanity, or lack thereof, is pointed out in direct contrast to the behaviour of the aliens or androids encountered. And so it is with Real Humans, the Swedish drama series set in a parallel present where robot technology is advanced enough to create HUBOTs; Human Robots which bear an uncanny resemblance to humans yet which are designed to serve. But some Hubots have drifted away from society and exist outside of it; on the run from the law, and breaking into houses in order to power up their batteries. These Hubots are hunted by those who wish to sell them on the black market, while a resistance group among humans use them as an excuse to destroy the Hubots. As seen on SBS, Real Humans explores this tenuous relationship between man and machine, constantly questioning both ours and the Hubots’ humanity.

CALL THE MIDWIFE : SEASON 2 The show which, in its first season, out-rated Downton Abbey when it aired in the UK, Call The Midwife is a moving, intimate, funny and above all, true-to-life look at the colourful stories of midwifery and families in East London in the Fifties, based on the best-selling memoirs of the late Jennifer Worth. And if you enjoyed the first series, you’ll be equally enthralled by Season 2; the nuns and nurses of Nonnatus House, a convent in one of the poorest areas of London, are back for more dramatic and comic medical adventures. Boasting a fine British cast, including Pam Ferris, comedienne Miranda Hart, and veteran Vanessa Redgrave, Call The Midwife Season 2 certainly delivers some great entertainment.

You’ll find all these titles at JB HIFI, online or at all good DVD outlets. FUSE also has five copies of each title to give away, see fusemagazine.com.au for more details.

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COUCHPOTATO

FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU


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The AIDS Action Council Provides professional counselling and support services which cater to your needs.

Drawing on years of counselling and client support experience, this free service is available to people living with HIV/AIDS and for people who want to discuss issues around relationships and sexuality. The service is also available for partners, families and friends. We have a long history working across the range of issues that affect our community and if required can also make appropriate referrals to other agencies and programs after assessing your needs.

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ŠCopyright AIDS Action Council of the ACT

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Virus Cocktail ANYONE?

INGREDIENTS: SIMPLY ADD HIV & HEP C

In the past I have written about the importance of getting a HIV or STI (sexually transmissible infection) check-up. Part of being in control of our health includes knowing what is going on in our bodies. Sometimes waiting to find out what that is can be scary. The important thing is that you have chosen to take control of their health and if there is a positive diagnosis, you are now able to do something about it, and hopefully stop future transmissions. However, recently we have been seeing guys getting diagnosed with something we didn’t actually think was an STI: Hepatitis C (Hep C), and all too frequently, this also includes guys living with HIV. This is where knowledge allows us to take control. In the last couple of years there has been an increase in the number of gay and bisexual guys testing positive for Hep C across Australia, and like so many other STIs this is reflected across Europe, the UK and the USA. Hep C is a virus that damages and inflames the liver, and in the long-term can eventually lead to scarring on the liver (cirrhosis), and in some cases can even develop into liver failure and/or cancer. Hep C, like HIV, is both an STI and a blood borne virus, as transmission is dependent on the virus reaching the blood stream. The most common means of transmitting Hep C is through sharing injecting, tattooing, piercing or other equipment that carries blood from one person to the next. Hep C is a more resilient virus than HIV and the environmental conditions that would rapidly kill HIV, don’t affect Hep C, as well as the quantities of the virus required for transmission being much smaller than HIV. Another variation between the two is that treatment for Hep C can effectively remove it from the body, with new and more effective treatment options also being developed. Hep C being considered an STI is a reasonably recent development as in most of the cases found amongst men that have sex with men is that there was no injecting drug use, no sharing of razors or any other way that the virus could have been transmitted except via unprotected sex. The major concern for gay and bisexual guys is for those diagnosed with Hep C and HIV. While Hep C doesn’t appear at this stage to affect HIV, the presence of HIV, like with so many other illnesses, has the potential to exacerbate the progression and impact of Hep C on the body. The good news is that HIV and Hep C can be treated at the same time. Some HIV treatments can however cause irritation to the liver, so treating the two needs to be carefully monitored with the HIV specialist. Because of the slow progression of Hep C, HIV will always be the priority virus to treat. There is increasing evidence that the sooner treatment starts, the more effective it is at removing the Hep C. AFAO (Australian Federation of AIDS Organisations) and NAPWHA (National Association of People with HIV Australia) have recently launched a new resource for gay men and Hep C, with a particular emphasis on HIV and Hep C co-infections. Check out The New Deal: thenewdeal.org.au

If you do want more information about Hepatitis, get in touch with the ACT Hepatitis Resource Centre hepatitisresourcecentre.com.au If you want to get a screening for HIV or Hep C you can speak to your doctor or check out aidsaction.org.au/strip By Keiran Rossteuscher AAC Social & Program Marketing Manager

HEALTH&WELLBEING

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DIVERSITY ACT TWILIGHT EXTRAVAGANZA Diversity ACT celebrated the opening of the Diversity Hub in Kambah at their Twilight Extravaganza on Saturday 23 March. Officially opened by Federal Member for Canberra, Gai Brodtmann MP, and Chief Minister of the ACT, Katy Gallagher MLA, the day was packed with entertainment and fun activities. Find out more about the Diversity Hub and Diversity ACT Community Services at diversityact.org.au

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OUT&ABOUT

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HOW LONG HAS IT BEEN SINCE YOUR LAST CHLAMYDIA TEST?

FIND OUT MORE ABOUT CHLAMYDIA Getting tested is very simple. All you need to know about symptoms and where to get a test is at socproject.net

CANB E R RA HO S P I TAL A division of ACT Health

DID YOU KNOW? Chlamydia is the most common Sexually Transmissible Infection (STI) in Australia, and that 1 in 14 sexually active people have it! Chlamydia affects EVERYONE and is easy to catch, but usually doesn’t have any symptoms, so many people don’t think to get tested for it. Find out more at socproject.net

socproject.net 41


SYDNEY GAY & LESBIAN MARDI GRAS PARADE 2013 — PHOTOS BY LILY CHEN, DOUG ROBINSON & KEITH JEFFERS

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ey Sydn bian Les Gay & as

i Gr Mard 13 20

SYDNEY GAY & LESBIAN MARDI GRAS PARADE 2013 — PHOTOS BY LILY CHEN, DOUG ROBINSON & KEITH JEFFERS

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A Little Laser Cosmetic Laser Clinic

Jennifer Dromgold is the owner of a boutique clinic providing hair removal and skin rejuvenation with medical grade treatments at affordable prices. Jennifer has clients ranging from gay boys & girls to people in the trans* community who need a professional that understands their needs.

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FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU


By Melisa Paz

MAY & JUNE 2013

YOUR HOROSCOPE

During May, the universe will encourage us to reflect and plan in order to prepare for some strong emotional currents in June, when Neptune and Mercury both go retrograde. Neptune starts its retrograde in the first week of June, so it will be harder to think clearly then — especially if you’re a Pisces. Neptune is strongly connected to imagination, so this will be the most affected area. If you use May to plan ahead and are mindful, this retrograde will not be so bad. By June 26, Mercury will start its retrograde and that means that everyone will have to make extra effort — like I’ve said before: don’t make any major purchases or sign any important documents during Mercury retrograde. Remember: keep calm — as always the universe knows best!

Aquarius

January 21 – February 18 May is your month Aquarius and it will truly be shining for you, so enjoy every moment and bask in the sun. In June your creativity will be on the low side. Tip: By the first week of May try to be as organised as you can as you’re in for a special day.

Taurus

April 21 – May 21 June will raise new emotions around family. Don´t let them take control. Striking the right balance between family and work will be important around this time. Tip: During May you might have issues at work — keeping a calm mind and breathing deep will be a tremendous help.

Leo

July 23 – August 23 Some family issues may come up during May. Try to solve any problems in a calm way and be careful not to bring family issues to work with you. Tip: Let things flow. The moon will be with you over the next two months giving you all the energy you need to survive any crisis.

Scorpio

October 24 – November 22 May will be an amazing month for you. Mars will give you lots of fantastic energy, so use it and let the Universe guide you on what new projects to undertake. Tip: By the second week of June try speaking a little bit more about your thoughts to that special person.

Pisces

February 19 – March 20 Neptune’s Retrograde will affect you especially, so try to keep centred. June might look like a month full of challenges but the Universe will be there for you — have an open heart. Tip: Good communication will be helpful. If you feel like you want to say something, say it.

Gemini

May 22 – June 21 Lucky Gemini! Both creativity and sex will be highlighted for you in May, so you should strive to make the very most of it as June will not be as fun. Tip: With Mercury going retrograde at the end of June, use May time to organise any matters related to your finances.

Virgo

August 24 – September 23 During May you might find an exciting opportunity comes along at work. Be sure to be diligent with any projects and you’ll be rewarded. Tip: Take extra care of your health around late June. Be mindful of weather before going out without the appropriate clothes.

Sagittarius

November 23 – December 22 May and June will be really good months, especially when it comes to money. Try not to spend too much and save as much as you can as you’ll need it for something special on the horizon. Tip: Early May you may hear about the opportunity to travel; go as it will be an amazing journey.

Aries

March 21 – April 20 By mid-May the Sun will give you a wonderful surprise in the love and romance area — when it comes, breath deep and savour the moment. Tip: Keep calm when (if any) stressful situations arise around work. Everything will get better with time — you don’t have to worry.

Cancer

June 22 – July 22 By the first week of June, Saturn will be with you. That means that you can use this week to break your work routine and use some time for yourself, because after May you will need it. Tip: Venus is preparing a nice surprise for you, so by May 3 go out with some friends and enjoy life!

Libra

September 24 – October 23 During May you will feel like your emotions are taking control. Keep calm, enjoy the good ones and allow bad ones to pass. Great news: Venus is preparing a surprise for you around love and romance. Tip: If you are not happy with what you are doing, it’s time to make changes — don’t be fearful.

Capricorn

December 23 – January 20 May will be a great moth to make decisions in any area of your life, as Jupiter will be there to guide you, helping you with its wisdom. Tip: Talk to your family about anything that has been bothering you for a while now — it’s a good time to get things out in the open.

STARGAZER

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COMMUNITY DIRECTORY AIDS Action Council The AIDS Action Council provides information, support and services. More info: aidsaction.org.au

PFLAG-ACT A support and friendship group for parents and friends of LGBTI people. More info email pflag.act@gmail.com

A Gender Agenda A resource for transgender, intersex, gender queer and gender variant people. genderrights.org.au

Long Yang A friendly social club for Asian and non-Asian gays and their friends. Canberra: lyccanberra.org Sydney: sydney.longyangclub.org

ACTQueer A free email list for LGBTI people in Canberra and surrounding region. groups.yahoo.com/group/actqueer Bit Bent Youth Group Meet other young people, get support or just hang out. Mondays at Belconnen Youth Centre 6pm–8pm and Thursdays at the Woden Youth Centre 5pm–6.30pm. Email: bit_bent@hotmail.com Canberra Gay & Lesbian QWIRE Want to be involved with Canberra’s own gay and lesbian choir? Singers and non-singers encouraged. More info: canberraqwire@yahoo.com.au

OUTBIZ : LGBTI Business Network Connect with other like-minded people, expand your business, find new customers or suppliers, network and support the LGBTI business community. Email: outbiz@yahoo.com.au Pink Tennis Gay & Lesbian Tennis Group meets Mondays 6pm–9pm at Turner Tennis Club, Cnr McCaughey & Condamine Sts.

Capital Queers Canberra’s Mardi Gras group. More info at capitalqueers.com

Qnet : Queer Youth Cyberspace GLBTI people under the age of 25. Check out qnet.org.au

Dyke Dinner & Movie Group More info on FUSE website or see Canberra Lesbians on Facebook.

Queanbeyan GLBTI Youth Support Mondays 4pm–6pm at Axis Youth Centre, Campbell Street, Queanbeyan Park.

Fruits in Boots A social and support network for rural GLBTI members outside the ACT. Email: fruitsinboots@gmail.com

Radio Q Canberra LGBTI community radio show on 2xx 98.3FM 2xxfm.org.au

Gay ACT Squash Group Wednesdays 6.30pm–7.30pm. National Sports Club, Mouat St, Lyneham. groups.google.com/group/gayactsquash Gaycrash Canberra Taking over the coolest Canberra straight bars one night at a time! facebook.com/gaycrash.canberra/info

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Motafrenz GLBTIQ Car Club Contact Stuart Poole ACT Convener Motafrenz on 0420 523 238 or email act@motafrenz.org motafrenz.org.au

Rainbow Bubs A playgroup and support group for same sex parents and their kids. Email: hoogied@yahoo.com Uni of Canberra LGBTI group A social group for all LGBTI students and staff. Queer Space is located at the UCSA building 1 at the Uni of Canberra. Info email: sexuality@theucsa.org.au

✪ Come and play at CUBE Nightclub! CANBERRA HANGOUTS Cube Nightclub Canberra’s premier gay nightclub venue. 33 Petrie Plaza Civic, Canberra City. cubenightclub.com.au Phoenix Pub The Phoenix is a chilled out friendly pub where everyone is welcome to drop by for a beer or some Drag Bingo! 21 East Row, Canberra City. lovethephoenix.com Tilley’s Devine Cafe For over 26 years Tilley’s has been a gathering place for the gay and lesbian community. Warm and sumptuous, it’s famous for its food and fabulous coffees and cake. To reserve your favourite table or booth call us on 6247 7753. Cnr of Wattle & Brigalow Sts, Lyneham. Diversity Hub Do you need assistance or require support? Call the Diversity ACT GLBTI Support Services Phone Line on 1300 794 717 between 4pm-10pm. diversityact.org.au Ranch Men’s Lounge Canberra’s mens’ space. They are located at Unit 19, Molongo Mall in Fyshwick ACT. A safe venue for men who want to meet men. See ad p47.

Want to know ‘what’s on’ or be listed here, then visit us at www.fusemagazine.com.au

FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU


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riverretreat.com.au Telephone 02 4443 6999

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‘‘

By Rose Pappalardo

Dear Rose, I was dating a boy for about four months and I broke it off, as it wasn’t working. Since then he and his friends have started to spread gossip and lies about me on Facebook. My friends are telling me to ignore it but some of the things are really starting to hurt and get me down. How do I handle this? Dan

Dear Dan, Gossip and lies can be very terribly hurtful — it doesn’t surprise me that it is getting you down. People are good at gossip and can sometimes be very cruel. The effects can be devastating. Most disappointing is not so much the person who starts the gossiping, but the people who pass it on. A friend once gave me a simple test from Socrates, called “Triple filter test” to make a choice about gossip; 1. Truth: Have you made absolutely sure that what you are about to tell me is true? 2. Goodness: Is what you are about to tell me about my friend something good? 3. Usefulness: Is what you want to tell me about my friend going to be useful to me?

Dear Rose, I am addicted to Twitter. There I said it! I am on it day and night and can’t stop. I didn’t think it was a problem until I accidently left my phone at home, by lunchtime I drove home to pick up my phone ‘cause I couldn’t stand it any longer... OMG what if I’m missing out on something important. Help! Twitter Addict

Dear Twitter Addict, Have no fear, I believe there is a app you can download for that. lol But seriously, addiction whether it be Twitter, alcohol, sex, food or anything really, is a red flag for something else going on. It’s a good opportunity to examine what is really bubbling under the surface. It could be you’re not happy with the direction of your life or maybe it’s a coping mechanism for frustration and stress.

You can’t control the behaviour of others, but you can control how you behave. So your friends are right, ignore the gossip and eventually people will move on to other things. However, if you find that some of the gossip becomes malicious and defamatory, you may need to adopt a more proactive approach and seek professional assistance.

The solution could be as simple as recognising what element in your life is driving the behaviour and then making changes, so you feel you are in the driver’s seat again. If it has become all too consuming you may need to consider some professional intervention. There are times I have sought help just to get some clearer perspective in my life, especially when there are a million things going on.

Dear Rose, Recently I discovered that one of my work friends is stealing. I am really worried that this person will get caught and fired or that someone else might get the blame. What can I do? Ellen

In the world we live in today, we are bombarded with minute-by-minute information, expectations and pressure, feeling you need to constantly be in touch. My best advice is, when you are feeling that way, stop whatever you are doing, take a deep breath, stand up and walk away.

Dear Ellen, Nobody likes to work with people they don’t trust so I can understand this terrible predicament. In your situation you can do one of two things: You can confront the person you suspect or you can tell your boss. My rule of thumb is always to give people the opportunity to stop before you take it any further. There is no easy way to confront or call someone on behaviour and it is one of the hardest things you will ever do, but if approached in a non-judgemental way and in a neutral setting, you will find it a lot easier to do. Good luck.

ASK DEAR ROSE 48

EMAIL DEAR ROSE WITH YOUR PROBLEM TODAY!

DEARROSE

Mae West ‘I believe that one day the world will judge the witch hunt against homosexuals just as harshly as it judges the Spanish Inquisition and the Holocaust.’

Mae West was an actress, singer, writer and sex symbol.

If you need help or have a question email : dearrose@fusemagazine.com.au

FUSEMAGAZINE.COM.AU



I want a place where everybody is welcome. I know a place.

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We just want you to be happy, no matter who you are. That’s why we have loads of live entertainment, pool tables, outdoor areas, and big screen TVs. We’ll even collect your empties for you! We’re like a better version of your best friend. Oh, you can bring them too, if you like.


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