You want an example of how far the lgbtq community has come? Check out documentaries looking at our lives.
The Homosexuals (sounds sinister, doesn't it?) was a CBS documentary which premiered in 1967. I will just break it down in two words - it stunk.
From Wikipedia:
As you can tell, it was not a fair documentary to our community. In all honesty, though, we are talking about 1967. Harvey Milk hadn't even come on the scene yet. And the Stonewall Riots were two years away.
Still, as the following clips shows, there is a reason why Wayne Besen of Truth Wins Out called this documentary "the single most destructive hour of antigay propaganda in our nation's history."
If you closed your eyes, Wallace would remind you of Peter LaBarbera or Peter Sprigg.
Now take a look at a clips from a documentary which will be premiering next week to commemorate the end of Don't Ask, Don't Tell:
The phrase "as different as night and day" is a cliche, but in this case, it is a very apt cliche to use.
We have come a long way, haven't we? And we haven't even finished accomplishing what we are going to accomplish in this world. Don't let the haters get you down. Always fight and never give up.
Past Know Your LGBT Posts:
The Homosexuals (sounds sinister, doesn't it?) was a CBS documentary which premiered in 1967. I will just break it down in two words - it stunk.
From Wikipedia:
Three years in the making, "The Homosexuals" went through two producers and multiple revisions. The episode included interviews with several gay men, psychiatrists, legal experts and cultural critics, interspersed with footage of a gay bar and a police sex sting.
As you can tell, it was not a fair documentary to our community. In all honesty, though, we are talking about 1967. Harvey Milk hadn't even come on the scene yet. And the Stonewall Riots were two years away.
Still, as the following clips shows, there is a reason why Wayne Besen of Truth Wins Out called this documentary "the single most destructive hour of antigay propaganda in our nation's history."
If you closed your eyes, Wallace would remind you of Peter LaBarbera or Peter Sprigg.
Now take a look at a clips from a documentary which will be premiering next week to commemorate the end of Don't Ask, Don't Tell:
The phrase "as different as night and day" is a cliche, but in this case, it is a very apt cliche to use.
We have come a long way, haven't we? And we haven't even finished accomplishing what we are going to accomplish in this world. Don't let the haters get you down. Always fight and never give up.
Past Know Your LGBT Posts: