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.
Drag artists perform for crowds in towns across Virginia. The photographer follows Gerryatrick, Shenandoah, Climaxx, Emerald Envy among others over eight months as they perform at venues in the Virginia towns of Staunton, Harrisonburg and Fredericksburg.
(Washington Blade photos by Landon Shackelford)



















Books
New book explores homosexuality in ancient cultures
âQueer Thing About Sinâ explains impact of religious credo in Greece, Rome
âThe Queer Thing About Sinâ
By Harry Tanner
c.2025, Bloomsbury
$28/259 pages
Nobody likes you very much.
Thatâs how it seems sometimes, doesnât it? Nobody wants to see you around, they donât want to hear your voice, they canât stand the thought of your existence and theyâd really rather you just go away. Itâs infuriating, and in the new book âThe Queer Thing About Sinâ by Harry Tanner, youâll see how we got to this point.
When he was a teenager, Harry Tanner says that he thought he âwas going to hell.â
For years, heâd been attracted to men and he prayed that it would stop. He asked for help from a lay minister who offered Tanner websites meant to repress his urges, but they werenât the panacea Tanner hoped for. It wasnât until he went to college that he found the answers he needed and âstopped fearing Godâs retribution.â
Being gay wasnât a sin. Not ever, but he âstill wanted to know why Western culture believed it was for so long.â
Historically, many believe that older men were sexual âmentorsâ for teenage boys, but Tanner says that in ancient Greece and Rome, same-sex relationships were common between male partners of equal age and between differently-aged pairs, alike. Clarity comes by understanding relationships between husbands and wives then, and careful translation of the word âboy,â to show that age wasnât a factor, but superiority and inferiority were.
In ancient Athens, queer love was considered to be ânobleâ but after the Persians sacked Athens, sex between men instead became an acceptable act of aggression aimed at conquered enemies. Raping a male prisoner was encouraged but, âGay men became symbols of a depraved lack of self-control and abstinence.â
Later Greeks believed that men could turn into women âif they werenât sufficiently virile.â Biblical interpretations point to more conflict; Leviticus specifically bans queer sex but âthe Sumerians actively encouraged it.â The Egyptians hated it, but âthere are sporadic clues that same-sex partners lived together in ancient Egypt.â
Says Tanner, âall is not what it seems.â
So you say youâre not really into ancient history. If itâs not your thing, then âThe Queer Thing About Sinâ wonât be, either.
Just know that if you skip this book, youâre missing out on the kind of excitement you get from reading mythology, but whatâs here is true, and a much wider view than mere folklore. Author Harry Tanner invites readers to go deep inside philosophy, religion, and ancient culture, but the information he brings is not dry. No, there are major battles brought to life here, vanquished enemies and death â but also love, acceptance, even encouragement that the citizens of yore in many societies embraced and enjoyed. Tanner explains carefully how religious credo tied in with homosexuality (or didnât) and he brings readers up to speed through recent times.
While this is not a breezy vacation read or a curl-up-with-a-blanket kind of book, âThe Queer Thing About Sinâ is absolutely worth spending time with. If youâre a thinking person and can give yourself a chance to ponder, youâll like it very much.
Theater
âOctetâ explores the depths of digital addiction
Habits not easily shaken in Studio Theatre chamber musical
âOctetâ
Through Feb. 26
Studio Theatre
1501 14th Street, N.W.
Tickets start at $55
Studiotheatre.org
David Malloyâs âOctetâ delves deep into the depths of digital addiction.
Featuring a person ensemble, this extraordinary a capella chamber musical explores the lives of recovering internet addicts whose lives have been devastated by digital dependency; sharing whatâs happened and how things have changed.
Dressed in casual street clothes, the âFriends of Saulâ trickle into a church all-purpose room, check their cell phones in a basket, put away the bingo tables, and arrange folding chairs into a circle. Some may stop by a side table offering cookies, tea, and coffee before taking a seat.
The show opens with âThe Forest,â a haunting hymn harking back to the good old days of an analog existence before glowing screens, incessant pings and texts.
âThe forest was beautiful/ My head was clean and clear/Alone without fear/ The forest was safe/ I danced like a beautiful fool / One time some time.â
Mimicking an actual step meeting, thereâs a preamble. And then the honest sharing begins, complete with accounts of sober time and slips.
Eager to share, Jessica (Chelsea Williams) painfully recalls being cancelled after the video of her public meltdown went viral. Henry (Angelo Harrington II) is a gay gamer with a Candy Crush problem. Toby (Adrian Joyce) a nihilist who needs to stay off the internet sings âSo anyway/ Iâm doing good/ Mostly/ Limiting my time/ Mostly.â
The groupâs unseen founder Saul is absent, per usual.
In his stead Paula, a welcoming woman played with quiet compassion by Tracy Lynn Olivera, leads. She and her husband no longer connect. They bring screens to bed. In a love-lost ballad, she explains: âWe donât sleep well/ My husband I/ Our circadian rhythms corrupted/ By the sallow blue glow of a screen/ Sucking souls and melatonin/ All of my dreams have been stolen.â
After too much time spent arguing with strangers on the internet, Marvin, a brainy young father played by David Toshiro Crane, encounters the voice of a God.
Ed (Jimmy Kieffer) deals with a porn addiction. Karly (Ana Marcu) avoids dating apps, a compulsion compared to her motherâs addiction to slot machines.
Malloy, who not only wrote the music but also the smart lyrics, book, and inventive vocal arrangements, brilliantly joins isolation with live harmony. Itâs really something.
And helmed by David Muse, âOctetâ is a precisely, quietly, yet powerfully staged production, featuring a topnotch cast who (when not taking their moment in the spotlight) use their voices to make sounds and act as a sort of Greek chorus. Mostly on stage throughout all of the 100-minute one act, they demonstrate impressive stamina and concentration.
An immersive production, âOctetâ invites audience members to feel a part of the meeting. Studioâs Shargai Theatre is configured, for the first, in the round. And like the characters, patrons must also unplug. Everyone is required to have their phones locked in a small pouch (that only ushers are able to open and close), so be prepared for a wee bit of separation anxiety.
At the end of the meeting, the group surrenders somnambulantly. They know they are powerless against internet addiction. But group newbie Velma (Amelia Aguilar) isnât entirely convinced. She remembers the good tech times.
In a bittersweet moment, she shares of an online friendship with âa girl in Sainte Marie / Just like me.â
Habits arenât easily shaken.
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