That’s right. I feel honored.
Not only is InterstateQ.com featured in this month’s OutInAsheville Spotlight, we are also featured right along side such well-known sites as my friends at Pam’s House Blend and PageOneQ, as well as 365gay.com and Chris Crain.

Here’s what writer Maxwell Powell says about us:
InterstateQ.com serves as both a an internet community for the masses and a personal website for Matt Hill Comer, one of SoulForce’s Equality Riders and an NC native. Matt is a student at UNC-Greensboro and is the Executive Director/Co-Founder of the NC Advocacy Coalition. Most recently he has been blogging about his experience as an Equality Rider. InterstateQ.com is devoted to LGBT news, events, and opinions through a youth and activist perspective. Matt’s writings have been featured or included in numerous media outlets. Since coming out at age 14, he has worked with various organizations to create social awareness on LGBT issues and make his community, state and nation a more accepting and equal place for all, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity. He longs for “the day when our beloved nation will live up to its ideals of equality, liberty and justice for all by full heartedly treating, respecting, accepting and valuing LGBT Americans as equally and as fairly as straight Americans.”
Check out the full Spotlight here
You should also check out Ann Paige’s OutInAsheville article on the Soulforce Equality Ride visit to Montreat College in Montreat, NC, which is just outside Asheville, NC.
Technorati Tags: Ann Paige, Maxwell Powell, OutInAsheville, LGBT, Asheville, Montreat, North Carolina, Pam Spaulding, Pam’s House Blend, PageOneQ, Chris Crain, CitizenCrain, Mike Rogers, 365gay.com News





Actually, Matt, I think your blog is far above those other blogs, which are notoriously repetitive, agenda-driven, picking stories to report that back up their ideas and ignoring those which negate them, and slanting to the point of dishonesty (and 365 has been out and out untruthful with their reporting in the past). I say this not so much to knock them as to praise you (even though I wouldn’t agree with you on everything), for having standards, and I hope yours will grow in popularity (especially with younger gays and lesbians) to set the standard for gay blogs in the future.
Thank you so much for your kind words Joe. They are humbling.
Okay, guy. (Not meant to be humbling, though. Meant to give you even MORE confidence! – lol)