Latest news with #isEnough


NZ Herald
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- NZ Herald
Black Faggot's Victor Rodger on Destiny Church and why his groundbreaking play remains so relevant today
Like a lot of young homosexuals, it made me feel a lot of self-loathing. But I wasn't raised to denigrate people who were gay. My mother was very young when she had me – she turns 72 this year – but she elected to keep me and I'm so grateful she did. She let me do swirly swirlies in her blue dress when I was going through my Deborah Kerr phase, from The King and I, and she got me the Barbie dolls I craved as a young fella. She was still surprised when I came out when I was 26, but she's always just let me be. When Destiny Church led its 'Enough is Enough' march on Parliament in 2004 against the Civil Union Bill [giving legal recognition to same-sex relationships], I knew without a doubt that at least one of those young men would be gay. Hating on themselves and marching against themselves. I wanted to write something metaphorically for that kid. Then, in 2012, there were more protests against the marriage equality bill, with members of the Pasifika community coming out against it. I knew it was time to finally get over the line. Victor Rodger: "Some seriously appalling things are going down in our own backyard." Photo / Dean Purcell Black Faggot premiered at Auckland's Basement Theatre in 2013. I wanted it to be funny, which it is, and I also wanted to diversify the spectrum of Samoan queer characters, who until then had often been typified by fa'afafine as objects of mirth, with no complexity or layers. Two actors play multiple roles, mostly queer Samoan men, from super camp to super butch and everything in between. There's also a fa'afafine, a Samoan mum, and a pumping iron straight brother, but the spine of the show is a relationship between a young Samoan man on the down low and an out-and-proud Samoan man. When I heard The Court Theatre in Christchurch wanted Black Faggot on its programme this year, I wondered if it was still relevant. I'd thought about doing it myself in 2023, for the 10th anniversary, and had asked myself the same question. A few years ago, I was a dramaturg on a trans rom-com about a Tongan fakaleiti at high school and the captain of the First XV, who takes a bet that he can make her fall in love with him. When we did our first showing to a group of students, they were just so invested in the trans main character having a happy ending. For me, as an older, queer person, I was blown away because that never would have happened in my era. Destiny Church members wearing Man Up T-shirts disrupt the Auckland Rainbow Parade on Ponsonby Road in February. But as they say, the more things change, the more they stay the same. I was in the UK when I saw the headlines: 'Brian Tamaki's Destiny Church pride protests: Te Atatū witness describes terror inside library'. I wasn't expecting something like that to happen, but it didn't surprise me, either. We are living through a period in history right now that is as startling as it is unstable. And here in Aotearoa, we can't kid ourselves that we're in a position to look overseas and say 'Well, at least it's not that bad here', because some seriously appalling things are going down in our own backyard. Back in 2013, I wanted to pull Black Faggot. I was unravelling over all sorts of other life stuff and had convinced myself it was the worst piece of shit that had ever been committed to paper. Everything felt pretty grim and dark. The premiere got a standing ovation, but even that offered no relief. With this new season, I've been able to engage with the show from a much better place. I forbade my mother from seeing it, but she disobeyed me and went to the opening night in Christchurch, which is where I grew up. She's always been concerned with the amount of swearing in my work and that people will think she raised me to talk in the gutter. I did that all on my own. She's also not a great fan of sex, and there's a lot of sex talk in the show. But she coped and was blown away by the two actors, one of whom is the son of a family friend from the same church. There are moments in it when you can hear a pin drop, like when the young Christian character keeps praying to God to be made straight. That resonates with so many of us who've been through the same thing, just wanting to be #normal. On the night I went, there was recognition and there was laughter, but the overriding emotion was celebratory. That's not a word I would have used, but seeing it now, I thought, yes, this is absolutely a celebration. And a necessary one. Victor Rodger is an award-winning playwright based in Wellington and a 2024 Arts Laureate. The new production of Black Faggot, directed by Anapela Polata'ivao (who starred in the feature film Tinā), has just completed a four-week season at The Court in Christchurch and is on at Auckland's Q Theatre from June 25 to 29.


The Advertiser
05-06-2025
- The Advertiser
Rogue Scholar attacker pleads guilty to headbutting woman in shocking assault
A QUEENSLAND builder, who headbutted, punched and slapped a woman in a Newcastle bar in a shocking attack that triggered widespread outrage and led to the formation of a rally against gendered violence, has pleaded guilty. Douglas William Kelvin Wood, 43, of Ipswich, was represented by solicitor Chris Watsford and excused from attending Newcastle Local Court during a mention of his matter on Thursday afternoon. Wood pleaded guilty to assault occasioning actual bodily harm over the attack on Britt Mitchell at the Rogue Scholar on March 15 after prosecutors agreed to withdraw a charge of affray. He will be sentenced in September. The Newcastle Herald reported last month that Wood was out with workmates celebrating the completion of a major project and was dancing wildly on the dance floor of the Newcastle West bar about 11.15pm when he suddenly slapped Ms Mitchell across the face. Wood turned to walk away and continue dancing when Ms Mitchell grabbed him and said: "What the f--- did you do that for? "You just hit me, you knocked my glasses off my face", according to court documents. But after being confronted, 43-year-old Wood laughed and said, "what are you going to do about it?" The pair exchanged further words before Wood removed the sunglasses from the top of his head and headbutted Ms Mitchell in the face. Bleeding profusely from her nose, Ms Mitchell threw a drink in her attacker's face and then left the dance floor. She sat at the bar and asked staff for a cloth for her nose, but police said Wood had followed her. He grabbed her by the shirt and punched her in the back of the head. When people rushed in to intervene and pull Wood away, he kept hold of Ms Mitchell's shirt and almost completely ripped it from her body in the melee. Eventually, to get away from her attacker, Ms Mitchell managed to get out of the shirt, leaving her in the venue in only her bra. The attack left Ms Mitchell with a broken nose. She went to Newcastle police station to make a statement, and police later obtained CCTV footage from inside the venue that they say captures the entire incident from multiple angles. Police say they identified the attacker as Wood, but by then, he had returned to Queensland. He was charged a few weeks later and appeared in court for the first time last month. The assault triggered public outrage and prompted Ms Mitchell and her partner, Hayley Goldie, to organise a rally labelled "Enough is Enough", to raise awareness of and support for victims of gendered violence. A QUEENSLAND builder, who headbutted, punched and slapped a woman in a Newcastle bar in a shocking attack that triggered widespread outrage and led to the formation of a rally against gendered violence, has pleaded guilty. Douglas William Kelvin Wood, 43, of Ipswich, was represented by solicitor Chris Watsford and excused from attending Newcastle Local Court during a mention of his matter on Thursday afternoon. Wood pleaded guilty to assault occasioning actual bodily harm over the attack on Britt Mitchell at the Rogue Scholar on March 15 after prosecutors agreed to withdraw a charge of affray. He will be sentenced in September. The Newcastle Herald reported last month that Wood was out with workmates celebrating the completion of a major project and was dancing wildly on the dance floor of the Newcastle West bar about 11.15pm when he suddenly slapped Ms Mitchell across the face. Wood turned to walk away and continue dancing when Ms Mitchell grabbed him and said: "What the f--- did you do that for? "You just hit me, you knocked my glasses off my face", according to court documents. But after being confronted, 43-year-old Wood laughed and said, "what are you going to do about it?" The pair exchanged further words before Wood removed the sunglasses from the top of his head and headbutted Ms Mitchell in the face. Bleeding profusely from her nose, Ms Mitchell threw a drink in her attacker's face and then left the dance floor. She sat at the bar and asked staff for a cloth for her nose, but police said Wood had followed her. He grabbed her by the shirt and punched her in the back of the head. When people rushed in to intervene and pull Wood away, he kept hold of Ms Mitchell's shirt and almost completely ripped it from her body in the melee. Eventually, to get away from her attacker, Ms Mitchell managed to get out of the shirt, leaving her in the venue in only her bra. The attack left Ms Mitchell with a broken nose. She went to Newcastle police station to make a statement, and police later obtained CCTV footage from inside the venue that they say captures the entire incident from multiple angles. Police say they identified the attacker as Wood, but by then, he had returned to Queensland. He was charged a few weeks later and appeared in court for the first time last month. The assault triggered public outrage and prompted Ms Mitchell and her partner, Hayley Goldie, to organise a rally labelled "Enough is Enough", to raise awareness of and support for victims of gendered violence. A QUEENSLAND builder, who headbutted, punched and slapped a woman in a Newcastle bar in a shocking attack that triggered widespread outrage and led to the formation of a rally against gendered violence, has pleaded guilty. Douglas William Kelvin Wood, 43, of Ipswich, was represented by solicitor Chris Watsford and excused from attending Newcastle Local Court during a mention of his matter on Thursday afternoon. Wood pleaded guilty to assault occasioning actual bodily harm over the attack on Britt Mitchell at the Rogue Scholar on March 15 after prosecutors agreed to withdraw a charge of affray. He will be sentenced in September. The Newcastle Herald reported last month that Wood was out with workmates celebrating the completion of a major project and was dancing wildly on the dance floor of the Newcastle West bar about 11.15pm when he suddenly slapped Ms Mitchell across the face. Wood turned to walk away and continue dancing when Ms Mitchell grabbed him and said: "What the f--- did you do that for? "You just hit me, you knocked my glasses off my face", according to court documents. But after being confronted, 43-year-old Wood laughed and said, "what are you going to do about it?" The pair exchanged further words before Wood removed the sunglasses from the top of his head and headbutted Ms Mitchell in the face. Bleeding profusely from her nose, Ms Mitchell threw a drink in her attacker's face and then left the dance floor. She sat at the bar and asked staff for a cloth for her nose, but police said Wood had followed her. He grabbed her by the shirt and punched her in the back of the head. When people rushed in to intervene and pull Wood away, he kept hold of Ms Mitchell's shirt and almost completely ripped it from her body in the melee. Eventually, to get away from her attacker, Ms Mitchell managed to get out of the shirt, leaving her in the venue in only her bra. The attack left Ms Mitchell with a broken nose. She went to Newcastle police station to make a statement, and police later obtained CCTV footage from inside the venue that they say captures the entire incident from multiple angles. Police say they identified the attacker as Wood, but by then, he had returned to Queensland. He was charged a few weeks later and appeared in court for the first time last month. The assault triggered public outrage and prompted Ms Mitchell and her partner, Hayley Goldie, to organise a rally labelled "Enough is Enough", to raise awareness of and support for victims of gendered violence. A QUEENSLAND builder, who headbutted, punched and slapped a woman in a Newcastle bar in a shocking attack that triggered widespread outrage and led to the formation of a rally against gendered violence, has pleaded guilty. Douglas William Kelvin Wood, 43, of Ipswich, was represented by solicitor Chris Watsford and excused from attending Newcastle Local Court during a mention of his matter on Thursday afternoon. Wood pleaded guilty to assault occasioning actual bodily harm over the attack on Britt Mitchell at the Rogue Scholar on March 15 after prosecutors agreed to withdraw a charge of affray. He will be sentenced in September. The Newcastle Herald reported last month that Wood was out with workmates celebrating the completion of a major project and was dancing wildly on the dance floor of the Newcastle West bar about 11.15pm when he suddenly slapped Ms Mitchell across the face. Wood turned to walk away and continue dancing when Ms Mitchell grabbed him and said: "What the f--- did you do that for? "You just hit me, you knocked my glasses off my face", according to court documents. But after being confronted, 43-year-old Wood laughed and said, "what are you going to do about it?" The pair exchanged further words before Wood removed the sunglasses from the top of his head and headbutted Ms Mitchell in the face. Bleeding profusely from her nose, Ms Mitchell threw a drink in her attacker's face and then left the dance floor. She sat at the bar and asked staff for a cloth for her nose, but police said Wood had followed her. He grabbed her by the shirt and punched her in the back of the head. When people rushed in to intervene and pull Wood away, he kept hold of Ms Mitchell's shirt and almost completely ripped it from her body in the melee. Eventually, to get away from her attacker, Ms Mitchell managed to get out of the shirt, leaving her in the venue in only her bra. The attack left Ms Mitchell with a broken nose. She went to Newcastle police station to make a statement, and police later obtained CCTV footage from inside the venue that they say captures the entire incident from multiple angles. Police say they identified the attacker as Wood, but by then, he had returned to Queensland. He was charged a few weeks later and appeared in court for the first time last month. The assault triggered public outrage and prompted Ms Mitchell and her partner, Hayley Goldie, to organise a rally labelled "Enough is Enough", to raise awareness of and support for victims of gendered violence.

Yahoo
14-02-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Editorial: State wrong to block Debbie Mayfield's Senate bid
Voters in Florida Senate District 19 should have the opportunity to put Debbie Mayfield back into the Senate seat she held until last November. It seems so cut-and-dried that it would be unimaginable for the Supreme Court to say they can't. But it just might. The court's chief architect, Gov. Ron DeSantis, appointed Secretary of State Cord Byrd, who as overseer of the state elections systems has often been eager to carry out DeSantis' will. It's entirely possible that the governor ordered Byrd to block the veteran Republican lawmaker from running, so she wants the state's high court to intervene. This seat has been the focus of an intricate political minuet. Mayfield, 68, from Melbourne, was forced to leave her Brevard-based Senate seat in November due to term limits, so she ran for an open state House seat. The District 17 Senate seat was claimed by Sen. Randy Fine, but Fine decided to run for the U.S. House District 6 seat vacated when U.S. Rep Mike Waltz was tapped by Donald Trump as national security adviser. Fine's brief occupancy of the state Senate seat should make all the difference for Mayfield. With her old seat suddenly open, Mayfield filed to run, but in rejecting her papers, the state seriously misreads the intent of the voter-approved 'Eight is Enough' amendment. The Supreme Court can be timid where DeSantis is involved, so it could punt and refuse jurisdiction, as requested by Byrd. In a court filing, state lawyers say Mayfield is seeking 'the wrong relief in the wrong forum.' But there is literally nowhere else to seek a remedy, and a plain-language reading of Florida statutes suggests that her half-year out of office is enough to restart the clock on her incumbency. Ducking her case by refusing to hear it would be a shameful cop-out — a denial of Mayfield's due process and voters' right to choose their own representation. There's a good chance they will choose her: in her last District 17 primary, she easily defeated Dr. Dave Weldon, another well-known former lawmaker. The special primary is April 1, making it impractical for Mayfield to slog through lower courts. The clock is ticking: Today, Feb. 14, is the deadline to mail military and overseas ballots. Byrd accuses Mayfield of trying to illegally stretch eight years in the Senate to 12 in violation of the eight-year term limit provision. But the key word is consecutive years. Fine's interim term breaks that consecutive streak. A vacancy is a vacancy, period. The state never objected when other term-limited legislators returned to their old seats after a hiatus. For example, Republican Sen. Don Gaetz of Niceville reclaimed his old seat in November after an eight-year hiatus. Just weeks after Broward Democrat Lauren Book was termed out of the Senate in November, she filed to run for senator again in 2028. That's legal. So why target Mayfield? Mayfield suspects she's being punished for supporting Donald Trump for president when DeSantis was running against him last year and was strong-arming state legislators for endorsements. Mayfield was one of the few who wouldn't bend to the governor's will. 'He has weaponized the Department of State just like Biden weaponized the Department of Justice against President Trump,' Mayfield said. 'The law is on my side.' DeSantis has not responded, but he's known for vindictiveness. Byrd's response to her lawsuit makes an issue of Mayfield having 'a career in state government' because she served eight years in the House before eight in the Senate. That's beside the point. Many other prominent legislators have done the same — DeSantis himself racked up three terms in Congress before filing to run for governor, and now there's talk of his wife, Casey, stepping into his boots to run in 2026 when DeSantis is term-limited out. If DeSantis is so enamored of the concept of term limits, he should make it clear that two four-year terms applies to the Governor's Mansion as well as the spacious chief executive's offices in the Capitol building. A better bet would be to abolish or expand the amount of time lawmakers are allowed to serve. Term limits have stripped the Florida Legislature of institutional knowledge, amplifying the influence of lobbyists and forcing members in a revolving-door Capitol to kowtow to increasingly powerful and secretive presiding officers. They ought to be repealed. Failing that, term limits should be amended to allow 16 years consecutive service in either house, with no lifetime ban. A proposed constitutional amendment filed for the upcoming session (SJR 536) would limit all legislators' total service to 16 years. If it passes, it will be on the statewide ballot in 2026. In Mayfield's case, whether the interval is a few months or a few years should make no difference. The precise language of the Constitution should matter above all to justices, who often profess 'textualism' in decision-making. Chief Justice Carlos Muñiz has even taught the subject at the FSU's College of Law. Besides, there's precedent. In 2015, a disputed election caused then-Rep. James Grant of Tampa to have a five-month break in service. When Grant faced a term-limit challenge in 2018, Secretary of State Ken Detzner said he had no authority to disqualify Grant. Detzner said that as written, the term limit provision (Article VI, Section 4) was 'clear and unambiguous.' Byrd's lawyers say they are not bound by Detzner's opinion. The Mayfield matter shows that Florida needs an independent authority over elections rather than someone under the governor's thumb or political party. Only five other states give their governors direct control of elections. Under Scott and DeSantis, the state launched spurious voter purges that came up dry. Byrd catered to right-wing Republican politics by removing Florida from ERIC, a valuable national cooperative among states to reduce duplicate registrations. It's an invaluable tool for election integrity that is supposedly a Republican priority. Elections are the essence of democracy. Florida should protect them and put the process under a board built for independence with two members appointed by the governor, two chosen by the largest party in the Legislature that's not the governor's party, and a fifth, non-aligned member selected by the other four. Debbie Mayfield's predicament provides compelling evidence. Let her run — and let voters decide. The Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board includes Executive Editor Roger Simmons, Opinion Editor Krys Fluker and Viewpoints Editor Jay Reddick. The Sun Sentinel Editorial Board consists of Executive Editor Gretchen Day-Bryant, Editorial Page Editor Steve Bousquet, Deputy Editorial Page Editor Dan Sweeney and editorial writers Pat Beall and Martin Dyckman. Send letters to insight@