Part 3: The Importance of Media Exposure
Media exposure is critically important to changing hearts and minds.
Media exposure is critically important to changing hearts and minds.
% Non-LGBTQ who personally know someone in our community
% Non-LGBTQ exposed to media
Media portrayals play a big role in non-LGBTQ American’s perception and comfortability with our community, especially if you don’t personally know someone LGBTQ
Exposed to in ads
Exposed to in TV/Movies
% change in familiarity among non-LGBTQ people based on media exposure vs. no media exposure
% change in comfortability based on media exposure vs. no media exposure
% change in agreement with the below statements based on media exposure vs. no media exposure
The GLAAD MEDIA INSTITUTE provides training, consultation, and research to develop an army of social justice ambassadors for all marginalized communities to champion acceptance and amplify media impact.
Your gift allows us to track the impact of our work, helping us better understand the state of acceptance and address the gaps with advocacy — like pushing for more LGBTQ-user protections on social media.
Fair, accurate, and inclusive news media coverage is vital to expanding public awareness and understanding of LGBTQ people. While recent decades have shown remarkable advancements in accurate reporting on issues affecting our lives and increasingly nuanced portrayals of the incredible diversity within LGBTQ communities, many reporters, editors, and producers continue to face challenges covering LGBTQ issues in a complex, sometimes rhetorically charged climate.
The U.S. South has the highest concentration of LGBTQ Americans of any region, in states without statewide laws protecting them from discrimination.
Measuring American attitudes toward HIV and the impact stigma has on people living with HIV…
The GLAAD Studio Responsibility Index (SRI) maps the quantity, quality and diversity of lesbian, gay,…
As part of the launch of The Visibility Project, P&G and GLAAD also announced findings…
stay tuned!