This OUTober, the Daily 49er staff celebrates being queer.
Tag: OUTober
Beach Weekly S7E6: OUTober
Daily Forty-Niner · Beach Weekly S7E6 – OUTober
OUTober: Students spill the tea on their LGBTQ dating experiences
Students part of the LGBTQ community share their dating horror stories in this year’s special OUTober issue.
Stonewall wasn’t just a riot
That fateful morning in 1969 ignited demands for gay rights.
Letter from the editor: The bricks that paved the way
We march on the path paved by bricks our predecessors threw for us. Many people, including those in the queer community, do not know queer history. It is important to acknowledge the people who paved the way for LGBTQ activism as we know it, especially the people of color who[Read More…]
Beach Weekly S5E8 — OUTober
In this week’s special episode, News Editor Julia Terbeche discusses the Daily Forty-Niner’s second-ever OUTober issue and stories focused on the LGBTQ community, including violence against trans women and a feature on Hamburger Mary’s Bar and Grille. Arts and Life Editor Paris Barraza touches on the history of drag and ball culture, and Special Projects Editor Peter Villafane reads his letter from the editor as well as shares his experience as a transgender man.
Out of the Closet, CSULB students share their coming out stories
No one’s coming out story is the same. Members of Long Beach State’s LGBTQ+ community share their individual coming out stories in the Daily Forty-Niner video series, “Out of the Closet.”
Letter to the Editor: There are more than two genders
In the United States, we have organized society around the idea that there are only two genders and that everyone is sexual. When, in fact, many societies have existed for ages that recognize a multitude of genders and a spectrum of sexuality.
CSULB students and staff spill the tea on misconceptions about the LGBTQ+ community
For Spill the Tea: OUTober edition, students give their take on untrue perceptions of the LGBTQ+ community and how they fit outside these molds.
Introduction to queer studies at CSULB is ‘a place to think about the way you think’
The course teaches students to consider “how queer manifests itself outside the body.”