Arts & Entertainment
Lance Bass says ‘Finding Prince Charming’ cast member is HIV-positive
Bachelor thinks ‘It’s really a stigma that we have to resolve now’

(Screenshot via LOGO)
“Finding Prince Charming” host Lance Bass has confirmed rumors a cast member will reveal he is HIV-positive on the show.
“It is true,” Bass told People Magazine about the gay dating reality show. “This is one of the things I love about the show â it’s a fun reality show, it’s dramatic, but there’s a lot of heart in it and amazing story lines that you’re going to shed a tear over. And one of those is finding about this guy’s HIV.”
“All of us know someone that is living with HIV, and I think the stigma is still really bad out there â people are just so uneducated about it,” Bass continued. “To us, obviously it doesn’t matter at all, we’ve been around it so much, but I think this is really going to educate a lot of people. I’m excited for people to watch it, especially this episode.”
The contestants will be competing for the affections of Robert SepĂșlveda Jr. who told People Magazine that the contestant’s HIV status did not deter him from giving him the same chance at love as everyone else.
“For me, it’s like: Is someone HIV-positive not worthy of love?” SepĂșlveda Jr. says. “That’s really the question, and it doesn’t matter to me. ‘Prince Charming’ would be accepting of anyone, and that’s how I am.”
“In the gay community, in just any community, if you have a disease, it’s not going to be anything that someone’s going to push you away from,” SepĂșlveda Jr. continued . “Again, me being ‘Prince Charming’ â the guy that everyone’s vying for their attention â I’m not going to not date someone because they’re HIV-positive. That’s ridiculous. It’s really a stigma that we have to resolve now.”
“Finding Prince Charming” airs on LOGO Thursday, Sept. 8 at 9 p.m.
Books
âThe Vampire Chroniclesâ inspire LGBTQ people around the world
AMCâs âInterview with the Vampireâ has brought feelings back to live
Four kids pedaled furiously, their bicycles wobbling over cracked pavement and uneven curbs. Laughter and shouted arguments about which mystical creature could beat which echoed down the quiet street. They carried backpacks stuffed with well-worn paperbacks â comic books and fantasy novels â each child lost in a private world of monsters, magic, and secret codes. The air hummed with the kind of adventure that exists only at the edge of imagination, shaped by an imaginary world created in another part of the planet.
This is not a description of âStranger Things,â nor of an American suburb in the 1980s. This is a small Russian village in the early 2000s â a place without paved roads, where most houses had no running water or central heating â where I spent every summer of my childhood. Those kids were my friends, and the world we were obsessed with was âThe Vampire Chroniclesâ by Anne Rice.
We didnât yet know that one of us would soon come out as openly bi, or that another â me â would become an LGBTQ activist. We were reading our first queer story in Anne Riceâs books. My first queer story. It felt wrong. And it felt extremely right. I havenât accepted that Iâm queer yet, but the easiness queerness was discussed in books helped.
Now, with AMCâs âInterview with the Vampire,â starring Jacob Anderson as Louis de Pointe du Lac â a visibly human, openly queer, aching vampire â and Sam Reid as Lestat de Lioncourt, something old has stirred back to life. Louis remains haunted by what he is and what he has done. Lestat, meanwhile, is neither hero nor villain. He desires without apology, and survives without shame.
I remember my bi friend â who was struggling with a difficult family â identifying with Lestat. Long before she came out, I already saw her queerness reflected there. âThe Vampire Chroniclesâ allowed both of us to come out, at least to each other, with surprising ease despite the queerphobic environment.
While watching â and rewatching â the series over this winter holiday, I kept thinking about what this story has meant, and still means, for queer youth and queer people worldwide. Once again, this is not just about âthe West.â I read comments from queer Ukrainian teenagers living under bombardment, finding joy in the show. I saw Russian fans furious at the absurdly censored translation by Amediateca, which rendered âboyfriendâ as âfriendâ or even âpal,â turning the central relationship between two queer vampires into near-comic nonsense. Mentions of Putin were also erased from the modern adaptation â part of a broader Russian effort to eliminate queer visibility and political critique altogether.
And yet, fans persist to know the real story. Even those outside the LGBTQ community search for uncensored translations or watch with subtitles. A new generation of Eastern European queers is finding itself through this series.
It made me reflect on the role of mass culture â especially American mass culture â globally. I use Ukraine and Russia as examples because Iâm from Ukraine, spent much of my childhood and adolescence in Russia, and speak both languages. But the impact is clearly broader. The evolution of mass culture changes the world, and in the context of queer history, âInterview with the Vampireâ is one of the brightest examples â precisely because of its international reach and because it was never marketed as âgay literature,â but as gothic horror for a general audience.
With AMC now producing a third season, âThe Vampire Lestat,â Iâve seen renewed speculation about Lestatâs queerness and debates about how explicitly the show portrays same-sex relationships. In the books, vampires cannot have sex in a âtraditionalâ way, but that never stopped Anne Rice from depicting deeply homoromantic relationships, charged with unmistakable homoerotic tension. This is, after all, a story about two men who âadoptâ a child and form a de facto queer family. And this is just the first book â in later novels we see a lot of openly queer couples and relationships.
The first novel, âInterview with the Vampireâ was published in 1976, so the absence of explicit gay sex scenes is unsurprising. Later, Anne Rice â who identified as queer â described herself as lacking a sense of gender, seeing herself as a gay man and viewing the world in a âbisexual way.â She openly confirmed that all her vampires are bisexual: a benefit of the Dark Gift, where gender becomes irrelevant.
This is why her work resonates so powerfully with queer readers worldwide, and why so many recognize themselves in her vampires. For many young people I know from Eastern Europe, âInterview with the Vampireâ was the first book in which they ever encountered a same-sex relationship.
But the true power of this universe lies in the fact that it was not created only for queer audiences. I know conservative Muslims with deeply traditional views who loved âThe Vampire Chroniclesâ as teenagers. I know straight Western couples who did too. Even people who initially found same-sex relationships unsettling often became more tolerant after reading the books, watching the movie or the show. It is harder to hate someone who reminds you of a beloved character.
That is the strength of the story: it was never framed as explicitly queer or purely romantic, gothic and geeky audiences love it. âThe Vampire Chroniclesâ are not a cure for queerphobia, but they are a powerful tool for making queerness more accessible. Popular culture offers a window into queer lives â and the broader that window, the more powerful it becomes.
Other examples include Will from âStranger Things,â Ellie and Dina from âThe Last of Usâ (both the game and the series), or even the less mainstream but influential sci-fi show âSeverance.â These stories allow audiences around the world to see queer people beyond stereotypes. That is the power of representation â not just for queer people themselves, but for society as a whole. It makes queer people look like real people, even when they are controversial blood-drinkers with fangs, or two girls surviving a fungal apocalypse.
Mass culture is a universal language, spoken worldwide. And that is precisely why censorship so often tries â and fails â to silence it.
Arts & Entertainment
Teyana Taylor, Erin Doherty have big night at Golden Globes
âHeated Rivalryâ stars Connor Storie and Hudson Williams among presenters
Honoring Tinseltownâs finest actors and actresses in film and television, the 83rd annual Golden Globes awards had a myriad of memorable LGBTQ moments from throughout the show.
The prestigious A-list event had first time winners like LGBTQ ally Teyana Taylor, taking home the award for Best Supporting Female Actor â Motion Picture for her mesmerizing portrayal of Perfidia Beverly Hills in âOne Battle After Another.â
Addressing the audience she said: âTo my brown sisters and little brown girls watching tonight, our softness is not a liability. Our depth is not too much. Our light does not need permission to shine. We belong in every room we walk into, our voices matter, and our dreams deserve space. Thank you so much, everybody.â
Another first-time winner was Rhea Seehorn, who won Best Female Actor in a Drama Series for her portrayal as Carol, a queer woman in the Apple TV+ series âPluribus.â
Created by Vince Gilligan, known forâBreaking Badâand âBetter Call Saul,â Seehorn said it was important âto honor getting the chance to play anybody from the LGBTQ community,â adding that she loves that this is not âthe remarkable thingâ about Carol.
âIt is part of who she is as a human being, and her relationship with her wife that sheâs lost is given so much weight because it is a partnership of love,” she said backstage in the pressroom.
âVince is not trying to make a political statement. Heâs actually just trying to say something about being human and what real love is. And so, it makes me very proud that it just happens to be a queer woman.â
Also, lesbian actress Erin Doherty was thrilled to be a first-time winner, receiving the award for best performance by a female actor in a supporting role on television, for Netflixâs âAdolescence.â
âI didnât want to assume, but I feel like we all know therapists,” Doherty said. âLife can be tough. Mental health is everything. Thank you to therapists, and it was an honor to play one.â
Doherty received the accolade from the stars of the gay Canadian hockey series, âHeated Rivalry,â Hudson Williams and Connor Storrie. Experiencing an overnight success, the dynamic duo were first time attendees and presenters at the Globes.

In a fun comedy bit, Storrie, who was pretending to be shy on stage, said: “It’s a little nerve-wracking here, being at our first Golden Globes!â Williams replied: “Just take a deep breath and picture everyone in the audience ⊠you know,” referring to the idea that in order to get over stage fright, you have to picture the audience with no clothes on.
âI don’t really know if that works since everyone’s seen us ⊠you know,” Storrie quipped. Williams then asked if he thought everyone in the Hilton Ballroom had seen their show.
Storrie replied, “That’s a maybe, but their trainers have and their moms have and their daughters have!”
âRivalryâ is based on the gay romance book series by Rachel Reid called “Game Changers.” Earlier in the week, the Washington Blade caught up with Williams, who said it was âtruly a dream come trueâ to be at the Globes. âI had no idea the show would be received so warmly, it has made my heart happy.â
Another phenomenon that won at the Globes was Netflixâs hit animated film, “KPop Demon Hunters,â which received three Golden Globe nominations, including best animated film, cinematic and box office achievement and best original song for âGolden,â with gay co-songwriter Mark Sonnenblick.
A controversial moment in the show was when presenter/comedian/LGBTQ activist Wanda Sykes presented the award for best stand-up comedy performance on TV. “Shoutout to the Golden Globes for having me. You know there’s some people pissed off that a queer Black woman is up here doing the job of two mediocre white guys.”
As she made jokes about each of the nominees, Sykes had a few terse words to say to Ricky Gervais, who was not present. The British comedian got in trouble for his jokes about the transgender community in his 2022 Netflix special.
“I love you for not being here. If you win, I get to accept the award on your behalf, and you’re going to thank God and the trans community.”
While Gervais did win for his stand-up comedy special, âMortality.â Sykes had a swift reply, asking Taylor if she could borrow her (acceptance) speech.
“Because [Ricky] would like to thank God and the trans community.”
Photos
PHOTOS: ‘ICE Out For Good’ Sunday protests
Northern Virginia demonstrations among nationwide protest
“ICE Out For Good” demonstrations were held in the Northern Virginia municipalities of Haymarket, Annandale and Arlington, among others, on Sunday, Jan. 12.
Nearly 1,200 similar actions were scheduled nationwide over the weekend, according to a statement from organizers.
Demonstrations in D.C. against ICE included a protest march on Friday and a march around the White House on Saturday.
(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)

View on Threads








View on Threads








-
Minnesota5 days agoReports say woman killed by ICE was part of LGBTQ community
-
Maryland5 days agoSteny Hoyer, the longest-serving House Democrat, to retire from Congress
-
National5 days agoU.S. in midst of âgenocidal process against trans peopleâ: study
-
Virginia5 days agoGay Va. State Sen. Ebbin resigns for role in Spanberger administration
