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Chasten James Glezman Buttigieg (/ ˈ tʃ æ s t ə n ˈ b uː t ɪ dʒ ə dʒ / CHAS-tən BOO-tij-əj; né Glezman; born June 23, 1989) is an American teacher, author, and LGBT+ activist. He is married to Pete Buttigieg , the former U.S. Secretary of Transportation , and was an advisor, spokesperson, and social media campaigner during his ...
I Have Something to Tell You is a 2020 memoir by Chasten Buttigieg. It was published by Atria Books in September 2020 [ 1 ] and includes topics from his early life in a conservative Midwestern family including sexual assault , domestic violence , and growing up closeted .
Pete and Chasten Buttigieg in 2019. Buttigieg announced his engagement to Chasten Glezman, a junior high school teacher, in a December 14, 2017, Facebook post. [319] [320] They had been dating since August 2015 after meeting on the dating app Hinge. [19] [321] They were married on June 16, 2018, in a private ceremony at the Cathedral of St. James.
Pete Buttigieg, American politician, and Chasten Buttigieg, American schoolteacher and writer (m. 2018) [191] Mario Cantone and Jerry Dixon (m. 2011) [192] Andrew Bayer, American DJ and Grammy-nominated music producer is married to a man (m. 2015) [193] Alan Cumming and Grant Shaffer (m. January 2012) [194] Allan Corduner and Juha Leppäjärvi ...
Came out as gay in 2015, [153] and married Chasten Glezman in 2018 [154] Christopher Cabaldon (born 1965) Democratic [c] California: Mayor of West Sacramento (1998-2020) Openly gay [155] Bill Crews (born 1952) Republican: Iowa: Mayor of Melbourne, Iowa (1984-1998) Possibly first out LGBT elected official in Iowa Edgardo Cruz Vélez Puerto Rico
Chasten Buttigieg (born 1989), husband of politician Pete Buttigieg Channing Chasten (born 2000), American soccer player Gamal Abdel Chasten , American poet and playwright
DMZ is an American comic book series set in a near future war-torn New York City that ran for 72 issues from 2005 to 2012. Characters in the story are, for the most part, subjects of either the United States federal government and its corporate affiliates, the rival Free States of America, or natives of the demilitarized zone (DMZ) of Manhattan island.
Free to Choose Network was founded by Bob Chitester. [5] At the time of Free to Choose Network's founding, Chitester was the general manager of two public broadcasters in Erie, Pennsylvania: the PBS channel WQLN-TV and the NPR station WQLN-FM .