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TAKE ME OUT highlights Patrick J. Adams, Julian Cihi, Hiram Delgado, Brandon J. Dirden, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Carl Lundstedt, Ken Marks, Michael Oberholtzer, Eduardo Ramos, Tyler Lansing Weaks, and Jesse Williams. 안전놀이터

In the Tony Award®-winning Take Me Out, dramatist Richard Greenberg commends the individual and expert complexities of America's #1 distraction. At the point when Darren Lemming (Jesse Williams), the star community defender for the Empires, lets out the unadulterated truth, the gathering off the field uncovers a flood of long-held implicit biases. Confronting a few antagonistic colleagues and laden fellowships, Darren is compelled to battle with the difficulties of being a gay ethnic minority inside the bounds of an exemplary American foundation. As the Empires battle to revitalize toward a title season, the players and their fans start to address custom, their loyalties, and the cost of triumph.

Billy Bean is one of just two Major League Baseball players to emerge as gay. For a long time, he played for the Detroit Tigers, Los Angeles Dodgers, and San Diego Padres. As a closeted gay man in the mercilessly hostile to gay universe of baseball, Bean confronted a tweaking decision between his adoration for the game and his first love. At last incapable to accommodate the two universes he lived in, he left ace baseball in the prime of his profession.

Whenever Bean turned out in 1999, his story tracked down cross country media inclusion, remembering for the Sunday front of The New York Times and on CNN. On December 8, 1999, he was consulted by Diane Sawyer on the broadly broadcast TV program 20/20. His diary, Going the Other Way, initially distributed in 2003, turned into a public blockbuster.

On July 15, 2014, Major League Baseball declared the arrangement of Billy as MLB's most memorable Ambassador for Inclusion, a job which puts him at the front of the League's endeavors for a fair and impartial work environment all through all of baseball. Billy presently serves at MLB as Vice President and Special Assistant to the Commissioner supervising different player training drives.

HOWARD BRYANT is the writer of nine books, Full Dissidence: Notes From an Uneven Playing Field, The Heritage: Black Athletes, A Divided America and the Politics of Patriotism, The Last Hero: A Life of Henry Aaron, Juicing the Game: Drugs, Power, and the Fight for the Soul of Major League Baseball, Shut Out: A Story of Race and Baseball in Boston, the three-book Legends sports series for center grade perusers, and Sisters and Champions: The True Story of Venus and Serena Williams, and added to 16 others.

He covered three games beats: the Oakland A's for the San Jose Mercury News (1998-2000), the New York Yankees for The Record (2001-2002), and the Washington Redskins (2005-2007). He was a journalist for the Boston Herald (2002-2005), has been a senior author for ESPN beginning around 2007 and the games reporter for NPR's Weekend Edition with Scott Simon beginning around 2006.

He has additionally counseled on a few narratives, including The Tenth Inning, Jackie Robinson, Hemingway, and Muhammad Ali, all by Ken Burns, and Lynn Novick's College Behind Bars.

KEN DAVIDOFF covered Major League Baseball from 1995 until March 2022, most as of late with The New York Post (2012-2022), for whom he filled in as a baseball reporter. He likewise composed for Newsday (2001-2012) and The Bergen Record (1994-2001). He actually should be visible discussing the Yankees on the WPIX (Channel 11) week after week show about the game's most well known group and has shown up wherever from ESPN to CNN to Fox News to the MLB Network and some more.