Friday, February 27, 2009

The Tradition Continues: Black Frost 32

(Leather Life column published in Lavender Magazine, Issue #359, February 27, 2009)

The Black Guard of Minneapolis recently welcomed out-of-town and local friends to their 32nd annual Black Frost run. Held the weekend of Feb. 6-8, the host hotel was the Days Inn-Midway in St. Paul.

The run’s show was presented Saturday afternoon, Feb. 7 at Rumours & Innuendo in downtown St. Paul. The show was entertaining and fabulous as always, but it had a different feel this year. Historically, members of the Black Guard have presented the show in a dark bar on a stage with theatrical lighting. This year’s show was performed against a backdrop of floor-to-ceiling windows in Innuendo’s sun-drenched front room. Putting aside metaphoric parallels about the gay and leather communities’ increasing openness and visibility, I’ll just say that the new venue was refreshing and transformed the show.

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“In the cool, cool, cool of the evening . . .”

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“All I wanna do is love you.”

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“Miss America and Miss Runner-Up.”

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“I guess I’m just a naughty little girl at heart.”

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“I am what I am/And what I am/Needs no excuses.”

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“I’m just a Broadway baby.”

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“And if you wonder/’bout the spell I’m under/It’s your love.”

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“With one look, I’ll be ME!”

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“With one look, I’ll be ME!”

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“I don’t care what comes tomorrow/We can face it together/The way old friends do.”

Friday, February 13, 2009

Guest columnist Rick Burgess: Life as a Pledge

(Leather Life column published in Lavender Magazine, Issue #358, February 13, 2009)

PHOTO: Rick Burgess in his Atons pledge vest, December, 2007

Your humble columnist is pleased to introduce Rick Burgess as this issue’s guest columnist. I first met Burgess when he entered the Mr. Minneapolis Eagle contest in 2007 and captured the first runner-up spot. Later that year when I heard he was a pledge, or provisional member, of the Atons, I asked if he was interested in writing a guest column about his experiences and adventures on the way to becoming accepted as a full member of the club. He said he would, and here’s what he wrote.

Burgess is now not only a full member of the Atons, he will spend 2009 as the club’s secretary. He is also involved with Minnesota Leather Pride.

Life as a Pledge

by Rick Burgess, Atons of Minneapolis

In October 2007, I submitted my application for membership to the Atons of Minneapolis. The Atons are one of the oldest active gay men’s Leather/Levi social fraternities in the country. Having never been in a fraternity, I wasn’t sure what to expect.

I was accepted as a pledge at the Atons’ November business meeting. The pledge period lasts a minimum of three months, but it is not over until the club brothers say it’s over.

Pledge Master Del was instrumental in making sure I was a good pledge. The pledge period is meant to give the existing full members an opportunity to get to know the new pledge. The most difficult part for this pledge was making sure to refer to all of the brothers, which I had known before pledging, as “Sir.”

My first major event as a pledge was the annual Holiday Fundraiser in December at the Bolt Underground. I was the official “gopher” for the evening, and as a special bonus, the Trustees of the club set up a special raffle involving the pledge—the Trustees were selling tickets for the paddling of the pledge at the end of the night. Unknown to the pledge, the number of tickets sold determined the number of swats. Once it was all said and done, there I was front and center to receive my 42 swats.

Later in December, since it was the holidays, the same Trustees had another special treat. This time it was tiny jingle bells on clothespins. [Your humble columnist was not present for this but is pretty sure the clothespins were not clipped to the pledge’s clothes, but instead were attached to the pledge himself.] But that was just the beginning. Once the clothes pins were on, it was time for pledge to sing “Jingle Bells” and make the bells jingle in rhythm to the song.

As the months rolled on, I spent time getting to know each of the members. This included coffee, dinners and afternoons of hanging out talking to learn more about each of my soon-to-be club brothers. At the same time, this was an opportunity for the brothers to get to know me and make their determination of whether they wanted to have me as a new club brother.

February brought the annual officers installation banquet held at Pi Bar. Of course, as with the other events, there was a special task for the pledge. During the banquet, it was my job to get to know members of the leather community who were present and then serve them, making sure they were well cared for and had all they needed or wanted. The catch to this was that I was to do it in nothing but a thong and boots.

During my time as a pledge, the Atons agreed to sponsor me to go to the Mr. Midwest Leather competition in St. Louis, Mo., where I was the second runner-up. The group also decided to assist in my fundraising for the Minnesota Red Ribbon Ride, adding $240 to the amount raised for the ride.

In April 2008, I was finally accepted as a full member of the Atons of Minneapolis. Since that time, I have become a more active member in the leather community, participating in Minnesota Leather Pride and the unveiling of the new giant leather pride flag at the Ashley Rukes GLBT Pride Parade in 2008.

In 2009, I will be serving as the Secretary for the Atons of Minneapolis. For information on becoming a member of the Atons, contact me at secretary@atons.net.

Friday, January 16, 2009

2008: A Look Back

(Leather Life column published in Lavender Magazine, Issue #356, January 16, 2009)

A Pivotal Year for Minnesota’s Leather Scene

For the first Leather Life column of 2009, let’s cast a fond backward glance at 2008. Yes, the last part of the year had its problems, among them worldwide economic turmoil and Prop. 8 in California. But before all that, for Minnesota’s leather community plenty of good things happened in 2008. Years from now we, and our community’s successors, may look back on 2008 as a pivotal year in some respects.

February: The Black Guard held their 31st annual Black Frost run in spite of some last-minute logistical problems (not of their making). The club had to expend so much effort dealing with a last-minute hotel change that they weren’t able to present their traditional show during the run.

(We interrupt this look back for a look ahead: The Black Guard of Minneapolis will be presenting Black Frost 32 Feb. 6-8, 2009, and the registration form promises “Yes, we will have a show this year!” There will also be games, a banquet, a bar tour, and a great bunch of guys to meet. Registration deadline is Jan. 24, so hurry. For details and a printable run registration form, visit <www.blackguardmpls.com>.)

April: MSDB inaugurated a new series of monthly education presentations, The LAB. The first class was about wrestling, and topics since have included spanking, flogging, massage and “holiday-themed play piercing.”

May: The Minnesota Storm Patrol presented the club’s second run, Northern Xposure II, which had the distinction of having the spring MACC (Mid-America Conference of Clubs) meeting be a part of the run. May also saw the 30th International Mr. Leather contest in Chicago—unfortunately, without a contestant representing Minnesota. At the end of May, the Knights of Leather held their 20th annual Knights Tournament run and attracted their largest crowd ever. The theme was kinky variations on fairy tales and cartoon characters.

June: The 2008 Minnesota Leather Pride celebration took things to a new level, with a triumphant public unveiling of a new giant leather pride flag right after a tearful retirement/farewell ceremony for the old flag (the flag that first appeared in 1998). The ceremony was probably the most public leather event ever held in Minnesota—it even made the evening news on at least one channel. A video documentary captured the ceremony, along with some behind-the-scenes interviews.

July: The Atons of Minneapolis presented Gopher XVIII, their “Close Encounters”-themed run. That same weekend in Chicago, at the annual Pantheon of Leather Community Service Awards, Minnesota picked up an award (“Large Event of the Year”) for Leather Leadership Conference XI, held in 2007 in Minneapolis (more about this later). Later in the month, a Minnesota Leather History roundtable discussion was presented at Patrick’s Cabaret.

November: Minnesota’s leather community shares a loss with the GLBT community as Pi Bar closes, a victim of the current and continuing economic and financial turmoil.

December: The end of the year brought two traditions: MSDB’s Bizarre Bazaar and the Atons Holiday Fundraiser. It also brought the completion of an ongoing project: the posting of the final podcast from Minnesota’s award-winning Leather Leadership Conference XI (only 20 months after the conference itself). There are a total of 20 episodes, available for listening on your computer or downloading to your iPod or other MP3 player. The cost? Free. The value? Priceless. Find a link to the podcasts at www.leatherleadership.org.

Wow, that was fun! Let’s do it again in 2009! (Without any further bar closings or other financial catastrophes, of course. And how about having someone from Minnesota in the International Mr. Leather contest this year?)

PHOTOS:

June, 2008: Minnesota’s new giant leather pride flag is unfurled for the first time. (From the documentary video “Minnesota’s Giant Leather Pride Flags: Saluting the Old, Unfurling the New.”)

PHOTO CREDIT: Donny Brunner/Mediastash


Friday, December 19, 2008

Leather Holiday Traditions

(Leather Life column published in Lavender Magazine, Issue #354, December 19, 2008)

It was a festive holiday weekend as members of the leather/BDSM/fetish community gathered—twice—at Rumours/Innuendo in St. Paul.

MSDB’s annual Bizarre Bazaar on Saturday, Dec. 6 filled two rooms and a balcony with local leather and fetish vendors, eye-popping entertainment, and a silent auction benefiting the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom.

The very next day the Atons of Minneapolis took over the same space with their annual Holiday Fundraiser benefiting The Aliveness Project and Open Arms of Minnesota. As in years past, the event featured a food drive and a huge silent auction. But this year the Atons and their guests took the “photos with leather Santa” thing to new and amazing heights—those were not photos, they were tableaux.

Here’s wishing everyone a safe, sane and merry holiday season.

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The daring Tina, one of the entertainers at the Bizarre Bazaar. Why “daring”? She danced while balancing a four-foot sword—on edge—on top of her head.

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Happy shoppers at the Bizarre Bazaar. From left: John, Brie and Paul.

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Merchandise at the Bizarre Bazaar, Gray’s Leather booth.

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PHOTO CREDIT: Andrew Bertke

Members of the Atons of Minneapolis in a holiday mood.

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PHOTO CREDIT: Andrew Bertke

A Christmas tableaux: Kevin Winge (Executive Director, Open Arms of Minnesota) and Jonesey (Leather Santa).

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Nothing says “Holidays” like an elf (B.D. Chambers) in a pillory.

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Revelers at the Atons Holiday Fundraiser: Ken and John; Rick and Mark; David, Robert and David; John and Tom.

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Portrait of an auction winner: David and his new chain-mail vest.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Leather in Lean Times

(Leather Life column published in Lavender Magazine, Issue #353, December 5, 2008)

The economic downturn hits home in ways big and small. This column, you might have noticed, didn’t appear in the previous issue of Lavender. Fewer advertising pages meant fewer pages for editorial content.

Another publication for which I’ve been writing (Skin 2, a fetish magazine in the UK), because of a decline in advertising revenue, recently decided it could no longer maintain its quarterly publishing schedule and now plans to issue one hard-bound book-style publication a year.

Publishing is not the only market sector hurting right now. The major investment banks on Wall Street are but a memory, and the stock market has lost everything it gained since about 1998. If you’re lucky enough to have retirement savings you’re probably watching with alarm as those savings shrink.

Detroit automakers say they’re headed for bankruptcy unless Congress intervenes—and China’s automakers say they need a government bailout, too. Meanwhile Mercedes-Benzes, and even fuel-efficient Toyotas, are piling up at the docks in the Port of Long Beach, Calif., as people’s ability or desire to buy them evaporates.

The housing market is worse than sluggish. Perhaps you’re a homeowner who would like to sell your home but can’t because prospective buyers can’t get a mortgage—or because the sale price would be less than what you owe on your mortgage. Or maybe you have an adjustable-rate mortgage and are watching helplessly as the payments balloon to the point of pain.

Unemployment is up and personal incomes are down. I know way too many people who are looking for a job right now. Retailers are bracing for dismal holiday sales in spite of major discounts and price cuts. Some small business owners find they can’t obtain loans needed to keep their business going.

Closer to home, I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve arrived recently at a restaurant only to find it has vanished. And now, hitting especially close to home for folks like us, the much-loved Pi Bar was scheduled to close Nov. 15, becoming a casualty of the mortgage/lending/credit crisis. (At this writing unorthodox but heroic efforts are underway to save Pi through community investment.)

Pi’s problems reveal the truth of our current situation: This crisis isn’t just economic. The crisis is social and cultural as well. Before things settle down, the GLBT and leather/BDSM/fetish communities stand to lose some cherished institutions.

Leather already has been through one major crisis in its fifty-something-year history. AIDS hit the leather community especially hard, killing much of a generation and disrupting the formal and informal mentoring and educational processes on which the survival and perpetuation of leather culture depends.

In the face of that crisis the community pulled together and dealt with it. Community members raised funds for care and research while much of the rest of society ignored the problem. Those who were healthy took care of those who were sick. And we supported each other as we mourned the many comrades we lost.

The community survived, but much damage needed to be repaired. In some ways, we’re still repairing that damage over two decades later.

Now our community—this time along with the rest of the country and the world—is facing a different kind of crisis. What do we do? How do we minimize the social and cultural damage that an economic downturn can cause?

We somehow do more with less. We acknowledge the reality of the changed circumstances for ourselves and for our community and society at large. Then we do what’s necessary to deal with those changed circumstances as intelligently and sensitively as possible. Some things will have to be scaled back. Some things just won’t happen, at least for a while. We’ll just have to do the best we can.

We decide what’s most important, and we support it. Conversely, we defer other things, or let them go altogether. We’ll all have to make hard choices, although some choices will effectively be made for us—if it’s a choice between spending limited funds on travel to a leather event or buying groceries, there’s not much to argue about. Perhaps we won’t be able to do everything we’ve been doing, or do it to the same extent. Eventually, when things settle down and straighten out, we can revisit the things we let go or scaled back and, if we think it’s appropriate, either resurrect or expand them again.

We try not to become either mercenary or hardened. The Leather Pride flag has a heart on it for a reason. Even in the face of current circumstances, we mustn’t allow that heart to become hardened. If we stop caring about others because we’re in trouble ourselves, we as a community will sacrifice our heritage and lose our soul. Even as we worry about our own circumstances, I hope we’ll continue to help those who are worse off than we are.

Nothing in our community—not bars, businesses, contests, other events, clubs, community institutions like NCSF, LA&M, Woodhull or other community non-profits—will be immune. It’s a storm we’ll all have to weather, together. I believe we will. And I hope when the storm is over we come out stronger, with our priorities in sharper focus and our conviction renewed.