In Pride month, a look at how different strands of LGBTQ+ advocacy have been expressed around the world.
From soft pleas for tolerance and empathy to angry confronting of attitudes, from messages to the LGBTQ+ community to those aimed at their families and at the straight community, from top-of-the-line film production to use of a single webcam. All are covered here. What they have in common is outstanding creativity.
Love Doesn’t Hurt Anyone
An independently-made film that plays around with what we find shocking. A very smart and persuasive idea.
On the face of it, this is not at all creative: one person talking to a webcam. So why are we including it? Alice’s sheer honesty, openness and eloquence about their mental health journey as a queer and autistic person is astonishingly compelling.
PFLAG Canada: Nobody’s Memories
Another very smart idea – poignant, and incredibly persuasive.
Amnesty International: Gay Turtle
A brilliantly clever prank with a horribly serious undertone, exposing everyday anti-gay prejudice in Turkey.
An Australia/New Zealand film that goes to the heart of some same-sex couples’ hesitancy, with the encouragement to ‘hold tight’.
With the sort of production values only a big corporate can afford, this film from Oreo (made in collaboration with PFLAG), has wonderfully subtle performances, and is very moving.
Hope is a marketing, creative and branding agency for charities and other social-purpose organisations. The Ideas Lab examines what makes effective (or ineffective) communications for these causes, charities and social-impact businesses.
Cause & Effect: Kamran Mallick
Kamran Mallick is CEO of Disability Rights UK, the disability justice charity. Previously he... Read more
Cause & Effect: James Beeby
James Beeby is Director of Income Generation for Terrence Higgins Trust. After starting out... Read more
Cause & Effect: Simon Brooks
Simon Brooks is Director of Communications and Marketing at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), the world’s oldest,... Read more