9/30/2010

White Quarterback Loves Black Male Cheerleader

A lifelong romance between a black male cheerleader and a white quarterback changes sports history forever when the QB becomes the first superstar athlete to come out while in the prime of his pro football career.

Too good to be true? Not if you believe in love, miracles and flying football stadiums.

An epic, adventure-filled odyssey where serious issues like homophobia, racism and AIDS exist right alongside fantastical characters like Hail Larry, Evil Announcer Guy and the Emergency Wife. Big fun!

Walt Loves the Bearcat ... your ticket is your imagination.

A Lambda Literary Award Finalist for Best Romance

Get Walt Loves the Bearcat at Amazon.com

Reviews

"A madcap whirl, Walt Loves the Bearcat is first and forever a love story, one written with a roller-coaster brio and a magical intensity that demand and deserve the reader’s perseverance."
SF Bay Times (Read full review).

"Warm-spirited ... resonates with soulful queries into the nature of love and life." Bay Area Reporter (Read full review).

9/29/2010

How to Survive Being HIV-Positive

Sometimes, living with HIV/AIDS can be a real bitch. One of the reasons: people who use words like clean and disease-free to distinguish themselves from those among us living with the virus.

Before the pandemic, those phrases did not exist. Since AIDS, insensitive people have created an entire lexicon designed to keep out the virus and anyone with it.

Must poz people live in their world? Unfortunately, yes. But do poz people have to adopt the world's negative attitudes about people living with HIV? Fortunately, no.

Here's a better choice for poz people: learn How To Survive Being HIV-Positive in an HIV-Negative World.

9/28/2010

How To Stay HIV-Negative

HIV-negative people can have sexual relations with HIV-positive people and remain HIV-negative. Just as two people can have sexual relations and not make a baby, so too can two people have sexual relations and not make AIDS, baby.

But most Americans do not know this. Instead, many see HIV/AIDS as another evil and vow to avoid all those who carry evil, in this case, those who are HIV-positive.

Is there a better way to stay safe? You bet. All you need to know is How to Stay HIV-Negative in an HIV-Positive World.

9/27/2010

ebook me!

Journey over the Bridge Across the Ocean, or come face to face with the Devil Inside like never before with Randy Boyd's ebooks, now available at the Barnes & Noble online store.

Both novels were Lambda Literary Award Finalists. Now both novels can be downloaded and read on digital devices, including your PC, Mac, iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad, Blackberry or nook.

Your on-the-go, digital reading options just got better with the Bridge Across the Ocean and the Devil Inside, now available as ebooks!

9/24/2010

When the USC Sigma Chi's Called Me Nigger

I'd been dreaming of living in California since age 14. That's when I convinced myself the Golden State was a great escape from my abusive family and lonely life in Indianapolis.

My escape plan was simple: Graduate from high school in June of 1980; enroll at the University of Southern California in September of 1980.

My first memorable moment as a college freshman: being called nigger the week before school starts by bros from the all-white, all-mighty Sigma Chi fraternity.
"I should have cried in front of them and let them see the tears of a hurt black boy."
My Sigma Chi welcome took place on a night when a handful of us new black students were walking home after a social function. As we passed the frat house on an otherwise quiet Greek row, a head peeked through the Sigma Chi curtains.

“Oh, niggers,” said a Sigma Chi, as if disappointed we weren't a group of white sorority girls or white fraternity boys. His comment was followed by the sound of brothers laughing.

Welcome to California, nigger.

Us niggers were way outnumbered on the all-white, Dixie-flagged-waving, USC Greek row, and there were more female niggers than male niggers among us, so us niggers got out of there quickly and quietly like the smart niggers we were.
"What do I do now? I can't just go back home. It's not even the first week of school yet."
Later that night, I had to find somewhere to be alone. I borrowed another student's bike, rode to the LA Memorial Coliseum and broke down in tears while looking at the lit field below me, thinking: What do I do now? I can't just go back home. It's not even the first week of school yet.
With the Coliseum as my witness, I vowed then and there to escape my new jail and this all-white-private-fraternity-party school ASAP. It was already time to dream up a new and better dream.

In the meantime, I was even more determined to get my college boy on, as planned. That meant: becoming a USC yell leader (no doubt in my mind), keep looking for my dream buddy, and continuing being a great inmate, er, student, then, eventually, get the f*%k out of the University of Spoiled Children who say things like, “oh, niggers.”
"I still cry for the 18-year-old boy who had to hear 'oh, niggers' coming from the Sigma Chi house."
In retrospect, I should have gone to the Dean and (the school paper) the day after the incident, and told them both how much it hurt, hearing the Sigma Chi's call me nigger.

I should have cried in front of them and let them see the tears of a hurt black boy who had put all his hopes and dreams into USC, only to have those dreams shattered in one casual blow when, the week before freshman year starts, he's welcomed with “oh, niggers” coming from one of the richest, all-white fraternities on the all-white fraternity row (one or two token niggers excepted, oh.)

But kids generally don't speak up, let alone reveal how hurt they feel. As an adult, I can admit that I still cry for the 18-year-old boy who had to hear “oh, niggers” coming from the Sigma Chi house.
"USC was my chance to escape my angry black family and meet the white boy of my dreams."
I can also admit that, because I grew up the youngest in a house full of violent and abusive black boys and black men, my adolescent heart longed for white boys and white men, the kind who hugged people and rescued people, as seen on TV and in the movies.

As such, my escape to California and USC was my chance to escape my angry black family and meet the white boy of my dreams, who would naturally come complete with his white friends and family.

I know I'm not the only abused black boy who's dreamt up this dream. It's what some black boys do. It's how we adapt to the harsh circumstances around us. It's still a part of me, and at age 18, it was the stuff of my California dreams. Can you say, surf's up!
"Why are there no blacks in the white fraternities?"
A month before college, while still at home in Indy, I received advanced warning of the rough racial seas ahead. It came in the form of a large booklet about the USC fraternity system. Every fraternity was on display, many with photos featuring all its members (in front of the house itself).

"Why are there no blacks in the white fraternities, and vice-versa for the few black frats, who don't seem to have actual houses?" I asked a friend named Kelvin, a senior at Ball State. He explained how all fraternities and sororities were segregated, not legally so much as, de facto.

"There are some one or two exceptions now and then," said Kelvin, himself a member of a popular, all-white house.

This unexpected education before my enrollment in a "big-time school with a good basketball or football team and a great party life" was daunting, to say the least. But it was August. I was already on the launchpad, the engines were revving, the mission, four years in the works, was about to blast off, and I couldn't let a little booklet stop the California Express now!
"I wish I had bared witness to my pain, then carried on with my college dreams."
And so a few weeks later, at the end of the summer of 1980, the little black boy turned high school graduate turned young man took off for college and his California dreams. A one-way ticket. Indianapolis to LAX.

Days after landing, I hear "oh, niggers" coming from the USC Sigma Chi house, home of the most beautiful of the beautiful white people that dominate the landscape. And the school. Welcome to California, nigger.
Back then, I wish I had bared witness to my pain, then carried on with my college dreams: wild parties, dorm hi-jinks, homecoming floats, football games. And beer! I went to college for the college life. And to meet my husband. Oh, yeah, and get a degree.

But that degree would not be earned at USC.

“Oh, niggers” ruined USC for me. From that night on, the Trojans were a bust. While I was there, I gave it the old college try, lol, but I was determined not to live the rest of my life saying, I graduated from USC.
Which is exactly why I transferred to, became a cheerleader at, and graduated from UCLA in 1985. Go Bruins!

9/23/2010

Are Me and My Kind Lovable?

"When’s the last time you read a book, saw a movie, heard a love song, passed a billboard, seen a commercial on television, seen any image anywhere where the hot, sexy, funny, cuddly, warm, romantic, all-American object of anyone’s affection was ... someone like me?

"Which me? Black male? Same gender loving? Athlete-looking on the outside, lovable goofball slash brainiac on the inside?

"Start with any of those atoms and build yourself a whole universe of me’s. You still ain’t gonna find me being the object of anyone’s affection in the media.

"If you see me in the media, I’ll be the black man, but I won’t be a black man dreaming of being a spirit leader or a rocket scientist, or a black man dreaming of having one true buddy and feeling special, the kind of special that makes you feel worthy of romance and love, the kind we all dream about, as seen on TV and in the movies.

"Our roles are always played by the Julia Robertses of the world, even if they don't fit the part.

"We live in an age where we are inundated with countless images from countless sources, from TV to movies to pop-up ads. A huge percentage of those images deal with love, sex and romance.

"Still, rare or nonexistent is the occasion where I encounter an image that reflects who I am and what I dream of. Even rarer and more nonexistent is the occasion where I encounter an image that might encourage another soul to dream of loving someone just like me.
"

from Walt Loves the Bearcat
by Randy Boyd
A Lambda Literary Finalist for Best Romance
Available wherever books are sold

9/19/2010

My Museum of Me

Let the world do what they want with me, but I was here: Randy Boyd, the boy, the man, the nigger, the faggot, the retard, the reject, the little league athlete, the junior high and high school athlete, the high school actor, and so much more.

Still, I know I gotta die someday. Like every descendant of the great apes before me.

I'm not that good. I got skillz, but believe me, I know I'm gonna die. Hopefully much later than sooner. And I'm very happy that I've survived long enough to create a Museum of Me, always on exhibit when there's life after me.

9/17/2010

Blocks for Jocks

In my blog column, Jockin': Homos in Sports, I write about a subject very dear to me. I ask questions, like, What Makes an Athlete Straight or Gay?

I say provocative things, like, Dear NFL Players: Tear Down This Wall.

And I tell the younger athletes, College Football Players: Lighten Up on Your Gay Teammates.

That's because I believe in doing my part to make the “Out” Pro Athlete Dream a dream come true.

Check out my sports blocks, now and forever on Randy Boyd's Blocks.

9/16/2010

How Magic Johnson Saved My Life

"Dear Magic Johnson: Your decision to go public [about living with HIV] in 1991 helped save my life. You single-handedly re-shook up the world, which had grown complacent and ambivalent towards AIDS since Rock Hudson's 1985 announcement.

Your announcement was a stimulus to global effort, as has been your simply walking this earth, being who you are, a sports commentator, a businessman, a former athlete--all the while owning your HIV status with a smile.

You, Magic Johnson, turned out to be the world's greatest cheerleader for conquering AIDS."

9/12/2010

Randy Who?

The hockey player? No. The Oregon teacher? No. The writer and author? Yeah, that's the one. That's this Randy Boyd.

The former USC and UCLA cheerleader. The author of four novels, nominated for five Lambda Literary Awards.

A Hoosier by birth. A UCLA graduate. A Pacer fan. Getting the picture? For more, check out this Randy Boyd's bio.

9/11/2010

Out of the Ashes of 9/11

An aspiring dog trainer found her chained to a fence, abandoned and abused with a debilitating club-foot and uneven temperament.

She wasn't the most social dog. She was prone to aggression and “she hates men,” said her new owner the day Boomer and I met Scioscia.

That day happened to be the darkest day in American history. For me, it's also a day spent Remembering Scioscia.

9/09/2010

Randy Boyd's Books

As a child, I imagined books and movies about someone like me. Rarely did I see images of people who thought like me, acted like me and with whom I could identify. And that was just in real life! On television, in novels and in the movies, I simply didn't exist.

Makes a brutha feel like Hollywood and the book world can't imagine someone like me being worthy of a plot.

Fortunately, they don't have to. I'm imagining it for them. Here now, my four novels to date. They're like my kids. I'm happy with the way they turned out.

A young black man living with HIV/AIDS dreams of an alternate life where he is HIV-negative and lovers with pro football's greatest quarterback. Or is that, a young black man who is HIV-negative dreams of an alternate life where he's living with HIV/AIDS and never meets pro football's greatest QB? Your ticket is your imagination. Walt Loves the Bearcat, a Lambda Literary Finalist for Best Romance.

A famous but closeted black pop singer tests positive for HIV and plots to assassinate a homophobic US Senator, while a straight white FBI agent goes undercover, as a gay activist, to stop him. Which side will you be on? Uprising, a two-time Lambda Literary Finalist for Best Mystery and Best Small Press Title.

An HIV-positive, black gay businessman must save his business and a friend's life by uncovering a sinister plot to demonize all homosexuals. The mind is a terrible thing to fuck with. The Devil Inside. A Lambda Literary Award Finalist for Best Science Fiction, Horror, Fantasy, and a Gaylactic Spectrum Awards nominee for Best Science Fiction Novel.

A young black man tests positive for HIV, then escapes to Cancun, Mexico, where he meets two white teenage brothers who idolize him, not knowing he is living with HIV/AIDS. It's a friendship that will change all their lives forever. Bridge Across the Ocean, a Lambda Literary Finalist for Best Small Title.

Welcome to my world.

9/03/2010

Road to a Better Me

I used to feel bad for wanting to cheerlead, until I felt pride for how I became a cheerleader.

I used to feel bad for being a fag, until I understood how I became homosexual.

I used to feel bad for acquiring HIV, until I forgave myself for how I became HIV positive.

I used to think I was bad for a lot of things, until I realized I'm all good.