:: Florida governor Charlie Crist should expect a few uninvited guests outside his wedding in St. Petersburg later this month. The group Impact-Florida, which organized protests on Nov. 15 of the state's anti-gay Amendment 2, has invited demonstrators to join together outside the church where the governor will marry Carole Rome on Friday, Dec. 12. Impact-Florida asks demonstrators to wear pink shirts and to only carry signs that reflect the spirit of the organizers' intent -- the celebration of everyone’s right to marry. After the church ceremony, protesters will march to the Renaissance Vinoy Resort where the Crists will hold a reception. Impact Florida spokesperson Lorna Bracewell, in an interview with the online LGBT magazine GaySoFla.com, said, "The demonstration will be peaceful and respectful." The singer/songwriter and Tampa Bay native said the Crist wedding provides a "unique opportunity" shine a light on the injustice and unfairness of Amendment 2.
:: A New Mexico film production company, Revision Studios, plans to unveil a "gay Bible" online next year on its website, PrincessDianaBible.com. A preview of Genesis is already available online. In it, God creates Aida and Eve rather than Adam and Eve. "There are many different versions of the Bible; I don't see why we can't have one," said Max Mitchell, who directed the science fiction comedy Horror in the Wind, in which an airborne formula invented by two biogeneticists reverses the world's sexual orientation. He says that film inspired him to create the re-worked bible, which is named after Diana "because of all her good works".
:: Ireland's state-owned broadcaster, RTE, will premier its first-ever radio program aimed at gay men and lesbians in the country. The Cosmopolitan, hosted by gay DJ Scott De Buitlear, will feature gay community news and information as well as dance hits. It will be broadcast in Ireland on W ednesday nights on RTE Pulse, one of the six new digital radio services which officially launched this morning. Listeners can tune in on special new Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB) radios or through the web at www.rte.ie.

:: Size queens rejoice! A new study should make a French accent sound even more sexy the next time you hear one. The research by the 'Institut fuer Kondom-Beratung' measured penises in their erect state belonging to 10,477 volunteers from all 25 countries in the EU. It found that on average, a French manhood was 6.1 inches (15.48 centimeters) long with a girth of 5.4 inches (13.63 centimeters). Swedish men scored second spot with six inches (15.36cm) length and five inches (12.78cm) circumference. (These, of course, were scientific measurements rather than online profile measurements in which just about everyone scores an 8".) At the bottom (but not necessarily on the bottom): Brits, Irish, and Greeks. Spaniards, like tennis star Fernando Verdasco, who posed nude for Cosmo and for the Everyman Male Cancer Campaign, were, on average... well average, but who'd complain about him?.