35th GLAAD Media Awards

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35th GLAAD Media Awards
DateMarch 14, 2024 (2024-03-14)
May 11, 2024 (2024-05-11)
LocationThe Beverly Hilton
(Beverly Hills, California)
New York Hilton Midtown
(New York, New York)
CountryUnited States
← 34th · GLAAD Media Awards · 36th →

The 35th GLAAD Media Awards will be the 2024 annual presentation of the GLAAD Media Awards by GLAAD honoring 2023 films, television shows, video games, musicians and works of journalism that fairly, accurately and inclusively represent the LGBT community and issues relevant to the community.[1]

As in previous years, the awards will be presented in two groups at two separate ceremonies. For this awards edition, the first took place on March 14, 2024, in Beverly Hills, California, while the second will take place on May 11, 2024, in New York City.[2] Special recognition will be given to Renaissance: A Film by Beyonce, The Dads, Enamorándonos, Drag Latina and Wendy, perdida pero famosa.[3]

Winners and nominees[edit]

The eligibility period for the 35th GLAAD Media Awards ran from January 1, 2023, to December 31, 2023.[3] All nominees are listed below,[4][5] and the winners are listed in bold.[6]

Film[edit]

Outstanding Film – Streaming or TV

Television[edit]

Children's Programming

Other[edit]

Outstanding Broadway Production
Outstanding Blog
  • Charlotte's Web Thoughts
  • Erin in the Morning
  • Holy Bullies and Headless Monsters
  • LawDork
  • Mombian
  • Pittsburgh Lesbian Correspondents
  • The Queer Review
  • The Randy Report
  • The Reckoning
  • The Rot Spot
Outstanding Podcast
  • Finding Fire Island (Broadway Podcast Network)
  • Gay and Afraid with Eric Sedeño (Past Your Bedtime)
  • Las Culturistas (iHeart)
  • NPR's Embedded (NPR)
  • Queen of Hearts (Wondery)
  • Rooted Recovery Stories (Promises Behavioral Health)
  • Sibling Rivalry (Studio 71)
  • That Conversation With Tarek Ali (Buzz Sprout)
  • This Queer Book Saved My Life (This Queer Book Productions, LLC)
  • TransLash (TransLash Media)

Journalism[edit]

Outstanding TV Journalism Segment
  • "11th Hour: Transgender Athletes and What People Don't Understand" – The 11th Hour (MSNBC)
  • "19-Year-Old Designer CJ King Gets Second Chance to Walk the Runway" – GMA3 (ABC)
  • "The All in Y'all" (KEYE-TV CBS Austin)
  • "Anti-LGBTQ+ Law in Uganda that Threatens the Death Penalty Sparks International Outcry" – PBS Newshour (PBS)
  • "Bringing Queer Joy into the World of Hip-Hop" – ABC News Live Prime (ABC News Live)
  • "Des Moines LGBTQ Community Hosts First-Ever 'People's Pride'" (WOI-TV Local 5 Des Moines)
  • "Geena Rocero Talks About Her New Memoir 'Horse Barbie' and the Power of Living Unapologetically" – CBS Mornings (CBS)
  • "How Eco-Drag Queen Pattie Gonia Defines What It Means to Fight for the Environment" – Nightline (ABC)
  • "New York City Gay Bar Deaths Classified as Homicides" (NBC News Now)
  • "One-on-One with the President of the American Medical Association (AMA)" – CBS Evening News with Norah O'Donnell (CBS)
Outstanding TV Journalism – Long-Form
Outstanding Live TV Journalism – Segment or Special
  • "Capehart on SCOTUS rulings: 'My Possibilities are Up to Them, Not Up to Me'" – The Last Word (MSNBC)
  • "CNN's Anderson Cooper Speaks With Lauri Carleton's Daughter, Ari Carleton, About Her Mother's Legacy" – Anderson Cooper 360 (CNN)
  • "Flipping the Script: Live Interviews on LGBTQ+ Community" – Morning News NOW (NBC News Now)
  • "Gio Benitez Interviews Sasha Velour on Her Book and the Climate of Drag in America" – Good Morning America (ABC)
  • "Indiana Students Put on LGBTQ-Themed Play Themselves After it's Canceled By the School" – Yasmin Vossoughian Reports (MSNBC)
  • "José Díaz-Balart Reports: A Texas Mother's Fight: the Case for Gender-Affirming Care" – José Díaz-Balart Reports (MSNBC)
  • "One-on-One with Eureka O'Hara" – The Reid Out (MSNBC)
  • "Pride Across America" (ABC News Live)
  • "TikTok Sensations 'The Old Gays' Talk About How They Became Friends and Their New Docuseries" – Today with Hoda & Jenna (NBC)
  • "Two Anti-LGBTQ Bills Advance to Louisiana House" Breakdown (WWL-TV CBS New Orleans)
Outstanding Print Article
  • "As Drag Bans Proliferate, Maren Morris Goes Deep With Drag's Biggest Stars on Why the Show Must Go On" by Stephen Daw (Billboard)
  • "Black Queer History is American History" by Myeshia Price (TIME)
  • "'But Most of All I'm Human': These 3 Transgender Teens Prove Identity Stretches Beyond One Label" by Susan Miller (USA Today)
  • "The Dancer" by Matt Kemper (The Atlanta-Journal Constitution)
  • "Heroism Overpowers Hate" by John Sotomayor (Embrace Magazine)
  • "Kim Petras Is Breaking the Mold" by Jeff Nelson (People)
  • "Pop Icons Are 'Mothers' Now. The LGBTQ Ballroom Scene Wants Credit." by Samantha Cherry (The Washington Post)
  • "Stop Bad Hair and Uglier Legislation (The New Classics)" by Karen Giberson (AC Magazine)
  • "Transgender Youth: 'Forced Outing' Bills Make Schools Unsafe" by Hannah Schoenbaum and Sean Murphy (AP)
  • "We Have the Tools to Stop HIV. So Why Is It Still Spreading?" by LZ Granderson (Los Angeles Times)
Outstanding Magazine Overall Coverage
Outstanding Online Journalism Article
  • "The AP Interview: Pope Francis Says Homosexuality Not a Crime" by Nicole Winifield (Associated Press)
  • "Book Banners Came for This Colorado Town. They Didn't Anticipate Resistance." By Jeff Fuentes Gleghorn (LGBTQNation.com)
  • "Evidence Undermines 'Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria' Claims" by Timmy Broderick (ScientificAmerican.com)
  • "From Drag Bans to Sports Restrictions, 75 Anti-LGBTQ Bills Have Become Law in 2023" by Jo Yurcaba (NBCNews.com)
  • "How the Latinx Drag Queens of Brooklyn Are Finding Freedom through Their Cultures" by Juan De Dios Sanchez Jurado (TeenVogue.com)
  • "Pedro Zamora, 'Real World' Star Who Died of AIDS, 'Humanized the Disease for a Generation,' Say Activists" by David Artavia (Yahoo.com)
  • "Pride Month Feels Different As Threats, Fear of Violence Grows" by Brooke Migdon (TheHill.com)
  • "Some Trans Kids Are Being Forced to Flee America for Their Safety" by Nico Lang (HuffPost.com)
  • "Stochastic Terrorism: Links between the GOP, Right-Wing Influencers & Neo-Nazi Violence" by Christopher Wiggins (Advocate.com)
  • "What Does Queer Gen Z Want on TV? Everything under the Rainbow" by Jude Cramer (INTOMore.com)
Outstanding Online Journalism – Video or Multimedia
  • "7 Remarkable Trans Elders Share Lessons for the Next Generation" (them.us)
  • "Brave Spaces" (PBS.org)
  • "CANS Can't Stand" (NewYorker.com)
  • "Club Q: Stronger Together" (NFL.com)
  • "'I've Always Known I Was Different': Four Trans People Share Their Stories" (WashingtonPost.com)
  • "Michaela Jaé Rodriguez Calls Out the New York Times' Anti-Trans Coverage & Advice for Trans Youth" (Variety.com)
  • "Moving Isa" (Insider.com)
  • "People Come Out to Their Parents | Truth or Drink" (Cut.com)
  • "Protecting Pride: Resilience after Tragedy – Club Q Survivors Fight to Project Their Community" (GoodMorningAmerica.com)
  • "Transnational" (Vice.com)

Spanish Language[edit]

Outstanding Spanish-Language Scripted Television Series
Outstanding Spanish-Language TV Journalism
  • "Adolescentes trans relatan su experiencia" – Noticiero Telemundo (Telemundo)

Special recognition[edit]

Special Recognition
Special Recognition (Spanish-Language)

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "GLAAD ANNOUNCES NOMINEES FOR THE 35th ANNUAL GLAAD MEDIA AWARDS". GLAAD. January 17, 2024. Retrieved January 19, 2024.
  2. ^ Messman-Rucker, Ariel (January 17, 2024). "'Red, White & Royal Blue,' 'Rustin' and boygenius are all vying for a 2024 GLAAD Media Award". Out. Retrieved January 19, 2024.
  3. ^ a b Pedersen, Erik (January 17, 2024). "GLAAD Media Awards Nominations Revealed". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved January 17, 2024.
  4. ^ "'Heartstopper,' '9-1-1 Lone Star' and 'Baldur's Gate 3' among GLAAD Media Awards nominees". NBC News. January 17, 2024. Retrieved January 19, 2024.
  5. ^ Pedersen, Erik (January 17, 2024). "GLAAD Media Awards Nominations Revealed". Deadline Hollywood.
  6. ^ Tapp, Tom (March 14, 2024). "The 35th Annual GLAAD Media Award Winners Include 'Ted Lasso,' 'Yellowjackets,' 'Ru Paul's Drag Race' & Reneé Rapp". Deadline Hollywood. Penske Media Corporation. Archived from the original on March 15, 2024. Retrieved March 14, 2024.