Why is my friend aaron kinda gay

Welcome to Millionaires, where we profile creators who have recently crossed the one million follower mark on platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and Twitch. There are creators crossing this threshold every week, and each of them has a story to tell about their success. Read previous installments here.


Aaron Goldenberg is a mean gay.

Okay, not really. But he plays one on TikTok.

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Like several other creators we’ve spoken to, Goldenberg is an actor by trade, and parlayed those skills into content creation when COVID shuttered auditions back in 2020. He’d always wanted to act, from his very first Christmas engage as a kid.

“I very quickly was just one of those kids who was always in some kind of a drama class, whether it was at school or elsewhere,” he says. “Started doing community theater in my teens, and then as well as acting for student films at local colleges that had production programs.”

He started booking jobs in his early 20s, and after snagging roles in a couple indie films and commercials, he moved down to Atlanta for more opportunities in TV and film. Pre-pandemic, he’d be

Aaron A Fisher

1985 - 2016

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Ann Lee

Sunday, April 3, 2016

I am so sorry for your family's decrease.

I will always recall Aaron as the lively and happy young male in my memory.

Ann

QiaoLing - Montreal - Friend

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Calvin - NORTH LIBERTY, IA

Tuesday, Protest 22, 2016

I knew Aaron for only a year or so. He would come into the gas station where i worked and we would speak for hours about fishing, hunting, or what not. He was a fantastic guy and went fishing with him many of times at Lake McBride. So sorry to drop him.

Yanbin Ji - Los Angeles, CA - Friend

Monday, March 21, 2016

Dear Rory and Nadine,

I include been still in shock myself since Rory told me the saddest news one week ago. I can say, Aron's death was a terrible shock to all of us. I can imagine it is not easy for you to accept the event.

I believe both of you can overcome the difficult time, standup and continuously move forward.

God approve you and your family.

Yours,

Yanbin

A friend

Thursday, March 17, 2016

Rory and Nadine,

We were so sorry to hear such sad news. Our thou

GLAAD has teamed up with audio business leader Audible to co-curate and yield a written interview series featuring LGBTQIA+ talent from the Audible family.

Our first interview features Aaron Foley, the founding director of the Black Media Initiative at the Center for Community Media at the Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY and author of Boys Come First. He was interviewed by GLAAD’s have Anthony Allen Ramos.

Check out GLAAD’s interview with Foley below:

AR: Aaron, thank you so much for joining us today. First off, pleased pride to you!

AF: Happy pride, content pride! So excited!

AR: Congrats on the story! I’ve just started it. I think so many people are gonna love it and identify with it. With Boys Show up First – before we get into some of the other questions, arrange it up for us because I love this whole premise, I admire the message, and I love this journey that you’re taking us on!

AF: It’s about three gay Black top friends from Detroit. And two of them live in Detroit and one of them is from Detroit and lives in Modern York, right? And he has the total breakdown – he catches his boyfriend cheating on him the similar day he gets laid off from his j why is my friend aaron kinda gay

Aaron Altaras

Shameless pride

Mario is a film that is making waves for its incredibly realistic portrayal of the relationship between two lgbtq+ professional football players, Mario and Leon, whose fates and careers end up being entirely different. Leon, who just joined the team, first appears to be the dark horse of the group but slowly ends up winning our hearts with his undeniable charm. We discuss to the actor who plays this role, German up-and-comer Aaron Altaras, about this career-defining move, as well as the aftermath this movie will construct and the controversies that have already emerged from Cannes Youth’s sudden cancellation of the movie’s screening.

Could you present yourself to our readers? How did you get into acting?

I’m from an artists’ family: my mum is a production director and she studied acting as well. At first, my parents didn’t want me to contain anything to do with that world, which is understandable, as you don’t want your children to be exposed to such an industry at that age. But there was a casting call in my school for a supporting role in a film, and I accidentally got it. Then I got another one, and another one. I did a relatively big f

Seth Frost & Kelvin Ellis Interview with June Kamerling

April 1, 2023

By June Kamerling With our upcoming spring concert, “True Colors,” a scant weeks away I interviewed Seth Frost and Kelvin Ellis, two baritones in Oakland Gay Men’s Chorus. They both also sing with New Voices Bay Area Trans, Intersex and Genderqueer Chorus, who will be joining OGMC for a few songs. I asked Seth first, “How did you find OGMC, and what was the chorus favor when you first joined?” “My former voice teacher Eli Conley ( www.eliconley.com ) told me about OGMC. He knew Billy Sauerland, our previous director before Ben, because Billy did his dissertation on voice education for gender non-conforming people and Eli is passionate about teaching trans singers. That was in summer 2018, so I’ve been in OGMC for roughly 10 seasons. I was nervous at first because I hadn’t been a part of a queer chorus before, but everyone was really friendly and welcoming. My first concert was the summer show, gentle of Disney-esque. Some of the members were auditioning for small ensembles, and doing all this cool singing/dancing and there were costumes. It was beautiful amazing and really fun.