This article may have been created or edited in return for undisclosed payments, a violation of Wikipedia's terms of use. It may require cleanup to comply with Wikipedia's content policies, particularly neutral point of view. (May 2019) |
James Mark Barnett II (born September 30, 1986) is an American entrepreneur and community activist from Dallas, Texas. At 17, he created a social networking site for gay teenagers and young adults called My-Boi.Com, which resulted in his father moving him from his Christian high school and his outing to his parents. His situation received national media attention and Barnett received several awards for his efforts on behalf of gay youth.[1] Barnett has since created a web development firm and a social networking site for the general high school and college community.
James Barnett | |
---|---|
Born | James Mark Barnett II September 30, 1986 |
Occupation | Entrepreneur |
Early life
editBarnett was motivated to create his own social networking site for gay youth after the then only existing service, XY.Com, went from being a free service to being fee based one.[2] In July 2004, he created My-Boi.Com, announcing the free status of his service in advertisements on XY.Com.
Expulsion, media attention and awards
editThree months after My-Boi's creation, Trinity Christian Academy was notified of Barnett's homosexuality, and the school administration called on him to further discuss his sexual orientation. The school also notified Barnett's parents about James' homosexuality and website. A compromise was eventually reached wherein Barnett's father withdrew him from the school to avoid any damage to James' permanent school record. He completed his studies at a public high school.[3]
Barnett's situation was picked up by both the mainstream and gay-focused press, with national organizations such as the Human Rights Council discussing his situation on The O'Reilly Factor.[3]
In January 2005, Barnett was awarded the Point Foundation Scholarship. Vance Lancaster, the executive director of the foundation, noted that "[James' story] is a sadly common and very real example of why Point Foundation scholarships are necessary."[4] In June 2005, Barnett was recognized with the Lawrence & Garner Courage Award, given by the Lambda Legal Foundation, for "outstanding courage in the face of uncertainty, discrimination and hostility in the advancement of civil rights for the LGBT and HIV/AIDS communities."[5]
Current activities
editBarnett graduated from Plano West Senior High in 2005, a public high school. He is a graduate of the University of Texas at Dallas, where he declared business as his major.
In 2007, Barnett launched DoorQ.com, a website for gay fans of science fiction, fantasy, and horror. This is the first project of Door Q Entertainment, a Los Angeles-based production company he launched in May 2007 with two associates, Jody Wheeler and Daniel Greeney.[6]
He also owns and operates Pointblanc, a web development corporation.
References
edit- ^ The Advocate - "Group gives grant to expelled gay student"
- ^ "Barnett concluded that paying online for participation in the site would hurt anonymity." "Christian school kicked a teen out for being gay"
- ^ a b The Advocate: Expelled teen’s parents threaten to kick him out. january 10, 2005.
- ^ Group gives grant to expelled student
- ^ "James Barrett awarded the 2005 Courage Award..." Lambda Legal Press Release Archived 2006-09-10 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Door Q Entertainment « Blue Seraph Productions". Archived from the original on 2012-02-02. Retrieved 2012-01-31.