logo
Number of LGBTQ-inclusive films drops again, data shows

Number of LGBTQ-inclusive films drops again, data shows

Axios21-06-2025

LGBTQ representation in major movie studios' productions has been dropping, per data from GLAAD.
Why it matters: In 2024, for the second year in a row, there was an overall decrease in inclusive films, after having hit a record high, GLAAD found.
The studios are "running the risk of losing the next generation of consumers," says Megan Townsend, GLAAD's senior director of entertainment research.
One in five Gen-Z U.S. adults identify as LGBTQ, per Gallup.
Driving the news: The entertainment industry has shown signs of succumbing to pressure to scale back on diversity and inclusion.
Several distributors, including Disney, Netflix and Paramount, pulled back Pride Month messaging this year.
By the numbers: Although the number of LGBTQ characters went up in 2024, from 170 to 181, fewer movies featured them.
Only 59 out of 250 films included LGBTQ characters, down from 70 out of 256 the previous year, the study found.
Among the LGBTQ characters, those of color decreased from 78 in 2023, to 66 in 2024.
LGBTQ-inclusive animated and family films from the 10 top distributors declined from 8 out of 39 in 2022 to 2 out of 26 in 2024.
The bottom line: "It is very hard to change your brand perception and win people back after they have decided that your brand is not for them, doesn't look like them, doesn't look like their friends, their family," Townsend tells Axios.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mark Hamill Recalls His Idea For Luke Skywalker's Tragic Backstory In ‘Star Wars: The Last Jedi'
Mark Hamill Recalls His Idea For Luke Skywalker's Tragic Backstory In ‘Star Wars: The Last Jedi'

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Mark Hamill Recalls His Idea For Luke Skywalker's Tragic Backstory In ‘Star Wars: The Last Jedi'

More than 30 years after he'd last played the role, Mark Hamill had a much darker idea for Luke Skywalker's life in Star Wars: Episode VIII — The Last Jedi (2017). The Emmy winner recalled his pitch for writer/director Rian Johnson about where Luke's life had taken him in the years since Episode VI — Return of the Jedi (1983) that would make him turn his back on the Force before returning in Episode VII — The Force Awakens (2015). More from Deadline Mark Hamill On Why He Won't Return As Luke Skywalker In 'Star Wars' Franchise: 'I Had My Time' Rian Johnson Defends 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi's 'Slightly Goofy Humor' – Watch Allan Freeman Dies: Marketing Exec Who Worked On Campaigns For 'Star Wars', 'The Shining' & Three Best Picture Oscar Winners Was 88 'I thought, what could make someone give up a devotion to what is basically a religious entity, to give up being a Jedi,' he explained on the Bullseye podcast. 'Well, the love of a woman,' Hamill continued. 'So, he falls in love with a woman. He gives up being a Jedi. They have a child together. At some point the child, as a toddler, picks up an unattended lightsaber, pushes the button, and is killed instantly. The wife is so full of grief, she kills herself.' Hamill's latest interview comes after he shot down any hopes of Luke returning for another installment in the Disney and Lucasfilm franchise, after the character died during a pivotal moment in The Last Jedi, becoming one with the Force. 'I am so grateful to George [Lucas] for letting me be a part of that back in the days, the humble days when George called Star Wars 'the most expensive low-budget movie ever made,'' he told 'We never expected it to become a permanent franchise and a part of pop culture like that. But my view is, I had my time. I'm appreciative of that, but I really think they should focus on the future and all the new characters.' Hamill jokingly added, 'And by the way, when I disappeared in [The Last Jedi], I left my robes behind. And there's no way I'm gonna appear as a naked Force ghost. I'm just letting you know that right now.' Best of Deadline 2025 TV Series Renewals: Photo Gallery 2025 TV Cancellations: Photo Gallery 2025-26 Awards Season Calendar: Dates For Tonys, Emmys, Oscars & More

‘Predator: Badlands' Joins Disney's San Diego Comic-Con Plans
‘Predator: Badlands' Joins Disney's San Diego Comic-Con Plans

Gizmodo

time8 hours ago

  • Gizmodo

‘Predator: Badlands' Joins Disney's San Diego Comic-Con Plans

The hunt will be on at San Diego Comic-Con, where Predator: Badlands will get the spotlight. Per the Hollywood Reporter, the sci-fi film will get a Hall H panel during the convention weekend. It'll be the second big Disney movie of the fall season to make an appearance at the famed Hall, joining October's Tron: Ares. Both films will fill in for a lack of Marvel at this year's convention, and it'll be the Predator franchise's first theatrical movie to hit SDCC since Shane Black's 2018 reboot. (Prey, which premiered at SDCC 2022, sadly never got a theatrical release.) Like with Tron, Predator: Badlands hasn't had much marketing since its initial trailer and poster. The Hall H panel will hopefully feature a new trailer for the film, which centers on Dak (Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi), a young Yautja outcast teaming with the android Thia (Elle Fanning) to get back in his clan's good graces by hunting a worthy enemy. Prey director Dan Trachtenberg is back behind the camera for this one, and unlike Prey and this year's Killers of Killers, you'll be able to see Badlands on the big screen. San Diego Comic-Con runs from July 24-27, and Predator: Badlands hits theaters on November 7. While we wait for more info about it, might as well rewatch Prey or Killer of Killers over on Hulu. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what's next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

Broadway's right — Jay-Z's Times Square casino bid must fail
Broadway's right — Jay-Z's Times Square casino bid must fail

New York Post

time8 hours ago

  • New York Post

Broadway's right — Jay-Z's Times Square casino bid must fail

Broadway was singing a different showtune this week. Luck be a lady… somewhere else! Many of the theater's powerful unions, landlords, trade organizations and ally businesses a-five-six-seven-hate Jay-Z, Caesars Entertainment and SL Green Realty's bad, bad, bad bid to plop a casino in Times Square. 5 Broadway workers protested the bid for a casino to be built right in the middle of Times Square. Billy Tompkins/ZUMA / In the very same building that's home to family-friendly 'The Lion King,' 1515 Broadway, blackjack beckons. One block away from 'Hamilton,' drunk tourists losing all of their Benjamins. Broadway feels such intense loathing toward Beyonce's husband's plan for Caesars Palace Times Square that, like the hippies of 'Hair,' the pros staged a rally Thursday by the red steps ahead of Friday's deadline for proposals. They were practically singing 'One Day More' out there. 'This casino's developers don't care about improving this neighborhood,' Broadway League prez Jean Valjean, I mean, Jason Laks said. 'A casino in the heart of Times Square would only set this area back.' Do you hear the people sing? Eight bids are competing for three gambling licenses around the metro area — from near the UN (just what foreign dignitaries need!) all the way up to Yonkers. Caesars' is the splashiest. 5 Caesars Palace Times Square would make its home at 1515 Broadway. A Better Times Square I'm not much of a protester. What do I want? A chair! When do I want it? Now! But I sit in solidarity with Broadway. They're dead right. The last thing the Crossroads of the World needs is poker tables, slot machines and the inevitable filth and riffraff that cling to them like saran wrap. The theater industry's chief beef, however, is a financial one. 'A casino can go anywhere,' Laks said. 'Broadway can only be here.' Show people insist that a shiny new gambling den would dangerously compete with their productions, which are only just getting back to some semblance of pre-pandemic normalcy. This past Broadway season had the highest attendance levels since 2019. A casino would rain on their parade. 5 Jay-Z is one of the forces behind the Times Square casino bid. Getty Images Gaming establishments are designed to keep customers inside them so they can spend all their money on the premises — at proprietary hotels, bars, restaurants and entertainments. Not at Joe Allen. Not at Hurley's. Not at Un Deux Trois. Only at Caesars. Once inside, the buildings tend to be labyrinthine and challenging to make your way out of. Intentionally. Those sneaks use psychological tricks such as dim lighting and windowless rooms to make you lose track of time. In short, the people who run casinos don't really want you to scurry off to see 'Aladdin.' 5 A Better Times Square Caesars says: Au contraire. Our business will be a boon to Broadway. We'll buy up thousands of tickets. That's funny as 'The Book of Mormon.' How does it benefit Caesars to send customers to a 2 ½-hour musical at 8 p.m.? It doesn't. That's just lip service to get the heavyweight Broadway League and Shubert Organization onboard. What of Las Vegas? They have shows, too, you say? Yes, Sin City does. But it's a different animal. You enter them from the casino floor. And they are nearly all 90 minutes long — purpose-built to get you back to the cards and chips ASAP. Twenty Broadway musicals currently are more than two hours and have an intermission. By the way, Broadway shows not called 'Mamma Mia!,' almost always flop hard in Vegas. So that's one giant dilemma. 5 While Las Vegas has shows, most are 90 minutes and entered from the casino floor. A Better Times Square Here's my issue. Times Square is already a Circus, Circus. The area has been especially disgusting and unruly since 2020, even if stronger policing has helped in recent months. The city's imbecilic moves over the years to turn much of it into a car-free pedestrian plaza has already provided ample opportunity for the homeless to sleep on the ground and drug dealers with a constant supply impaired loiterers. So, let's add gambling to that toxic mix. Nobody with a brain really believes that a casino would improve Times Square. Just like no one really believed that legalizing pot would be a consequence-free moneymaker for the state. Our ethically challenged politicians go gaga for these terrible ideas because of the payoffs they get. Meanwhile our neighborhoods and businesses suffer. The only high rollers Times Square needs are investors who pour millions into risky Broadway shows. Now, that's one helluva gamble.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store