How this GLAAD leader used a tough diagnosis to grow his brand
With President Trump eliminating almost anything remotely DEI-related in the federal government, as well as erasing all HIV and LGBTQ+ medical care guidance from the CDC website, today's guest on Living Not So Fabulously couldn't be more timely.
From climbing out of credit card debt by launching a small business to preparing his finances for coming out publicly as HIV positive and then turning his life's journey into a thriving personal brand, GLAAD Senior Director of Communications Tony Morrison shares his poignant lessons on brand building and living authentically with hosts David & John Auten-Schneider.
After coming out as HIV positive publicly with an article in 2021 while at ABC's Good Morning America, Morrison discovered support and a craving for more of his experiences. 'What was interesting for me is a lot of non-LGBTQ people reaching out to me, thanking me for my story. People wanted more story and experience, and I, in turn, wanted to hear the same from others.'
As advice to folks building their own personal brand, Morrison says folks should hone in on their own personal stories. 'I have this huge belief that your story is your currency—your experience is your currency,' he explains. 'People will pay for your experience and for your story,' he says. 'If you attach your story, your experience to your business and your model, I think you're unstoppable. Because your story is the one thing that no one can take from you.'
Today, along with serving as GLAAD's Senior Communications Director since 2022, Morrison has built his own story into a personal brand as the host of +Life Media's web series 'Truth Be Told,' where he has weekly conversations featuring LGBTQ+ personalities and activists as they share their own truths with the world. Morrison's journey as a media maker is more than just inspiration. They serve as guidance for someone else to take their own stigmatized journey and evolve it into a personal brand.
For full episodes of Living Not So Fabulously, listen on your favorite podcast platform or watch on our website.
Yahoo Finance's Living Not So Fabulously is created and produced by Rachael Lewis-Krisky.
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USA Today
36 minutes ago
- USA Today
DC Pride Parade 2025: Route, time, what to know about festivities
DC Pride Parade 2025: Route, time, what to know about festivities Show Caption Hide Caption Pride flag raised in DC in honor of Pride month Officials, organizers and supporters gathered in front of the John A. Wilson building in Washington D.C. as the Pride flag was raised. June is Pride Month and DC's Capital Pride Alliance is hosting WorldPride – a global festival that promotes LGBTQ+ visibility and awareness – on Saturday, June 7, which is expected to draw thousands of visitors from across the country. "This beloved tradition honors our history and acknowledges the evolution of the LGBTQ+ neighborhoods in Washington, DC, while respecting the origins and importance of taking to the streets in our fight for equality," the event's website reads. WorldPride, which began May 17, is brimming with events and celebrations – musical performances, fashion shows, discussion groups and subcommunity gatherings such as Trans Pride, Latinx Pride, Youth Pride and beyond. The festival culminates with the city's Pride Parade on June 7 and a massive rally and march from the Lincoln Memorial to the U.S. Capitol on June 8. Here's what to know about DC's 2025 Pride Parade, including the start time and route. DC Pride Parade 2025 start time, route The parade steps off at 2 p.m. from 14th and T streets NW and goes through Thomas Circle before turning onto Pennsylvania Avenue, according to the festival's website. The parade is scheduled to end on Pennsylvania Ave NW, near the Navy Memorial. You can see the full route here. DC Pride Parade 2025 road closures There will be numerous road closures and parking restrictions around the city on June 6 and 7. The Metropolitan Police Department listed in a news release on May 28 the full list of closures and restrictions. You can see the full release here. Dupont Circle will close for event According to reporting from the Washington Post, the National Park Service imposed 'a temporary closure of Dupont Circle Park from approximately 6 p.m. on Thursday, June 5, 2025, through approximately 6 p.m. on Sunday, June 8, 2025.' The closure was requested by United States Park Police, which called it 'necessary for the maintenance of public health and safety and protection of natural and cultural resources in Dupont Circle Park," according to reporting from the Washington Post. Contributing: Susan Miller, USA TODAY Gabe Hauari is a national trending news reporter at USA TODAY. You can follow him on X @GabeHauari or email him at Gdhauari@


National Geographic
41 minutes ago
- National Geographic
7 places that honor LGBTQ+ history—during Pride Month and beyond
Curious travelers seeking to understand different cultures—near and abroad—can cure their curiosity by visiting historic landmarks and museums. The same can be done when expanding one's knowledge about the LGBTQ+ community and its history—and not just during Pride month in June. These places are open to the public year-round and collect, preserve, and share untold LGBTQ+ stories and contributions to the local and larger mainstream community. Visiting LGBTQ+ points of interest when you travel can help forge a deeper understanding of a destination and its queer community. "For too long, LGBTQ+ history was oral and hidden. Dedicated museums preserve truth, challenge misconceptions, and affirm the fundamental right to exist," says George Savoulis, director of Qtopia Sydney. We've compiled a list of the seven best places around the globe, including LGBTQ+ museums, that history lovers should consider visiting for Pride Month and beyond. (These monuments honor LGBTQ history around the world.) 1. The Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art, New York City Located in New York City's SoHo neighborhood, this visual arts museum collects, preserves, and exhibits the work of LGBTQ+ artists including pieces that analyze themes, issues, and people in the community. Founders Charles Leslie and Fritz Lohman created the concept for the museum after hosting an exhibition of gay artists in their SoHo loft. Today, the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art's permanent collection includes Llanor Alleyne's mixed-media collage 'Another Poem (For Colin Robinson)' and Ann P. Meredith's photo taken during a women's AIDS foundation support group in 1987. Families visiting with children should be aware that some art on display does feature nudity. The museum also hosts temporary artist exhibits such as Young Joon Kwak's 'Resisterhood,' a celebration of the human body form and its imperfections during our youth, aging, gestation, or gender transformation. Queer figure drawing classes for and by queer trans bodies and storytelling that celebrate Latinx LGBTQ+ contributions to the arts are just a few examples of fun programs and activities offered to visitors. (See 100 years of LGBTQ history mapped across New York City.) 2. Queer Britain, London Located in the King's Cross district of London, Queer Britain is the first LGBTQ+ museum in the UK. In 2018, Joseph Galliano-Doig and Iain Mehrtens held temporary art installations and exhibitions around the city, eventually becoming this one-of-a-kind museum in 2022. Queer Britain has four galleries that celebrate queer people but also serve as a place where visitors can immerse themselves in LGBTQ+ stories and ideas. Previous art installations and exhibitions have included a large Pride flag commissioned by Netflix to celebrate the third season of the TV series Heartstopper, a community showcase on queer migrant men, and an exhibit of Jimmy Somerville's album The Age of Consent (1984). The newest addition to the museum '20 Years of UK Black Pride,' follows the history of UK Black Pride, from its first gathering in Southend-on-Sea to how it became the largest free Pride celebration for LGBTQ+ Black and people of color. The exhibition runs through August 31, 2025. (Must-see LGBTQ-friendly destinations for every kind of traveler.) 3. Qtopia Sydney, Australia In 2024, Qtopia Sydney opened its doors to the public, becoming the largest LGBTQ+ museum in the world. The museum was the vision of the late Professor David Cooper who hoped to create a space to honor Australians impacted by the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Cooper shared this dream with David Polson, one of the first men diagnosed with HIV/AIDS in Australia. Making Cooper's dream a reality, Polson founded Qtopia Sydney. The history doesn't stop there, the LGBTQ+ museum is housed inside Sydney's old Darlington Police Station, where many gay activists were held after the city's first gay protest in 1978. The LGBTQ+ community reclaimed the harrowed building by turning the prison cells into exhibits. "This building is a profound act of spatial justice—transforming a site of oppression and abuse into one of celebration and education," says Savoulis. The first cell of the old police station focuses on police brutality as it relates to the LGBTQ+ community. When visitors enter the museum, they are confronted with a thought-provoking and revealing exhibition dedicated to the HIV/AIDS epidemic (1981 to late 1990s). Previous temporary exhibits have included an homage to beloved drag queen Joyce Maynge, queer media like Lesbians on the Loose, and 'Bedazzled,' a creative display of costumes worn at Mardi Gras (Sydney's annual Pride celebration). 4. Stonewall National Museum, Archives, and Library, Fort Lauderdale, Florida Located near Fort Lauderdale's Holiday Park, the Stonewall National Museum, Archives, and Library (SNMAL) has preserved LGBTQ+ history for over five decades. Mark N. Silber founded SNMAL, which claims to have the largest LGBTQ+ collection in the world. The collection started in his parent's home in 1973, and today, SNMAL frequently rotates its exhibits, but there are permanent, must-see exhibitions on-site, including one that highlights four decades of LGBTQ+ history in Broward County, where the museum is located. "The exhibits represent the voice of the people, the times, and society at large to represent a full picture of history and culture," says Robert Kesten, president and CEO of SNMAL. SNMAL has hosted previous and upcoming exhibitions and events such as a re-enactment of the Stonewall uprising, "55 Years of Pride" and "Queer Baseball" exhibitions, a book signing with comedian Bruce Vilanch, and free queer movie nights, including queer favorites such as All About Eve, Moonlight, and Death Becomes Her. (These12 historic LGBTQ figures changed the world.) 5. Schwules Museum, Berlin, Germany In 1984, Andreas Sternweiler, Wolfgang Theis, and Manfred Baumgardt were students working as guards at the former Berlin Museum. They encouraged the museum's director to host an exhibition about Berlin's LGBTQ+ community. During the summer of 1984, the exhibition— 'Eldorado – the History, Everyday Life, and Culture of Homosexual Women and Men 1850-1950,' was on display in the Berlin Museum and welcomed over 40,000 visitors. The success and popularity of 'Eldorado' sparked the idea to create a permanent residence for the exhibit, which would eventually be housed in what's known as Schwules Museum today. Schwules Museum has been in Berlin's Tiergarten neighborhood since 2013. Its goal remains to preserve European queer culture by chronicling LGBTQ+ history in Germany and other European nations. Its archive is full of periodicals from the 1990s and over 25,000 books about homosexuality, queer-feminist issues, transgender, and intersex identities. Kit Heyam's Before We Were Trans: A New History of Gender and Andrea Rottmann's Queer Lives Across the Wall: Desire and Danger in Divided Berlin, 1945–1970 are a couple of books visitors will find here. After browsing the library, visit the main exhibition space which displays galleries of photos, videos, postcards, letters, and clothing items from the LGBTQ+ community. The museum has hosted exhibitions on dandyism and Charlotte von Mahlsdorf, an East German gay icon. (Learn about the great hunt for the world's first LGBTQ+ archive.) 6. Gerber/Hart LGBTQ+ Library and Archives, Chicago The Gerber/Hart LGBTQ+ Library and Archives in Rogers Park is the largest LGBTQ+ library in the Midwest. Founded in 1981, it houses nearly 15,000 items focused on the LGBTQ+ community and organizations in Chicago and the Midwest of the U.S. Items on display include photo albums from Miss Tillie, a drag performer who started performing in the 1940s and eventually moved to Chicago in the 1960s. Some of the 800 periodicals in its archives include vintage issues of Thing, a Chicago-based magazine in circulation from 1989 to 1993 that covered the local Black LGBTQ+ community. Visitors can also explore curated galleries that focus on Chicago's drag scene, Pride memorabilia, banned LGBTQ+ books, and areas that focus on topics such as lesbian feminism of the 1970s and 1980s, bisexual activism, and lesbians in sports. Throughout the year, the library has an array of queer events such as a Queer Stitch Night led by fiber artist Isabel Sperry and the Queer Zine Club, an informal gathering of LGBTQ+ people who are curious about queer culture and zine making. (Activist Pattie Gonia is on a mission to make the outdoors a more welcoming place.) 7. GLBT Historical Society, San Francisco The GLBT Historical Society—in San Francisco's famed Castro District—is touted as the first stand-alone museum to showcase exhibits focused on LGBTQ+ history and culture in the United States. The museum chronicles queer activism and cultural movements in the Bay Area with a focus on diversity and social justice. The "Queer Past Becomes Present" exhibit in the main gallery curated a few personal belongings of Harvey Milk, a gay activist and the first openly gay mayor of San Francisco. The museum is also home to a large collection of LGBTQ+ historical materials including the Asian/Pacific AIDS Coalition records and Meg Barnett's collection of Lesbians Against Police Violence records which consist of the organization's agendas, flyers, notes from general and committee meetings, and a few newspaper and magazine clippings. The archives at the GLBT Historical Society are named after Dr. John P. DeCecco, a psychology professor, author, and pioneer in sexuality studies. Visits to the archives are by appointment only. (How this Gold Rush town became an LGBTQ+ haven for travelers and transplants.) Lola Méndez is an Uruguayan-American freelance journalist who writes about sustainability, travel, culture, and wellness. Follow her on Instagram and Twitter.


The Hill
an hour ago
- The Hill
DC hosts WorldPride: What to know about weekend bash
For the first time, WorldPride has descended on Washington, D.C., as the city marks its 50th anniversary of Pride celebrations. The Capital Pride parade will kick off at 2 p.m. EDT Saturday at 14th Street and T Street NW, according to the Capital Pride Alliance, a nonprofit organization promoting LGBTQ rights and organizing the parade. WorldPride events began May 17 and run through this weekend. Jennifer Lopez will headline the World Pride Music Festival on the RFK Campus Festival Grounds on Friday and Saturday. The last time WorldPride was hosted in the United States was in New York in 2019, when approximately 5 million people attended from around the world. In 2023, a million people celebrated in Sydney. Here's what to know about Pride celebrations in the nation's capital. There's a seemingly endless number of events, performances and things to see around the city this weekend. WorldPride will feature 'Rainbow Road,' billed as the largest LGBTQ mural ever painted, according to the artist Lisa Marie Thalhammer. She said she wishes to bring joy and awareness to the community and titled the piece 'We Exist' to rebel against the current administration. The WorldPride music festival Friday and Saturday will welcome LGBTQ icons and world-famous performers on three different stages. Lopez will headline Friday, with Paris Hilton, Trisha Paytas, Rita Ora and Tinashe also slated to perform. Saturday will feature Troye Sivan, Kim Petras, a RuPaul DJ set and a special appearance by Reneé Rapp. The festival is 99 percent sold-out, but final tickets and a list of official afterparties are available on its website. A two-day WorldPride Street Festival will take over part of Pennsylvania Avenue from 2-10 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, featuring concerts, food, art exhibitions, artisans and beverages. On Saturday, Cynthia Erivo will headline the postparade concert on 3rd Street and Pennsylvania Avenue NW, which will also feature performances by David Archuleta and CeCe Peniston. To follow all the events, the Pride365 app is available for download. Organizers have made safety their priority for this year and will alert attendees throughout the weekend if anything arises. WorldPride comes as the Trump administration has shown hostility toward Pride Month, refusing to acknowledge Pride Month and stripping the name of gay civil rights activist Harvey Milk from a Navy ship. 'As the LGBTQ+ community continues its fight for equality, visibility, and justice, WorldPride serves as a powerful rallying cry, and we are working to unite voices worldwide in support of our movement,' WorldPride said on its website. 'The actions being taken by the new administration underline the importance of our continued work and highlight the need for the global community to gather during WorldPride, where we will advocate for and uplift the LGBTQ+ community.' President Trump has rolled back various protections for LGBTQ groups since his first day in office. On Jan. 20, Trump signed an executive order recognizing only two genders and launched a campaign against what he calls 'gender ideology.' He has signed executive orders seeking to ban transgender women from participating in women's sports, restrict gender-affirming care for teenagers under 19 years old, and bar transgender troops from the military. Trump seized on the backlash to diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) policies during his campaign, and corporations have pulled funding for DEI programs and sponsorship of potentially divisive Pride events. San Francisco Pride has a $200,000 budget deficit, while New York Pride has a $750,000 budget gap. This year's Pride attendance has already been impacted by Trump's policies. Phyll Opoku-Gyimah, a British LGBTQ rights activist also known as Lady Phyll, was supposed to deliver opening remarks at the WorldPride Human Rights Conference. She was denied entry to the U.S. due to a recent trip to Cuba. Multiple countries, such as Denmark and Finland, have issued travel advisories for transgender tourists visiting the United States. WorldPride organizers moved Pride events away from the Kennedy Center after Trump named himself chair of the institution. The National Park Service decided to close Dupont Circle Park from Thursday to Sunday, shutting off a popular meeting place for the LGBTQ community during the festival. After back-and-forth between authorities and activists, the United States Park Police said the closure was necessary to reduce possible violence and limit excessive police presence.