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Mike Read

DJ
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Gender Male
Age 77
Date of birth March 1,1947
Zodiac sign Pisces
Born Heywood
United Kingdom
Height 185 (cm)
AlbumsWords & Music - Sir John Betjeman & Mike Read
GenresRock
Pop
Job Disc jockey
Journalist
Television presenter
Radio personality
Movies/Shows Pop Quiz
Saturday Superstore
Celebrity Ghost Stories UK
Awards Grammy Award for Best Country Song
Academy of Country Music Award for Song of the Year
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID404172

Classic FM 100 Favourite Poems
The barn owl
The Story of the Shadows: An Autobiography
Forever England: The Life of Rupert Brooke
Reads Musical Reciter Signed Edition
Spirit of the New Forest the
Major to Minor: The Rise and Fall of the Songwriter
Little Book of Cliff Richard
The Writing on the Wall: 101 Iconic Blue Plaques Commemorating Britain's History
New Forest Moods
Red Kite Country: A Celebration of the Wildlife and Landscape of Mid Wales
Perfect New Forest
The Robin
Rupert Brooke: His Life and Poetry
Terminus
The Cliff Richard File
The South Coast Beat Scene of the 1960s
Seize the Day
New Forest Address Book
Cliff Richard Story
Elizabethan dragonflies
Mike Read's Rock and pop quiz book
Drift Down the Darkness
Labatt's 500: Britain's All-time Favourite Tracks
Eggs and Marbles
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Mike Read Life story


Michael David Kenneth Read is an English radio DJ, writer, journalist and television presenter. Read has been a broadcaster for more than 40 years, and is best known for his association as a DJ with . . .

Sam Smith: What's behind I'm Not Here to Make Friends backlash?

Nov 25,2022 8:11 pm

By Rebecca Swash and Riyah CollinsNewsbeat reporters

When someone calls their New Track I'm Not Here to Make Friends, they're probably expecting a reaction.

And with their latest video, Sam Smith has certainly caused a bit of stir.

If you haven't watched it, The Singer spends most of it wearing a corset and nipple tassels while performing some spicy moves with backing dancers.

Some People think the video is " oversexualised" and Want It to come with A Warning . Others think Sam is a victim of double-standards.

The video lands

The video for I'm Not Here to Make Friends starts with Sam, wearing an enormous pink coat, arriving at a remote castle by helicopter.

Once inside, dancers and drag queens surround The Singer for a series of routines.

One scene in particular has upset Some People - it shows Sam in that corset and nipple tassel look, posing suggestively while being showered with jets of water.

When the video was released it - predictably - Flying to The Top of its trending chart,

It wasn't long before Sam was trending on Twitter too, with a lot of posts calling the video " vulgar" and saying it was inappropriate for younger viewers.

Youtube's restricted mode blocks the video. But fans say it's no worse than others released by artists, many of them female, containing suggestive imagery.

Songs like Anaconda by Nicki Minaj , S& M by Rihanna or even Call On Me by Eric Prydz all capitalise on it.

Phobia?

Those who think Sam has been Singled Out have a theory.

In 2019, The Singer came out as non-binary and asked fans to use they/them pronouns. Their new album, Gloria, fully embraces LGBTQ+ culture.

" If a Female Artist had done that exact same video, worn the exact same outfits, No One would bat an eyelid, " says drag queen Pixie Polite.

" I think The Outcry just smacks of this sort of homophobia, queer phobia and transphobia. "

There's also an element of fatphobia, says Pixie, as Sam doesn't conform to stereotypical ideal body standards.

Since Sam came out as non-binary, fans think The Singer has leaned in to their identity and it's had an impact on their music.

" Sam Smith 's Early Work was very palatable to a mainstream audience, because they didn't celebrate their queerness in the same way, " says Pixie.

" I think this is a coming of age moment for Sam Smith as an artist. "

Shock factor

Kenny Ethan Jones , a trans advocate and writer from London, agrees that Sam is entering an era of " embracing their queerness".

" It's really nice to see Sam really step into themselves, " says Kenny.

" I think Sam's doing doing God's work essentially, just allowing everybody to be represented and feel good in their body. "

Music Video producer Ashleigh Jadee thinks this effort to put queer bodies at the centre of the video might be what's sparked the reaction.

Ashleigh says it shows us a version of sexuality that we don't often see, which gives it a shock factor, and there's Nothing New about seeing straight men and women on our screens.

For Ashleigh, I'm Not Here to Make Friends didn't stand out as particularly spicy.

She says: " I watched the video and I was a bit like, 'oh, is this it'?

" I can understand why Some People might think it's a bit too wild. But I think nowadays videos are really sexualised anyway. "

The Bbc is not responsible for the content of external sites.

This isn't the First Time an artist has reflected their LGBT identity in their work.

Twenty-five years ago, George Michael was arrested by an undercover policeman in Los Angeles .

He caught The British singer performing a sex act in a Public Toilet and arrested him for cottaging.

George, who had not revealed his sexuality before this, came Back with the Music Video for his song Outside - which featured dancers simulating sex in public and a lot of leather.

And before that, there was Relax by Frankie Goes to Hollywood, released in 1983.

The Band had to make two videos for The Song , as The First was set in a gay, S& M-themed nightclub and allegedly banned from TV.

And The Bbc refused to play The Song after one of it top DJs at The Time , Mike Read , branded it " obscene".

'Paving The Way '

" The Tide of progress always ebbs and flows, " says Pixie.

" You will always have a slight push Back before you then can move forward again and I think the culture war that's happening at The Moment around queer People and trans People , is definitely that pushback. "

In 2023, LGBT rights have made Headlines - whether it's the controversy around the or the Archbishop of Canterbury saying.

" The slogan 'we're here, we're queer, get used to it', I think it's as relevant today as it has always been, " says Pixie.

Kenny say's he's proud of Sam for confidently showcasing their identity in the video and their new album.

" It's unfortunate that People who pave The Way get The Most hate, but essentially we have to do it, " says Kenny.

" If we don't push through, and get through this mucky era then we're never going to make progress. "

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Source of news: bbc.com

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