Harvey levin gay
GREG IN HOLLYWOOD
By Greg Hernandez on Apr 23, 2010 12:10 am | Comments (293) |
Harvey Levin is usually hectic breaking news about other people.
But the managing editor of TMZ.com and executive producer and host of TMZ on TV got personal this week while hosting a fundraising event in West Hollywood for the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association.
“I really wanted to do this and I’m really pleased and honored that you guys asked me to come here,” he told the crowd.
I’m a longtime NLGJA member and arrived at the East-West Lounge Wednesday night early with the hopes of snagging an interview with Harvey about being gay in the news business and how that has affected his life and career. He said his employer Warner Bros. isn’t keen on his doing such things without clearance. (But we did snap a photo together, see below)
I was disappointed at not getting an interview but then pleased when Harvey touched on many of the topics I’d wanted to discuss in his remarks to the crowd.
“I’m thinking back a prolonged time wh
Harvey Levin gives an truthful account of growing up gay
In a city famous for its happy hour culture, summer can be an even better moment to take advantage of post-work drink and ingest deals. Interns are in town, summer Fridays are in full swing, and patios and rooftops are aplenty. Here are a few prime, non-comprehensive spots for an afternoon deal with besties, colleagues, and new connections.
Alfreda. Dupont’s Alfreda, a tribute to the chef’s grandmother, offers relaxed pizza and traditional Italian eats. The happy hour runs Monday-Friday 4-6 p.m., featuring $8 spritzes and BOGO pizzas. Few perform spritzes like the Italians, and Alfreda leans in on five kinds plus one N/A spritz; our go-to is the rose and mezcal with grapefruit or the locally made Don Ciccio limoncello spritz with basil.
Lyle’s. Especially leaning into the spritz side of summer is at Lyle’s, fully embracing the fizzy ephemera of the season with the Summer of Spritz. The Dupont Circle hotel restaurant imagines cocktails from France, Italy, Spain, and Portugal. Spritzes feature limoncello and vinho verde. For those that hit Lyle’s every week during the spritz special—and get a literal logo on Lyle’s passpo
Harvey Levin facts for kids
For the American economist, watch Harvey J. Levin.
Harvey Robert Levin, born on September 2, 1950, is an American television producer, legal expert, and journalist. He is best known for starting the popular icon news website TMZ in 2005. He also hosted a show called OBJECTified on the Fox News Channel.
Early Life and Education
Harvey Levin was born in Los Angeles County, California. He went to Grover Cleveland High School in Reseda, Los Angeles, graduating in 1968.
He then studied at the University of California, Santa Barbara, earning a degree in political science in 1972. After that, he attended the University of Chicago Regulation School and became a lawyer in 1975.
Career Highlights
Early Law Career
Levin worked as a lawyer in California for about 20 years, starting in 1975. In the mid-1970s, he also taught law at the University of Miami Institution of Law. Later, he taught at Whittier College School of Law.
In 1978, Levin became well-known for debating Howard Jarvis. Jarvis helped create Proposition 13, a law in California that changed property taxes. Levin was against this law.
Because of his growing fame, Levin started giving legal advice on
TMZbigshotHarvey Levin is known for exposing the secrets of Hollywood's biggest stars, but now he's revealing a few of his own.
The creator and executive producer of the popular gossip website and television gossip show of the matching name opened up about his sexuality in a new essay he penned for the Los Angeles LGBT Center, "the world's largest provider of programs and services for LGBT people."
Levin details in the piece, published on the non-profit's Vanguard Now site on Friday, the "profound internal struggle" he felt as a teen and how a "homophobic campaign" that someone close to him waged had "scarred" him for "many, many years." It caused him to try "harder than ever to lead a 'straight' life."
His shame led to him living a life of secrecy and lies. "If I went to a gay block, I would wait -- sometimes for half an hour -- just to make sure cars weren’t passing by the front door for fear a driver might see me enter," Levin writes. "When I met someone, I would often use an alias so I could easily cut ties. It actually makes no feeling, but that’s what I did."
Levin, who earned the number 48 spot last year on Out magazine's list of the 50 most powerful queer people in
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