Trent Reznor denounces Marilyn Manson
Photo: Catherine McGann (Getty Images)
Trent Reznor has issued a new statement today, reminding readers that, although the two artists were heavily involved with each other in the 1990s with Reznor producing or co-producing Marilyn Manson’s first major albums,
Portrait Of An American Family and
Antichrist Superstar he and performer Brian “Marilyn Manson” Warner have been estranged from each other ever since: in Reznor’s words, “I cut ties with him nearly 25 years ago.” This is per
The Long Hard Road Out Of Hell,
in which he alleges that he and Reznor sexually assaulted a woman together in the mid-’90s.
Sky News, writes for
PinkNews about the toll the AIDS epidemic took on his family in the 1980s and beyond, and the parallels that can be drawn between HIV/AIDS and COVID-19.
I was seven when I watched my uncle dying in St Lukes-Roosevelt hospital in New York City.
Simon was only 36 and it was the 90s. I remember asking someone what a lump on his neck was. It was just his Adam’s apple, but he was so thin it stuck out painfully.
I’d never seen anything like it before, growing up in rural Herefordshire, England, as I was at the time. But in New York – and San Francisco, London and other big cities with a large gay community – it was horrifyingly common.
The 5 Towns Jewish Times
December 28, 2020
(JTA) There’s no way to tally all whom we lost in 2020, a year when we mourned even our ability to carry out time-tested rituals of grief.
Among those who died this year were some of the Jewish world’s most famous and influential pillars in a range of industries, realms of thought and areas of activism from pioneer jurist Ruth Bader Ginsburg to moral thought leader Rabbi Jonathan Sacks to Orthodox rabbi Norman Lamm to influential LGBTQ activist Larry Kramer.
But many of the people whose deaths tell the story of 2020 were not widely known, except among the people who loved them and the communities they enriched.
Those we lost in 2020: Remembering the rabbis, pioneers, innovators and family members December 28, 2020 11:46 am Clockwise from top left: Rabbi Dovid Feinstein, Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, Kirk Douglas, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Catie Lazarus. (Getty Images; photo design by Grace Yagel)
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(JTA) There’s no way to tally all whom we lost in 2020, a year when we mourned even our ability to carry out time-tested rituals of grief.
Among those who died this year were some of the Jewish world’s most famous and influential pillars in a range of industries, realms of thought and areas of activism from the pioneer jurist Ruth Bader Ginsburg to the moral thought leader Rabbi Jonathan Sacks to the Modern Orthodox rabbi Norman Lamm to the influential LGBTQ activist Larry Kramer.
| Credit: Catherine McGann/Getty Images
Michael Alig, the infamous leader of the 1990s Club Kids who was later convicted of murdering his roommate and drug dealer, has died at the age of 54.
Alig was found dead in his Manhattan apartment on Christmas Day following an apparent overdose, according to a report from the
New York Daily News on Friday. His ex-boyfriend, who found him, told police that Alig had been doing drugs and heroin was found in the apartment, the
Daily News reported.
Alig first became known for cofounding the Club Kids, a group of eccentric partiers popular in NYC’s ’90s club scene for their outlandish outfits and behavior.