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LGBT Older Adults Face Challenges Like Discrimination and Isolation – ideastream

It’s mid-June. That means it’s mid-pride month for the LGBTQ plus community. But while there have been many positive strides in recent years for this community in terms of representation in the media, government and increased allyship, there are still plenty of challenges for those who are out, especially for older adults. 

According to the national advocacy organization SAGE, older adults in the LGBT community are less likely than their heterosexual peers to reach out to health care providers, senior centers, meal and other entitlement programs, because they fear discrimination and harrassment based on their sexual orientation or gender identity.

LGBT people are also twice as likely to age alone and four times less likely to have children to help take care of them as they age. 

According to a National LGBT Health Education Center report, rates of depression are more than twice as high among LGBT older adults, compared to older adults in general. 

The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated some of the issues seniors faced, as many struggled with isolation. Adult day care centers closed, and people had trouble accessing virtual events. 

To start The Sound of Ideas, we’ll talk to community partners who will lay out this issue in greater detail, and will discuss resources available to support this aging population. 

Later in the hour, we’ll look ahead to some Juneteenth celebrations happening around the city this weekend.

Resources

LGBT Community Center of Greater Cleveland

Benjamin Rose Institute on Aging

Assembly approves transgender athlete ban – Spectrum News 1

MADISON, Wis. — A pair of bills banning transgender athletes from participating in girls’ and women’s sports at both the K-12 and collegiate levels was given the green light from the Wisconsin Assembly Wednesday.

The debate over the bills comes right in the middle of LGBT Pride Month and though there’s a whole lot of talk, the legislation seems to be destined for a veto by Democratic Gov. Tony Evers.


What You Need To Know

  • A pair of bills passed by the Assembly Wednesday bans transgender athletes from participating in girls’ and women’s sports
  • The proposals passed along party lines with all Republicans in support and all Democrats against
  • The pair of bills still need to be approved by the State Senate
  • Democratic Gov. Tony Evers is likely to veto the bills if they reach his desk

Amira Pierotti, who is going into their senior year at Memorial High School, doesn’t consider themselves an athlete, but they have plenty of friends who are.

“The reality is that many trans students, even if their school allows them to play on a team that best aligns with their gender, they can’t participate in any competitions,” Pierotti said.

Pierotti

Pierotti believes the WIAA’s rules are already too strict, which require at least a year of hormone replacement therapy and parental consent before a transgender girl can compete on a girls’ team.

“Student’s options are to go on a co-ed team, which will likely turn out to just be a trans team or be labeled as a trans team—that’s harmful, or to be outed—that’s harmful,” Pierotti said.

State Rep. Barb Dittrich (R-Oconomowoc), who is spearheading the ban, disagrees and thinks the WIAA’s policies don’t go far enough.

Dittrich

“There are medical studies showing that athletes who have been under hormone treatment, male athletes that have been under hormone treatment for two years, still hold a 10% advantage over biological women in those sports,” Dittrich said.

Ahead of Wednesday’s vote, the Democrats in the LGBTQ+ Caucus unveiled this year’s ‘Equality Agenda,’ which includes six bills. Among them, banning conversion therapy and removing discriminatory language from the state’s constitution and statutes.

Protesters hold signs with messages of support during rally held outside the state Capitol Wednesday on afternoon in Madison, Wis.

“To our transgender community, their families, and especially to our non-binary and transgender young people we say: we see you, we honor you for who you are. You are valued and you belong,” State Rep. Lee Snodgrass (D-Appleton) said during a press conference Wednesday morning.

So far, none of the bills have received a public hearing or bipartisan support.

Protester makes sign during rally held outside the state Capitol on Wednesday afternoon in Madison, Wis.

As for Pierotti, they are not giving up.

“These laws are not needed,” Pierotti said. “There’s no scientific basis and the reality is we’re not assaulters. We just want to live our lives.”

Assembly Bills 195 and 196 still need approval from the State Senate before going to Gov. Evers.

‘Evil’ or ‘supportive’: Public speaks for and against Penncrest library gay pride display – GoErie.com

SAEGERTOWN — Penncrest School District residents packed a district meeting room for the second time Wednesday night to address the Penncrest School Board about a recent display of books for Gay Pride Month at the Maplewood High School library.

Some residents supported the display and denounced School Director David Valesky’s social media post that called the display “totally evil.”

Background:Crawford resident petitions for ouster of 2 Penncrest school directors

Others supported Valesky and denounced the display.

Residents also crowded the Saegertown meeting room during a board work session Monday night.

This is a screenshot of the Facebook post by Penncrest School Director David Valesky. Valesky used a photo of the library display posted by another man and added his own comments.

Valesky did not comment on the controversy during Wednesday’s School Board business meeting. School directors adjourned the meeting without board member remarks when Melanie Weed tried to address them during the portion of the agenda set aside for directors’ comments.

Weed, a Penncrest graduate, launched an online petition calling for the recall of Valesky and another school director, Luigi DeFrancesco, who shared Valesky’s post. Weed no longer lives in the school district. According to board policy, only district residents may address the board during public meetings.

Weed was escorted from the meeting room after refusing to yield the podium. The School Board then adjourned the meeting.

The controversy that divided the Crawford County community began last month when Valesky posted on Facebook about the library display of gay pride books.

“Besides the point of being totally evil, this is not what we need to be teaching kids. They aren’t at school to be brainwashed into thinking homosexuality is okay. It’s actually being promoted to the point that it’s even ‘cool,’ ” Valesky said in the post. The post shared a photo of the display.

Residents speaking for and against the book display and Valesky’s comment received almost equal applause from audiences that packed the School Board meeting room for both meetings this week.

Intolerance should not be tolerated, but the advocacy of “lifestyles contrary” to the Judeo-Christian belief system is wrong, Fred Bryant, of Centerville, told the School Board on Wednesday.

Bryant called for the formation of a parent task force to consider “controversial” books purchased by the schools with limited dollars.

Anne Gamber, of Guys Mills, thanked Valesky and School Director Luigi DeFrancesco, who shared Valesky’s social media post, for standing up for “Christian values.”

Debbie Cagle, of Centerville, applauded the library display.

“If you remove these books, what will be removed next, books on slavery, books on the civil rights movement … Where will it stop,” Cagle said. “Book displays are not pushing homosexuality, contrary to what Mr. Valesky says.”

Hate has no place in the schools, especially from a board member who had sworn to uphold the constitution and protect all students from discrimination, Cagle said. 

Saegertown High School language arts teacher Stacey Hetrick addressed the board both Monday and Wednesday nights to support the book display and LGBTQ students.

“A school’s job is to provide a fair and equitable education for all, including providing resources,” Hetrick said Monday. “Books remind us that we are not alone.”

Hetrick asked Wednesday night’s audience to stand in silence with her for 30 seconds in support of all Penncrest students.

The Maplewood library book display was set up in early May in advance of Gay Pride Month in June, Penncrest schools Superintendent Timothy Glasspool said in a written statement to local media. There were simultaneous displays of books about baseball, music and bullying, he said.

The Penncrest School District is committed to providing a safe learning environment for all students, Glasspool said in the statement.

“As a public school, we teach tolerance and celebrate diversity,” he said.

William Hetrick, also a language arts teacher at Saegertown High School, on Wednesday night “strongly urged” school directors to provide diversity training for all Penncrest students and staff.

Weed was open about being queer in school and was tormented by classmates, first at Maplewood and then at Saegertown High School, Weed said.

In the petition, Weed called Valesky’s comments “hateful, hurtful things. The kind of things that make kids kill themselves, the kind of things that makes other people kill kids.”

The petition had more than 4,600 signatures Wednesday afternoon. Signing the petition was not limited to Penncrest School District residents.

Pennsylvania law provides no process to remove an elected school director from office, said Stuart Knade, chief legal officer for the Pennsylvania School Boards Association, in an email to the Erie Times-News.

Knade did not comment on the Penncrest controversy, only on Pennsylvania law.

“The bottom line is that there is no provision of PA law that grants a school board the power to remove one of its members from office,” Knade said. “PA law provides no recall process for school board members or most other elected officials no matter how many people sign on to the petition. That means essentially that the ballot box is left as the sole means in PA to remove school board members because of opposition to their views, statements or voting records.”

Contact Valerie Myers at vmyers@timesnews.com. Follow her on Twitter@ETNmyers.

“Never too late”: Colorado man who came out at 90 finds online connection during COVID-19 – The Know

Kenneth Felts, who came out at 90-years-old, found community during the pandemic through virtual events at The Center on Colfax/ (Denver7)

At 90 years old, Kenneth Felts realized he’d die one day without most people truly knowing who he was.

“I was going to go to the grave as a straight person,” Felts said.

That’s why, as he wrote a memoir after beating cancer, Felts decided to come out as gay, first to his daughter last year and then to his friends on social media.

“Didn’t mean to, but I put it on a public Facebook and wham! I started getting memos, letters, and everything else,” Felts said. “It’s a freedom that I received from coming out that made it possible to really start enjoying life.”

Felts is just one example of an elder who has found connection through The Center on Colfax’s virtual elder program.

Read the full story from our partner at thedenverchannel.com.

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Dancing outside with Pride | Penn Today – Penn Today

Sun, sweat, and moves were on display on Wednesday, June 16, as members of Penn’s LGBT Center hosted “Dance Outside w/ Pride,” a virtual and in-person dance class with Philadelphia choreographer Devon Sinclair.

During Pride Month, Penn’s LGBT Center kicks its outreach schedule into full swing, hosting a hybrid virtual/in-person event every Wednesday, along with its recurring events throughout the summer, including “Summer Weekly Kiki!” and “Summertime LGBTQ+ Staff and Facul-Tea.”

Wednesday’s event was a combination of exercise for dancers of all levels and celebration of Pride Month, with joyous weather and slamming beats.

For the remainder of Pride Month, the Center will host “Pride on Ice” on June 23 at Penn’s Ice Rink, and an online “LGBTQ+ Pride Trivia Night” on June 30.

5 Things To Do This Weekend In Essex County – Patch.com

ESSEX COUNTY, NJ — Looking for something to do this weekend? Check out this list of goings-on in Essex County.

Did we miss something? Let us know the details in the comments section, or learn more about how to post announcements or events to your local Patch site.

FREE HOCKEY FOR GIRLS

  • When/Where: Sat, June 19 at 9:15 a.m., Richard J. Codey Arena, 560 Northfield Avenue in West Orange
  • What: The New Jersey Devils Youth Hockey Club invites girls of all ages to participate in our Try Hockey Free program. Players should bring helmets from home, but we will provide loaner skates. Learn more about this event here.

HAVE A BEER ON JUNETEENTH

  • When/Where: Saturday, June 19, from 1 p.m. to 10 p.m. at the Montclair Brewery, 101 Walnut Street in Montclair
  • What: Montclair’s first microbrewery will host a Juneteenth celebration, including performances on the brewery’s outdoor stage. Learn more about this event here.

STRETCH YOUR LEGS WITH YOGA

  • When/Where: 9 to 11 a.m. on Sunday, June 20 at The Oval in Caldwell
  • What: A free, Father’s Day yoga event in Caldwell will give people a chance to stretch their legs – and learn more about the future of the Caldwell Community Center while they’re at it. The event is open to people of all ages and fitness levels, organizers said. Learn more about this event here.

PRIDE EVENT: A COMING OUT ANTHOLOGY

  • When/Where: Sat, June 19 at 7 p.m., Oskar Schindler Performing, Boland Drive in West Orange
  • What: “This is Our Story: A Coming Out Anthology” examines and celebrates the experiences of LGBTQ+ people of diverse backgrounds before, during, and after coming out. Through the lens of real stories submitted by real people, playwrights Nicholas J. Clarey and Tommy Jamerson craft a series of vignettes, told through monologues, scenes, poems, and songs, to bring these stories, struggles, celebrations, and triumphs to life on the stage. All profits will be donated to the LGBT RAIN Foundation of Essex County. Learn more about this event here.

ART MUSEUM CELEBRATES JUNETEENTH

  • When/Where: Sat, June 19 at 10 a.m., The Newark Museum of Art, 49 Washington Street in Newark
  • What: Celebrate Juneteenth with The Newark Museum of Art! Explore the significance of Juneteenth with us as we deep dive into history to better equip ourselves with the tools necessary to bring reform and activate change in the present and future. All programs will be available on Zoom, and live on FB, Twitter, YouTube, and Twitch. Learn more about this event here.

Top 6 Places To Visit In Maine This Summer – Travel Off Path

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Maine is the state known for its gorgeous nature areas, spectacular coastlines peppered with lighthouses and maritime history. The 23rd state of the union also played a role in United States history dating back to the American Revolution. Maine is a popular summer destination for New Englanders and people from all over the United States. The top destinations to visit in Maine this summer are waiting for your visit. 

portland.

Top Destinations to Visit in Maine

See the Cultural Hub of Portland

Maine’s largest city has many things to see and do. For some history lessons, you can visit the Maine Historical Society or take a tour and see the numerous landmarks around the city. There are many outdoor adventures in Portland such as Spring Meadows Golf Course, Funtown Splashtown USA, Fore Points Marina and the Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens. Portland also has much to offer with delicious New England cuisine. Don’t visit Portland without indulging with one of Maine’s famous lobsters. 

portland2.jpg

Take a Trolley or Boat Tour from Bar Harbor

Bar Harbor is located on Desert Island and is a wonderful coastal community. When you take a stroll around Bar Harbor, you will be overwhelmed by its stunning coastline, water views and storybook charm. The water activities and boat tours available at Bar Harbor are numerous. They include paddle boarding, canoeing, whale watching expeditions, lobster fishing, Windjammer Cruises and ferry services, plus much more. On land visitors can do a bike tour, or see the Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens. Visitors can experience Bar Harbor Ghost Tours, play golf, ride Oli’s Trolley, or take a guided tour of the town. 

Oli's Trolley.

See Nature and Wildlife at Acadia National Park

Acadia National Park is 47, 000 acres of stunning landscape that is full of rocky beaches, woodlands and an abundance of wildlife. You may even spot Harbor seals sunning themselves on the bedrock in a perfect position for a photo opportunity.  At the park you can hike the 150 miles of trails and see the granite peak of Cadillac Mountain, the highest point on the east coast of the United States. The park has many outdoor activities available to its guests including fishing, biking, birdwatching, boating, horseback riding, plus much more. Campsites are also available for guests in the park. 

See the Quaint Little Town of Camden

The town of Camden on the mis coast has something for everyone year round. You can get an awesome view of the Penobscot Bay atop Mount Battle at Camden Hills State Park. There are many niche boat tours that depart from Camden Harbor daily.  Barret’s Cove is a quiet beach destination that is a respite from the busyness of downtown Camden in the summer tourist season.  This little town is known for its gourmet food and renowned Maine chefs. There are a great deal of restaurants along the waterfront area and downtown, primarily serving local seafood and other scrumptious meals. 

Camden Maine

Watch the Sun Set at Kennebunkport

Kennebunkport is one of the prettiest towns in Maine. The coastal town has many beautiful beaches including Goose Rocks Beach and Colony Beach. You can take a journey on a wonderful Maine Schooner, or a fishing or lobstering excursion on one of the boat tours available in town. The Brick Store Museum and the Nott House contain a number of historical artifacts. Another historical highlight in Kennebunkport is the famous Seashore Trolley Museum. Visit Dock Square and spend some time at the open air cafes and browse the shops. 

Kennebunkport

Beach it at Ogunquit

Ogunquit, located on the southern Maine coast, is the quintessential beach  vacation destination. The local Chamber of Commerce hosts many events that take place year round in town. There are also several live entertainment and performing arts venues operating here for guest’s nighttime entertainment. Take a walk along Marginal Way and breath in the salt air and see the crashing surf. Due to its many gay friendly bars, Ogunquit has become a popular vacation destination for the LGBTQ community. The Main Beach at Ogunquit with its shallow river is the best place  for children to swim, while Ogunquit Beach is the best location for all water sports. 

Ogunquit Beach

Read More:

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Alaska Airlines reveals new Pride-themed livery – Boston News, Weather, Sports | WHDH 7News

(CNN) — As always, June is a-jostle with corporations revealing their Pride-themed initiatives, but one US airline has gone a little further than the usual rainbow-decked Instagram post.

Alaska Airlines debuted its Pride plane on Tuesday, truly nailing its colors to the mast — or decals to the fuselage.

The Airbus A320’s new livery has “Fly with Pride” written on the side and the design features brightly colored silhouettes of planes and stripes on the main body and engines.

The design choice, says Alaska Airlines on Twitter, is “iconic rainbow stripes & inclusive colors such as brown, black, light blue, white & pink to represent BIPOC & Transgender communities. Without those groups of people & their activism, we would not have Pride today.”

Accompanying “Fly with Pride” pins are available for $4 on the company’s online store. The airline is also celebrating via its in-flight entertainment, with its Pride Month movie and TV selection including classics such as “Milk” and “Cabaret” and series “Pose” and “Little Fires Everywhere.”

The airline tells CNN Travel that it began the design process for the plane back in April, and it will be flying with their network for a whole year — not just Pride Month.

“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time a US airline has introduced a Pride-inspired plane,” says the Alaska Airlines spokesperson.

The “One Mile at a Time” blog notes that the A320, registration N854VA, must have had its makeover turned around pretty quickly, as it was operating a full schedule to June 12 and then was in the hangar for just two days.

Decals are a faster, less expensive way of decorating an aircraft than the more traditional stencil-and-paint technique.

While painting a regular passenger plane costs somewhere in the region of $150,000 to $300,000, using decals — essentially massive stickers, produced to industry specifications — can cut costs, and makes a refresh quicker too.

“One Mile at a Time” also points out that you can keep abreast of the plane’s day-of adventures via FlightRadar24. As of writing, it’s in Portland, having previously shown off its new livery along the US West Coast in Seattle, San Diego, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Santa Ana and across the Canadian border to Ontario.

Virgin Atlantic hosted a Pride flight in 2018, fronted by Broadway star Tituss Burgess and staffed entirely by LGBT pilots and cabin crew. JetBlue followed suit in 2019 by naming a plane “Shantay Blue Stay,” in honor of a partnership with “RuPaul’s Drag Race.”

Back in 2016, Iceland’s Wow Air (R.I.P.) used the registration code “GAY” on an A330 to show its support for LGBT communities, while Australia’s Qantas also gave an A330 a colorful makeover in 2017, writing the airline’s name in rainbow colors and adding a Pride flag to the kangaroo logo on its tail.

(Copyright (c) 2021 CNN. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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Assembly Republicans pass bills excluding trans girls and women from sports – Wisconsin Examiner

Rep. Barbara Dittrich - Trans athlete bills
Rep. Barbara Dittrich (R-Oconomowoc) wrote the bills passed on Wednesday that would exclude trans women and girls from playing sports. (Screenshot | WisEye)

Multiple times during a debate on Wednesday over two bills that would exclude transgender girls and women from playing sports in leagues that align with their gender identity, the bills’ author, Rep. Barbara Dittrich (R-Oconomowoc) expressed outrage over accusations from Democrats that the legislation was “shameful” or “cruel.” 

“We’ve heard some really unkind rhetoric here and it hasn’t come from my side of the aisle,” Dittrich said. 

Yet on Wednesday, over the course of Assembly Republicans’ pre-session news conference and the floor debate, Dittrich and Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (R-Rochester) used the terms “biological male” and “biological female” at least a dozen times. 

The use of these terms, purposefully referring to transgender people by something other than their gender identity, is considered by GLAAD, an LGBTQ advocacy organization, to be harmful to trans people. 

“Problematic phrases like those above are reductive and overly-simplify a very complex subject,” GLAAD says in a language guide. “A person’s sex is determined by a number of factors — not simply genetics — and a person’s biology does not ‘trump’ a person’s gender identity. Finally, people are born babies: they are not ‘born a man’ or ‘born a woman.’”

The two bills, one which would exclude trans girls from school-sponsored sports and another which would exclude trans women from collegiate sports, ultimately both passed 59-38 on party line votes. 

But both bills are expected to be vetoed by Democratic Gov. Tony Evers — so the debate devolved into Democrats begging for Republicans to vote no on the bills so as not to harm trans kids watching the debate and Republicans saying they were outraged by the idea that boys will choose to identify as girls so as to gain an advantage and win competitions. 

Dittrich said she’s had a number of calls from constituents worried about their children playing sports with trans girls. Yet the only examples of trans athletes in Wisconsin she has been able to produce (in a since-deleted tweet) involved amateur adults. 

Dittrich introduced her bills after similar legislation was introduced in Republican-held states across the country. The authors of the bills in other states were also unable to point to examples of trans girls dominating school sports leagues in their states, an Associated Press report found. 

Repeatedly, Democrats noted excluding trans girls from sports could have harmful mental health effects and will likely prevent children from having the often valuable experiences that sports can offer. 

Rep. Kristina Shelton (D-Green Bay), a former physical education teacher and basketball coach, said she always aimed for her classrooms and gyms to be inclusive and welcoming places for students of all identities and abilities, that she benefited from women’s sports and that allowing trans girls the opportunity to find a place on a team does not threaten the existence of a local high school’s girls basketball team. 

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“What is the role our government should serve in regard to this legislation? Trans kids aren’t new, but you know what is new? What’s new is our effort to build a society that actually sees them, that loves them and defends them fiercely,” Shelton said. “I’m going to tell you all as a legislator, as a teacher, as a mom, I wish I could, but I can’t protect kids from getting hurt all of the time. But I can say without a doubt in my bones and in my being, that the Wisconsin State Legislature should not be one of the things that causes our children harm. Everyone counts, folks. But we’re all accountable, and those that vote yes on this bill will be held accountable.” 

If these bills were to become law, organizations such as the NCAA would refuse to hold tournaments and championships in Wisconsin — a rule that has already affected other states. After North Carolina moved to ban transgender people from using public restrooms that align with their gender identity, the governing body of college sports refused to hold events in the state. 

In Wisconsin — following last week’s announcement that the NCAA College Football Playoff could expand to 12 teams and hold games in home stadiums — the passage of these bills could prevent the University of Wisconsin-Madison from holding a playoff game in Camp Randall Stadium, Rep. Katrina Shankland (D-Stevens Point) noted. 

Additionally, the NCAA and International Olympic Committee have already long had in place nuanced rules setting out how trans athletes can participate. Yet despite these research-based guidelines, Republicans touted disputed science as the foundation of their argument. 

“This isn’t bigotry, this is science,” Rep. Janel Brantdjen (R-Menomonee Falls) said as she told a story about her days as a high school swimmer who wasn’t as fast as her male classmates. 

And even as the Republicans said they were simply trying to protect the aims of federal Title IX regulations that protect womens’ rights to equal educational opportunities, the administration of President Joe Biden announced that those Title IX protections would be extended to trans and gay students. 

Democrats said they wanted to be spending time debating other, more pressing concerns or the provisions they introduced early Wednesday morning in their “Equality Agenda” to expand rights to LGBTQ Wisconsinites — but instead they spent several hours insisting that despite the actions of Republicans, trans children deserve to be included in the state. 

“I wish we were not having this debate today. I wish that Republicans would focus on the significant, pressing issues that are facing our state, rather than attempting to distract Wisconsinites from their failures to govern by targeting vulnerable children,” Rep. Greta Neubauer (D-Racine), who is bisexual, said. “The road ahead is long, it will not be easy. There is much work left to do. But we will do that work with compassion, with love and with joy. We will stand with our trans youth, and we will not let anyone take away our pride.”

Pride month brings renewed focus to LGBTQ+ stressors and challenges – DVIDS

ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. – As the Department of Defense and military services continue to celebrate gay pride month, there is a renewed focus on the stressors and challenges experienced by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender service members and their families.

As part of a focused effort to examine the health of the Army family, the Army Public Health Center is preparing a report, expected to be released this fall, examining the stressors impacting Army family health, including those experienced by LGBT Soldiers and their families. One particular area of focus for the report is the stressors experienced by sexual minority groups, including perceived stigma and sexual victimization.

According to the 2018 DOD Workplace and Gender Relations Survey of Active Duty Members, which included questions about sexual orientation but not gender identity, about 14 percent of female survey respondents and 3 percent of male survey respondents identified as LGB. The survey also noted that 7 percent of female respondents and 5 percent of male respondents selected “prefer not to answer,” indicating there is a subset of Soldiers on which the Army lacks visibility with regard to sexual orientation; and that up to 23 percent of female Soldiers and 9 percent of male Soldiers may be underrepresented and understudied sexual minorities.

A recent RAND study titled Sexual Assault of Sexual Minorities in the U.S. Military also examined the 2018 WGRA data and found service members who identify as LGB or who do not indicate that they identify as heterosexual represented only 12 percent of the active component population in 2018, but accounted for approximately 43 percent of all sexually assaulted service members in that year.

In his remarks June 9 as part of DOD Pride Month, Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III noted that progress has been made for a new generation of LGBT soldiers, sailors, airmen, guardians and Marines openly and proudly serving their country since the repeal of “Don’t ask Don’t Tell” 10 years ago. But he said more needs to be done.

“Our work isn’t done until we tackle the challenge of sexual assault and harassment in the force,” said Austin. “And we know that service members from this community are at elevated risk of such crimes.”

Dr. Matthew Beymer, an APHC epidemiologist, said one of the challenges when looking at the WGRA data as well as data from the DOD’s 2018 Health Related Behavior Survey, which asks service members questions about health-related issues that can affect force readiness or the ability to meet the demands of military life, is there is limited surveillance data on LGBT military personnel experiencing sexual assault.

“Few studies have investigated the underlying causes or risk factors for LGB service members who have experienced sexual assault,” said Beymer. “This is clearly an issue that could benefit from any allocation of resources and evidence-based investigation.”

The Sexual Assault of Sexual Minorities in the U.S. Military reached a similar conclusion.

“Successfully preventing these assaults might require understanding the circumstances in which they occur and the motivations of the attackers. In particular, it would be critical to learn if sexual assaults on service members who do not describe themselves as heterosexual are primarily hate crimes or harassment based on sexual orientation rather than crimes with sexual motives.”

Another area requiring more clarity is to better understand the stressors facing LGBT Soldiers and family members as sexual minority groups, said Lisa Polyak, an APHC senior environmental engineer, who is collaborating with Beymer to prepare the Health of the Army Family vignette focused on this issue and who has also experienced some of these stressors with her partner as they raised their two daughters over the past three decades.

“It’s reasonable to assume that stressors in the military population largely mirror stressors in the civilian population,” said Polyak. “Decades of discrimination based on sexual orientation in policy, religion and K-12 education, where these minority groups experienced bullying, have led to minority stress.”

A meta-analysis published by the National Institutes of Health in 2008 of 214,344 heterosexual and 11,971 non-heterosexual people reported disparate rates of adverse mental health outcomes. Specifically, non-heterosexual people had a 2.5-fold higher risk for suicide attempt when compared to heterosexual people and were also at higher risk for depression and anxiety.

“Over this past year, we lost a gay Soldier to suicide,” said Capt. Matt Visser, commander 40th Public Affairs Detachment, 101st Airborne Division, Fort Bragg, North Carolina, who identifies as gay. “Despite all the organizational progress on inclusivity, I had to wonder what could have been done to prevent this loss. Could we have improved access to in-person behavioral health support, which had mostly transitioned to telephonic care at our installation as a COVID mitigation measure? Would an increase in equal opportunity training on sexual minorities have improved organizational awareness, cohesion, and sense of belonging?”

In addition, other studies have demonstrated higher odds of both sexual assault victimization and re-victimization among lesbian and bisexual women in the U.S. compared to heterosexual women.

Beymer said there is also a need for meaningful data on the health status of transgender service members.

“We are aware of only two DOD surveys that queried for transgender status among service members (2015 HRBS, 2016 WGRA), but neither of these surveys reported health outcomes for transgender personnel,” said Beymer.

The 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey (the largest survey examining the experiences of transgender people in the U.S.) found that transgender people experience significant health disparities relative to the U.S. population:

· 39 percent of respondents experienced serious psychological distress compared with 5 percent of the U.S. population;
· 40 percent of transgender respondents have attempted suicide in their lifetime, nearly nine times the rate in the U.S. population (4.6%)

In January, President Joe Biden issued two executive orders that impact DOD transgender individuals: EO 1398, “Preventing And Combating Discrimination On The Basis Of Gender Identity Or Sexual Orientation,” and EO 14004, “Enabling All Qualified Americans To Serve Their Country In Uniform.”

“The revised policies in these instructions restore the DOD’s original 2016 policies regarding transgender service,” said John Kirby, Pentagon press secretary. “Specifically, they prohibit discrimination on the basis of gender identity or an individual’s identification as transgender. They also provide a means to access into the military in one’s self-identify gender, provided all appropriate standards are met.”

The services are still in the process of updating their policies to bring them in line with the executive orders. Within the federal government, many organizations are adapting some of these recommendations that the Army could also implement to improve Army support to transgender Soldiers:

* In accordance with DODI 1300.28 (In-Service Transition for Transgender Service Members), support and resource gender transition

* Adopt transgender-inclusive policies such as allowing service members to identify their preferred pronouns, and encourage the workforce to respect and use the pronouns of choice.

* Offer transgender diversity training to all service members

* Offer resources and support groups for transgender service members and their families

The coming Health of the Family report will offer some recommendations for senior leaders and policy makers to address some of these issues, said Beymer and Polyak. The lack of demographic data on LGBT Soldiers means that senior Army Leaders are unaware of the issues affecting the health and readiness of at least 5 percent (or more) of their Soldiers.

“I think the Army, through policy, has attempted to be more inclusive and accepting of LGBTQ+ persons,” said 1st Lt. Ashley Carrillo, a social work intern at the Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center, Fort Hood, Texas. “More trainings on sexuality and inclusive language would be a helpful start. When someone is asked, ‘Do you have a significant other?’ rather than asking a female, ‘Are you married and what does your husband do?’ it allows for open dialogue and the space for someone to share what they are comfortable sharing, and does not place someone in a position to have to defend, explain, educate or feel judged.”

Awareness of the health and readiness issues faced by LGBT personnel begins with collecting demographic data in the same way we collect demographics on age, sex, race and ethnicity, said Polyak.

Polyak explained improvements in demographic visibility of sexual minority service members must address both sexual orientation (to provide visibility on LGB Soldiers) and gender identity (to provide visibility on transgender and gender non-conforming Soldiers).

“Engaging in targeted data collection will allow the Army to assess the needs of LGBT Soldiers and, by extension, their Families, more accurately, thus facilitating policy and programs that ensure equitable health outcomes for all Soldiers, regardless of sexual orientation,” said Polyak.

The deficit of sexual orientation and gender identity data in U.S. population health surveys and studies has been flagged by the U.S. Surgeon General in the Healthy People 2030 project as a priority issue in order to improve health status for LGBT populations.

“In order to improve access and remove barriers to care, the Department of Defense should incorporate LGBTQ+ voluntary demographic data collection. Integrating these data would enhance our ability to construct human resource and healthcare practices that better serve LGBTQ+ communities and their families,” said Visser.

Austin concluded his DOD Pride event remarks saying, “Our work isn’t done until we recognize that the health of the force fully incorporates mental health, including for LGBTQ+ service members. That’s why we recommit to treating all wounds, both visible and invisible. And our work isn’t done until we create a safe and supportive workplace for everyone – free from discrimination, harassment, and fear.”

Keep up to date on the latest Health of the Army Family, or HoAF, information by visiting APHC’s HoAF campaign page at https://phc.amedd.army.mil/topics/campaigns/armyfamily/Pages/default.aspx.

The Army Public Health Center focuses on promoting healthy people, communities, animals and workplaces through the prevention of disease, injury and disability of Soldiers, military retirees, their families, veterans, Army civilian employees, and animals through population-based monitoring, investigations, and technical consultations.

Date Taken: 06.17.2021
Date Posted: 06.17.2021 07:17
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Children’s Network Ratings Dramatically Drop As It Ramps Up On Pro-LGBT Content – Christianity Daily

A decline in television and internet ratings for the ViacomCBS-owned Nickelodeon suggests that its campaign to increase pro-LGBT content on its platform did not work to bring in new viewers and instead has pushed existing viewers away. A report reveals that the children’s network has lost up to two-thirds of its audience in the last four years.

According to the independent entertainment blog Pirates and Princesses (via Faithwire), Nickelodeon has seen a major decline in viewership since July 2017, when it had an average of 1.3 million to just an average of 372,000 in June 2021, calling it “catastrophically bad” that the children’s network lost as much as two-thirds of its audience. Its response has been to capitalize on nostalgia and bring back older Nickelodeon shows such as “The Rugrats” and “iCarly,” albeit with a pro-LGBT twist.

But Pirates and Princesses argues that such pro-LGBT content such in “The Rugrats” is not necessarily the answer to a dramatic ratings drop in one of the most recognizable networks for kids. The blog argued, “It’s hard to see how a children’s show about infants is best served in advertising when the news is all about sexuality.”

What’s worse for Nickelodeon is that it is also seeing a major decline in viewers on its YouTube videos. In fact, their videos were “downvoted to such a degree that they’ve now hidden the ratio.” On any normal YouTube video, users can see how many people “liked” and “disliked” the video. Nickelodeon’s channel appears to have disabled this function.

The Daily Wire reported that the dramatic drop in ratings is “particularly bad news” for ViacomCBS as it tries to beef up its streaming service, Paramount+ while trying to attract more viewers with its pro-LGBT content. Nickelodeon programs available on the streaming platform’s library and the LGBT community appear to be keeping watch.

According to TVLine, the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation or GLAAD released a “Where We Are on TV” report that complained about how there was a slight decrease in the number of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender and queer characters in television today, which the report says is “due in part to how the pandemic sidelined many of the shows that reliably represent the LGBTQ community.”

GLAAD decried the fact that the inclusion of LGBT series regular characters on primetime scripted broadcast series has dropped from 10.2% to 9.1%, a 0.9% difference that they believe was worth writing a report about. GLAAD president Sarah Kate Ellis demanded that “we expect to see real growth” following the COVID-19 pandemic when things return to normal.

“As a media company, we have the power to create real change,” Viacom Global Consumer Insights SVP Christian Kurz said in 2019. “Viacom has been at the forefront of diversity for a very long time. It helps empower the organization to showcase stories and people in positive ways.”

Nickelodeon had begun showing pro-LGBT content as early as June 2002, when it aired a program called “Nick News Special Edition: My Family Is Different,” which featured children of gay and lesbian parents speaking about their experiences grwing up. In 2005, “Spongebob SquarePants” series creator Stephen Hillenburg responded to criticism that the show was “homosexual propaganda” by saying that the titlular character was asexual and not gay. In 2014, the show “The Legend of Korra” implied that the titular character was in a same-sex relationship. In 2016, an interracial gay couple was introduced in “The Loud House.”

If anything, however, the drop in the network’s ratings simply indicate that pro-LGBT shows aren’t very appealing to many audiences anymore.

Alaska Airlines reveals new Pride-themed livery – CNN

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(CNN) — As always, June is a-jostle with corporations revealing their Pride-themed initiatives, but one US airline has gone a little further than the usual rainbow-decked Instagram post.

Alaska Airlines debuted its Pride plane on Tuesday, truly nailing its colors to the mast — or decals to the fuselage.

The Airbus A320’s new livery has “Fly with Pride” written on the side and the design features brightly colored silhouettes of planes and stripes on the main body and engines.

The design choice, says Alaska Airlines on Twitter, is “iconic rainbow stripes & inclusive colors such as brown, black, light blue, white & pink to represent BIPOC & Transgender communities. Without those groups of people & their activism, we would not have Pride today.”
Accompanying “Fly with Pride” pins are available for $4 on the company’s online store. The airline is also celebrating via its in-flight entertainment, with its Pride Month movie and TV selection including classics such as “Milk” and “Cabaret” and series “Pose” and “Little Fires Everywhere.”

The airline tells CNN Travel that it began the design process for the plane back in April, and it will be flying with their network for a whole year — not just Pride Month.

“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time a US airline has introduced a Pride-inspired plane,” says the Alaska Airlines spokesperson.

Fly with Pride plane, Alaska Airlines, June 2021. Press handout

With most in-person celebrations canceled thiis year, “We decided to take the Pride parades to the skies,” Alaska Airlines tells CNN Travel.

Alaska Airlines

The “One Mile at a Time” blog notes that the A320, registration N854VA, must have had its makeover turned around pretty quickly, as it was operating a full schedule to June 12 and then was in the hangar for just two days.

Decals are a faster, less expensive way of decorating an aircraft than the more traditional stencil-and-paint technique.

“One Mile at a Time” also points out that you can keep abreast of the plane’s day-of adventures via FlightRadar24. As of writing, it’s in Portland, having previously shown off its new livery along the US West Coast in Seattle, San Diego, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Santa Ana and across the Canadian border to Ontario.
Virgin Atlantic hosted a Pride flight in 2018, fronted by Broadway star Tituss Burgess and staffed entirely by LGBT pilots and cabin crew. JetBlue followed suit in 2019 by naming a plane “Shantay Blue Stay,” in honor of a partnership with “RuPaul’s Drag Race.”
Back in 2016, Iceland’s Wow Air (R.I.P.) used the registration code “GAY” on an A330 to show its support for LGBT communities, while Australia’s Qantas also gave an A330 a colorful makeover in 2017, writing the airline’s name in rainbow colors and adding a Pride flag to the kangaroo logo on its tail.

UF professionals discuss LGBTQ representation in children’s entertainment – The Independent Florida Alligator

Growing up in a religious household, Mandy Moore wasn’t exposed to bisexuality until coming across Shadowhunters’ character Magnus Bane in high school. Looking back at her childhood, Moore said being introduced to the LGBTQ community earlier could have changed the course of her life.

“I can’t imagine how different my life would have been if I’d even known that there were other options besides being gay or straight,” she said.

Moore, a graduate student and instructor at UF who specializes in television, children’s media and fandom-culture research, is not the only one who found her identity through television. For many members of the LGBTQ community, representation in different entertainment mediums can play a crucial role in personal development, especially in children. 

Media monitoring organizations like GLAAD tracked LGBTQ representation in the general entertainment industry for 25 years. The growing space for LGBTQ stories on kids and family programming begs the question of whether the public can place a level of responsibility on influential children’s media outlets to produce inclusive content.

Since the 2010s, kid-friendly media saw a jump in progressive animations introducing openly LGBTQ characters, such as Cartoon Network’s “Steven Universe” and DreamWorks’ “She-Ra and the Princesses of Power.” These shows received awards and nominations specifically for their LGBTQ representation.

Although Disney’s 2019 Corporate Responsibility Report mentions its commitment to “championing diversity and inclusion,” the company continues to face heavy criticism for utilizing queer-coding, queerbaiting and tokenism techniques in their films. 

Examples include only adding queer characters into background shots and/or only providing them with limited storylines, such as in “Toy Story 4” and “Onward.” 

With a growing openly LGBTQ population, Moore said full representation in children’s entertainment is necessary to accurately depict today’s society. 

 “Just having gay characters in the background can be helpful for normalizing things, but if you never show queer people in their full humanity, that’s not really representation,” she said.

Kevin Cooley, a doctoral candidate at UF, works in film and media studies, animation and comics, and queer theory. He said cartoons made by queer women, such as “Angela Anaconda” (1999) and “Pepper-Anne” (1997), helped him unlearn the rigid conception of gender and desire he’d inherited from the heteronormative world.

 “Animation, cartooning, visual culture, illustrations, video games, and fantastical novels are not just ‘escapes’ from the dreary real world children inhabit,” Cooley wrote in an email. They are chances to re-write the mythologies we teach children, and to broaden the possibility for what their own identities can be.”

Like Moore, Jules Catuogno, a 24-year-old UF psychology alum, said the first memorable queer characters they saw were from TV shows they watched in high school. While Catuogno believes children’s media increased its LGBTQ representation, they said corporations will never do enough “due to their nature.”

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“The steps that corporations take to show representation often remove many of the radical and revolutionary parts of being queer because they don’t fit into mainstream expectations,” Catuogno said. “They have an obligation to, at the very least, be representative of queer people; however, no corporation is going to do work towards the actual liberation of queer people.”

While publicly praised shows like “Steven Universe” and “She-Ra and the Princesses of Power” were created by openly queer individuals, Moore said issues of tokenism among larger corporations like Disney can occur from lack of representation within the studio’s writing staff.

For Kenneth Kidd, the associate chair and undergraduate coordinator of UF’s English department, growing up watching television and film in the ‘70s and ‘80s meant mainly seeing queer-coded representation from characters who were given stereotypical traits audiences were expected to interpret as queer.

“There weren’t characters with ‘out’ sexualities or alternative gender identities even, but there were eccentric, odd, singular characters with interesting life choices,” Kidd wrote in an email. “‘Pee Wee’s Playhouse’ was one of the first rather queer TV shows for children, but I’d say there was always a tradition of theatricity in some children’s programming.”

In terms of placing responsibility on large influential corporations, Kidd said profits are usually the pressing concern for most children’s media outlets to include LGBTQ representation.

“Things funded with public money have a particular ethical commitment to promote fairness and diversity and equity,” Kidd said. “Corporate media has some responsibility for positive treatments of queer people and people in all their diversity, and they have sometimes taken the lead on this because they are more alert to changes in the culture and the market.”

Cooley said that because corporations can only be counted upon if it benefits them financially, the solution to receiving better LGBTQ+ representation seems to lie in ensuring individuals who identify with the community are infiltrating children’s media enterprises.

“Instead of placing our faith in corporations, we’d have better luck placing it in artists savvy enough to hijack corporate media channels for their massive distribution networks and work within those spaces to create and distribute new and provocative queer media,” Cooley said. 

“In short: we can’t count on Disney to queer Star Wars, but you’d better believe Dave Filoni is going to fight as hard as he can for a queer Ahsoka Tano story!”

Contact Brenna at bsheets@alligator.org. Follow her on Twitter @BrennaMarieShe1.

The Independent Florida Alligator has been independent of the university since 1971, your donation today could help #SaveStudentNewsrooms. Please consider giving today.

Things to do in the Columbus area this weekend: concerts, movie, market and more – The Columbus Dispatch

There’s plenty of events going on this weekend, since it’s not only Pride Month but also Juneteenth, a commemoration related to the history of slavery in the United States.

Juneteenth:Celebrations provide chance for reflection, growth following difficult year

Each Thursday, The Dispatch rounds up a few suggestions for this to keep you busy this weekend. 

A celebration of gay pride theater performance, Popcorn Pops returns on Friday night for kids and a wine and arts festival in Grove City are among events we recommend.

Weekend events:Here’s how Columbus is celebrating Juneteenth this weekend

Want to get away?:It’s time to have some fun! Here are things to do in Ohio this summer

You can ensure you never miss these updates by subscribing to our Life in the 614 email newsletter.

Evolution Theatre celebrates gay pride 

Evolution Theatre Company celebrates Columbus Pride 2021 with a production of “Vampire Lesbians of Sodom,” Charles Busch’s long-running off-Broadway comedy about the bitter rivalry between two seductive vampiresses over 2,000 years from ancient Sodom through Hollywood’s silent-movie era to contemporary Las Vegas. Performances take place at 7:30 p.m. Thursday (preview), 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday and June 24, and 8 p.m. June 25-26 at MadLab Theatre, 227 N. 3rd St. Tickets cost $25, or $20 for senior citizens, $15 for students. Call 614-233-1124 or visit www.evolutiontheatre.org.

Pride Month:Virginia West Pride Fest drag queen show brings joy Downtown during Pride Month

Jazz program for Juneteenth

In commemoration of Juneteenth, the Jazz Arts Group will again make available the digital program “Jazz and the Struggle for Freedom” on its online platform, JAG TV. The program, which was first presented earlier in the year, consists of jazz, blues, R&B and gospel music played by Jazz Arts Group musicians, including pianist Bobby Floyd, drummer Reggie Jackson and trumpeter (and Columbus Jazz Orchestra Artistic Director) Byron Stripling. Also included is a conversation between Stripling and Michelle Alexander, the New York Times opinion writer and author of “The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness.” The free program can be viewed starting Friday and continuing through July 4 at www.jag.tv.

Popcorn Pops returns

In the first family-friendly “Popcorn Pops” concert of the Picnic With the Pops season, the Columbus Symphony will perform music that looks to the stars in “Space Out & Step Out” at the John F. Wolfe Columbus Commons, East Rich and South High streets. The concert, led by symphony associate conductor Andres Lopera, will kick off at 7 p.m. Friday, but pre-concert activities — including interactive games and balloon art — get underway at 5:30 p.m. Tickets cost $12.60 for adults, including free admission for one child between the ages of 3 and 12. Additional tickets for children cost $5.25, and those age 2 and younger are admitted free. For more information, visit columbussymphony.com

Going to the Pops?:Concert review: Picnic With the Pops opening was worth the wait

Matthew Broderick in a scene from "Ferris Bueller's Day Off."

‘Bueller? Bueller?’

Any high school teachers still looking for the perpetually tardy and absent adolescent Ferris Bueller would do well to check the McCoy Center for the Arts in New Albany, where, at 7:30 p.m. Friday, “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” will be shown in a free screening at the center, 100 W. Dublin-Granville Road, New Albany. The classic comedy, written and directed by John Hughes, stars Matthew Broderick, Alan Ruck, Mia Sara and Jennifer Grey. Reservations are required. For more information, visit mccoycenter.org.  

Pianist Michael Cavanaugh, who will perform with the Columbus Symphony during "The Music of Elton John" on Saturday.

Pop at the Pops with the Columbus Symphony 

Pianist and vocalist Michael Cavanaugh is best-known for appearing in the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical “Movin’ Out with the musical score by Billy Joel,” but these days, the performer is summoning the musical spirit of another icon of modern pop music. Backed by the Columbus Symphony, Cavanaugh will perform the program “The Music of Elton John” at 8 p.m. Saturday as part of Picnic With the Pops at the John F. Wolfe Columbus Commons, East Rich and South High streets. Expect a vivid orchestral version of “I’m Still Standing,” “Tiny Dancer,” “Your Song” and more. Lawn tickets cost $36.75, or $10.50 for ages 3 to 12, free for age 2 and younger. For more information, visit columbussymphony.com

Going to the Pops?:Concert review: Picnic With the Pops opening was worth the wait

Nocturnal North Market 

The North Market, 59 Spruce St., will open for its monthly open-air evening market, which takes place from 6 to 9 p.m. the third Friday of each month through October. Some of the regular market merchants will remain open, and outside, handmade and locally grown products will be for sale. Listen to live music, and grab a drink from The Barrel & Bottle. For more information, visit northmarket.org.

Find a farmers market::Columbus-area communities gear up for a busy year selling produce

Grove City Wine and Arts Festival 

Check out an art fair and get to know more than 20 Ohio wineries at the Wine and Arts Festival, which runs from 5 to 10 p.m. Friday and 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday in Grove City’s Town Center. Tickets cost $25 for eight samples of wine. For more information, call 614-539-8762 or visit www.heartofgrovecity.org.

The Best Gay & LGBT+ Friendly Bars In Manchester – Secret Manchester

Our guide to Manchester’s famous Gay Village.

Manchester has long been an open-minded city. One that’s opened its arms up to the LGBTQ+ community. And what makes it even more special? Its thriving, dedicated district that celebrates all things LGBTQ+; the Gay Village. A place where everyone is welcome and everyone is encouraged to be their true selves, the Gay Village is iconic for a reason – and that reason is its fantastic bars and clubs, operated by those who love and actively build up the community not just during Pride Month and Manchester Pride, but all the time. Without further ado, here are just some of our picks of the best gay and LGBTQ+ bars in Manchester.

1. The Brewers

Credit: The Brewers

A relatively new addition to Canal Street, after rehauling KIKI and VOID just last year, The Brewers sits right in the heart of it all, serving literally tons of cocktails (hello, 2-4-1!), a fantastic after-work drinks atmosphere, a retro-style dance floor that absolutely oozes Studio 54 vibes, and tons of entertainment in store ranging from drag, burlesque, comedy, cabaret. You name it, they’ve got it. The Brewers, 4 Canal St, M1 3HE.

2. G-A-Y Manchester

Credit: Matt W

An absolute institution not only in Manchester but nationwide, G-A-Y takes centre stage on Canal Street, providing one of the most fun nights out in the entire city. Serving cheap drinks, cheesy tunes and a huge dancefloor for guests to cut some shapes on – G-A-Y is open ’til 4am, proving itself the late-night destination to be in the Village. G-A-Y, 63 Richmond St, M1 3WB.

3. Via

Credit: Via

A popular spot for pre-drinks (and just drink-drinks!) in the Village, Via describes itself as the ‘old lady of Canal Street’, with more of a pub vibe in comparison to Canal Street’s trademark club feel, thanks to its wooden yet opulent decor. Serving both food and drinks, guests can enjoy both early drinks and a late-night atmosphere, too, with frequent drag shows happening in the evenings and fun lip sync battles with fellow Canal Street bars. Via, 28-30 Canal St, M1 3EZ.

4. On Bar

Credit: On Bar

One of Manchester’s liveliest live entertainment bars, On Bar knows how to put on a good show – with tons of drag shows, DJs and so much more gracing their roster on a regular basis. From food to cocktails, to back-to-back events taking place every week, On Bar is a fantastic place to visit if you’re looking for something a little more experiential. Be sure to keep an eye on their upcoming events here to catch a show or bottomless brunch next time you’re in the Village. On Bar, 46 Canal St, M1 3WD.

[SEE ALSO: A Beyoncé-Inspired Bottomless Brunch With Fabulous Drag Queens Is Coming To Manchester]

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5. Tribeca

Credit: Tribeca

Another of Manchester’s liveliest, Tribeca hosts tons of incredibly fun events, including both drag and live DJ sets every weekend. The busy bar has become well-known for its fantastic array of cocktails, with glam NYC-style decor to accompany. It’s by far one of the boujier places to visit in the Village – a statement backed up by their seriously good bottomless brunch events in collaboration with some of the UK’s finest drag acts.

[SEE ALSO: This Boozy Drag Brunch Is Coming To Town With An Incredible Line-Up]

6. The Rem Bar

Credit: The Rem Bar

One of the Village’s more diverse venues, The Rem Bar has a much more laid back feel, providing a little something for those who prefer a simple pint over cocktails and club nights. Known as one of the ‘original’ gay men’s bars on the street, the bar is popular with bears and skins, and hosts regular retro music nights, ‘bear-e-oke’, and a fantastic casual atmosphere to enjoy. The Rem Bar, 33 Sackville St, M1 3LZ.

7. The Goose

Credit: The Goose

One of very few proper pubs in the Village, The Goose is the perfect palate cleanser for those looking for an LGBTQ+-friendly place for a casual drink, with traditional decor, real ales, tons of gins, and even Pieminster pies. Attracting quite a mixed bag to the establishment thanks to its central location within the Village and proximity to the coach stop, The Goose is a great choice for escaping the club nights for a little while. The Goose, 29 Bloom St, M1 3JE.

8. The Molly House

Credit: The Molly House

A beautifully decorated, cosy spot in the heart of the Gay Village, The Molly House offers an alternative experience for the community to enjoy, serving cocktails, tea, real ales and even tapas. It has more of a wine bar feel to it during the evenings (and a lovely wine menu, too!), with tasty dishes such as croquetas, marinated octopus, and chorizo on offer, as well as a menu of fantastic burgers – which have been met with fan acclaim. The Molly House, 26 Richmond St, M1 3NB.

Read more: This Boozy Drag Brunch Is Coming To Town With An Incredible Line-Up