Arts & Entertainment
‘Finding Prince Charming’ trailer released; 13 suitors battle for love
reality show premieres Thursday, Sept. 8

(Screenshot via LOGO)
Logo’s “Bachelor”-style dating show “Finding Prince Charming” has released its first look at the upcoming season.
Robert SepĂșlveda Jr., a 33-year old former fashion model and interior designer, lives in Atlanta and runs his own luxury design firm. SepĂșlveda Jr. isn’t just a pretty face but also the founder of Atlanta Rainbow Crosswalks, an LGBT civil arts project.
Naturally, the stakes are high for 13 suitors to win his heart. One by one the men will be eliminated until SepĂșlveda Jr. picks one person to be in an exclusive relationship. But it won’t be easy. In the trailer, SepĂșlveda Jr. admits he may be falling in love “with several of the guys.”
A reality dating show also wouldn’t be complete without plenty of fights and one person threatening to call the police.
The show appears to be about more than just finding love and drama, but also about the visibility and solidarity of the gay community as a whole.
“We are part of something so much bigger,” one man says in the trailer. “Every gay man understands what it’s like to be an underdog. We need each other more than ever.”
The show, hosted by Lance Bass, premieres Thursday, Sept. 8 at 9 p.m. on Logo.
Books
New book reveals what we can learn from animal sex
âPoking the Squidâ on homosexuality, gender swapping, and more
âPoking the Squid: What We Can Learn from Animal Sexâ
By Perrin Roosevelt Ireland
c.2026, W.W. Norton
$29.99 241 pages
Birds do it.
According to Cole Porter, bees do, too, but itâs not exactly what he imagined. Wild and tame, avians, insects, and mammals all have sex â although not always as youâve been told or for reasons you might think. Even educated fleas do it and, as in the new book, âPoking the Squidâ by Perrin Roosevelt Ireland, humans can learn from them all.

If you read through scientific papers on animal reproduction, you might notice something unusual: for scientists, the word âsexâ means a lot of different things.
Says Ireland, âItâs used to describe behaviors, biology, life histories, and more.â
That might be because animals are not simply binary.
Take, for instance, hyenas. Itâs easy for the casual observer to mistake a male hyena for a female and vice versa because of stereotypes of anatomy. Mating, for hyenas, requires subordination for the male and a nifty trick on the part of the femaleâs body to get things done.
Our feathered friends are no birdbrains, either: black-browed albatrosses were once thought to be monogamous but global warming seems to have changed their nesting habits sometimes. Male flamingos have sex with one another, as a territorial thing; other birds and animals form same-sex pairs for other reasons.
The Chinese mantis eats her mate after fertilization. Female snakes, alpacas, guinea pigs, and monkeys are anatomically able to enjoy sex. Genitalia between species varies quite a bit; in fact, the vaginas of ducks âare highly complex.â Lionesses will mate up to 100 times when in heat. Female damselflies will change into a âthird sexâ to avoid overly aggressive mating males. Bearded dragons can change their sex, if needed, as can yellow clown goby fish. And seahorse pregnancy and birth sparked a book banning in Tennessee.
So, asks Ireland, if animals, including us, vary so much in biology and life, â⊠why are we using the word sex like it means something, anything, consistent?!â
Pick up âPoking the Squid,â page through it a few seconds, and youâll see that the information here is largely told through cartoon-like drawings mixed with captions. It seems to be something on the lighter side, but donât let that artwork fool you.
Author Perrin Roosevelt Ireland offers readers solid information that cozies up to the scholarly, with hard science, philosophy, feminism, and quotations from researchers to support it, thus furthering the narrative and hitting the points squarely. If you see the art and expect something lighthearted, comic, and small-talk-worthy, you could be disappointed.
On the other hand, if you want solid, wryly serious facts, youâre in for a treat.
Thereâs lots of learning to be gleaned here, and some slight nudge-wink whimsy to emphasize the absurdity of wrong-headed thinking. This can make readers feel like theyâre in-the-know on the jokes, and the playfulness balances the seriousness of the information well.
So, serious, scholarly, or slightly silly, none of these are negative but youâre going to know what you want from a book like this. For the right reader, someone in the mood, âPoking the Squidâ is wild.
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The eighth annual Westminster Pride Festival was held at Westminster City Park in Westminster, Md. on Saturday, July 11.
(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)














The fifth annual Emerald City Pride was held in Greenbelt, Md. on Saturday, July 11.
(Washignton Blade photos by Michael Key)












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