The Era of Corporate Allyship with the LGBTQ Community Is over. Maybe that’s a Good Thing.
6 Articles
6 Articles
The era of corporate allyship with the LGBTQ community is over. Maybe that’s a good thing.
I remember the heady days when Out magazine, which I edited from 2006 to 2018, would swell each June for L.G.B.T.Q. Pride month, its pages thick with ads. Our offices became cluttered with vodka bottles emblazoned in Pride flags, sneakers in rainbow hues, underwear so festively gay that they might as well have come with a parade permit. That deployment of marketing budgets to support the gay community became known as rainbow capitalism, and for …
As corporate sponsors walk away from Pride, some call for a return to its activist roots
Organizations across Canada are grappling with a chilled enthusiasm among sponsors and donors this year, forcing organizers to search for the delicate balance between growing its audience and staying true to its activist roots fighting for 2SLGBTQ+ rights.
Inside the Everyday Lives of Queer Couples Who Are Redefining What Love Looks Like
“It was hate at first sight,” Nick remembers. That’s how it began — not with sparks or perfect timing, but with a rumour, a misunderstanding, and a fair amount of suspicion. For many queer couples in India, love doesn’t follow a neat storyline. It often begins in unexpected places, grows slowly, and takes shape in the gaps left by what society doesn’t always offer: acceptance, templates, clear directions. In a world that still struggles to fully…
For the first time in Portugal, the Europride has joined thousands of people in the Adventure of Liberty in Lisbon to walk through the rights of the LGBTI+ community and claim the right to love without prejudice. Under the term "Proudly Yourselves", the Europride 2025 called for the celebration of authenticity, union and love, which was seen in the face of thousands of people who have fallen into the Lisboat adventure, engaged in cartoons and tr…
A whole piece of history told through testimonies and archival images to question the fragility of rights obtained through struggle. A documentary to remember, but also to enlighten the present. At the end of May, director Winnipégois, Noam Gonick, presented his latest film On the Move: Love and Queers Resistance. A documentary film that traces the great battles and milestones that paved the way for the birth of the LGBTQ+ rights struggle in Can…
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