I can't wait to sashay her down the runway!
The above is the cartoon for New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest for week #197. Let me know if you come up with a caption.
Shane and I went to the Capitol Pride festival in downtown DC yesterday. It was a beautiful day for a festival.
Some of the gays may have been confused by the "Manhunt" sign over the Newseum (a museum devoted to journalim), which bordered the festival. It wasn't anything to do with the Manhunt website, but concerned an exhibit about finding the assassin of Abraham Lincoln.
On the main stage when we first arrived was a gaggle of drag queens. How iconic they look with the Capitol as the backdrop. 
Shane's favorite magazine is Down East. He was reading it in bed this morning and became upset by an article profiling Linda Bean, the granddaughter of the late L.L. Bean. The article is called "Linda Bean's Lobster Dream." It appeared to be about her efforts to help the lobster industry in Maine. Then it turns into a profile about how the bible is infallible and that basically God hates fags (perhaps a slight exaggeration). Below is Shane's letter to the editor in response. 
This is the cactus we use as a Christmas tree. In the spring, I drag it outside and eventually it begins to bud. There are lots of buds this year. It must have been enjoying our very wet spring of late. These phallic buds turn into huge flowers that usually bloom one or two evenings and then drop off. 
Clicking on the pictures will make them bigger.
We're going to NYC next month and we bought tickets to this show just before the broadcast of the Tonys, because we thought demand would surge after the show. Shane has become obsessed with watching it over and over.
I swear this is not becoming a fan site for Neil Patrick Harris. His closing song on the Tony Awards last night was very cute.
The Express is a free newspaper I get at the subway stop, which is distributed by the Washington Post. I read it on my commute in to work. Here's what I found interesting in today's news: 




Marine View near Etretat -- 1882 -- Oil on canvas
The next two works by Cy Twombly are part of a work called "Fifty Days at Illiam." The complete set of 10 are wall-sized, and completed in 1977-1978. They are oil, oil crayon, and graphite on canvas.

I thought these works present an interesting contrast.
I mentioned previously that I was planning on making a Levi's purchase this weekend to support their support of marriage equality. I bought these Men's Regular Fit Light Stone Wash Jeans. I was going to get "Straight Fit" jeans, but that just didn't seem right. You can order stuff online here.