QSaltLake Magazine, Issue 322, April 2021

Page 10

10  |  QSALTLAKE MAGAZINE  |  NEWS

Qsaltlake.com  |

ISSUE 322  |

APRIL, 2021

Pride ’21 will include a Covid-safe event on Washington Square and a Rainbow March & Rally The Utah Pride Center announced plans for Pride Week 2021, to be held June 1 through 7. As in recent years, the event will be held at Washington Square, home of the Salt Lake City-County Building, but this will not be Pride as usual due to the worldwide pandemic. “This will be a week-long pride celebration like no other,” Robert Moolman, executive director of the Utah Pride Center, said. “Our team has gotten creative with the realities of the day, and we have worked with city and health officials to plan a Covid-safe yet fun, face-to-face series of events.” “This celebration will replace the annual Pride Festival and Pride Parade this year,” Moolman said. “This incredible event will probably never happen again in this form and on this scale. It’s going to be unique, fun, educational, and offer an opportunity to come out of our houses, be together again and do so safely.” With mandated restrictions on face-toface events, such Pride staples as vendors, food trucks, beverages, and stages will not happen this year. What will happen is an opportunity to meet together to learn, play, and be entertained through a series of exhibits and events. Pride-goers will reserve a time to go onto the grounds so crowd size can be controlled, said Moolman. While there, they will go through what looks like a maze if looked at from above. Called the Pride Story Garden, many exhibits and interactive areas will be placed throughout the grounds. Some will go through the history of the LGBTQ movement, some will tell the stories of people past and present in the community, and some will focus on different parts of the community. The week starts on June 1 with the flag-raising at the Salt Lake City-County Building and the reading of Pride proclamations from city and state leaders. “We are asking leaders of cities, counties, and the state of Utah to proclaim the week as Pride Week,” said Moolman. “We are very hopeful that Gov. [Spencer] Cox will be the first to proclaim Pride officially.”

On June 2, the annual Pride Interfaith Service will be held, welcoming faiths of all kinds to come together and celebrate the community in their own special ways. The Pride Story Garden will open on June 3 and run through the 7th. On the night of June 5, the “Pride in the Sky” fireworks show will take place. Rather than a Pride Parade, the event returns to its roots of a “Rainbow March and Rally,” starting at the Utah State Capitol, running down State Street past the City-County Building, and ending at Liberty Park. “The huge rainbow flag will be at the beginning, rather than at the end, of the march and will lead marchers along the route,” Moolman said. “Can you imagine how that will look as the flag stretches down State Street on Capitol Hill? What a great photo opportunity.” “There will be different balloon arches representing the many parts of our community all along the march route. They will be collected as the march passes them, culminating in a massive balloon flag once it reaches the end,” Moolman continued.

At the garden, one of the key exhibits will be coming from the Stonewall National Museum and Archives in Fort Lauderdale. It chronicles the LGBTQ movement through history. “A fun part of that exhibit will be the ability to reenact when anti-gay activist Anita Bryant received a pie in the face during a press conference,” Moolman said. Bryant, a singer and spokesperson for the Florida Orange Growers, called her campaign “Save Our Children” and began crisscrossing the nation to rid schools of LGBTQ teachers. St. Paul, Minn. nurse, and gay activist Thom Higgins interrupted a live press conference by throwing a pie in Bryant’s face. “At least it’s a fruit pie,” Bryant responded. QSaltLake Magazine will also exhibit 18 magazine covers representing its 18 years of printing. All funds raised during the event will help fund the year-round programs and services of the Utah Pride Center. As further details are solidified, watch the QSaltLake website and utahpridecenter.org.  Q

‘Lady Maga’ fired from job for social media posts Ryan Woods, the Salt Lake ultra-conservative Trump lover who attends rallies and conventions as drag queen Lady Maga and was recently elected as president of the Utah Log Cabin Republicans, was fired from Delta Airlines for his social media posts around the time of the U.S. Capitol insurrection. In his posts leading up to January 6, Woods posted photos in drag holding guns and signs saying “LGBT for Trump.” Delta’s social media policy warns that employees represent the Delta brand 24/7, whether or not they associate the company with their postings. Delta decides what it considers to be “offensive speech.” Woods says that the policing of social media is only done when there has been a complaint against an employee. Woods says in a Facebook Live post that he had an “impeccable career” of eight years at Delta and plans to take the

company to court for discrimination, saying he is standing up against “cancel culture.” He is raising funds through a GoFundMe page, which has brought in over $6,500 to date of his $40,000 goal. Woods said in the video that he has felt depressed and suicidal since the firing, but a recent talk with his brother reinforced his will to move forward and fight. As president of Utah Log Cabin Republicans, Woods has come out against the “Leftist LGBTQ++ Movement,” and healthcare decisions by doctors and parents of transgender children.  Q


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Articles inside

A tale of a quarantined queen

4min
page 38

Let’s Get Back to the Party: A Novel

2min
page 37

A sex library

4min
page 34

Matthew Ivan Bennett has hope for a sexually undefined character in his play ‘Art & Class’

3min
pages 30-31

Deep Inside Hollywood

6min
pages 28-29

LGBTQ at BYU

15min
pages 24-27

I don’t regret graduating from BYU, but I would never do that to myself again.

3min
page 23

How the Y above BYU was lit up in rainbow colors

4min
page 22

Transgender, gender expansive and intersex youth: Know that you are valid and loved

1min
page 20

Join the Gayby Boom

3min
page 19

Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves

4min
page 18

Electing people who aren't hateful ghouls makes all the difference

4min
page 17

LGBTQ and MENA organizations build new communities

1min
page 14

Celebrate Genderbands’ 6th anniversary by donating $6

1min
page 14

UofU to celebrate ‘Queer at the Intersections’

2min
page 13

Big-name donations to help Encircle build 8 new locations

1min
page 12

New SLCo councilman says ‘left’ won’t be happy until everyone is bisexual, ‘light brown’

2min
page 11

'Lady Maga' fired from job for social media posts

1min
page 10

Pride ’21 will include a Covid-safe event on Washington Square and a Rainbow March & Rally

3min
page 10

Utah Sen. Mike Lee slams Amazon for dropping anti-trans book

2min
page 9

Utah 2021 Legislative Session wrap-up

5min
page 8

The top national and world news since last issue you should know

6min
pages 6-7

A glimmer of hope

1min
page 4
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