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Meet the candidates for West Hollywood City Council

11 hopefuls — including incumbents — seek 3 seats

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From affordable housing to public safety to transportation, progressive platforms are par for the course among the crowded field in the West Hollywood City Council race — but with the March 5 General Municipal Election looming, eight challengers and three incumbent candidates are looking to distinguish themselves. They’ll have that opportunity, when the West Hollywood Chamber of Commerce hosts a Candidate Forum on Jan. 29. Below, the Blade takes a look at their similarities, and stark contrasts.

Jack Cline fights for healthcare as a human right, and occasionally dons drag, as Jackie OMG. (Photo via jackieomg.com)

JACK CLINE (jackieomg.com) | No campaign contributions or pay-to-play politics are the promises of RN, NP Cline, who notes, “I fight for healthcare as a human right, and support single-payer healthcare.” (He’s served as a union negotiator for the California Nurses Association, which has endorsed his candidacy.) In addition to health and safety, his other platform points are: Quality of life in West Hollywood, affordable housing, the elimination of wasteful spending, voting for nurses’ values, and advocacy for renters, low-income residents, and seniors. Fun Fact: Dressed for success, and certainly campy fun, Cline can also be found, on occasion, werking the drag persona of Jackie OMG (Oh My Goodness!!!).

John D’Amico, seen here being sworn in as Mayor Pro Tempore (May 2018), wants to maintain a “consistently high level of social services for residents in need.” (Photo by Jon Viscott)

JOHN D’AMICO (ourweho.com) | Incumbent D’Amico says his nearly three decades of living as both a renter and owner “on the eastside of West Hollywood and on the westside, above the Sunset Strip and below Santa Monica Boulevard” has given him a “unique perspective of the challenges and opportunities of living in our city.” During his time with the affordable housing developer, Los Angeles Housing Partnership, the trained architect “was responsible for overseeing the renovation and construction of well over 300 affordable housing units.” Sustainability and protection of existing housing stock are top priorities, along with achieving an appropriate balance between development and livability, while maintaining a “consistently high level of social services for residents in need.” The one-time co-Director of Policy and Planning at AIDS Project Los Angeles (during the height of the AIDS epidemic in Los Angeles) also notes the need to create a safe environment in which “our community supports people in their individuality — in being themselves.” Fun Fact: D’Amico registered as domestic partner to Keith Rand in 1992, married him in 2008, and currently resides with Rand, along with their two dogs, Mr. Big and Dodger.

Tom Demille wants on-demand bus transportation, and micro-units for young people. (Photo via facebook.com/ElectTomDemille)

TOM DEMILLE (facebook.com/ElectTomDemille) | An accomplished actor who has lived with AIDS for 20 years, Demille is a frequent presence at Council meetings, where he’s been “the conscious of the community.” As a candidate, his eyes are on their finances. “All the money belongs to the residents,” Demille notes, “and they aren’t even listening to them anymore. I think we should go back to basics.” On matters of public safety, Demille says, “We need to light up the City and put CCTV up.” He also wants to triple the social services budget “in order to fend off the inevitable, which is, most of our community is going to become 65 and older in the next five years.” Part of that money, he says, should “go to a food bank, for people who are food-insecure.” Transportation “should be used more efficiently,” by establishing bus service as on-demand. Fun Fact: Demille played a Klingon on “Star Trek: Deep Space Nine,” and multiple roles in the 1996 TV movie, “Mrs. Santa Claus.”

Brendan Hood would institute a vacancy tax, and invest in colored bike lanes.( Photo via Hood)

BRENDAN HOOD (brendanhood.com) | Nine-year resident Hood’s passion for progressive causes manifests throughout his platform. In housing matters, Hood wants to lower the affordable housing requirement to from 20 percent to 10-15 (“making larger developments more economically feasible”), and institute a vacancy tax. In matters of transportation, he’d like to bring the Crenshaw line to Hollywood within the next decade (“saving residents thousands of dollars on transportation costs and boosting sales for local businesses”). Investing in colored bike lanes, he asserts, would “increase visibility and safety for cyclists and drivers and encourage greater use of bikes as an alternative to driving.” Hood also ties high housing costs and poor public transportation to homelessness — naming financial stress as one of its root causes, and noting the need to “follow the lead of Los Angeles and work with non-profits like Lava Mae to offer mobile showers and other basic necessities for the homeless within West Hollywood.” Fun Fact: Hood is a longtime member of West Hollywood Dodgeball and Varsity Gay League.

Lindsey Horvath wants West Hollywood to be an age-friendly community, and equally hospitable to bikes and pedestrians. (Photo via facebook.com/lindsey.horvath.82)

LINDSEY HORVATH (lindseyhorvath.com) | Incumbent Horvath was elected in 2015, having previously served as a councilmember from 2009 to 2011, and as Mayor from April 2015 to April 2016. Her website notes her “long history of civic and social justice advocacy” in the form of, among other things, making West Hollywood an “age-friendly community.” Brought forward while a Transportation Commissioner (2011-2015) were efforts to reduce traffic and parking problems, and make West Hollywood friendlier to bikes and pedestrians. She was appointed to the West Hollywood Women’s Advisory Board in 2007, and, in that capacity, “collaborated with community leaders and organizations in successfully advocating for the full funding of the backlog of untested rape kit evidence in the City and County of Los Angeles.” As an LGBTQ rights champion, Horvath served as a Board member of the Victory Fund, and a founding Board member of the NOH8 Campaign. Fun Fact: The entertainment-advertising executive has created award-winning campaigns for movies and television.

James Duke Mason promises to provide “vigorous leadership,” in the pursuit of housing affordability, homelessness, and aging in place. (Photo via jamesdukemason.com)

JAMES DUKE MASON (jamesdukemason.com) | The Los Angeles native and self-professed “young, persistent voice of the new generation” promises to provide the “vigorous leadership that we need to seize the opportunities in front of us.” After becoming the first openly gay president of his international high school’s student council, The Advocate Magazine gave him a spot on 2010’s Forty Under 40 list. At the age of 22, a 2015 run for West Hollywood City Council was unsuccessful, but Mason “achieved a surprisingly strong result in a crowded field of candidates,” his website notes. He served on the Board of Directors of the West Hollywood Community Housing Corporation, and spent the last three years as a city official on the West Hollywood Lesbian & Gay Advisory Board, where he was Co-Chair from 2017 to 2018. While there, Mason “gained critical experience in the workings of municipal government” and spoke up on “critical challenges that must be addressed by our city, including housing affordability, homelessness, the tough climate for small businesses, and aging in place.” Fun Fact: The veteran freelance writer and public relations consultant is the son of pop icon and LGBT ally Belinda Carlisle.

Lauren Meister, seen here with her rescue dog, Spike, prioritizes policies to save affordable housing stock and local neighborhood-serving businesses. (Photo via Meister4weho.com)

LAUREN MEISTER (Meister4weho.com) | Elected in 2015, the incumbent notes her West Hollywood roots and commitment to public advocacy were planted as a neighborhood watch captain, who took the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s CERT (Community Emergency Response Team) training, attended the West Hollywood Sheriff’s Community Academy, and “went on to lead the largest neighborhood association in the city, representing residents on issues such as public safety, traffic circulation, parking and development.” Meister seeks to further her efforts to save affordable housing stock and local neighborhood-serving businesses, advance public safety and social issues, protect parks/green spaces, and advance fair parking advocacy. While a member of the Council, she worked on initiatives to strengthen the Rent Stabilization Ordinance, provide social services for homeless people, create a Small Business Task Force, develop socially conscious banking policies, and establish West Hollywood as a safe haven for LGBT asylum seekers. Meister is the sole proprietor of her locally-based marketing research firm. Fun Fact: Her parents, sister, and rescue dog, Spike, all call West Hollywood home.

Shawn Davis Mooney has been a soldier in the U.S. Army, business owner, and entertainer for the last 20 years. (Photo by Shawn Christopher Mooney)

SHAWN DAVIS MOONEY (facebook.com/shawndavis.mooney) | Mooney has been a soldier in the U.S. Army, business owner, and entertainer for the last 20 years. He developed his desire to “look out for all seniors and the disadvantaged” while working as General Manager of two retirement communities. Mooney would work to “care for our seniors, especially our LGBT seniors, who may not have anyone to care for them. Together we can ensure that not only do the seniors of West Hollywood have affordable housing, food, and healthcare, but every resident calling West Hollywood home has access to these basic human dignities.” Having moved to West Hollywood in 1993, he “knew it would be a lifelong love affair,” and says his current presence in the neighborhood makes him “think about how can we preserve these qualities for future generations while embracing growth and change.” As a councilmember, he assures, “I will be a steward of West Hollywood and preserve its eclectic history.” Fun Fact: The name of Shawn Mooney’s husband is Shawn Mooney. No confusion with the cat’s name: It’s Jade.

Eric Jon Schmidt wants to “rotate the crops on the City Council” in favor of “fresh, diverse, energetic leadership.” (Photo via wehoeric.com)

ERIC JON SCHMIDT (wehoeric.com) | “It’s time to rotate the crops on City Council,” Schmidt says, “and get some new, fresh, diverse, energetic leadership to represent us.” Having decried the City Council’s “reckless spending and petty infighting,” he says they are “tired, indifferent, ineffective, bought and paid for by developers, and they don’t listen to the concerns of the residents.” Citing the rising crime rate, a lack of sufficient public cameras, and the danger posed to pedestrians by scooters, bikes, and skateboards on the sidewalks, he’s calling for the Director of Public Safety to be replaced. Schmidt also wants a Sheriff’s Substation on the East Side, emergency phones across the City, and a “Deputy foot patrol on the major streets, to better interact with residents and visitors.” Relief from traffic congestion and over-development, and strong advocacy for renters, are front-and-center concerns, as is his motto/mantra: “Accountability, integrity, and transparency.” Fun Fact: Schmidt’s Chihuahua, Peanut, and Shorkie, Joey, are service and companion dogs in training to visit hospital and hospice patients.

Iranian American immigrant, attorney, small business owner, and LGBTQ Civil Rights advocate Sephi Shyne has lived in West Hollywood for over a decade. (Photo via sepishyne.com)

SEPI SHYNE (sepishyne.com) | Iranian American immigrant, attorney, Reiki Master, small business owner, and LGBTQ Civil Rights advocate Shyne has lived in West Hollywood for over a decade, with her wife and “furkids.” An appointed member of the City’s Lesbian and Gay Advisory Board who received a B.S. in Accounting and MIS from San Jose State University, and a Juris Doctorate from Golden Gate University School of Law in San Francisco, her work as Co-President of the LGBT Bar Association of Los Angeles saw Shyne “lead a fundraiser where we raised $10,000 for ‘No on Prop 8’ — and I advocated against hate crimes and Prop 8 on CNN.” Seeking equality and engagement of under-served communities including lesbians, the transgender community, the bisexual community, and communities of color, Shyne seeks to be “a voice for renters,” via preserving and strengthening their rights. Fun Fact: A daily walk with her dog, Chloe, gives Shyne pause (paws?) to contemplate the need for “more stop signs and enforcement to protect pedestrians,” as well as “more lighting to deter crime.”

Marquita Thomas seeks to bring “creative and innovative solutions” to homelessness, affordable housing, mental health, and substance abuse. (Photo via marquitaforwesthollywood.com)

MARQUITA THOMAS (marquitaforwesthollywood.com) | Noting a “commitment to serving her community through service,” the 23-year West Hollywood resident cites a stint on the Lesbian Visibility Board for the City, her contribution to planning and programming the West Hollywood Dyke March, and serving as Co-chair of the Lesbian & Gay Advisory Board. She also served on the board of Christopher Street West. Thomas seeks to draw on her experience as Executive Director of the LA Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce to “bring creative and innovative solutions” to homelessness, which she call “a humanitarian crisis that requires more practical solutions and less rhetoric.” On the matter of affordable housing, Thomas urges us to “plan ahead for transit-oriented development along the proposed Metro light rail line” — and, regarding mental health and substance abuse, she notes, “Options continue to be a woefully overlooked necessity in a City that has so much nightlife.” Fun Fact: The founder of Out & About Events for Women, for which she creates programming for Los Angeles’ “under-served lesbian community” prepared for her career in advocacy and community organizing at the same college as Barack Obama.

The West Hollywood Chamber of Commerce hosts the Candidate Forum, Tues., Jan. 29, 6:30 PM – 9:00 PM, at the City’s Council Chambers. More info at weho.org/Home/Components/Calendar/Event/19631/15. Watch it live, at weho.org/wehotv.

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Q Con 2025 to take place in West Hollywood, free admission

Reserve your free tickets at the Q Con website!

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Q Con, SoCal’s only LGBTQ+ comic convention, is set to return Saturday, May 3, bringing in dozens of LGBTQ+ speakers, vendors, artists and community voices to their lineup. 

“LGBTQIA+ people of all ages and backgrounds need to see themselves and their stories represented in the arts – to know they are okay, they are accepted and they are powerful. Q Con gives us the opportunity to do this – to raise queer voices in comic books and graphic novels, bring the community together and have a lot of fun at the same time,” said Ted Abenheim, president of Prism Comics.

Mark your calendars and start scheming up your queer cosplay outfits for a costume contest that celebrates the LGBTQ+ representation and visibility in one of the most queer-coded industries in media ahead of Pride month. 

Prism Comics, the nonprofit organization championing LGBTQ+ representation and diversity in comic books, graphic novels and pop media, announced their 4th annual Q Con, happening in West Hollywood’s Plummer Park. The convention will take place in West Hollywood from 11AM to 6PM at Fiesta Hall. 

The nonprofit established in 2003, is deemed the “LGBTQ+ Comics Central,” at San Diego Comic Con, WonderCon Anaheim, Los Angeles Comic Con and other conventions. Prism prides itself on providing a safe space for the LGBTQ+ community to unite over mutual passion, interest and love for comics, novels and more. This is the space where comic creators, readers, librarians, educators and families can come together and celebrate, discuss and enjoy the representation the community needs and deserves. 
Find free tickets and more information regarding guest speakers, panels and vendors here.

Q Con is also currently seeking LGBTQ+ comic creators and businesses who are interested in setting up a table at the event. If interested in tabling or volunteering, email Ted Abenheim, President of Prism Comics at  [email protected].

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California

Running, racing, dodging: Janelle Kellman on her bid to be California’s next Lieutenant Governor

Kellman says that she wants to use the position to tie together responsible growth and addressing the affordability crisis

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Janelle Kellman is used to running marathons, which comes in handy as she campaigns to be
California’s next Lieutenant Governor – a campaign she began in 2023 for an election
that won’t happen until November 2026.

“The secret to being a true runner is consistency and discipline,” she says. “Nobody will
outwork me. I am not career politician. I am somebody who is gonna roll up my sleeves
and do all of the hard work.”

If she wins, the environmental lawyer and former mayor of Sausalito will make history
as the highest-ranking LGBTQ person elected to statewide office in California. But Kellman says she’s no climber. She’s putting a large stock of her campaign on the fact that she’s not a Sacramento insider and she’s not planning to use the job as a springboard to some other, more high-profile job.

“Many people run for this position because they want to be something else. I’m not
trying to be something else. Actually, I really want to do this job,” Kellman says.

The Lieutenant Governor sits on the boards of all of California’s higher education
institutions and has a significant role in natural resources and economic planning
through membership on the State Lands Commission, Coastal Commission, and
Commission for Economic Development.

Kellman says that she wants to use the position to tie together responsible growth and
addressing the affordability crisis that has seen hundreds of thousands of people leave
the state.

“There’s three things we really need to be focusing on to address affordability crisis.
Number one more housing of all types. Number two, proper public safety policies and
keeping our families safe. And number three, better mental health programs, both to keep people off the streets and address the homelessness problem and to support our
children,” she says.

Meeting these challenges will require someone who can ensure that many different
parts of California’s government – from the education system, the housing approvals
process, to the legal system, the heath care system and more – are laser focused on
bringing down the cost of living, Kellman says.

“I’m a lifelong team sport athlete and I’ve always been the captain of all the sports, and I
see [being Lieutenant-Governor] very much as a unifying collaboration type role, right?
This is a role I specifically want because I like that dynamic. I am really drawn to the opportunity to bring experts together.”

Kellman is aware of the symbolism her serving as Lieutenant Governor as a queer
woman would have in 2025.

“Our rights are under attack nationwide, and I see it as more important than ever that
California continue to be a stronghold of equity and inclusion,” she says. “To have
somebody who represents a minority community at the helm of our government really
gives visibility to our issues and reinforces that Californian is a place that values equality
and inclusion.”

Still, on one of the thornier issues of queer inclusion, Kellman is noticeably aversive.

She was quick to scold the Gov. Gavin Newsom when asked to comment on his recent podcast where he mused that trans women competing in women’s sports was “deeply unfair.”

“I hope that he would aim to represent all members of the State of California. So, I
hope he continues to govern and not just have a podcast for the next couple of years,”
she says. “But it’s also an opportunity to remind voters and remind everybody, it’s much more than that. It’s about inclusion. It’s about education. It’s about mental health and wellness.
There are so many issues that affect people Nationwide and Statewide. We’ve got to
stay focused on the big picture.”

But does that mean that she would advocate for trans women athletes being able to
compete in women’s sports, particularly as the lieutenant governor has a role in higher
education, where this issue has been in focus?

“I think the role of the Lieutenant Governor as an individual who sits on many of these
boards is to ensure that all students are treated fairly, and all our young people feel safe,
whoever they are on college campuses. I think that is the number one. No matter your background, no matter your orientation. So I would apply that across the board to anybody on college campuses,” she says.

Given one more chance to clarify her position, Kellman dodges again.

“I think that we have bigger issues to be talking about in the United States and
California,” she says.

But Kellman is critical of the Democratic political establishment that has entrenched
itself in Sacramento, which she characterizes as impeding progress on California’s most
critical issues.

“We’ve become an obstructionist party, and we need to be a party that gets things
done,” she says. “I’ve been able to get a lot done even as a small town mayor, and I see
my fellow mayors be able to get things done at the local level, I want to raise that up so
that it happens statewide.

“Let’s be the party that gets things done. And let’s focus on this high cost of living first
and foremost,” she says.

Without invoking the specter of the word “efficiency” in today’s political climate, Kellman
is also eager to hold the establishment to account for solving the state’s problems.

“Where’s the accountability? Where’s the transparency? What is happening in real
time? Let’s take homelessness, right? We know that as a state from 2017-18 to now, we
spent 22 billion dollars on homelessness. And during that same time period, the number
of unhoused in California went up by a third. Now, what if we were actually demanding
accountability and transparency along the way?”

And she’s eager to hold herself to account in office, too.

“If this was the private sector, I’d get hired. Because we would say you know how to do
the job, you’re going to be held accountable. We need more of that.”

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California

Two anti-trans bills fail to advance in California

AB 89 and AB 844 were aimed at banning trans women and girls from competing in women’s sports

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The two bills introduced by Republican lawmakers aimed at banning trans athletes from female sports, did not pass during yesterday’s committee meeting. 

Assembly Bill 89 and Assembly Bill 844, have failed to advance in the Arts, Entertainment, Sports and Tourism Committee on Tuesday by a 2-6 vote on each bill. AB 89, introduced by Assemblymember Kate Sanchez (R-Rancho Santa Margarita) and AB 844, introduced by Assemblymember Bill Essayli (R-Riverside), were both rejected by California lawmakers. 

“If these members and their counterparts were truly committed to addressing the inequities and safety concerns women and girls face—in sports and everyday life—they would be joining the frontlines in the fight for equal pay, stronger protections against domestic violence and sexual assault, and expanded healthcare resources,” said Tony Hoang, executive director at Equality California. 

AB 89 and AB 844 are part of the nationwide coordinated effort led by extremists in Washington D.C. to sow fear and misinformation about transgender people—in particular youth—and attempt to erase them from virtually all areas of public life. 

“Instead of tackling the real problems in our state like high inflation and rising healthcare costs, Assemblymembers Sanchez and Essayli continue to waste time and taxpayer money using transgender youth as political pawns in a shameful display of divisive politics and a thirst for attention.,” said Hoang. 

AB 89 would have established a ban on athletes whose sex was assigned male at birth, from competing on a girls’ interscholastic sports team. 

AB 844 would have reversed California’s law which currently allows trans athletes to participate in girls and women’s sports teams across all age levels, up to college level. 

Tuesday’s hearing marked the first public debate on the issue in California since Newsom’s public comments about trans women in sports being “deeply unfair.”  

On Friday, Gov. Newsom’s office confirmed it received a letter from U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon, stating that California could lose federal funds if it continued to allow trans athletes to compete in women’s and girls’ sports. 

“As Secretary of Education, I am officially asking you to inform this Department whether you will remind schools in California to comply with federal law by protecting sex-separated spaces and activities. I am also officially asking you to publicly assure parents that California teachers will not facilitate the fantasy of ‘gender transitions’ for their children,” she wrote in the letter.

Equality California continues their partnership with the Legislative LGBTQ+ Caucus and other legislative partners in an effort to combat the passage of bills like AB 89 and AB 844. 

“We are pleased these bills have failed and are thankful to those lawmakers who opposed this dangerous legislation in committee, particularly to the committee chair, Assemblymember Chris Ward, for his leadership,” said Hoang.

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California

GLAAD’s Latine Honors celebrates culture and identity with packed house

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Harvey Guillén raises a toast to the impact of LGBTQ+ Latine talent at the GLAAD Latine Honors reception in Hollywood with Smirnoff. (Photo credit Katherine Rosario via GLAAD)

GLAAD’s Spanish-Language & Latine Media created and produced the first Latine Honors, nearly blowing the roof off of Grandmaster Recorders in Hollywood, with a more-than-packed house full of stars. 

The Latine Honors were created to celebrate the best in queer, Latine visibility and representation in entertainment media, advocacy and journalism. This event happened back-to-back-to-back with the GLAAD Black and Brown Honors and the 36th GLAAD Media Awards. 

The Latine Honors were hosted by the hilarious stand-up comedian Roz Hernandez, who continues to make waves in the Los Angeles comedy scene and beyond. 

“Every single time [GLAAD] calls, I answer,” said Hernandez on the carpet. 

Hernandez says she is very lucky to be acknowledged by GLAAD and to join forces with them in the work they do for the LGBTQ+ community. 

The Spanish-Language Special Recognition Awards were presented on stage by Harvey Guillén to “The Q Agenda,” a TV series on Latin Nation and “La Verdrag,” a news show on Canal Once, for their incomparable contributions to queer, Latine representation in media. 

LA Blade had the chance to interview some of the Latine stars that graced the carpet to offer their two cents on issues affecting the LGBTQ+ community, including Harvey Guillén, Vico Ortíz, David Archuleta and members of “The Q Agenda.” 

“I think now more than ever, it’s important for us to remember that we can’t be numb to the things happening around us,” said Guillén. “People are becoming less empathetic toward our community and other communities being attacked, so we have to remember to not lose focus. Do not lose focus and do not lose empathy.” 

We also had a chance to catch up with Ortíz on the carpet. They are currently hosting a daily LGBTQ+ news podcast with Nay Bever, where together, they tactfully deliver the news that is relevant to our communities. 

“I am co-hosting a daily news podcast called ‘Today in Gay,’ where we wake up everyday, we read the news and then report them to our queer community,” said Ortíz. “It’s quite a responsibility, but I’m also really honored to deliver [the news] with care and tenderness and tact.”

Ortíz was an honoree at the Latine Honors for their outstanding contributions to the media and entertainment industries as a Puerto Rican, non-binary, multi-hyphenated artist. 

Archuleta spoke to us about his latest single Créme Bruleé, which incorporates a Latin flare to a pop tune. 

“I’m so excited because I just released a new song, Creme Bruleé” said Archuleta. “I was really inspired by the pop girlies – Chapelle, Sabrina, Charlie [XCX], Billie [Eilish], and I just thought I wanted to channel that and I want to feel that confidence and that sexiness that I feel when I listen to their music, but I wanted to add a Latin flare to it.” 

Keynote remarks were delivered by GLAAD President and CEO, Sarah Kate Ellis; welcome remarks were shared by Monica Tresandes, Senior Director of Spanish Language & Latine Media and Representation; and Gabe Gonzalez, host of GLAAD’s original ¡DÍMELO!, shared remarks about the attendees representing the Latine creators and media from across the industry.

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Arts & Entertainment

2025 Best of LGBTQ LA Readers’ Choice Award Nominations

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It’s time to celebrate the vibrant and diverse LGBTQ+ community of Los Angeles! Nominations for the Best of LGBTQ LA Awards are open from March 31st to April 6th, giving you the chance to highlight your favorite local legends, hotspots, performers, and change-makers. Then, from April 14th to April 27th, cast your vote for the finalists and help decide who truly represents the best of LGBTQ LA.

Use the form below or click the link HERE to nominate!

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Local

‘Think of those who have not been seen,’ Cynthia Erivo’s powerful message at GLAAD Awards

Erivo and Doechii delivered powerful acceptance speeches at the 36th GLAAD Media Awards

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GLAAD celebrated its 40th anniversary with a star-studded gala in Beverly Hills, honoring achievements in LGBTQ+ media and entertainment, while pushing back at efforts nationwide to turn back civil rights protections, restrict and erase transgender identities.

Doechii accepted a GLAAD Media Award for outstanding music artist, Harper Steele won for outstanding documentary for Will & Harper and Nava Mau was honored with the outstanding series – limited anthology award for Baby Reindeer.

Those in attendance rose for a long and enthusiastic standing ovation as the prestigious Stephen F. Kolzak Award was presented to Cynthia Erivo.

“It isn’t easy. None of it is, waking up and choosing to be yourself, proclaiming a space belongs to you when you don’t feel welcomed,” said Erivo.

The 38-year-old queer Oscar nominee and Emmy, Tony and Grammy winner delivered a moving acceptance speech, in which she thanked GLAAD but also called on the audience to do more to help those in the community who have not yet come out. Video of her remarks has gone viral on Instagram.

“Here in this room, we have all been the recipients of the gift that is the opportunity to be more. I doubt that it has come easy to any of us, but more, for some, the road has not been one paved with yellow bricks, but instead paved with bumps and potholes. Whichever road you have traveled, how beautiful it is that you’ve had a road to travel on at all. There are the invisible ones who have had no road at all. For those who have not
yet even begun to find the road, be encouraged and be patient with yourself, it will show itself,” Erivo said. Then she paused from reading the speech that was in the teleprompter, and ad libbed a poetic, closing message.

“We use the phrase ‘out and proud,’ and though you might not have the strength or capacity to do that now, know that I am proud of your quiet and solitary want to be just that,” she said, and then addressed the community ahead of Transgender Day of Visibility. “We are all visible. We can be seen. We see each other. I see you, you see me. But think of those who have not been seen, think of those who sit in the dark and wait their turn, hoping and waiting for a light to light their path. I ask every single one of you in this room, with the spaces that you’re in, and the lights that you hold, to point it in the direction of someone who just needs a little guidance.”

Broadway legend Patti LuPone offered guidance from queer icons, past and present, when she took the stage to recite inspiring quotes that brought the house down.

“I can no longer accept the things I cannot change. I am changing the things I cannot accept,” LuPone quoted lesbian, feminist, activist Angela Davis. “Coming out is the most political thing you can do,” she said, quoting Harvey Milk.

Then LuPone cited some of the stars of Drag Race, including Valentina, Kennedy Davenport, Alyssa Edwards, Trixie Mattel, Plane Jane, and Latrice Royale. But it was the words of OG Drag Race alumna Bianca Del Rio that got the crowd on its feet: “Not today, Satan. Not today!”

“Right now, LGBTQ+ rights are under attack, but what they take from us, they take from you too,” said Brian Michael Smith, upon winning the award for outstanding drama series for 911: Lone Star. “These aren’t isolated rollbacks; they’re attacks on all of our civil rights. This kind of representation is more than visibility, it’s resistance.”

When Doechii accepted the trophy for outstanding music artist at the ceremony, the “Denial Is a River” rapper commented on this politically charged moment for the LGBTQ community, as she praised GLAAD for its principles of “acceptance, inclusiveness and empowerment.”

“Those are the same things I strongly believe in and advocate for and that continue to propel me forward, especially now that hard-won cultural change and rights for transgender people and the LGBTQ community have been threatened,” said Doechii. “And I am disgusted. Disgusted. But I want to say that we are here and we are not going anywhere.”

“These kinds of events help me to feel support, to feel like we’re a team working together to make ourselves feel more seen, make others feel more seen, and there’s so much still to celebrate,” said singer songwriter David Archuleta, the American Idol alum who made headlines in 2021 when he came out and quit the Mormon Church. On the red carpet before the gala, he shared with the Los Angeles Blade his advice to fans who want to find joy amid the gloom: “I love to go dance. Dance is so therapeutic. It’s a place where you can just shake it off, feel hot, go out, and that’s a therapeutic way.”

“This is where I find joy,” Michaela Jaé Rodriguez told the Blade. “But the best times where I find even more joy is learning what state we’re in. Learning how I can fire myself, put a fire behind me, and stay as vigilant as possible and be in the forefront and never disappear. And I want to encourage that to a lot of my young individuals out there. Don’t disappear. Stand out, be proud, and don’t be scared. I’m not scared!”

“It feels amazing, being surrounded by basically my own people is always like a big warm hug, so I love it,” Harper Steele told the Blade.

The writer, who took home a GLAAD trophy for her award-winning documentary with her friend and fellow SNL alum Will Ferrell, noted that despite the joy of the evening, she was “very sad” about political moves targeting the transgender community in Washington, D.C. as well where she grew up in Iowa.

“My own home state, who gave me trans protections and rights, just took them away,” Steele told the Blade. “We’re the first group that’s ever had those rights taken away from us, so we’re in a weird time. I’m going to keep doing the best I can to convince people that they’re wrong. Not only are they wrong, but they’re being stupid.”

The Washington Blade was nominated for its coverage of the 2024 Summer Olympics Games, ”Paris Olympics: More queer athletes, more medals, more Pride, less Grindr,” in the category of outstanding print article. The winner was “‘Changing The Narrative’: Advocates Fight HIV Stigma in Dallas’ Latino Community” by Abraham Nudelstejer of The Dallas Morning News. The Advocate won for outstanding magazine overall coverage, and Jo Yurcaba of NBC Out won for “Friends Remember Nex Benedict, Oklahoma Student Who Died After School Fight, as ‘Fiery Kid.’”

The Blade also spoke to GLAAD President and CEO Sarah Kate Ellis on the red carpet.

Ellis and the organization survived a difficult challenge in 2024 when Ellis herself came under fire from The New York Times for what it called “lavish” spending. It should be noted that in a one-on-one conversation with Variety in October, Ellis pointed out that The Times report omitted mention of GLAAD’s multi-year campaign that called attention to the newspaper’s unbalanced coverage of issues related to transgender Americans and gender-affirming care, and that any spending issues raised by the report — seen by many as a hit piece in retaliation for GLAAD’s campaign — had already been addressed “two years ago.”

Ellis told the Blade she remains focused on GLAAD’s mission to advance acceptance of the LGBTQ community in media.

“I think tonight for me is about getting everybody together to talk about our stories, how important they are, and make sure that we are plastering the airwaves with our stories. And I think it’s about moving forward and having a plan. We have a plan at GLAAD. We understand what’s happened to this media ecosystem and we’re forging forward.”

Ellis spoke passionately about the challenge the nonprofit faces in 2025 and beyond.

“I think the media ecosystem has changed so dramatically and tectonically in a short period of time, “ she said. “We’re seeing that right-wing media gets about 100 million people a week. Progressive media reaches 30 million people a week. So, we have a 70 million person gap, and that gap is why we’re losing presidential campaigns, why we’re losing the narrative, why our community is under siege. We have to close that gap.”

Read the full list of nominees and winners of this year’s GLAAD Media Awards here.

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California

Equality California to release 2024 Legislative Scorecard and rally at State Capitol

The rally will unite LGBTQ+ community members and political leaders

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Equality California will hold a rally at the State Capitol’s West Steps in response to rising anti-LGBTQ+ political attacks on Wednesday, March 26 at 11:00 AM PT.

This rally will also serve as an opportunity to discuss the release of the 2024 Legislative Scorecard, which is a report of politicians and sponsored legislation that further and cement the protections of LGBTQ+ rights. The scorecard also analyzes voting methods and results, gathering an overall score that reflects legislators’ votes on EQCA-sponsored legislation.

Equality California is the nation’s largest statewide civil rights organization working towards bringing justice to LGBTQ+ issues by rallying against legislative issues that attack LGBTQ+ rights.

This call to action will serve as part of the organization’s annual  LGBTQ+ Advocacy Day, held each year to bring together constituents with lawmakers in support of pro-LGBTQ+ legislation.

EQCA has a line-up of featured political speakers to include Assembly Democratic Caucus Chair Rick Chavez Zbur, Legislative LGBTQ Caucus Chair and Assemblymember Chris Ward, Legislative LGBTQ Caucus Vice Chair and Senator Caroline Menjivar, among others.

This event is meant to bring attention to the rise in political attacks, unite in community and mobilize efforts toward preserving LGBTQ+ rights for the state of California and beyond.

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Breaking News

Family of Linda Becerra Moran, trans woman killed by LAPD after calling 911, files lawsuit

Moran was pronounced dead after three weeks on life-support

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On Feb. 7, Linda Becerra Moran contacted the Los Angeles Police Department in a phone call where she reported that she was being held against her will in a San Fernando Motel. 

At around 9:40AM, Moran called the Foothill Division of the LAPD, and was recorded stating that she was not only being held at the motel against her will, but that she was being forced to bring men into her motel room. In the audio call recording, she is heard crying as she answers the questions regarding her safety. 

When the officers found her in the hotel room they stated that she didn’t remember how she got there, while speaking in Spanish to the officers. 

The statement released regarding the officer-involved shooting says that ‘when officers arrived, they entered the motel room and met with Moran. During their investigation, Moran became agitated, armed herself with a knife and held it to her neck.’ 

The officers responded by drawing their guns, further agitating her. The attorney representing the family of Moran says the released video proves that the shooting was unlawful and unjust. 

Now, the TransLatin@ Coalition is looking for justice for Moran and her family, especially considering that she was someone who received services directly from them. They hosted the first vigil for her on Friday, March 14, in front of the LAPD headquarters. 

“Linda Becerra Moran, a trans immigrant who received services from our organization, was brutally shot and murdered by the Los Angeles Police Department. We held a vigil and we invited the community to join us in solidarity as we demand justice and honor Linda’s life,” said the TransLatin@ Coalition in a statement. 

The police officer who shot and killed Moran was Jacob Sanchez, 24, who was hired in 2021. 

Moran was pronounced dead after three weeks on life support in late February.

Somos Familia Valle, is hosting a poster-making event today from 2PM to 8PM where they will be preparing for a call to action. The call to action is scheduled for Saturday, March 22 at the Foothill Division Police Department, at 1PM. The organization posted a list of demands, along with their statement on Moran’s death. 

“At a time where our trans siblings are being attacked politically and socially, now more than ever is the time for us to be loud and seek accountability,” reads the statement. “The murder of Linda Becerra Moran by the Los Angeles Foothill Division Police Department was unwarranted and speaks to the disregard for trans lives, but also the lack of de-escalation tactics.”

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Local

LA’s Queer professionals will gather to host free community event

Open Space Therapy Collective Hosts Community Building Experience with Queerly Connected

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Canva design by Gisselle Palomera

The Open Space Therapy Collective will be hosting a community building experience featuring dozens of LA-based professionals from across different industries. This community-building event was planned in response to the sweeping political attacks against the queer, trans and BIPOC communities. The event hosted by Queerly Connected is fittingly titled We Got Us, and it will be free and open to the public. 

Wellness providers will be there to provide art therapy, movement therapy, grief counseling, sound baths, yoga and other creative and healing arts. 

“As political pressure on our communities intensifies, it’s increasingly more important for us to come together and create a space where our healing and joy can intersect,” said Renea Johnson, founder of Open Space Therapy Collective and host of Queerly Connected. “Historically, in times like these, it’s important for us to expand our community and nurture collaboration. That’s why I’m so grateful for everyone who steps out to build community with us at Queerly Connected. 

Another aim of the event is to learn and experience the modalities of the queer, trans and BIPOC communities. Attendees can deepen their understanding and learn more about a queer-informed approach. 

Some of the experiential workshops and other offerings will include grief counseling by Studio DDLA, sound baths by TSage and DG Sound Healing, full-spectrum support from The Gender Doula, artist collaborations by Secret Spot, nails by Little Brother Nails and more. 

The event will take place at Studio DDLA. This event is meant to encourage people to come as they are, with a rolling entry from 4PM until 7PM on Sunday, March 16. 

To learn more about the event or the collaborators, visit their website.

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Local

WeHo Gives Back program launched to support small businesses

This initiative will raise funds for local businesses impacted by the recent wild fires

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The West Hollywood Chamber of Commerce (WHCC) announced the launch of WeHo Gives Back, a new initiative that is committed to supporting small businesses in West Hollywood that have been impacted by the Los Angeles fires.

“The small businesses of West Hollywood are resilient, but they need our community’s support
now more than ever,” said Genevieve Morrill, WHCC president and CEO. “WeHo Gives Back is
our way of ensuring these establishments receive the support they need to recover and thrive.”

West Hollywood is home to a diverse number of locally owned businesses. From the nightlife and restaurant industries to service providers like dry cleaners and salons, there’s a business for every one of the community’s needs. According to the WeHo Chamber of Commerce, businesses have been experiencing revenue declines between 25 percent to 50 percent with retail, hotels, restaurants, and bars being hit the hardest. In some cases, businesses have reported over 70 percent in loss of revenue, leading to a reduction in staff and operating hours.

About 26 percent of West Hollywood’s workforce is made up of hospitality workers, primarily employed by small businesses. These businesses, including the hotel industry, contribute to an estimated 70 percent of the city’s revenue. Tax revenue is used to support social services, community safety, and infrastructure improvements.

WHCC is calling on the community to support through WeHo Gives Back with a goal to restore the loss in foot traffic and to raise much needed funds. The public is encouraged to venture out to West Hollywood to shop, dine, and play.

The initiative kicked off on March 1st and West Hollywood go-ers will start to see QR codes on signs, napkins and websites in order to contribute to the recovery fund.

For more information about WeHo Gives Back or where to donate, visit wehochamber.com/wehogivesback.

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