Don't Quit Your Gay Job takes to the ice in season openers |
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Written by Mark Robins
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Sunday, 07 February 2010 07:05 |
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Just in time for those certain games happening in February, those funny "we'll try anything" guys take to the ice in the first two episodes of season two of OUTtv's Don't Quit Your Gay Job.
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William Yang's China: welcome to the next generation vacation slideshow |
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Written by Mark Robins
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Thursday, 04 February 2010 11:53 |
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Welcome to the next generation vacation slideshow. No longer relegated to the dens and living rooms of suburban America, William Yang elevates the traditional family travelogue to an art as he tells the story of the people he met and places he visited during his four trips to his ancestral home, China.
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Burn the Floor presale tix available through February 5th |
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Wednesday, 03 February 2010 10:28 |
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Ballroom dance sensation Burn the Floor returns to Vancouver in April following a successful Broadway run and we’re giving you an opportunity to purchase tickets before they go on sale to the general public.
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Flaming poetry slam makes debut in the village |
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Wednesday, 27 January 2010 16:32 |
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On January 4th a new kind of poetry took the Davie Village by storm. But this is not the poetry of Browning, Yeats or cummings and you can be certain the words of Tennyson, Dickinson and Frost were not uttered that night. Instead, this is what organizer, or Slam Master if you will, Mr Gay Vancouver XXX Aedan Saint calls "Flaming Slam Poetry".
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China calling: setting out to prove you can go home again |
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Written by Mark Robins
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Tuesday, 26 January 2010 21:17 |
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The last time photographer and storyteller William Yang was in Vancouver was five years ago where he performed at the Push Festival. Yang returns to Vancouver again for his second Push Festival with his work China, February 2nd through 6th at UBC’s Frederic Wood Theatre. We caught up with him while he got ready to present his show in Montreal to talk about China, the search for his heritage and being gay in a country where homosexuality is still considered an anomaly.
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