The Daily Show: Ears Edition - TDS Time Machine | Pride Month
Episode Date: June 9, 2025Salute Pride Month with a look back at The Daily Show's coverage of pride, progress and corporate promotional synergy. Desi Lydic recaps the history of the pride movement from its beginnings. Jo...n Stewart reports on early victories in the marriage equality movement. Steve Carell boldly goes to the Gaylaxicon 2000 convention to discover the links between pride and sci-fi nerds. Ed Helms travels to Canada to meet a lone straight pride warrior. Josh Gad reports from the field on New York's gay marriage legalization. Trevor Noah celebrates recent progress in the movement but warns about workplace discrimination. Jaboukie Young-White joins the Pittsburgh Pride Parade. Dulcé Sloan connects the dots on corporate pride participation, and Ronny Chieng enlists help from Grace Kuhlenschmidt to talk disappointing pride backlash. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Happy Pride Month, everyone, or as it's called at Mike Pence's house, June.
Pride is a celebration of queerness, acceptance, and club remixes you can actually dance to.
And today I'm here at RuPaul's private pool to tell you how Pride Month came to be,
because just like all queer people, June has a coming out story of its own.
You could say Pride's roots go back to the 60s with Philly's Reminder Day pickets.
Reminder Day was like the precursor to what Pride is now, in the same way that Madonna
was the precursor to Lady Gaga.
And if you don't get that reference, you should probably stop watching now
because this is a Pride segment and you're a terrible ally.
The 60s also saw protests all over America,
like the Black Cat Tavern riot in LA
and a protest at the White House
demanding equal employment opportunities for gay people.
That's right, it used to be legal to fire people
just for being gay, which makes no sense.
Who you have sex with should have no bearing
on whether you get to keep your job,
unless you do it on the copy machine.
Well-known fact, that is how most paper jams get started.
I learned the hard way.
But then, of course, came Stonewall in 69,
when police raided a gay bar in New York City
called the Stonewall Inn,
and the queer community fought back.
It was such a significant moment in America's gay rights movement that to this day, that
whole block is now a historic site visited by people from all over the world.
The only way that corner of Christopher Street would attract more gay people is if Britney
had a residency there.
Stonewall was the big turning point.
Though they still faced so much discrimination, the LGBTQ community finally felt empowered
enough to hold big public celebrations.
The first ever official gay pride parade was held in Chicago in 1970, but one day later
New York held an entire Pride Week.
During this seven-day celebration, the community marched from the village to Central Park with
slogans like Gay Gay All the Way and Gay Power.
Which isn't just a good slogan,
it's also the energy source
that keeps the lights running on Broadway.
Of course, we can't talk about pride
without talking about the symbol of it.
No, not your grandparents Googling what is scissoring.
I'm talking about the rainbow flag,
which was designed in 1978 by Gilbert Baker.
He called himself the Gay Betsy Ross, which makes sense.
Not only did they both design iconic flags, but they also belonged to communities where
wigs were very popular.
One of the coolest things about Gilbert Baker was that he refused to trademark the Pride
flag.
He wanted everyone to be able to share it and reinterpret it, which is why today, the
flag has become as fluid as sexuality itself.
By the time we reached the 80s, the AIDS crisis came to the forefront, and Pride took on a
new mission.
It wasn't just about visibility and acceptance, it was about destigmatizing and promoting
public health, which was especially important because the federal government pretty much
just pretended AIDS didn't exist, like what Tom Hanks does with Chet.
Once we made it to the 90s, Pride was even more mainstream than ever before, and in 1999,
President Bill Clinton signed the executive order officially recognizing June as Pride
Month for the first time.
Yeah, if two people of the same gender wanted to have sexual relations, that was fine with
him, even if he didn't totally understand the definition of sexual relations.
I did not have...
Clinton's executive order referred to June
as Gay and Lesbian Pride Month.
Then in 2009, President Obama changed it
to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Pride Month.
Then President Trump dialed it back a little
and just called it LGBT Pride Month, which makes sense.
No big words, and it's less scary for Mike Pence.
But these days, the Biden administration extended the name again to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual,
Transgender, and Queer Pride Month, making it, as of now, the only thing that's been
built back better.
But whatever you call it, Pride has truly become a global phenomenon.
It's celebrated everywhere.
Manila, South Africa, Brazil, Madrid.
Pride's gone to so many places, if it had an Instagram, you'd have to mute their stories.
We get it, Pride.
You had fun in Spain.
Stop making the rest of us feel so boring.
So this month, don't forget where Pride came from
and all the people who fought to make it a reality.
The LGBTQ community still faces many challenges,
but it's also experienced a lot of progress.
And if you ask me, that's worth celebrating.
Hello, hello, hello.
Shit, RuPaul's back from vacation early.
Come on.
Vermont Supreme Court gives gay couples legal rights.
New Hampshire makes a remark under its breath
and scratches its ass.
The Vermont Supreme Court, grateful for a case not involving SAP rights and tapping
permits, made history yesterday when it ruled gay couples are entitled to the same benefits
and protections as heterosexual couples. The ruling prompted jubilation among Upper New
England's gay community, thousands of whom took to the streets chanting, we're here, we're queer, get used to it, yeah.
Presidential candidate Steve Forbes
added his two billion cents,
calling the ruling a, quote,
flagrant example of judicial activism.
I believe in traditional marriage,
just like his dear old dad.
marriage just like his dear old dad. Being both Vermont based and a highly regarded cultural barometer, Ben and Jerry's ice cream
celebrated the event by releasing new flavors including Apple Brown Betty Friedan, Maple
Thorpe and of course, penis. Geeks, losers, dweebs, simps, propeller heads.
These are but a few of the labels that our society uses to describe the science fiction world.
But as Steve Carell discovered, our collective intolerance hasn't spawned anger in return,
but rather a spirit of inclusion that reflects the deepest meaning of turning the other cheek.
The worlds of science fiction and fantasy have long presented positive images of gay characters.
But I was going into Toshi station to pick up some power converters.
However, this on-screen tolerance hasn't been reflected off-screen. Until now.
Welcome to Gaylaxicon 2000.
What is Gaylaxicon?
Gaylaxicon 2000 is a science fiction convention
for gays, lesbians, bisexuals, transgenders, their friends
and family.
Is it hard to tell people you're a science fiction buff?
Yes, sometimes people have a harder time with that than the fact that I'm bi.
You're bi?
Yes.
Cool.
Is it time for gay science fiction fans to come out of the closet?
Yes it is.
What would that closet of the future look like? I don't know. Wouldn't
it be cool if the doors themselves didn't roll on little rollers but have that and little
air compressors underneath it? That's the kind of closet you want to come out of. Am
I right? No matter what form that closet of the future may take,
here at Gaylaxicon 2000, people are already out.
Donning new experimental personas,
attending informative science fiction forums,
and admiring hundreds of fantasy-based works of art.
Are you telling me that if I look at one of these,
I'm going to be seeing imaginary animals
having sex?
Yes, indeed.
Anthropomorphic erotica.
Explain that concept to me.
Well, that depends on the artist.
Some of these people are notorious for drawing sexy skunks, some for rabbits, some for almost
any species you can imagine.
Could you describe what we're looking at here? What I'm looking at is based upon a lifetime of study, observation.
I'm trying to make a comment about our society and the way we live today.
It's a guy having anal sex with a fox. Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Clearly, there was something for everyone at Gay Lexicon.
But as I soon found out, there was more.
Much more.
If I were gay and a science fiction buff, which I am not either of them, what would
you have for me to do here?
The most exciting event would be the masquerade.
What's so much fun about the masquerade?
You find out a little bit about the personality.
It brings out a different side to them?
Yes, it shows a side that is usually hidden.
Couldn't that be dangerous?
While Jack Frost denied that there was any danger in the masquerade process,
I had my doubts.
So I decided to conduct a little experiment of my own.
How does one create a costume for themselves?
I guess first of all you have to know what you want to be.
As I began to immerse myself in character after character, I realized that in fact there
was no danger. By revealing my inner self, I found myself childlike liberated inspired
and very gay
despite the Pope's presence all is not well in Canada in fact many citizens are
hoping the Pope can heal some very deep divisions
that are threatening to tear the Canadian nation apart.
Our own Ed Helms reports.
Bill Watcott is a decent, hardworking Canadian citizen
who is being persecuted because of his sexuality.
I'm Bill Watcott and I'm definitely a heterosexual.
By choosing to live an openly straight lifestyle, Bill has become an object of ridicule.
Is it fair to say that because of your sexuality, you've suffered?
Yes, that would be a fair statement.
Suffered because he lives in Canada, our gay neighbor to the north, where if you don't like gay music, gay sports, and gay cops,
you're an outsider.
And to make matters even worse for Bill Whatcot, he lives in Canada's gayest city, Regina. That's right, Regina. A hotbed of heterophobia. Where local gay supremacist
Duncan Campbell has this to say about Bill Whatcot.
I don't think a lot of people like him.
Ouch! Even in the face of straight bashing like that, Bill has nothing but kind words for the gay majority.
Homosexual sex is a sin. It doesn't matter what gender. That's disordered sex. Like that, Bill has nothing but kind words for the gay majority.
Homosexual sex is a sin.
It doesn't matter what gender.
That's disordered sex.
And it's a disordered desire and attraction.
It's filthy.
What have you found?
Think about the damage they're going to do to each other.
And when they're going down that path, they're going down a path that'll lead to a lot of
disease and unhappiness.
He's tolerant. He's tolerant,
he's well-spoken, and he has a mustache. But the gays still refuse to accept Bill
Whatcott. So in a heroic act of defiance, Bill decided to stand up for his kind
and organized a parade in the name of Straight Bride, a colossal demonstration
that brought downtown
Regina to its knees.
It was straight Canada's finest hour, but the gay majority continues to make Bill's
life a living hell.
One time in Toronto I had a homosexual try to pick me up.
I actually, I didn't even know he was gay. I was just trying to help him. living hell. One time in Toronto I had a homosexual try to pick me up.
I actually I didn't even know he was gay I was just trying to help him.
You know we were at a YMCA and he wasn't using correct technique.
I'm sorry you were where?
Okay the YMCA, do you have that in America?
It's like a health club?
Is it a gay club?
This one turned out to be a gay pickup spot because he asked me to go out for coffee and I did.
Nothing else happened, we swear.
But despite these brushes with gayness,
Bill has remained impressively grounded in his masculinity.
He showed me his gun collection.
Please, I am actually giving it a decent polish now.
Yeah, polish that thing up.
And even indulged me in a front yard tussle.
Later, we enjoyed a relaxing moment together,
where Bill shared even more details about his life
as a heterosexual, including the fact that he's a male nurse.
Not many nurses are hunters and gun owners.
When will gay Canada accept people like Bill Whatcott? Not many nurses are hunters and gun owners.
When will gay Canada accept people like Bill Whatcot?
Probably never.
And yet Bill Whatcot carries on, fighting for the rights of all straight, parade-loving,
Canadian male nurses, who sometimes get coffee with people they meet at the YMCA.
I have to say
an in-depth report is excellent reporting it. Well done. Thank you. Thank you very much.
It's really interesting in doing this report
I interesting in in doing this report I I realized something about myself
uh...
yeah I uh...
I'm straight
I said it
I'm straight
it feels pretty good Ed uh... that's really not the big deal.
I mean, like 90% of the country, I'm straight, and I don't go announcing it, but you know, it's not that...
You're straight too?
Yeah. Yeah.
Ladies and gentlemen, TV's Jon Stewart, also straight.
I had no idea you were...
We should hang out.
Yes, yes.
No, we could go to the YMCA,
help each other work out,
give each other massages.
Do you slow dance?
Because...
Ed, that's gay.
That's...
Right, I'm straight.
Ed Helms, everybody. We'll be right back. You know, I had a crazy weekend.
Yesterday, like every year in the end of June,
last weekend, I dress up in glitter like a peacock.
And I marched down Fifth Avenue to raise awareness of exotic birds.
And I got to tell you to raise awareness of exotic birds.
And I gotta tell you, this year, almost more than any other year, it went really, really well.
I couldn't believe the support I was getting.
People are like, this is a great day, it's been too long, you know?
And I was like, yeah, exotic birds, you know what I mean?
And then people are like, wasn't Friday amazing?
And I was like, why?
What happened Friday?
It is a history-making night with a vote that just happened
a short time ago.
New York becomes the seventh jurisdiction in America
to recognize marriage for same-sex couples.
Wow, that's a major civil rights victory.
New York's, uh, is still applauding.
Finally, New York State's gay and lesbian community are free from the burden that was having
to set foot in Connecticut in order to get married.
No.
No.
Really, the nuptials are in Stamford?
No. Hmm.
Yes, it was last Friday night at 10.30 p.m. Eastern gay rights time.
After a week of tense negotiations and dueling protests
featuring brutal gay versus Jew bullfighting,
the Senate in Albany finally made an honest state of New York
by a vote of 33-4 for destroying society as we know it and
29 against the vote was in doubt right up until the last minute as of Thursday
The state Senate was deadlocked 31 31 marriage rights supporters had to find at least one more Republican to flip and then
Upstepped Mark D'Asanze state senator from Buffalo who had run on a platform of banning gay marriage.
Here's what he had to say.
As a Catholic, I was raised to believe that marriage
is between a man and a woman.
Alright, so we'll just move on from him.
And maybe they'll find a vote from someone
who doesn't appear to be on Elliot Ness' enemies list.
I cannot legally come up with an argument
against same-sex marriage.
Who am I to say that someone does not have the same rights
that I have with my wife, who I love,
or that have the 1,300-plus rights that I share with her?
I vote in the affirmative, Mr. President. You know what? I'm so impressed. In honor of this man, in honor of this great man, I
will no longer do my offensive Italian New Yorker voice. For as long, because it's not
often you see this son of a bitch, the courage that this mother-fucking balls,
the giant fucking cagoons hanging over this man
like bocce balls on a summer after.
I can't, I'm sorry, it's very hard not to do the voice.
It's a very fun voice.
And so with support of Grisanti
and his fellow Republican Stephen Solon,
gay marriage passed and of course course you know what that means.
The city estimates the new law will bring more than 180 million dollars to the state
in the next three years.
Yes, excellent.
And ladies and gentlemen, I also am cashing in.
It's a perfect time to roll out my new Jon Stewart brand, Tuxpedos!
All the elegance and panache of a tuxedo.
But with the ball-flattering physique.
Yes, indeed.
While Friday's decision brings the total number of states permitting gay marriage in districts
to seven, 41 other states still have laws on the books explicitly banning same-sex marriage.
It's why many gay activists are looking for federal action to achieve national marriage
equality.
Last Thursday, Barack Obama addressed that very question.
I have long believed that the so-called Defense of Marriage Act ought to be repealed.
Hoorah!
Hear, hear!
Yay!
I assume the president's problem with the Defense of Marriage Act is that should be
a federal law in support of gay marriage.
Part of the reason that DOMA doesn't make sense is that traditionally marriage has been
decided by the states.
Really? by the states. Oh.
Really?
The gentleman with mixed race parents playing the states no best card.
You know, when I was born,
I was born,
when I was born, my parents' marriage
would have been illegal in Florida and Virginia.
So, different strokes.
Of course, the implications of legalizing gay marriage can be hard to fully understand,
unless perhaps you have a correspondent who works in musical theater.
We sent our own Josh Gad from Book of Mormon out to make sense of this landmark legislation.
The legalization of gay marriage means one thing, best put by Super Bowl hero David Tyree.
This will be the beginning of our country sliding toward, you know, it's a strong word, but anarchy.
Now everyone from Albany to Rochester will have to deal with what people here in the city have long had to accept as part of their daily lives.
Leather daddies creating traffic snarls and sailors gone AWOL.
This is like an average day in the gay community isn't it?
No, this is a very special day that we do every year.
Oh yeah, tonight's BET Awards. I forgot.
That's not why we're marching.
Sir, uh, sir, may I ask you a quick question?
How is this not like the apocalypse?
This is a f***ing parade, dude.
Yeah, it reminds me a bit of that passage from Revelations.
And behold, I saw a pale horse and its rider was wearing a jockstrap and hell followed.
I don't read the Bible.
It's in there, page 42. What kind of parade is in store for tomorrow? was wearing a jockstrap and hell followed. I don't read the Bible.
It's in there, page 42.
What kind of parade is in store for tomorrow?
I don't think any other parades.
We have pride only once a year.
You're saying there's all for the parade.
Yes.
But in reality, the St. Patrick's Day Parade
is a very accurate portrayal of how
Irish people behave every day.
I wouldn't say that at all.
Oh, I would. The St. Patrick's Day Parade. I wouldn't say that at all.
Oh, I would.
Because some of the people who are out making a mess on St. Patrick's Day
aren't even Irish.
Yeah, but Irish people are always getting drunk and vomiting inside subway stations.
Take a good look upstate. Normal, respectable people like this will have nowhere to turn.
Are you worried about the repercussions of gay marriage?
Yeah, I'm one of those people.
Are you gay?
I'm gay.
I fish with guys like you.
Oh, thanks.
Yep.
We look like other people.
Amazing.
You're not gay.
That's gay.
You're not gay.
They're gay and I'm gay.
Really?
David Tyree!
David Tyree! David Tyree! That was David Tyree, Super Bowl hero, bravely
showing his face here at Gay Pride Parade. Unbelievable. It's become clear to me now
that you're not actually David Tyree. Even though I was on Broadway, once they found
out I was a breeder, the knives came out. I loved you in the Book of Mormon. Oh, thank
you. Too bad you didn't win. Are you from the Book of Mormon? I love you and the book of war. Thank you to that you didn't
win.
Are you from the book of Mormon you look like it. Oh my God
you you didn't get the townie
I hope you guys have fun yourselves.
It became clear that no one not even this intrepid reporter was
immune from their takeover.
I think that New York is a part of the world right now.
And then New York is going to still be in New York, you know?
And just be a part of everything else.
That's...
Really?
Yes.
Then how did this happen?
What?
Three minutes ago, I was wearing a suit.
I have no idea how I even got in these.
Good luck, Buffalo.
You'll need it.
Energy!
["Pride Month"]
It's Pride Month, right?
Which America has been celebrating
with huge pride parades around the country,
from right here in New York all the way to Beaufort, Wyoming. Now, there, it was just two guys walking to CVS,
but they were having a good time,
so it counts as a parade.
But, but, yesterday's Supreme Court news
has dimmed the celebration,
because Justice Kennedy was the swing vote
supporting gay rights,
and there's widespread concern
that Trump's next pick won't be, right?
It's a harsh way to end Pride Month.
You know, it's kind of like ending your birthday party
with a cancer doctor popping out of a cake,
like, surprise!
-♪ Happy last birthday to you. -♪
Oh.
And although...
You guys sound like you were at the birthday for real.
Oh.
And although many are worried about the future
of LGBTQ rights, let's take a moment to celebrate
how much progress has been made,
and not just in America, but around the world.
Taiwan will become the first Asian nation
to legalize same-sex marriage.
History tonight down under,
Australia's parliament has voted to legalize gay marriage.
Germany's parliament voted to legalize same-sex marriage
in a historic vote.
Bermuda has now legalized same-sex marriage
for a second time.
The island's Supreme Court overturned a gay marriage ban
that was signed into law just four months ago.
The Supreme Court first legalized same-sex marriage
last May.
Then in February, Bermuda became the first national
territory in the world to repeal
its gay marriage legislation.
Yeah, that's right.
Bermuda legalized same-sex marriage twice.
Yeah. And I know that seems weird,
but that's just how legislation works in Bermuda.
You see, what happens is you pass it in Parliament,
and then it goes to the triangle where it's lost.
Then a deep-sea diver finds it
and takes it back to parliament.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's not just marriage equality.
Around the world, LGBTQ rights are moving forward
in different ways. Pakistan passed transgender rights.
Botswana's high court recognized
the trans woman's identity for the first time.
And all of Georgia is now gay.
Yeah.
Yeah, you don't even,
those queer eye guys do not mess around.
And even though, and even though the Trump administration
has eroded LGBTQ rights by rolling back
anti-discrimination laws
and banning trans people from the military,
they're gonna find it a lot harder
to reverse the public's views on gay rights.
The most recent ABC News poll found
that 81% of Americans said companies should not be allowed
to refuse service to gays and lesbians.
67% now say the same-sex marriages should be legal.
That's the highest we've ever seen.
This is one of the most remarkable changes
that we have seen in our history.
As the country heads toward midterm elections this fall,
some history is being made.
An unprecedented number of candidates
who are openly lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender
are running for office.
That's an incredible story.
It's incredible all around, right?
Right?
Think of how perceptions have shifted.
And it wasn't easy. Don't ever forget it wasn't easy.
It took marches, it took protests,
it took lawsuits, and two different will and graces
to get America here.
But it got here all the same.
So happy Pride Month, everyone. We'll be right back.
-♪ Yeah! -♪ We'll be right back. -♪ Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! Whoop! I'm Jaboukie Young-White, The Daily Show's senior Rust Belt correspondent. JK, I'm gay.
And so is Pittsburgh.
It's Pride Month, and Equality March is the original Pittsburgh Pride.
It has bikers, pups, pups, furries, queens, twunks, drunks, cops, bears, and fish creatures.
But there's one group that not everyone is happy about.
A lot of corporations are capitalizing off Pride and off LGBTQIA plus like merch.
I don't know, they're just making a lot of money off this.
That's what the Q in LGBTQIA stands for, corporations.
Okay.
But surely discriminating against our Pride loving corporations can't be the answer.
Pittsburgh Pride Equality March is for everybody.
It doesn't matter who you are, where you work, or who you love.
And just so you know, we love corporations.
Viacom, you're great.
Keep doing what you do.
We're really big fans here at The Daily Show Viacom.
Love you.
So the answer is obviously to hug these corporations close.
And corporations are hugging right back.
Google KPMG, Etna, Lyft, not Chick-fil-A.
And here comes the true slay queen, Walmart.
Is Walmart gay?
Walmart does take pride in their gay associates.
As a company, I don't think you can label a company
with a sexual orientation. Walmart seems like a top to me. I would agree with that. Yeah. I think it's amazing
that so many people could come out and just live their truth as a marketable
demographic. For sure and they've really made it like a safe place for everybody
I think for us too. Yeah, yeah, yeah. 100%. It's like, here I am, I'm queer, I have a
debit card. Everyone's gay as hell now. And gays love money bitch. Right, right.
So queer capitalism is totally chill?
Actually, there is a specific issue
with corporate sponsorship in Pittsburgh,
and it involves the F word.
No, not that.
Fracking.
There's a lot of corporations that are seemingly buying.
Last year, this march was called the EQT Equality March.
EQT doesn't stand for equality,
it stands for they're a fracking company.
Do you think that it's appropriate that a fracking company is a sponsor for Pittsburgh
Pride?
Law.
I think that it is completely inappropriate that a fracking company is a sponsor for anything.
EQT doesn't just shoot hot liquid deep into holes in the ground, they also swing both
ways by supporting Pride and various anti-gay politicians.
So what are people supposed to do?
Have a separate Pride without corporate sponsors?
Some say, frack yes.
This Pride event represents the people.
Non-corporational Pride.
Something that centers our TLGBCQ communities of Pittsburgh.
Do you think corporations can be gay people? No, corporations cannot be gay people. something that centers our TLGTB communities of Pittsburgh.
Do you think corporations can be gay people?
No, corporations cannot be gay people.
The People's Pride is non-corporate, has more color in its rainbow,
and I found someone who can keep up with my moves.
But are they turning their back on progress?
Don't you think it's beautiful that queer people have been able to come out
and live their truth as a marketable, capitalizing demographic?
No. I would think it would be beautiful if those actions were genuine.
They want to be a part of what's trending right now. Right now, being gay is trendy, you know?
Pose is out and there are lots of gay celebrities now.
Could you name a couple?
Yeah, so on top of my head right now, Big Freedia.
There's Deshaun Wesley and Leomi Maldonado.
They don't even want my brand. This is where I draw the line. Top of my head right now, Big Freedia. There's Deshaun Wesley and Naomi Maldonado.
They don't even want my brand. This is where I draw the line.
There has to be some way for corporations like EQT to prove that they're really committed
and not just experimenting.
Like maybe they just need to show that they're really about queer subculture
in like a more inventive, creative way.
I'm afraid where you're going with this.
I thought that maybe this could really get across the message of what EQT stands for.
It's like drilling, but also...
It's a little fast.
With the...
Could just slow it down...
Oh, maybe that.
That's right.
Progress takes time.
50 years ago, corporations wouldn't touch the gay community,
and now they can't wait to show their love in public.
And what better way to reciprocate that love
than with the EQT Berry Speed Deep Fracking Drill Dump.
Brought to you by EQT.
Let's kick it off with the Supreme Court,
America's highest court and the place Ruth Bader Ginsburg
goes in between workouts.
Yesterday, the court heard oral arguments
in a big case that could have major impacts on the workplace.
The Supreme Court is back at work this weekend.
Today it heard arguments in one of the most important cases
of its new term.
Does existing law protect
LGBTQ employees on the job?
The justices heard the case of Gerald Bostock, fired from a county job in Georgia after joining
a gay softball league. He sued, but lower courts threw his case out. They ruled that
the 1964 Civil Rights Act, signed by President Johnson, which bans job discrimination on
the basis of race and sex, among other factors,
does not cover sexual orientation.
Vostok's lawyer says firing someone for being gay
is discrimination based on sex.
Man, this is gonna be a huge case,
and we're gonna have to wait to see what the court decides,
but if you ask me, it's crazy that you can fire someone
for being gay, you know?
I mean, like if you're fired at work,
it should only be for being gay, you know? I mean, like if you're fired at work,
it should only be for work reasons,
like stealing or not showing up
or saying you like the final episode of Game of Thrones.
You should be fired.
It's like a big deal.
Also, I've always wondered this,
like how do you fire someone for being gay?
You can't tell who's gay.
Like if people haven't come out, you don't know.
You don't even know what gay is.
What, you're just gonna have bosses walking up to employees
like, Bob, you're fired for being gay.
He's like, I'm not gay, I'm just Southern.
It's like, oh, I'm sorry, I got confused, I'm sorry.
You realize this ruling could also affect everyone,
not just gay people, right?
Because by this logic, if you extend the logic,
anything you do in your sex life
can be grounds for losing your job, right?
It's your sexual preference, that's what they're saying.
Yeah, if you're one of those people
who's really quiet during sex, yeah, you could lose your job at the job, right? It's your sexual preference, that's what they're saying. Yeah, if you're one of those people who's really quiet during sex, yeah,
you could lose your job at the mall, huh?
Yeah, if you're into domination and humiliating people,
you could lose your job at Verizon customer service, huh?
Yeah, and if you're the type of person
who doesn't believe in the female orgasm,
you could use your job as vice president
of the United States, it could be really bad.
You don't know.
I don't want that to happen to him.
But actually, I'll be honest, I'm looking forward
to this decision because the people who get mad
about other people having sex are always the ones
who aren't getting any themselves.
So we're gonna know, by the way they vote,
who on the Supreme Court f***s. And now, let's hear from the next guest. June is Pride Month.
Or as it's called in the state of Florida, shh.
But while you're out there celebrating Pride, don't forget that some of its biggest supporters
weren't always on its side.
For more, we turn to Dulce Sloan for another installment of Dulcéin.
Hello, friends. of Dulcéan. ["Dulcéan"]
Hello, friends. It's June, which means this is the first month of the year
where it's just hot enough outside to not be sexy.
But in America, we know June also means Gay Pride Month.
So I want to wish everyone happy pride.
And I'm not the only one.
This year, it feels like every damn company
with a logo is going full rainbow.
You've probably seen these ads,
like Burger King offering Whoppers
with two top buns and two bottom buns.
Listen, it's still bread.
And every gay man I know is not eating bread in the summer,
they're doing keto and crunches until October.
But don't forget, companies weren't always jumping on the pride float,
looking like a Lisa Frank trapper keeper. When the gay rights movement first began in 1969,
most companies were too afraid to advertise to gay people. They didn't want to offend the rest of
America, especially religious conservatives. They were so uptight they thought pretzels are too sexy. All those twists. Oh it's so sinful. So companies kept their distance except for Absolute
vodka. Absolute was one of the first big companies to market to the queer
community because those Swedes don't give a shit about the religious right.
They were like who cares if the right doesn't like us? All they drink is milk.
So thanks to Absolute for being a true ally.
["Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy"]
Whew, it's a good year.
I didn't drink the whole thing
because I got a work meeting after this
and they said I gotta be sober this time.
Anyway, as gay people became more visible in society,
some advertisers slowly started reaching out
into the community until the AIDS epidemic blew up.
That sent companies flame for the hills again.
Oh no, what if the gays look at our ads?
Wait, is that how you get ads?
But you know what company doubled down
on their advertising during the AIDS crisis?
That's right, Absolute Vodka.
["Sweet Home Run"]
Mm.
A second half got a kick.
Damn, all right.
Where was I?
Right, by the 1990s, the queer community had once again
fought its way into greater acceptance.
So brands once again tried to dip their toes
into the pool party, but they were still too nervous
to jump all the way in.
So American advertising entered a phase now known as
Gay Vague, which sounds a lot like being in a fraternity.
Basically, it was companies hinting
at possible homosexuality. Like this Volkswagen ad where two dudes are driving in a car and
then pick up this dirty ass chair off the sidewalk. So the ad leaves it open to interpretation.
Are they roommates? Are they lovers? Are they roommate lovers? Because that's the worst
kind of hookup. You gotta wait for them to text you back and finish up in the bathroom?
Now a few times during this era,
a brand tried to make an outright gay ad,
like Benetton in Ikea.
And the ad completely won over the religious right
and they apologized for everything!
Ha ha ha ha ha ha!
Psych!
One Ikea in Long Island even got a bomb threat.
What is wrong with these religious fanatics?
They know the furniture isn't gay, right?
Plus, if there's one place that can reassemble
after a bombing, it's an Ikea.
Unfortunately for the religious right,
but luckily for everyone else, their time was ending.
Over the next two decades, Americans started to realize
that gay people were just the same as everyone else,
except with better ads.
And as popular opinion improved,
companies finally felt it was safe enough
to take gay money.
And this time it was major brands.
Amazon started advertising to gay people.
Coca-Cola aired a commercial
with two dads during the Super Bowl.
And Just Salad even had a big gay salad.
Which, come on, that was just a regular salad.
At least saw some glitter in it.
And that brings us to today,
when practically every company does Pride Month marketing.
But just because every June a business
acts like they're auditioning for Joseph
and the amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat,
it doesn't mean their values line up with their tweets. Take AT&T for example.
They love to show everyone how much they support Pride, while also giving $1 million to anti-LGBTQ
politicians and PACs.
Or how retailers like H&M are launching Pride collections with items made in countries that
criminalize homosexuality, which is another reason wearing this ugly ass top
should be a crime.
And they aren't the only hypocrites
donating to anti-queer causes,
but hey, why go through all the trouble
of listing them here?
I'm no hater.
["Dog on Fire"]
Oh, and that one too.
Okay.
Are we done?
This is making me sad.
The point is, enjoy all those gay whoppers and pink Toyotas,
but don't forget what this month is about.
Pride is a time to celebrate the right to love who you want
and to honor the people who fought to give us that right back when no brand was on their side.
Except for Absolute.
You know what, one of those gay whoppers sounds
real good about Nell though.
I'm dizzy.
It's June, which means it's time to celebrate the holiday Jojo Siwa invented, Pride Month.
Pride Month started as an anti-establishment protest, but over the last few decades it's
gone mainstream.
There are parades in every city, Pizza Hut puts out gay boxes, and even Exxon changes
all its oil spills to a rainbow color.
Hashtag ally. But recently, the conservative backlash has been growing,
and this year, some Pride traditions
are coming under fire.
In Florida, Ron DeSantis' administration
has forbidden cities across the state
from displaying colorful lights on their bridges
during Pride Month, limiting bridge coloration
to red, white, and blue.
Bridges across the state that normally illuminate
in colorful arrays of light to mark holidays
won't be able to use any other colors.
The goal of Ron's order is clearly
to shut down any celebration of Pride Month.
Yo, what is up with Ron DeSantis?
I mean, I can't believe a guy who rocks three-inch heels
is such a dick to the gay community.
But, by the way...
Yeah.
By the way, red, white, and blue lights on crumbling infrastructure, perfect metaphor
for America.
And it's so sad because having pride colors on bridges also prevented a lot of straight
people from killing themselves.
Guys would be like, hey, I can't jump off this bridge, that's gay.
But if you think it can't get any pettier than a band on Rainbow Bridges, there's a
bar in Idaho saying, hold my heterosexual beer.
An Idaho bar is offering a break from the pride push that's being forced on Americans
by declaring June to be Heterosexual Awesomeness Month.
The old state saloon offering deals all month long, Heteromail Monday when any heterosexual male get this who must be dressed like a heterosexual male
Gets a free pint of beer
You must be dressed like a heterosexual male so
This straight bar is gonna be critiquing everyone's outfits as soon as they walk in the door
It sounds super straight to me.
What?
What exactly are they even saying here?
Like, our bar is so straight
that we're offering special deals
to pack it entirely with dudes.
I mean, you're basically one brick away
from being Stonewall, okay?
So, now I guess someone could argue
that none of this stuff is explicitly anti-gay, but just check out how Colorado Republicans
are celebrating pride.
The Colorado Republican Party is calling on people to burn all gay pride flags,
proclaiming in a mass email to supporters that quote, God hates pride.
The Republican Party's message attacks so-called godless groomers,
and it echoes the anti-gay slur
used by Westboro Baptist Church protesters.
Okay, yeah, awful story, but hang on.
Wait, did Jesus have laser eyes?
I...
Was that in the Bible?
I mean, I knew he had powers.
I didn't know he was in the X-Men. I don't get how anyone can be so angry about rainbow flags.
I mean, it must be exhausting being that homophobic,
you know, just eating a bag of Skittles like,
no homo, no homo, no homo.
So there's backlash to Pride Month all around the country.
And guess what?
Some of those corporate allies
are turning out to be fair weather friends.
Target says it will no longer sell
its Pride Month collection in all of its stores.
The decision comes after conservative groups
became upset over the chain's decision
to sell LGBTQ themed merchandise last June.
The company says the backlash harmed sales.
Are you kidding me?
Target stopped selling gay stuff?
But their logo is literally a butthole.
Well, you know, that's it.
From now on, I will be going somewhere else
to pretend to shop so I can poop in the bathroom.
For more on this story, we go live to Target
with our senior lesbian correspondent, Grace Coolins-Mead. Grace, Grace, Grace, what's the feeling at Target?
It's pretty amazing.
Did you know if you use the self-checkout machine,
you don't have to pay?
Yeah, okay, I don't think that's right,
but that's not what I'm talking about.
How do people feel about Target banging gay merchandise?
Oh, yeah, it's so disappointing.
Gay people just want equality.
If Target wants to ban gay items, fine.
But if they want to be equal,
then they also need to ban all the straight items.
Like golf clubs or cargo shorts or two-in-one shampoos.
Wait, no, no, that's a shampoo I use.
I mean, it saves time and my hair looks great.
Yes.
All right, so, anyway, so straight items,
items that straight people use?
No, it's more of a vibe.
Every product has a clear orientation.
Every product, okay, what about like, I don't know,
water bottles?
Okay. Cell phone bottles? Gay.
Cell phone cases?
Straight.
Okay, I think I get it. So a slotted spoon, that feels gay.
Slotted spoons are so straight. They're serving nothing.
Okay.
Okay, what about sweaters?
Straight.
Dog sweaters?
Gay.
Electrical sockets? Gay. Dog sweaters. Gay.
Electrical sockets.
Gay, obviously.
They're power bottoms.
Okay, what about calculators?
So that one's interesting.
Standard calculators are straight, but graphing calculators are gay because they're doing
way too much.
Okay, I think I'm getting it.
Printers are straight and humidifiers are gay.
Ronnie, don't out them.
They haven't told their family yet.
Okay, wait. I'm sorry. I don't know what.
Look, hey, that's besides the point, okay? Pride isn't about
rainbow tank tops at Target. It's a way for the queer
community to remember how far we've come from the violence and
discrimination we once faced. And most importantly, it's about
me hooking up with my ex-girlfriend's ex-girlfriend in a cabin in Vermont.
Let's just say that I'm the electrical socket.
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