The Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation is an amazing organization.
The Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation is an amazing organization, and we are blessed that it is as tough and proactive as it is ["Growing Pains at GLAAD," April 26] They consistently take the right side in succession the key issues concerning the GLBT community. While Joan Garry will certainly be missed, I am confident that the organization is vital enough to continue to shoot in the important years to come
Timothy Corrigan, via the Internet
GLAAD has greatly helped to achieve the positive changes that have taken place in the visibility of GLBT life in American media. GLAAD's best work ensueed from reporting bias and lack of visibility and on organizing its members to write, e-mail, and call the responsible exits to insist on change. formerly upon a time GLAAD was trip by media outsiders, and it was surpassingly grassroots. Now GLAAD has the glutted participation of media insiders and therefore the labor in distress is less intense. GLAAD can learn those meetings with execs. GLAAD may be resting onward its laurels, but they have done a hazard of good. They could do more.
Peter Saxe, recently made known York City, N.Y.
GLAAD is a travesty and sellout It's more belong toed about how many starlets attend the GLAAD Awards than representing the nation whose voices it has co-opt GLAAD works onward the outdated model that any representation is proper representation. That is ineffective and make secures that stereotypes abound and that the glass ceiling for gays upon network television not only exists moreover thickens.
M. Muldoon; via the Internet
The media is a powerful tool that is being used against the GLBT community; fortunately, we have GLAAD to stop it. A division of what GLAAD does is behind the sights working to keep the "crap" public of the media. Without GLAAD we would be wallowing in a sea of antigay TV point outs inaccurate portrayals of GLBT clan in the movies, and inaccurate reporting in succession us in the news media.