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Trans Indians turn to courts for rights

Nursing student last month won right to enroll as Trans person

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Madras High Court in Chennai, India. (Photo by Eugene Ga/Bigstock)

CHENNAI, India — Respect, loyalty and strength are synonymous with India’s Transgender community. 

According to ancient Indian texts, Rama granted Trans people the power to confer a blessing on auspicious occasions. But 200 years of British colonialism changed the environment for them. Indian courts, however, have tried to remedy some of these abuses through landmark rulings.

In October, the Madras High Court, one of the highest courts in India, ruled Trans people are entitled to a special category for admission to post-basic nursing and post-basic diploma in psychiatry nursing courses. 

The Madras High Court directed the secretary of the Tamil Nadu Health and Family Welfare department, the director of Medical Education, and the secretary to the Selection Committee to treat the petitioner S Tamilselvi as the third gender and place her in a special category for admission to the course for the academic year 2022-2023. 

The present exam in the course has been issued only for male and female candidates. 

The top court also said that if any other Trans person applied for the same course, a separate category of merit list shall be prepared by the secretary consisting of only trans candidates and based on merit among Trans candidates. 

Tamilselvi, a candidate for the course, petitioned the Madras High Court to find the Post Basic-Nursing Course and Post Basic Diploma in Psychiatry Nursing Course for the year 2022-2023, as illegal for not categorizing trans candidates under a special category. 

For the same course, communal reservation is available. But there were no separate reservations available for the third gender, which made Tamilselvi approach the court, according to her lawyer, Reshmi Christy. 

While delivering the ruling, the Madras High Court also cited the Indian Supreme Court’s decision to treat the third gender as a special category. 

“Even though special reservation has not been made horizontally for Transgender candidates,” said Justice Suresh Kumar while delivering the decision. “The non-inclusion of the petitioner in the special category meant for Transgender is against the judgments given by the Hon’ble Supreme Court as well as this court and also against the provisions of the 2019 Act.”

While talking with the Washington Blade, Kalki Subramaniam, a Trans rights and climate activist, applauded the ruling and said that reservation is very important for the rise of the economic and social status of the Trans population of India who because of the colonization by the British and their colonial laws have been completely marginalized and till today suffer stigma, exploitation and poverty. Reservation will help them raise their social and economic status sustainably. 

Reacting to the Madras High Court ruling, Chetana Salunkhe of the LGBTQ+ group Navi Mumbai expressed her happiness. 

“It is indeed a great news that the Madras High Court came out with the ruling that Transgender people in India deserve to be provided special reservation with separate merit list of their own,” said Salunkhe. “As per the Indian society Transgender people are not given much opportunities when it comes to studying, working or even generally. But even though this is a start I still believe that merit does not really need to linked with gender, cast creed and that it should be given on knowledge and potential to everyone equally.”

Salunkhe also said that the ruling would lead to greater opportunities for Trans people in India as they have been denied even basic rights. 

“Due to this one step they will at least get access to education and work which can help them have a stable lifestyle for them and their family and overall even the societies viewpoint will change towards the community when we are seen successful,” said Salunkhe. “I also believe, all we need to grow in life, is to be seen equally in the eyes of the society and be treated right.”

Kanav Narayan Sahgal, a communication manager at Nyaaya, the Vidhi Center for Legal Policy, also applauded the High Court’s ruling. 

“I think it’s a progressive step forward. From what I understand, the court held this decision unwaveringly,” said Sahgal. “While this case related to the admission of Transgender people for Post Basic (Nursing) Courses and Post Basic Diploma Courses in Psychiatry Nursing for the academic year 2022-2023, courts and legislators will ultimately have to think about how to expand the ambit to this judgment (and its reasoning) to possible challenges to discriminatory admission processes for other courses, especially those that are quite unfamiliar to LGBTQ+ issues such as finance, business, and real estate. The real question in my mind is how can we include Transgender people in all walks of life, beyond just healthcare.”

Sahgal also added that it is the most progressive step forward, and it would be pertinent to listen to trans activists themselves who has spoken widely on the issue of reservations. 

“Grace Banu, whose activism I deeply admire, has been a fierce advocate of horizontal reservations for Transgender people,” said Sahgal. “This will give SC, ST and OBC Transgender people greater opportunities and will ensure that policy makers truly take an intersectional approach while trying to include Transgender people in matters of law and governance. In 2021, Karnataka become the first state to provide one percent reservation for transgender persons in employment for civil services posts across caste categories. This was a result of an intervention filed by Jeeva, an organization working on the rights of sexual minorities in Karnataka in Sangama v. State of Karnataka. I hope that other states in India follow suit.”

Ankush Kumar is a freelance reporter who has covered many stories for Washington and Los Angeles Blades from Iran, India and Singapore. He recently reported for the Daily Beast. He can be reached at [email protected]. He is on Twitter at @mohitkopinion

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Miscellaneous

Queer highlights of the 2026 Oscars: Barbra Streisand’s live performance, a shocking tie, and more

The queer short film ‘Two People Exchanging Saliva’ tied in the Best Live Action Short category

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While last night’s Academy Awards saw the expected winners One Battle After Another and Sinners nab a collective 10 Oscars throughout the evening, dominating most of the major categories, there were a few moments for queer film fans to celebrate.

During the ceremony’s prolonged and emotional In Memoriam segment, which paid tribute to Robert Redford, Rob Reiner, and Catherine O’Hara, queer icon Barbra Streisand went on stage and gave a rare live performance of “The Way We Were” as a tribute to Redford, who died last September at the age of 83. Before singing, Streisand said, “Now, Bob had real backbone on and off the screen. He spoke up to defend freedom of the press, protect the environment, and encouraged new voices at his Sundance Institute — some of whom are up for Oscars tonight, which is so great. He was thoughtful and bold.”

Both “I Lied to You” from Sinners and “Golden” from KPop Demon Hunters were performed live; Alabama Shakes frontwoman Brittany Howard performed during the evening’s powerful rendition of Sinners’ “pierce the veil” scene. Golden ended up winning the Best Original Song award.

One of the most shocking moments of the night arrived early on when Kumail Nanjiani presented the Best Live Action short category, which was a tie between The Singers and Two People Exchanging Saliva — only the seventh tie in Oscars history (one of which involved Streisand’s 1969 win for Funny Girl!) The latter short, which is currently streaming on The New Yorker, is described as “a dystopian version of Paris where kissing is forbidden and purchases are made through small acts of violence” and follows the unexpected connection between two women.

When accepting the award last night, Two People Exchanging Saliva director and producer Natalie Musteata said: “Thank you to the Academy for supporting a film that is weird, and that is queer, and that is made by a majority of women!”

One Battle After Another’s editor, Andy Jurgensen (who collaborated with Paul Thomas Anderson on Licorice Pizza and Phantom Thread), kissed his husband before going on stage to accept his award for film editing. He said, “To my partner, Bill, who brings so much joy to my life every day.”

Overall, the 2026 award season did not feature many queer films or actors in the line-up, and that was reflected in both the Oscar nominees and eventual winners. Smaller award shows like the Gotham Awards and the Film Independent Spirit Awards provided opportunities for indies like Sorry, Baby, Twinless, and Lurker to get proper recognition.

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Events

Carrying the sapphic torch forward: The Dinah returns this year with new leaders

For three decades, The Dinah has been a sapphic utopia for queer people worldwide. How will new owners preserve the music festival?

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The Dinah is one of the biggest, multi-day music festivals organized for and by sapphic people. (Photo courtesy RADskillZ)

Sapphic exaltation can be found poolside at The Dinah, where for the last three decades, sapphic people have gathered to dance, find long-lasting community, and celebrate their own sacred queer joy. Affectionately dubbed “lesbian Coachella,” The Dinah is one of the largest music festivals held for queer women and sapphic people, including trans and nonbinary community members. 

The Dinah has always been loud and proud, and was brought to fruition by renowned party thrower Mariah Hanson. In 1991, she organized the festival’s first iteration, molding the Palm Springs Modern Art Museum into a lively, safe bubble for sapphic people to experience high-voltage, unfettered togetherness and belonging — without shame, harm, or discrimination. 

Over 30 years later, The Dinah has become a sapphic “utopia”: a multi-day gathering where people can find community, revel in sapphic excellence, and see some of the biggest superstars in their space thrive on stage. Previous performers include Doechii, Margaret Cho, the Indigo Girls, Tegan and Sara, Princess Nokia, and Lauren Jauregui. 

In 2026, the festival sees another evolution: new leadership. Bella Barkow and Rose Garcia have acquired the festival from Hanson and are aiming to make the event more inclusive, accessible, and joyful than ever. They want to preserve the alchemy of queer parties — these are the very spaces that they, as queer youth, discovered liberation and love. 

On Feb. 11, it was announced that Rose Garcia and Bella Barkow are the new co-owners of The Dinah. (Photo courtesy Mona Elyafi)

Barkow grew up in Toronto’s rave scene and would spend time hanging out in Church and Wellesley, the city’s queer-friendly nucleus. 2,000 miles away, Garcia was stirring up L.A.’s club scene, her infectious wiles becoming the real-life inspiration for a character in the lesbian TV bible, The L Word.

They both also have history with The Dinah: Barkow, a queer event producer, managed the festival’s operations before their recent acquisition. Garcia was hand-plucked by Hanson to host and emcee the festival for over a decade. 

Wild, rebellious, and uplifted by community, Barkow and Garcia are now dedicated to preserving and multiplying this space for other sapphic people across generations. As co-owners of the festival, they speak with great care about carrying this torch forward: of preserving this ecosystem that Hanson constructed and maintained, alone. Their challenge is two-fold: how do they preserve its history and essence while also creating enough breathing room for change and transformation?

The Dinah 2025 (Photo by RADskillZ)

The Blade sat down with Barkow and Garcia to talk about their vision for The Dinah and its future. 

Rose, before you were an emcee and now co-owner of The Dinah, you were attending the festival as a young queer person. What was that like for you?

Garcia: When I first discovered the Dinah, it was in my early twenties, and I couldn’t afford to go for the whole weekend. I was young, working, going to school, and figuring things out, so my friends and I would hop into a car and drive up for Sunday’s pool party. When I first showed up there, I was like: this is incredible. I’ve never seen so many sapphic women in one space. It was thousands upon thousands of women. And even though I’m in a big “market” in LA, we still didn’t have a lot of places to go back then. We had the Palms bar and a couple of clubs, but nothing to this scale. 

So when I walked [into the Dinah], I was meeting people from Australia, Europe, Canada — people from all over the world. And it was so amazing, because I never knew something like this existed. It became my go-to place and a part of my life, honestly: [I could] congregate with my friends, take this amazing trip, and be around thousands of folks and feel a sense of acceptance and safety. 

You’ve both been upfront that you want to make sure The Dinah is affordable, inclusive and accessible. Tell me more about the value of that and how you’re making this happen. 

Barkow: It’s nice to think that LGBTQ rights are on a linear path towards betterness, but unfortunately, the world is not working like that. We both believe that this event needs to keep being accessible to the younger generation, to the people who, like us, came out when they were young, and perhaps saw it on The L Word, or The Real L Word, like myself. I remember seeing it when I was in Toronto and being like: “Oh my God. This place exists. This is a real thing. I can actually go there and be myself.” We do think it’s important that this event is for everyone. I’ve had women in their 70’s who are first timers coming up, so you never know. 

Garcia: I also want to interject that even though it’s been open to everyone, we want to actually scream it from the top of the mountains: that it’s not only a sapphic, women-loving-women (WLW) event. It’s open to all of our friends, and we accept and want everyone to feel welcome. That’s really important to Bella and me. We want to make sure our trans community feels welcome, [our] nonbinary community. We want everyone to feel that they can come to this space and feel accepted. 

Barkow: I started gender sensitivity and proper pronoun usage training with the front-of-house staff at Dinah about two years ago, and we’re hoping to expand that and make sure that all staff, including hotel and security, are aware of that. There’s always the fear that [they could] misgender or misrepresent someone based on how they look. [We make it clear] you need to understand that our community is very, very specific. You need to support that and be a part of it. 

What are you most excited about in this new era of The Dinah?

Garcia: I’m excited to see the people who are going to come. When we launched the tickets, we got an overwhelming, warm, amazing reception. That was something that I was initially worried about [in] the change of hands. “Is it going to fare well with the community?” And we’ve been accepted. So, we’re excited to see what the community says about our first production and to see the faces of people just being happy, celebrating, and enjoying the weekend, and to look at my partner and be like: Man, we did this. Our blood, sweat, and tears for the last 10 months are finally coming to fruition.

Bella: I’m really excited to see how the community takes to the new initiatives that we’re bringing out that are community building-specific activations, so things for the solo and single travelers and things for the sober community that really expand the event. [It’s] a music festival first and foremost, but also a space to build lifelong friendships. As Mariah used to call it, this five-day utopia [is] a place where the outside world doesn’t matter and we’re all there to be together and enjoy community together. 

You’ve acquired The Dinah and you’re deep in the planning of this year’s festival. Does all of this, and the reception you’ve received, give you hope for the future of sapphic spaces?

Garcia: Yes, I think it does. Mariah used to have a partnership program [and] we’re going to reignite that. [We’ll] reach out to a lot of sapphic spaces throughout the country and all over the world, and [become] promotional partners. Not only does it support them in any events that they plan on having, because Dinah does have a big draw and a big reach, but it also helps us reach out to those markets as well. And we support each other. It’s a win-win for both. We [also] see a lot of the younger generation working on bringing more events to the community, and Bella and I are big supporters of all of them. 

Barkow: It’s the understanding that there’s enough room at the table for everyone. We need to support each other as a community. Historically, it’s always been like a woman is sitting at the table and she says: “Oh, this is my seat, and it’s the only seat, and so I have to protect my seat.” And that’s not true. I see this as an opportunity for us to help pull other women up to come join the table because there’s a seat for everyone. 

Dinah 2026 takes place from Sept. 30 to Oct. 5 in Palm Springs. More information can be found on their website.

Kristie Song is a California Local News Fellow placed with the Los Angeles Blade. The California Local News Fellowship is a state-funded initiative to support and strengthen local news reporting. Learn more about it at fellowships.journalism.berkeley.edu/cafellows.

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Los Angeles

UCLA’s long-standing LGBTQ+ alumni organization welcomes new president 

The Blade sat down with paralegal studies professor and local advocate Bobby Rimas to talk about intersectional leadership and his goals for the UCLA Lambda Alumni Association. 

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Bobby Rimas assumed the presidency of the UCLA Lambda Alumni Association early this month. (Photo courtesy Bobby Rimas)

As a young student studying history at UCLA, Bobby Rimas was grounded by his growing desire to give back to his community. He worked as a tutor for low-income students and became invested in learning about the ways intersectionality impacts people’s access to education and resources. “My barriers may not be the same as yours, and your barriers may not be the same as mine,” Rimas told the Blade. “How do you apply that in leadership [and] in the classroom?” 

After 15 years of service to UCLA’s various alumni networks, first beginning with the Pilipino Alumni Association, Rimas became president of the university’s Lambda Alumni Association on Jan. 1. The UCLA Lambda Alumni Association was formed in 1989 as a way to support LGBTQ+ students and graduates with professional development, scholarship opportunities, mentorship, and other outreach support. 

UCLA has long been a local epicenter of queer activism and advancement. Students formed groups like the Gay Student Union and Lesbian Sisterhood in 1969 and 1973, respectively, to empower and connect queer students. Queer art and culture also thrived in this time, as students saw the launches of the queer campus paper, magazine, and a film festival that centered on LGBTQ+ stories. 

Administratively, campus officials were taking a stance against LGBTQ+ discrimination. In 1975,  UCLA Chancellor Charles E. Young banned departments and programs from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation. 

In the decades since, leaders like Rimas are working to preserve this history and also build upon it. How can we inspire students in and out of the classroom? How do we make sure they have access to valuable resources and can advocate for themselves in places that are not always inclusive of their needs and identities?

Rimas often ponders these questions, both as president of the Lambda Alumni Association and at Cal State LA, where he works as an associate professor of paralegal studies. There is often cross-pollination in the concerns he receives from alumni members as well as his students: How do they find employers who are accepting of LGBTQ+ people? How do they avoid being discriminated against in the workplace?

These are questions Rimas hopes to tackle more in his role as president of the UCLA Lambda Alumni Association and in his continued tenure as an educator. One of his first goals is to expand the board and bring on more diverse perspectives to the organization. “More people means more activity,” Rimas said, who hopes that the combined knowledge and resources of the board can better serve students and alumni. 

Rimas also hopes to throw a large Gala event, one that mirrors the extravagant, celebratory 2019 bash he organized for the association when he was first brought onto the team. 100 people attended, creating a wave of awareness for the organization and increasing their scholarship funding. 

What’s next? UCLA Lambda Alumni Association’s first board meeting is this upcoming Monday. Rimas hopes to discuss strategies to grow the organization’s presence beyond the campus’ reach, in other queer cornerstones like West Hollywood, elevating diverse LGBTQ+ voices, and improving ways they can professionally support their network’s members. 

Kristie Song is a California Local News Fellow placed with the Los Angeles Blade. The California Local News Fellowship is a state-funded initiative to support and strengthen local news reporting. Learn more about it at fellowships.journalism.berkeley.edu/cafellows.

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Los Angeles

Advocates demand that trans youth be protected as cases are argued in Supreme Court

This week, LGBTQ+ advocates and legal experts spoke in support of trans youth as two Supreme Court cases challenge their rights and safety.

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Viscount Lucas Rojas, Toni Newman and Jenny Pizer called for the protection of trans youth at a press conference on Jan. 13. (Photo courtesy AIDS Healthcare Foundation)

This Tuesday, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments regarding two cases about transgender girls in sports: Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J. 

In 2020, Idaho Governor Brad Little signed into law HB 500, which bans transgender girls and women from participating in school sports. This affected the first case’s respondent: transgender student athlete Lindsay Hecox, who was barred from participating in the track and cross country teams as well as intramural soccer and running clubs.

In 2021, then-governor of West Virginia, Jim Justice, approved HB 3293, which enacts a similar ban. Becky Pepper-Jackson (B.P.J.), now an incoming high school student, opposed the discriminatory policy when it prevented her from joining her then-middle school’s cross country and track and field teams. Pepper-Jackson has also only undergone female puberty due to gender-affirming care, but West Virginia argues that its anti-transgender policies should be upheld because of her assigned sex at birth. 

For LGBTQ+ advocates and allies, these cases illustrate the burden and harm transgender people face daily as their rights to privacy, dignity, care, and inclusion are constantly at risk of being eroded and stripped completely. 

Experts also wonder if these cases could potentially reshape the Constitution’s Equal Protection Clause as well as the civil rights law, Title IX. The former prohibits discrimination on other factors aside from race, though governments have argued that certain “suspect classifications” can be looked at more closely through “heightened scrutiny.” The latter prohibits sex-based discrimination in federally-funded schools.

What is unfolding and how local advocates are informing change:

The fight ahead is weary, and experts are certain that the states involved will not concede their points. In a webinar organized yesterday by the Williams Institute, several LGBTQ+ policy experts, including Rutgers Law School professor and anti-discrimination scholar Katie Eyer, examined where these cases may be heading, as well as efforts to muddy the arguments. 

“It seems possible that the court might try to sidestep that issue here by saying that these laws don’t target transgender people at all,” Eyer said. “I think for most people, this seems bananas: like an upside-down world. We all know these laws were about transgender people.”

Jenny Pizer, an attorney for the LGBTQ+ civil rights legal organization Lambda Legal and a co-counsel member for the B.P.J. case, affirmed this sentiment at a press conference organized Tuesday by Lambda Legal and AIDS Healthcare Foundation affinity group, FLUX. “They’ve gone to great lengths to say there’s no discrimination,” Pizer said. “[They’re arguing] it’s just technicalities or classifications.” 

Eyer was one of three Equal Protections scholars who filed an amicus brief to be considered in the Supreme Court cases. An amicus brief is a legal document submitted by someone who is not involved directly in a case but who may offer additional perspectives and information that can inform the ruling process. 

Eyer’s brief provided historical context that clarified the disadvantages of blanket sex-based policies. These types of laws, according to Eyer, uphold stereotypes over nuance, truth, and equal protection guidelines. For Pepper-Jackson, who has only undergone female puberty and who does not “benefit” from what dissidents define as a sex-based competitive “advantage,” the state should have provided her the ability to argue that she should have the same rights as other girls. 

“Of course, the state hasn’t done that here,” Eyer said. “Under these precedents, the Supreme Court should invalidate the laws as applied to those trans girls who really don’t have a sex-based competitive advantage.”

Who are these bills protecting?

The states argue that their policies are merely “ensuring safety and fairness in girls’ sports.” But queer advocates understand that this is a veneer for the exclusion of transgender people from society. Forcing trans youth out of sports “does not protect anyone,” according to California LGBTQ Health and Human Services Network director Dannie Ceseňa, who spoke at Tuesday’s press conference.

“It encourages the scrutiny of children’s bodies. It fuels gender policing, and it creates hostile school environments — not safer ones,” said Ceseňa. “Our youth should not inherit a world that treats their existence as a threat.” 

Transgender people are systemically disempowered 

At yesterday’s webinar, Distinguished Visiting Scholar at the Williams Institute Andrew Flores discussed his own amicus brief in support of Pepper-Jackson. The brief highlights the need for “heightened judicial scrutiny” in Pepper-Jackson’s case because the majority of political processes “systemically fail” transgender people. 

For example, the transgender community faces substantial barriers in exercising their voter rights because of voter identification laws and other policies that regulate and define identity. “Even being able to gain access to the franchise is a burden for transgender people,” Flores said. “The court does play an important role there. It can grant legitimacy to arguments…or at least [acknowledge] that these issues are more complicated than maybe how they’ll receive them.” 

What’s next?

Experts are hesitant about where the cases stand. “Bottom line: I don’t know what the court is going to do in these cases. They may send them back down for further development,” Pizer said, who thinks future rulings will not shift more overarching policies regarding transgender rights. “I think they will probably decide based only on laws about sports, not laws more broadly about the rights of trans folks.” 

But whatever is decided, the impacts will trickle down to everyone. While the cases deal specifically with anti-transgender policies, experts warn that LGBTQ+ issues have always been tied to racial, economic, and disability justice. “There’s this looming constitutional campaign to really undermine civil rights,” said Eyer. “That affects LGBTQ people. It affects people of color. It affects people with disabilities. It affects everybody, and it really is concerning.” 

As transgender inclusion and safety are being argued on the largest legal stage, advocates are asking: “When are you going to step up?” They are also sending a direct message to transgender youth: “We see you, we believe in you, and we are fighting for you,” said Ceseňa. “You deserve joy, community, and care. You deserve a future that reflects who you are and not who anyone or any politician demands you to be. Trans youth deserve better.” 

Kristie Song is a California Local News Fellow placed with the Los Angeles Blade. The California Local News Fellowship is a state-funded initiative to support and strengthen local news reporting. Learn more about it at fellowships.journalism.berkeley.edu/cafellows.

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LGBTQ+ Youth Mental Health

Law expanding mental health resources for LGBTQ+ youth has gone under effect

Beginning Jan. 1, AB 727 amplifies resources for queer students in California.

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(Blade photo by Michael Key)

On Wednesday, Governor Newsom announced in a press release that a number of key statewide laws would take effect on New Year’s Day. One of these laws is AB 727, a bill that mandates that all student ID cards in California’s public middle schools, high schools, and colleges include the number for the LGBTQ+ suicide prevention nonprofit The Trevor Project’s 24/7 crisis hotline. 

Authored by local Assemblymember Mark González, the bill is especially crucial as President Trump steers administrative efforts that seek to end various LGBTQ+ resources. In 2025, the national 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline discontinued its “Press 3 option,” which connected young queer people to a specialized counseling line. 

Hate crimes targeting transgender, gender nonconforming, and other queer folks are on the rise in California. Amongst LGBTQ+ youth, mental health concerns are increasing. The Trevor Project found in a recent study that suicidal ideation amongst young LGBTQ+ people living in the U.S. rose from 41% to 47% in the last two years.

In December, the administration began advancing proposals that would ban gender-affirming care for minors, as well as restrict insurance coverage around these essential services. News updates like these have become frequent and incessant, creating an echo chamber that more and more young queer folks are struggling to escape from. 

AB 727 is trying to remind them that they are not alone. “Every student deserves to feel safe, supported, and seen for who they are,” wrote Governor Newsom in October, when he first signed the bill. “AB 727 makes it clear: your identity doesn’t disqualify you from care and community – it’s exactly why we are fighting to make it easier to reach.”

The bill is one of a number of statewide and local efforts to ensure young queer people are able to readily access empowering resources, education, and someone who is eager to listen to and support them. For many queer folks, this small act can be life-altering, even life-saving. Other initiatives include a motion by Los Angeles Supervisors Lindsey Horvath and Janice Hahn that proposes a localized version of the “Press 3 option.”

“We’re sending a clear message,” wrote Assemblymember González, after AB 727’s initial signing in October. “[That] our LGBTQ+ youth are seen, valued, and never alone. AB 727 is not just a piece of legislation; it is a lifeline for our queer youth.” 

Kristie Song is a California Local News Fellow placed with the Los Angeles Blade. The California Local News Fellowship is a state-funded initiative to support and strengthen local news reporting. Learn more about it at fellowships.journalism.berkeley.edu/cafellows.

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Los Angeles

Anger, resistance and unity coursed through L.A. City Hall “No Kings” protest

The Blade photographed Saturday’s demonstration as thousands mobilized and marched

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Protestors joined in chants and made calls for community action (Blade photo by Kristie Song)

On Oct. 18th, a mosaic of Angelinos across generations and cultural backgrounds gathered outside of city hall as they proudly lifted handmade signs decrying President Trump and the current administration. This march was one of several rallies organized just within the city, and one of thousands others organized across the nation.

The protest was packed, with people standing nearly shoulder to shoulder as a number of local leaders including Black Women for Wellness Action Project policy analyst LaKisha Camese, TransLatin@ Coalition president Bamby Salcedo and Assemblymember Isaac Bryan, made rousing speeches and led passionate chants before the march began. Speakers like political commentator Brian Tyler Cohen did not hold back when they addressed the crowd. “[They are] so desperate to rebrand this thing as a ‘Hate America’ rally. But do you know what hating America looks like?,” asked Cohen.

Image captures by Blade reporter Kristie Song

“It looks like sending secret police accountable to no one into our cities…It looks like keeping the government closed because you are so hell bent on stripping away health care from 24 million Americans and trying to get their costs to double, triple or quadruple. So if you’re looking for the ‘Hate America’ rally, might I suggest the White House.”

Protestors cheered at the top of their lungs with each passing speech, and each clear and explicit denouncement of the current administration. “There’s no rally like what’s happening here in Los Angeles,” said Assemblymember Bryan. “This is where Black, brown, poor, indigenous, everyday people come together…Washington D.C. doesn’t care about us, and we know that. But, we care about each other, don’t we? We believe that health care is a human right, don’t we? We believe that housing is a human right, don’t we? We will stand up to authoritarianism, won’t we? Because when we fight together, what happens? We win!”

As people began to grow restless, the march finally began, taking them to a highway overpass.

As residents boarded a bus at Cesar E. Chavez and Broadway, they were halted by blocked roads as large congregations marched by. Transit riders looked on into the crowds, their faces mere inches from some of the passing protestors. Separated by a layer of window glass, one nodded along as protestors lifted their signs above their heads and chanted “ICE out of LA!” Some waved to people inside the stalled bus, inviting solidarity from those who weren’t marching alongside them.

When the road cleared, their calls could still be heard for a little longer.

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California

Governor Newsom has vetoed two bills aimed to improve PrEP and gender-affirming care access

An update on AB 554 and SB 418, as well as nine other LGBTQ+ bills that the governor passed earlier this week

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(Blade photo by Michael Key)

This Monday, Governor Newsom issued a legislative update on over 150 bills that had passed legislation and were waiting on his decision on whether or not they would be chaptered into law. 11 of these bills advocated for queer community members, including their improved access to healthcare, more privacy rights, greater ease in changing their name and gender markers, as well as the expansion of adoption rights and the inclusion of two-spirit individuals into important funding and resource opportunities. 

Two were vetoed. 

AB 554: Greater access to HIV/AIDS preventative medicine (Vetoed)

First introduced in February, AB 554 was co-authored by local Assemblymember Mark González and San Francisco Assemblymember Matt Haney. Also known as the Protecting Rights, Expanding Prevention, and Advancing Reimbursement for Equity (PrEPARE) Act of 2025, the bill intended to expand patients’ access to various forms of FDA-approved HIV/AIDS preventative medication. It would have prohibited health insurance plans from subjecting these forms of medication to prior authorization, step therapy, or cost-sharing. It would have also required the state to reimburse local agencies for administering this medicine, alleviating the strain on small clinics to meet the demand of community members in need of PrEP. 

Though LGBTQ+ civil rights groups like Equality California rallied support for the bill, it was returned by the governor without a signature. In a veto memo, he wrote that he “wholeheartedly [supports] efforts to ensure affordable and accessible prevention and treatment of HIV/AIDS” but questioned whether the bill would actually increase the affordability of and access to necessary preventative treatment. “By exceeding the cost-sharing provisions under the ACA [Affordable Care Act], this bill would result in increased costs to health plans, which would then be passed on to consumers.” 

In response, Assemblymember González wrote to the Blade about his disappointment. Still, he remains hopeful about the state of PrEP access. “I’m deeply grateful to Governor Newsom for his continued partnership and for standing with us in protecting access to PrEP through this year’s budget.”

SB 418: Stronger access to gender-affirming care without discrimination (Vetoed)

Authored by Senator Caroline Menjivar, SB 418 would have required a health care service plan to cover up to a 12-month supply of FDA-approved prescription hormone therapy and the supplies needed by an individual to self-administer this medication without being subjected to utilization management methods like prior authorization.

The bill was also intended to prohibit health insurers from denying a patient the ability to enroll in or renew their health insurance plans based on factors like sex characteristics, intersex traits, and gender identity. 

In late January, President Trump released a statement that the federal government would “not fund, sponsor, promote, assist, or support the so-called ‘transition’ of a child from one sex to another.” As healthcare for trans, gender-expansive, and intersex (TGI) individuals becomes increasingly unstable under the current administration, SB 418 aimed to protect TGI community members and their ability to access critical and necessary hormone therapy and gender-affirming care. 

In the governor’s veto memo, he wrote that he was “concerned” about the bill’s limitation on utilization management methods. For him, it’s an “important tool [that ensured] enrollees receive the right care at the right time. Prohibiting this cost constraint strategy is likely to result in an increase in enrollee premiums to offset costs incurred by health plans and insurers.” 

For Senator Menjivar, this decision was “heartbreaking” as TGI individuals continue to face barriers to vital care. “SB 418 was the most tangible and effective legislative tool introduced this year to help TGI folks weather this political storm,” Menjivar wrote to the Blade. Still, she says that she is committed to continue fighting to secure health care access for TGI community members.

The vetoing of these two bills was a major blow for LGBTQ+ civil rights organizations and advocates. Equality California executive director Tony Hoang wrote about his disappointment in a recent press release. “These bills would have guaranteed that transgender people and their families could continue to access essential medications without disruption and that people at risk of HIV could obtain PrEP quickly and affordably,” wrote Hoang. “The Governor’s decision to veto these measures undermines California’s longstanding leadership in advancing health equity and protecting the LGBTQ+ community.”

But with these setbacks came a number of wins. Governor Newsom passed nine other bills advancing the rights of LGBTQ+ individuals. 

SB 59: Confidentiality protections for trans and nonbinary individuals

This bill, authored by Senator Scott Wiener, will ensure that when someone files a legal petition to change their name or their gender marker, these court records are kept confidential. Additionally, SB 59 will prohibit people other than the petitioner to post these confidential records online.

AB 678: Creating an LGBTQ+ inclusive council on homelessness

Created by Assemblymember Alex Lee, AB 678 will require the governor to build an Interagency Council on Homelessness that will form relationships between federal and state agencies with local, on-the-ground coalitions and nonprofit organizations that focus on working with unhoused communities. Together, they will work on creating strategies to end homelessness.

The bill also specifically requires this council to actively work with LGBTQ+ leaders and community members to ensure that the strategies it develops are inclusive and culturally competent. 

AB 1525: Restricting disciplinary action against attorneys on the basis of “sensitive services,” which includes gender-affirming care 

The California State Assembly’s Committee on Judiciary created this bill to prohibit disciplinary action against attorneys who receive, advocate for, recommend, or enable “sensitive services,” which include health care services for sexual and reproductive health, sexually transmitted illnesses, and gender-affirming care. 

AB 1084: Streamlining court processes for name and gender marker changes 

Created by Assemblymember Rick Zbur, AB 1084 aims to quicken the process and limit barriers transgender and nonbinary individuals face when filing to change their name and gender marker. The bill will require courts to issue orders within six weeks from when a petition is filed, and without a hearing. The bill will also prohibit others from being able to file an objection to a petitioner’s name or gender marker change.

SB 450: Protecting adoption rights for LGBTQ+ parents and families 

Authored by Senator Menjivar, SB 450 will allow queer parents from other states to claim parentage rights to their adopted children born in California. “The signing of SB 450 is a win for LGBTQ+ parents who want what every parent wants, the protection of their legal rights as the parents of their children,” Senator Menjivar wrote to the Blade. “SB 450 clarifies California’s longstanding jurisdiction for adoption proceedings, including confirmatory adoptions, in cases where the families no longer live, or never lived, in the state but the child was born here. This means LGBTQ+ families, who are weighing the options of potentially leaving an affirming state to a Red state for financial reasons, can at least now feel confident that decision won’t cost them their parental rights.” 

SB 497: Protecting right to gender-affirming care from out-of-state law enforcement

Authored by Senator Wiener, SB 497 is another bill focused on providing protections for transgender and nonbinary individuals. It will prohibit healthcare providers and service plans from releasing medical information related to gender-affirming care for a patient who is being pursued by out-of-state law enforcement officials. SB 497 would also generally safeguard against out-of-state subpoenas that would prevent a person’s ability to access gender-affirming care.

SB 590: Including chosen family members in paid family leave laws

Authored by Senator Maria Durazo, this bill would alter existing laws around paid family leave, which currently provides wage replacement benefits for up to eight weeks for workers who take time off work to take care of seriously ill family members. SB 590 will expand this definition of family members to include “designated” persons. For many queer individuals, their “chosen family” members are often just as crucial, if not more than, their blood relatives. This bill opens up the scope of what is considered a family member, allowing LGBTQ+ individuals wage protections if they take time away to care for these loved ones.

AB 1487: Expanding equity fund to include two-spirit communities 

Co-authored by Assemblymembers Dawn Addis and Mark González, AB 1487 will rename the existing Transgender, Gender Nonconforming, and Intersex Wellness and Equity Fund to the Two-Spirit, Transgender, Gender Nonconforming, and Intersex (2TGI) Wellness and Equity Fund. This will enable the fund to grant financial support to organizations that serve two-spirit and LGBTQ+ tribal community members in a number of services, including: workforce development training, resettlement and social integration programs, youth outreach, healthcare support, and more. 

AB 82: Confidentiality protections for patients and providers of reproductive and gender-affirming care 

Authored by Assemblymember Chris Ward, this bill will allow reproductive or gender-affirming health care patients and service providers who face violence and harassment because of their association with such care to request that state and local agencies protect the confidentiality of their identities and addresses. 

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Miscellaneous

Escaping the party culture: Why more LGBTQ+ people are choosing sobriety and utilizing ketamine therapy

Today, a new wave of healing is taking root—one that blends cutting-edge science with compassionate care.

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Introduction: From Glitter to Grounding

West Hollywood has long been a symbol of queer resilience, joy, and liberation. But beneath the rainbow lights and endless champagne toasts lies a quieter truth: many LGBTQ+ individuals are struggling with depression, alcohol dependency, and anxiety. The party culture that once felt like freedom can slowly turn into a trap.

Today, a new wave of healing is taking root—one that blends cutting-edge science with compassionate care. Instead of another night numbing pain at the bar, thousands of queer residents are choosing sobriety, finding purpose, and embracing innovative treatments like at-home ketamine therapy and low-dose naltrexone (LDN).

At the heart of this movement is Better U, a mental wellness company disrupting the status quo with discreet, science-backed solutions that bring healing into your home.

The LGBTQ+ Mental Health Crisis: More Than Just Statistics

The numbers are sobering: LGBTQ+ adults are twice as likely as heterosexual adults to experience depression, anxiety, and substance use disorders. In West Hollywood, where nightlife thrives, alcohol often becomes a coping mechanism—until it becomes a chain.

Alcohol use disorder affects up to 25% of LGBTQ+ adults, compared to about 10% of the general population. LGBTQ+ youth are four times more likely to attempt suicide than their peers. Despite these disparities, most treatment options still revolve around daily antidepressants or 12-step programs that don’t address the root causes of pain.

The truth? Traditional mental health care is falling short for queer communities.

Why Daily Pills and Party Culture Aren’t Enough

For decades, the standard treatment for depression and anxiety has been daily antidepressants. But LGBTQ+ patients often report:

• Unwanted side effects (weight gain, sexual dysfunction, emotional numbness).
• Low effectiveness rates (many report little to no relief after years on medication).
• Stigma around seeking help that discourages follow-through.

Add to that the cultural reliance on alcohol as a form of connection, and many people find themselves in a cycle of numb → escape → crash → repeat.

This is where ketamine therapy and LDN step in—not as escapism, but as tools for healing, sobriety, and self-discovery.

The Science of Ketamine Therapy: Rewiring the Brain

Unlike recreational use, ketamine therapy is a safe, low-dose, medically guided treatment that targets the root of depression and addiction.

• Neuroplasticity boost: Ketamine stimulates glutamate receptors, helping neurons form new connections. Think of it as opening “windows of change” where stuck thought patterns can be rewired.
• Rapid results: Unlike antidepressants that can take six to eight weeks, ketamine therapy often reduces depression and suicidal ideation within hours to days.
• Emotional reset: Patients report profound shifts in perspective, allowing them to process trauma without being consumed by it.

For LGBTQ+ patients who’ve lived with rejection, shame, or identity-based trauma, this reset can be life-changing.

Low-Dose Naltrexone (LDN): A Little-Known Ally Against Alcohol

While ketamine works on depression and anxiety, LDN quietly helps tackle alcohol cravings and inflammation.

• How it works: Naltrexone blocks opioid receptors, reducing the rewarding effects of alcohol. Over time, drinking loses its grip.
• In low doses: LDN also calms inflammation in the brain and body, which researchers link to depression, chronic pain, and autoimmune conditions.
• For sobriety: Thousands in recovery use LDN to ease the process of quitting drinking without feeling deprived.

When combined with ketamine therapy, LDN addresses both the emotional and physical roots of addiction.

Better U: Healing at Home, Without the Stigma

Here’s what sets Better U apart in West Hollywood’s crowded wellness landscape:

  1. At-Home Treatment – No fluorescent clinic lines, no judgmental waiting rooms. Medication is delivered discreetly to your door.
  2. Remote Accountability Coaching – Licensed integration coaches guide you through your journey, helping you stay accountable while building new habits.
  3. Holistic Healing – Ketamine therapy, LDN, and psychiatric support are all combined into one seamless program.
  4. Community Impact – Better U has already helped tens of thousands nationwide, including thousands in West Hollywood, find freedom from alcohol, depression, and anxiety.

“Our mission is to help people come home to themselves—to finally feel at ease in their own skin. To soften the noise of depression, addiction, and anxiety, and replace it with clarity, connection, and love. Every person deserves more than quick fixes or endless prescriptions.

With Better U, we’re offering a path to real healing: the freedom to let go of what no longer serves you and the courage to step into the world as your truest self—living with compassion, spreading love, and inspiring others to do the same.”

Escaping the Party Culture: Stories of Change

Imagine Marco, a 34-year-old gay man living in West Hollywood. For years, weekends meant endless drinking, hookups, and waking up Monday feeling emptier than before. Therapy helped, but not enough. Antidepressants dulled him.

After starting Better U’s at-home ketamine therapy with LDN, Marco noticed:

• His cravings for alcohol decreased.
• His depression lifted in weeks, not months.
• He started running again, something he hadn’t done in years.
• For the first time, he felt hope—not just distraction.

His story is not unique. Across West Hollywood, queer residents are realizing: healing doesn’t have to happen at the bar. It can happen at home.

The Neurobiology of Sobriety: A Closer Look

Why does this approach work so well?

• Ketamine + Glutamate: Increases BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor), helping the brain rewire out of depressive loops.
• LDN + Endorphins: Increases endorphin release in low doses, stabilizing mood while reducing alcohol cravings.
• Alcohol-Free Brain: Within 30 days of sobriety, dopamine receptors begin to recover, improving motivation and joy.

When you pair all three, you’re essentially retraining the brain’s reward system—away from alcohol, toward healthier sources of meaning.

From Isolation to Community

Sobriety can feel lonely, especially in queer spaces where nightlife dominates. But Better U builds community in new ways:

• Integration groups (virtual safe spaces to share experiences).
• Accountability coaching (so you’re never alone in the process).
• Pride in healing (reframing sobriety as strength, not deprivation).

The result? A new queer culture that celebrates authenticity, connection, and healing—not just another round at the bar.

The Bigger Picture: Disrupting a Broken System

The current mental health system is broken. Long waitlists, rushed psychiatry appointments, and overprescription leave too many LGBTQ+ people slipping through the cracks.

Better U’s model challenges that:

• No more waiting weeks for a refill.
• No more hiding your healing.
• No more daily pills without progress.

Instead, queer residents of West Hollywood can access care remotely, discreetly, affordably—and effectively.

Call to Action: A Better U, A Better WeHo

Healing doesn’t have to mean isolation. Sobriety doesn’t have to mean loss. With at-home ketamine therapy and low-dose naltrexone, LGBTQ+ individuals are finding freedom, joy, and purpose again—without leaving their living rooms.

If you’re in West Hollywood and struggling with alcohol, depression, or anxiety, know this: you are not broken. You are not alone. And a better you is possible.

Visit BetterUCare.com to learn more about at-home ketamine therapy, low-dose naltrexone, and how you can begin your journey today.

Kindness is the best medicine.

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Miscellaneous

Tiffany ‘New York’ Pollard Dishes on queer storytelling in her new show ‘Slayers: Wheel of Fate’

The reality star discusses her new series and why we always need LGBTQ+ stories

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‘Slayers: Wheel of Fate’ poster

If you’ve watched reality television at all in the past two decades, odds are you’ve been graced by the onscreen presence of Tiffany ‘New York’ Pollard. 

Few people have conquered the reality TV landscape like New York; starting off as a contestant on the infamous The Flavor of Love, she went from finding romance to hosting and appearing on some of the best programs this genre has to offer. Queer audiences have always adored their boisterous personality and uncanny ability to verbally eviscerate others—and the feeling is mutual. Whether it’s appearing on RuPaul’s Drag Race, partying it up at gay clubs across the country, or leading her own programs with OUTtv,  Pollard has never been shy about showing how much she loves her LGBTQ+ fans. And now, proudly wearing their own LGBTQ+ identity and more committed to queer storytelling than ever, she’s ready to once again revolutionize the medium by hosting OUTtv’s latest competition series: Slayers: Wheel of Fate. The Los Angeles Blade sat down with Pollard to discuss this new reality adventure, what it means to truly support the LGBTQ+ community, and why we always need real stories like these — not just when people are threatening to take them away. 

“I’ve always wanted to host a big competition like this,” explained Pollard, on what drew her to Slayers. “Reality TV is in my veins, so I knew I had something special to add to [the show].” It’s a flair that the performer has brought to every project she’s been a part of; from villainous competitions to dating shows centered around her, audiences always enjoy seeing the dynamic authenticity that is Tiffany Pollard. She’s been featured in every kind of reality show imaginable, yet even with such an expansive filmography, she’s never been a part of anything like Slayers

The series follows a group of LGBTQ+ contestants living together in a mansion and facing a series of brutal competitions, with each episode seeing someone get eliminated through a ‘Main Slay’ challenge. Its contestants span a myriad of gender identities and sexualities, with the series offering them a chance to be their most-real selves. “We need stories that center LGBTQ+ folks…but not just when times are bad,” Pollard explained, on how, while she’s thankful the series focuses on authenticity, similar shows need to similarly let people be themselves, no matter what’s happening in the world around them. “I’ve been around a long time—and I expect to start seeing people stand with us when things are good again, too! Sometimes folks wait until everyone is in danger to give a damn. Support queer people ALWAYS.” It’s an important message now more than ever, and it’s conveyed in the most intense format through Slayers.

Themed around a medieval setting and an illegal ‘dragon-betting’ ring, the players are fighting to unseat the unseen ‘Queen Karen’ in a hilariously campy, shockingly pulse-pounding format. It’s a kind of thrilling fun that so many LGBTQ+ viewers need right now, with the series purposefully spotlighting the identities of its all-queer cast… including the host herself. 

In a recent interview with PinkNews, Pollard stated that she ‘resonates with non-binary,’ explaining that her gender identity and expression are very fluid. It’s what made the chance to lead a show of only LGBTQ+ competitors so affirming for her, with the host saying, “As a member of the community with a platform, it’s important to show up and be visible for people. To remind folks they’re not alone.” 

Seeing Pollard come out has been a heartwarming experience for her countless fans — and it couldn’t have happened at a better time. While coming out has never been easy, it’s particularly hard for people ‘in the closet’ today; rising anti-LGBTQ+ discrimination nationwide has led to many worrying that accepting their identity openly will label them a political target. Pollard understands this, and it’s why she made sure her competitors felt respected and affirmed at every step of the filming process (when she wasn’t trying to feed them to a dragon, of course). She hopes that her coming out will inspire others to do the same, and she empathizes with those nervous to live their truths today — but assures them that hiding is never the answer. 

“I want to remind [everyone scared] that we’re not going anywhere and that we’re stronger as a group,” Pollard said vehemently, imbuing each word with their trademark brand of unflappable confidence. “Put down the petty dramas with each other for right now and let’s just focus on pushing through this.”

It’s slightly ironic to hear a call to unity from New York; most people know her from the many legendary scenes of her tearing others apart (ol’ maiden type of shoes, anyone?). Yet any look at the star’s history will showcase that, while her onscreen career has been built by jaw-dropping chaos, her personal life has always seen her as an advocate, bringing queer folks the joy they need and calling out bigotry across the country. 

Tiffany ‘New York’ Pollard hopes that Slayers: Wheel of Fate will not only provide LGBTQ+ viewers a break from the stress of today, but also inspire them to live as passionately free as the people they’re watching onscreen. Throughout the interview, she expressed how she understands why so many are scared, but that finding a safe, affirming way to express one’s pride is more important for our communities than it’s ever been before. She’s grateful for a career that has given her such a big platform to broadcast this message — and detests the way similar stars are rolling back on publicly supporting their LGBTQ+ fans when they need it most.

To these other celebrities, ones who are scared that being anti-hate might lose them some fans, she has one thing to say: “You should be more scared of what happens if you don’t. Period.”

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Arts & Entertainment

New exhibition unveils archival records and forgotten stories of HIV/AIDS activists

“The Sky is Always Falling” intertwines past and present cycles of queer crises and fights for freedom

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“The Sky is Always Falling” presents artwork, historical records, photos, and other ephemeral media around the work of activist group ACT UP/LA

On Wednesday afternoon, art critic and curator Anuradha Vikram strode across the wide main room of the Advocate and Gochis Galleries at the Los Angeles LGBT Center, pressing neon labels onto walls covered with newspaper clippings, pamphlet pages, protest photos and flyer printouts from the peak of the national AIDS epidemic that began in the early 1980s. 

These documents hold fragments of the lives of artists, activists and supporters of the AIDS Coalition To Unleash Power/Los Angeles (ACT UP/LA), a group that organized various non-violent protests, community meetings, vigils and other demonstrations to bring attention to harmful and ineffective government policies around HIV/AIDS; advocate for better healthcare access, hospital conditions and resources for PWAs (people with AIDS); and shine light on communities who were sidelined in HIV/AIDS research and care, including women, incarcerated people, and communities of color. 

“The Sky is Always Falling: HIV/AIDS Activists Unleashing Power in Los Angeles Then and Now” is a new exhibition opening on September 28th that preserves tangible records of ACT UP/LA’s existence and resistance. Much of the media included in this show is a remnant from when the group was active, from its formation in 1987 to its eventual disintegration in the late 1990s. The various pieces on display are reproductions of historical files and records collected and preserved at institutions like the ONE Archives and the June L. Mazer Lesbian Archives, two major repositories for LGBTQ+ historical materials.

The exhibition also includes a small room with more explicit materials, as well as contemporary video work by artist Kang Seung Lee. (Blade photo by Kristie Song)

“Since this is primarily focused on the 1980s and ‘90s, so much of the material was printouts, faxes, photocopies, and computer graphic design setups. Reproducing it all made material sense,” Vikram told the Blade. 

“If this was a show about the 1940’s or the 1890’s, it might not feel so authentic to have copies of things. But here, even the original materials were copies at one time, so they’re the copies that survived. We’re working with the idea of the copy being the original — which is a very 90’s kind of zine, community-organizing approach that also then applies here for ACT/UP.”

Since April, Vikram has been planning, researching and organizing the exhibition as part of the local Circa: Queer Histories Festival. Now in its third year, Circa was created by One Institute, a long-standing LGBTQ+ organization that amplifies queer histories through educational programming. Their festival runs through October 31st, and includes a panel on the history of sex work in NYC ballroom culture, a South Asian dance and drag performance, a workshop on trans history and reclaiming origin stories, a screening of 1972 Japanese “pink film” Shinjuku Midnight Story: Man and Woman, and several other lectures, readings, and gatherings.

“The Sky is Always Falling” is the opening event of Circa’s packed calendar this year, and offers attendees a chance to become part of an intergenerational conversation around queer solidarity in the face of public health, social, and political crises. The show highlights key actions organized by ACT UP/LA members, including a 1990 protest at Frontera women’s prison that was organized by the coalition’s Women’s Caucus. Over a hundred supporters protested the prison’s handling of its AIDS ward, criticizing its lack of proper nutrition, care, and qualified staff. 

In June of 2020, an urgent memo was released by public health experts, stating that San Quentin California State Prison was being impacted by a rapidly developing COVID-19 outbreak and had “profoundly inadequate resources to keep it from developing into a full-blown local epidemic.” 

Vikram says it is important to highlight how systemic issues and failures create cycles of violence for marginalized populations. “These issues haven’t gone away in any way. They’ve just kind of rolled forward,” Vikram said. “In each of these topics and panels, the goal was to connect it, ultimately, to something today. So you would understand that it’s not just a historical phenomenon, but rather like a guide, a little bit of a roadmap for how to deal with stuff now.”  

A self-proclaimed “baby teenager” during the height of ACT UP activations, Vikram is grateful to the queer elders who welcomed her into their spaces and shared their stories with her. These connections informed her own journey as a queer South Asian person growing up in New York, carving out a space for her own voice and identity in contemporary art criticism and curating.

Curator Anuradha Vikram stands at the Advocate and Gochis Galleries on Sept. 24th. (Blade photo by Kristie Song)

Vikram hopes that — through this exhibition, her lecturing, and her community work — she can “repair” ties between queer adolescents today and queer people of older generations. The knowledge, guidance, and joy she received from relationships she formed with older queer people in her youth provided a model with which she could navigate the world: with fervor and with bravery.

“Now I feel that young people really have very little connection to elder generations — even middle generations like mine. And so that knowledge is not being continuously passed on in the same way,” Vikram said. “This is actually what anthropologists say makes us human: the ability to have that intergenerational transfer of knowledge without having to fight the same battles every generation. And, at this moment in time, that’s being severed because of the fascist turn in our culture, really. So the goal of this project was to help young people who are trying now to organize around a number of issues against this government — for gay rights, for trans rights, for Palestine, for their own health and welfare — to help them get that information in some form.” 

“The Sky is Always Falling” opens on Sunday, September 28th with a reception from 4-7 p.m. at the Advocate and Gochis Galleries at the Los Angeles LBGT Center. 

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