Join GLAAD and take action for acceptance.
Trending
- Don’t miss “The Groomsmen: Second Chances” coming to your TV this Saturday!
- GLAAD Gaming Spotlight: Outerloop Games’ Chandana Ekanayake on Crafting Queer, Brown, and Bold Stories
- Healing Through Music: David Hernandez Releases “feel it all”
- The Okra Project Expands Nationwide with BetterHelp to Deliver Free Mental Health Care for Black Trans Communities
- Suni MF on Breaking Barriers in Hip-Hop and Winning Big at the BMI Awards
- GLAAD Amplifies Black Southern Queer Voices During LGBTQ Journalists Association Convention
- Queer Joy Shined at the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards
- WATCH: Dylan O’Brien and James Sweeney on ‘Twinless’ and Championing Original Queer Stories
Where We Are on TV 2023-2024

Four years ago, GLAAD challenged the industry to have every platform count at least 50 percent characters of color. This year both broadcast and cable fell short of that challenge, and no platform improved upon their previous percentage.
On primetime scripted broadcast, there are 31 LGBTQ characters of color (48 percent of all LGBTQ characters). This is the same percentage as the previous year and marks the second year in a row that broadcast has fallen beneath fifty percent, after meeting GLAAD’s challenge the previous three years. Cable saw a decrease in the percentage of characters of color. Of the 77 LGBTQ characters on cable, 37 (48 percent) are characters of color, a drop of two percentage points from last year, which fails to meet the 50 percent benchmark. LGBTQ characters on streaming also saw a three percentage point drop down to 164 out of 327 characters (50 percent) from last year’s high of 53 percent. This is the only platform that met the challenge, but barely scraped by.
Of the total 468 LGBTQ characters counted on all three platforms, 232 (50 percent) are characters of color. This is a one percentage point decrease from last year’s 51 percent. As noted in last year’s report, a significant number of characters of color were on canceled series, which foretold this decline. Unfortunately, the same is true this year, as 55 percent of characters who are on canceled or ended series are characters of color.
The industry needs to prioritize the inclusion of diverse LGBTQ people of color, both in greenlighting and promoting those stories.
Racial diversity of LGBTQ characters on broadcast networks
No Data Found
No Data Found
Total LGBTQ Characters on Broadcast: 64
- White: 33 (52%)
- Black: 16 (25%)
- Latine: 4 (6%)
- API: 6 (9%)
- Multiracial: 4 (6%)
- MENA: 1 (2%)
- Indigenous: 0 (0%)
Racial diversity of LGBTQ characters on cable networks
No Data Found
No Data Found
Total LGBTQ Characters on Cable: 77
- White: 39 (51%)
- Black: 23 (30%)
- Latine: 5 (7%)
- API: 4 (5%)
- Multiracial: 1 (1%)
- MENA: 3 (4%)
- Indigenous: 1 (1%)
- One (1%) additional character is non-human.
Racial diversity of LGBTQ characters on streaming services
No Data Found
No Data Found
Total LGBTQ Characters on Streaming: 327
- White: 144 (44%)
- Black: 56 (17%)
- Latine: 31 (10%)
- API: 29 (9%)
- Multiracial: 32 (10%)
- MENA: 9 (3%)
- Indigenous: 7 (2%)
- An additional 19 characters (6%) are non-human
Table of Contents
Share this
View Past Years’ Reports
MEASURE THE MOVEMENT
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 trans representation in movies.
More Publications from GLAAD
The sixth annual GLAAD Network Responsibility Index (NRI) is an evaluation of the quantity and…
In a historic move, on May 9, President Barack Obama announced his support for full marriage equality for gay and lesbian couples. In an interview with Good Morning America’s Robin Roberts, President Obama stated that his decision to publically support marriage equality is rooted in his faith. In the days immediately following President Barack Obama’s statement in support of marriage equality for gay and lesbian couples, news media outlets scrambled to address the president’s use of religious language in explaining how his “evolution” concluded with him choosing to support marriage equality. What we found was stark, but unsurprising.
With President Barack Obama’s recent announcement of support for same-sex marriage, GLAAD today is urging…
Welcome to Where We Are On TV, GLAAD’s annual report about diversity on television. At…