
A gay rights activist dressed as Marilyn Monroe performs during a Gay Pride parade in Santiago, Chile, on September 30. Thousands of people took part in the Gay Parade, to demonstrate against discrimination and to demand equal rights for gays and lesbians. - Reuters
The following is a copy of an article run on the international wire service Associated Press about the cancellation of Buju Banton's shows. The article was posted September 22, 2006.
LOS ANGELES (AP):
A nightclub has cancelled a performance by Buju Banton, a reggae star whose violent lyrics about gays and lesbians have made him a controversial figure, after receiving complaints from patrons.
Email messages and phone calls from concerned customers prompted the cancellation of the October 2 show, said Adam Manacker, general manager of the Highland nightclub and restaurant.
"We felt it was the right thing to do after doing some research on the matter," Manacker said.
Full refunds will be given.
In July, concerts featuring Banton and Beenie Man were nixed in Britain after activists said both artists refused to stop using anti-gay lyrics.
Two of Banton's songs released early in his career, Batty Rider and Boom Bye Bye, glorify the shooting of gay men.
His most recent album, Too Bad, released earlier this month, omits homophobic lyrics.
The husky-voiced Banton has been a major star in his native Jamaica since the early 1990s with brash dancehall music and, more recently, a traditional reggae sound. His career has been stunted in the United States because of his attitude toward gays.
Banton was tried and acquitted on charges that he participated in the beating of six gay men by a Jamaica gang in 2004.