Queer artist pronoun wrote your new favorite breakup album
“There’s No One New Around You” is painfully real indie pop.
“There’s No One New Around You” is painfully real indie pop.
Los Angeles-based artist Lauren Ruth Ward isn’t interested in what you can do for her.
The Los Angeles LGBT Center launched a campaign called “100 Days and Me,” aimed at mobilizing and providing support to the LGBTQ community in the alarming era of the Trump administration.
Mary Tyler Moore was a legend: television royalty whose presence made viewers feel happy and comfortable, all while making history as the star of her own eponymous show, a first for a woman in 1970. Mary Tyler Moore died on Wednesday at the age of 80.
Happy birthday, Ellen DeGeneres. We need more you than ever.
A massive rally inspired by the aftermath of the current election and planned around the inauguration of Donald Trump, the Women’s March is a demonstration of centering women, prioritizing the needs and wants of women, keeping mindful of intersectionality and inclusivity.
Elissa Ha, a bisexual member of the NYC Chapter of the Women’s March on Washington, shares with GO why she got involved and why she’ll be marching with thousands of other women this Saturday.
As Inauguration Day nears, women worldwide are rallying for the Women’s March on Washington and sister marches in their own cities, ready to protest President-elect Donald Trump and his various policies that would affect women’s lives in multiple ways.
The story of falling for your best friend is a recognizable one for many women, and So Yong Kim’s indie feature Lovesong is about that thin line between intense emotional connection and genuine romantic intimacy.
The inevitable question posed to any woman making her way down the red carpet press line for any event is about what she’s wearing and why.
The 2017 Golden Globe Awards honored some of Hollywood’s most deserving last night, including shows and people featuring LGBT women, women of color and allies.
In 2015, New York Governor Chris Cuomo introduced regulations through the New York State Human Rights Law that would ban harassment and discrimination against transgender people, and now hundreds of trans advocate and ally organizations have sent a letter to the governor asking that he now pass the Gender Expression Non-Discrimination Act.
2016 has been ripe with bad news, hard losses and tragic events, right up until the very end. But there was a lot to celebrate for queer women as well that should not go unmentioned as we close another year. This is GO’s list of the best in Lesbian/Bi Pop Culture.
“You’ll Still Call Me By Name” is darkly moody and yet filled with the lightness and emboldening of self-acceptance.
“I know there are several resources about amazing gay men and all the work they have done,” Robin told GO, “but I wanted to make sure there were some interesting resources available specifically about the lesbians.”
Out director K. Rocco Shields is looking to change the world with her new film “Love is All You Need?”
“The list” is built on the hypothetical notion that should you end up in the same room flirting with your famous crush, you’d get a free pass to participate in whatever might happen next. It’s meant to be harmless fun—but what happens when you’re actually given that chance?
Otherwild, which has locations in both Los Angeles and NYC, is launching a new collaboration with Kelly Rakowski’s Herstory project, and it’s celebrating queer history and culture through fashion.
Gina Young’s successful queer, feminist literary performance series SORORITY is moving to Hammer Museum for a two-night special this weekend in Los Angeles.
Thirty years ago, lesbian-themed films were rare. Outside of a select few like “Personal Best” or “The Hunger,” any blatant portrayal of someone Sapphically-inclined was shrouded in subtext, or made out to be a villain.
#VideoOfTheDay this is a must see documentary coming out on December 5.
Video of the Day: First teaser of the LGBTQ history mini-series “When We Rise,” coming soon on ABC.
Join us in celebrating what’s good in our lives and our country this holiday weekend.
There have been several highly-publicized portrayals of prison life in the media, from documentaries to reality shows to fictional offerings like “Orange is the New Black.”
Out author Emily Danforth published her debut novel “The Miseducation of Cameron Post” in 2012, and now it’s getting an exciting film adaptation from queer filmmaker Desiree Akhavan.
Alia Shawkat has played several memorable roles in her 17-year-career, most famously Portia de Rossi’s on-screen teen daughter Maeby Funke on “Arrested Development.”
The out fitness personality has a new book about modern motherhood, and it’s as progressive as her politics.
MTV has been a pivotal part of LGBT visibility on reality television since Pedro came out as gay and HIV positive on the third season of The Real World in 1994.
Patriarchy comes with a lot of ironies, and one of the most infuriating is that men want women to get back in the kitchen, as long as it’s not part of a successful restaurant.
Paris has long been known as a romantic refuge for expatriates, artists and progressive poets, but has it kept true to its legacy?
Every year, GLAAD releases their Where We Are on TV report on television’s LGBTQ inclusion, keeping networks aware and responsible for their representation or lack thereof.
Women’s retreats and festivals have been a staple of lesbian culture for decades, but for various reasons, a lot of them have not been able to sustain themselves.
Cynthia Nixon takes on the role of the “polarizing” first lady in National Geographic Channel’s adaptation of the Bill O’Reilly bestseller Killing Reagan.