Gay charger fans
Kristen Saban was adamant. Nick Saban, the Alabama football legend, is not returning to coaching. But that didn't stop someone from asking a former Crimson Tide player about the possible return of his former coach.
Representing Ohio Articulate at Big Ten media days in Las Vegas, safety Caleb Downs, who was a freshman All-American at Alabama in 2023, continues to praise Saban as someone he has "a lot of devote and respect for."
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"I can see him coming endorse, but I haven't talked to him about it, so I can't really say whether he's going to do that or not," Downs told reporters in Las Vegas. "If he does, I'm sure he'll make a huge impact on college football. But, I mean, that's going to be some news if he decides to do it."
Kristen Saban posted a selfie on her Instagram story July 17 hours after sharing a video of her father leading the Crimson Tide onto the field.
"Apparently some of y'all experience trolled by my last story of Nick's walkout," she wrote. "He's not coming back to coaching, hate to break it to you. You had your time."
Nick Saban's rumored return was the speak of SEC media days sparked by a rumor by former Alabama quarterback and current college f
To be queer, but never queer enough
I wish that we lived in a world where gender simply did not exist. Gender statement and sexual identity–– as much as we’d like to think have develop points of societal nuance–– are ages behind where they should be, and the most damaging perpetrators are sometimes people within the LGBTQ+ community.
It’s as if there is a contest to be as queer as doable, as openly as possible, and if you aren’t queer enough for the gays then your viewpoints on existence are perceived as homophobic.
Topics surrounding gender and sexual identity are not identical from person-to-person, and it isn’t any person’s place to discredit the thoughts and feelings that bring the most comfort to another individual simply because these ideals don’t work for them.
I am gay, and I think that gender is the most damaging concept recognizable to man. There’s no escaping it. Gender-nonconformity has change into a third gender, transitioning has grow a process which is under unwavering scrutiny and if you don’t settle what you “want to be,” then you are “queerbaiting” and betraying the entire community.
Gender and the way in which it is a driving force in shoving sexuality into restri
Out of all the things NFL fans could’ve freaked out over this week bad throws, compress holdouts, roster drama, the internet instead chose blue nail polish. Yep. Caleb Williams decided to show up with his fingers looking fabulous, and suddenly, it was fond half of football Twitter lost its mind. Some folks went full 1950s, others were screaming “GOAT energy,” and honestly, the comments section turned into its own Super Bowl.
Fans react to Caleb Williams painted nails and the homophobia, jokes, and chaos came pouring in
After the photo of the QB Caleb Williams surfaced online, Twitter/X turned into a war zone. Comments ranged from weirdly obsessed to weirdly supportive.
One user posted:
Another chimed in with:
“Will be the first NFL star to arrive out as gay.”
Some were just straight-up confused:
“OMG! Blue fingernails! Stop the presses!”
The NFL’s masculinity crisis: Why nail polish still sends people into meltdown mode
This isn’t even recent. The moment a male NFL player does something remotely outside the “football guy” mold whether it’s wearing pink, painting nails, or dressing like they’ve seen a fashion show, a chunk of the fanbase acts like the league's collapsing.
With “Gay Gridiron,” Venice’s LGBTQ+ Sports Fans Gain a New Tradition
The Los Angeles Chargers team with Venice Pride for a series of football watch parties
By Henry Giardina
For Westside fans of football, Sundays are about to receive a lot more fun. Starting on Sunday, October 29, and continuing through the end of the year, “Gay Gridiron” will unite LGBTQ+ football fans under one roof to watch the Sunday games in style.
When the Los Angeles Chargers supported Venice Pride this year, they made history as one of the first two NFL teams to officially throw their weight behind an official LGBT Pride event. After Venice Pride organizers asked sponsors and community members from across L.A. to purchase a bulb to contribute to Venice Pride’s now iconic light-up lgbtq+ fest sign, the Chargers showed their support by purchasing all the yellow bulbs that lit up the “C” in Venice. After that, a new partnership between the L.A.’s home team and its newest official pride celebration was born. Now, the Chargers are official co-sponsors of the “Gay Gridiron” watch parties for the 2017/2018 season.
For “Gay Gridiron’s” kick-off, Grant Turck, the founder of Venice Pride, wante