Aired Jan 17, 2020
Archive: Something to Talk About & Talking Inclusively
Something to Talk About and Talking Inclusively are monthly discussion series for organizations looking for ways to keep the conversation going about LGBTQ+ and ally issues all year long. This archive includes articles and discussion questions, developed by the PFLAG National and Straight for Equality staff – on LGBTQ+ topics, intersectionality, diversity, inclusion and more – that are from 2018 or prior.
Something to Talk About
- March 2020 – Why these Harry Potter fans are standing with the LGBTQ community against a J.K. Rowling tweet
- January 2020 – For transgender men, pain of menstruation is more than just physical
- November 2019 – Singer Ellie Goulding Threatens to Drop Salvation Army Halftime Show Over Alleged LGBTQ Treatment
- September 2019 – 12 Things You Should Never Say to Your LGBTQ Coworkers
- July 2019 – The LGBTQ Civil Rights Fight is Far From Over
- May 2019 – Censoring gay marriage on TV could be an ominous sign of things to come
- March 2019 – More than 100 religious leaders in Tennessee take a stand against slate of anti-LGBT legislation
- January 2019 – Most cancer doctors don’t know enough about LGBTQ patient care, study finds
Talking Inclusively
- April 2020 – First Look: Queer Harlem Renaissance Spotlights Claude McKay and the Unsung LGBTQ Community in Congo Caberet
- February 2020 – ‘Sex Education’ Star Ncuti Gatwa on Why His Character Is So Important for Black Gay Visibility
- December 2019 – A Queer Couple’s Plan for Dealing with Ignorant Family During the Holidays
- October 2019 – Protesters Draw Attention to Violence against Transgender Women of Color at CNN LGBTQ Town Hall
- August 2019 – South Carolina death marks 14th black transgender woman killed in U.S. this year
- June 2019 – Study Finds Most LGBTQ Services Located in White, Wealthy Neighborhoods
- April 2019 – Trump Plans to End the AIDS Epidemic. In Places Like Mississippi, Obstacles Are Everywhere
- February 2019 – Op-ed: Bayard Rustin’s Legacy Is Complicated, And That’s Okay