Mark S. King Guests On TriVersity Talk! Thursday November 4th, 2021 At 7 PM ET

Television

Wendy Stuart and Steven Bloomer-Teague will be hosting TriVersity Talk this Thursday at 7 PM ET with featured guest Mark S. King.

TriVersity Talk! is a weekly web series with featured guests discussing their lives, activism and pressing issues in the LGBTQ Community. With TriVersity Talk! the goal is to laugh and learn. TriVersity Talk! Is part of TriVersity’s ICARE Initiative. ICARE stands for Increasing Community Awareness through Relevant Education. ICARE Programs are generously funded by The Greater Pike Community Foundation.

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LIVE on Thursday, November 4th at 7 pm ET, ‘TriVersity Talk!’ welcomes award-winning blogger, author, speaker, and HIV/AIDS activist, Mark S. King. Between his transformation from actor to activist to his award winning writing and blog, Wendy and Steven have much to discuss with Mark! Join us and bring your questions!

More on Mark: MARK S. KING is an award winning blogger, author, speaker, and HIV/AIDS activist who has been involved in HIV causes since testing positive in 1985. King was named the 2020 LGBTQ Journalist of the Year by the National Lesbian and Gay Journalist Association (NLGJA), which also awarded King their “Excellence in Blogging” honor in 2014, 2016 and 2020. My Fabulous Disease won the 2020 GLAAD Award for Outstanding Blog after five consecutive nominations, and was named one of 2020’s “OUT100” by OUT Magazine.

King is a sought-after speaker and advocacy journalist who has traveled the globe to report from conferences and speak to colleges, organizations, and groups of people living with HIV.

After graduating from the University of Houston in 1981, King pursued an acting career in Los Angeles and appeared in dozens of television commercials hawking fast food and soft drinks. During this time he also opened Telerotic, which became one of the largest gay telephone fantasy services in the country. King sold the company in 1986 as AIDS was beginning its devastation of the gay community. It is this period of time that King brings back to life in his memoir, A Place Like This.

King began working for community AIDS agencies in 1984 as a volunteer, and joined the staff of the Los Angeles Shanti Foundation in 1988, becoming their first Director of Public Relations. In 1993 he moved to Atlanta to serve as executive director of AIDS Survival Project, and later as Director of Education and Communications for AID Atlanta, the southeast’s largest AIDS service agency.

During his tenure at AID Atlanta King began producing columns and essays on HIV and gay life in general, and became a sought-after speaker for public forums and conferences. He also created Reconstruction in 1996, a program designed to address the practical and emotional concerns of renewed health among people living with AIDS. The program was reproduced throughout the world and led to a presentation at the 1998 International AIDS Conference in Geneva, Switzerland.

King has appeared as a spokesperson on ABC News, 48 Hours, the BBC, CNN, and in The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times. His award-winning writing has been featured in The Advocate, Newsweek, POZ Magazine, Queerty, and TheBody.com. King has been honored for his writing numerous times, including the 2007-2008 National Lesbian and Gay Journalist Association’s award for best opinion piece of the year, for his essay “Once, When We Were Heroes,” about the early days of the AIDS epidemic.

In 2008, King was featured in the award-winning documentary Meth as a crystal methamphetamine addict in recovery. He has since written and produced shows to benefit those in recovery which feature Anita Mann, his drag alter-ego, including “Anita Will Recover!,” Emily’s Message,” and “The Broken Road to Oz.”

In 2011 and 2018, King was honored to be included among the “POZ 100,” the 100 people and ideas that POZ Magazine finds most inspiring. In November of 2012, Instinct Magazine named Mark one of their “Leading Men of 2012” for his HIV/AIDS advocacy and writing. King made the cover of the June 2013 issue of POZ Magazine, which included his essay, “The Sound of Stigma.” He was also honored to be among the Grand Marshals of the 2013 Atlanta Pride parade. That year, HIV Equal included King on their list of Legendary Activists in the Fight Against HIV/AIDS.

Today, Mark lives in Baltimore with his husband Michael, a real smarty pants involved in national healthcare access. Michael is a much better person than Mark. Ask anybody.

Watch Mark S. King on TriVersity Talk! Live on Thursday at 7 PM ET on Youtube here:

Or on the TriVersity Talk! Facebook page here:

https://www.facebook.com/75258021683/posts/10159559660731684/

The official website for The TriVersity Center may be found at

https://www.triversitycenter.org

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