
EXCLUSIVE Steps' Ian H Watkins hits out at JK Rowling as he claims the LGBTQI+ community is 'under attack': 'How dare you challenge my existence?'
In his latest career venture the Steps star has released a children's book teaching younger generations that being different is your superpower and Pride is a safe space for people to be open and not be judged by others.
Reflecting on his own experience growing up in the Rhondda Valley in Wales in the 80s and 90s, the singer admitted that while things are now more progressive the LGBTQI+ community are still 'under attack'.
Speaking exclusively to MailOnline, Ian explained: 'There are a few, they are the minority, a few very powerful people making decisions that the majority do not agree with.... So this book is also a big middle finger up to the b***ts.'
Most notably JK Rowling has been very vocal on the subject of trans people for several years and following the Supreme Court 's judgment on April 17, the author has consistently referred to transgender women as being 'men'.
Meanwhile Stephen Fry also criticised LGBT charity Stonewall as 'nonsensical' and 'stuck in a terrible, terrible, quagmire' on trans issues as he admitted 'I am not sure I support them' in December.
Asked what his response would be to those who use their platform to go against more liberal and progressive views, he began: 'I would say "how dare you?" How dare you challenge my existence.
'Queer people have always been here, we are here and we always will be here. So how dare you make me feel like a second-rate citizen?
'I don't want acceptance, I demand respect and every other LGBTQI+ person would say the same.'
Encouraging people to be kind he continued: 'There's actual human beings involved. I think they are playing a political game. But at the end of the day, the bottom line is just be kind.
'We're all facing struggles on a daily basis, you never know what somebody is going through, so just be kind, life is hard enough, let it go.'
The star added: 'Who I choose to love, why does that form your opinion? Why should that make you lose sleep at night? No. Worry about yourself.'
Ian's new book titled Pride and the Rainbow Warriors follows the Rainbow Warriors on a journey as they teach readers of all ages the definition, history and importance of Pride and what it means to be included in the LGBTQ+ community.
Talking about the book, the star explained: 'It's a little love letter to my younger self.
'It's a book that I wish I had had when I was growing up. I was bullied. I was made to feel very different.
'I spent lots of time out of school because I was I called names. I felt like I was secluded and I wanted my children and their friends to grow up in a very different world so that's where the idea for this book came from.'
Ian shares twin sons Macsen and Cybi with his former partner Craig Ryder. The couple welcomed the boys via surrogate in 2016 before splitting a year later.
Explaining how accepting his children are of sexuality, he joked: 'One of the things Cybi said to me, we're talking maybe five years ago when they were four or five.
'He went, so Daddy, 'boys can marry boys" and I sad "yes," and "girls can marry girls" and I said "yes," and he said "But can a T-rex marry a pterodactyl? And that was the conversation.
'They didn't care about what humans could marry what humans. It was more that the T-rex would eat the pterodactyl. That was the conversation.'
After coming out publicly in 2007 in an interview with The Sun, Ian revealed he now feels he is 'making up for all of the years I spent in the closet while in Steps.
'It was a very dark time for LGBTQ people in the 90s. You were demonised. You were painted as the devil. It was sensationalised when somebody was in the closet.
'There was always a gay in the band and the papers knew about it, the press knew about it, and we were scared but I feel like now I'm making up for it.'
He added: 'I have a lot of peace to make with my silence and I'm very proactive. I use my voice in a political way and a supportive way for all of my peers.
'So it's a passion project for me this book and I'm really, really proud of it.'
As well as the release of the new book, Ian also devotes his time to talking about diversity in schools and encouraging children to embrace their uniqueness.
He added: 'There's also a massive lack of education in schools and libraries. The resources are very, very, very sparse. There's not much of it at all so that was another kind of fire in my belly to get this out there.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
8 minutes ago
- The Sun
Major boost for ITV daytime as THREE hit shows confirmed to return after Loose Women and Lorraine schedule chaos
ITV has been given a major boost amid the ongoing daytime TV chaos. Three huge shows have been confirmed to return after it was revealed that Loose Women and Lorraine would be undergoing major changes as part of cost-cutting measures. 5 5 5 Both programmes, which make up part of ITV daytime's output, will only run for 30 weeks and Loose Women will also be forced to ditch its studio audience. But whilst changes are afoot for those shows, three other programmes have been given a major boost with ITV planning to record brand new episodes of all three later this year. The Chase, Tipping Point and Deal or No Deal will all film brand new episodes later this year in a bid to keep them on-air until next year with new episodes that are already in the can across all three shows set to make their debuts over the summer. It is great news for viewers of Tipping Point as the show failed to record any more episodes last year sparking rumours it could be coming to an end. However, it was quickly clarified that the quiz show didn't film new episodes last year as a result of still having many unaired ones in the can that have been drip fed out across the last year. It will mark the first time that Ben has returned to the studio in almost two years to film new episodes. Elsewhere, Stephen Mulhern is gearing back up to film brand new editions of Deal or No Deal. A new full-length series will be recorded this autumn to air in 2026. But fans won't have to wait that long for new episodes with another series, which has already been filmed, set to commence later this year. Plus, The Chase, ITV's biggest quizzing output, is expected to film for four months, later this year. Tipping Point contestant goes viral over baffling quiz show answer that left viewers in hysterics The show's production company, Potato, are currently looking for crew to work on the programme from September through December. This news marks a positive step for quiz show fans after it was revealed that the rest of the daytime schedule would face an overhaul from next year. From January 2026, Lorraine, which is fronted by Lorraine Kelly, will air daily from 9.30am until 10am, a change from its current 9am to 10am slot. In a further change amid ITV's financial woes, it will now broadcast for only 30 weeks of the year meaning stand-in presenters who are often used in presenter Kelly's absence will no longer be needed for the remaining 22 weeks. Loose Women will broadcast fewer episodes - airing "on a seasonal basis for 30 weeks of the year" say ITV. It is expected that a number of panellists will be given the boot as a result of the shake-up. Good Morning Britain will be extended by 30 minutes to run from 6am to 9.30am daily. Lorraine will run from 9.30am-10am, on a seasonal basis for 30 weeks of the year. During the weeks Lorraine is not on air, Good Morning Britain will run from 6am to 10am. This Morning will remain in its 10am-12.30pm slot on weekdays throughout the year. Loose Women will be in the 12.30-1.30pm slot, again on a seasonal basis for 30 weeks of the year. The changes will take effect from January 2026. 5 5


The Guardian
9 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Liberation review – fizzing tensions of historic Pan-African Congress
Activist movements aren't all speeches, protests and slogans. Revolutions are made by people – and those people are idealistic and messy and flawed. This is the truth at the core of Ntombizodwa Nyoni's ambitious new play marking the 80th anniversary of the Fifth Pan-African Congress in Manchester, a crucial moment in the postwar fight against colonial rule. It's a story that's both global and firmly rooted in the city, making it an ideal fit for Manchester international festival. Set in and around the Congress, Liberation follows the people behind the movement, including veteran activists George Padmore (Eamonn Walker) and Amy Ashwood Garvey (Pamela Nomvete) and future African politicians Kwame Nkrumah (Eric Kofi Abrefa), Jomo Kenyatta (Tonderai Munyevu) and Joe Appiah (Joshua Roberts-Mensah). We see their public speeches, their private discussions and their pub-room debates. There's a fizzing tension between solidarity and idealism on the one hand and ambition and interpersonal conflict on the other. Nyoni's script is alive to nuance and difficulty, staging knotty struggles between different genders, generations and regional loyalties, as well as prodding at complex ideas around political change and allyship. As young social worker Alma La Badie (an impassioned Leonie Elliott) observes, the Congress is a space of egos as much as principles, where righteousness coexists with hypocrisy. It's a play that is, by its nature, all talk. Yet Nyoni and director Monique Touko manage to inject the proceedings with some theatricality and verve, recognising that there is no true liberation without joy. Music (composed by Ezra Collective's Ife Ogunjobi) is central, soundtracking the jubilant entrance of Congress delegates and returning at key moments throughout. With so many people involved, some figures are inevitably given more space than others, but Nyoni deftly juggles the large ensemble of personalities and the strong cast flesh out even the smaller roles. Like the attractive interlocking hexagons of Paul Wills's set, evoking the worker bee designs found all over Manchester, the competing aims of the Congress eventually – if only temporarily – tesselate. In many ways, Liberation is a celebration of shared struggle, but one that makes vital room for complexity. At Royal Exchange theatre, Manchester, until 26 July


BBC News
11 minutes ago
- BBC News
Update on access to BBC Sounds outside the UK
Earlier this year, BBC Studios launched a new audio service outside the UK on and the BBC app. This includes access to BBC Radio 4 and BBC World Service English, thousands of hours of podcasts (including Global News Podcast, World of Secrets and Infinite Monkey Cage) – as well as some of the best of the BBC's journalism and storytelling including news and history programming. As part of the announcement, we said we planned to close BBC Sounds to audiences living outside the UK later this year, making it available exclusively to people in the UK. Anyone who lives in the UK will still be able to use the BBC Sounds app when they go on holiday abroad for around a month. We can now confirm that BBC Sounds will close for listeners based outside the UK on 21 July, 2025. Throughout, we have recognised the importance of the ongoing availability all of the BBC's radio stations to listeners outside the UK. Today, we've added a new directory on that gives audiences access to all the BBC's radio stations from across the UK. This includes the BBC's music stations - BBC Radio 1, Radio 2, and Radio 3, 6Music, 1Xtra and Asian Network, Radio 4Xtra and 5Live, all the BBC's stations from the UK nations and every local radio station in England. These links will provide listeners with continued access to live listening. BBC Radio 4 and BBC World Service English are available on already and will continue to be. There will also be a range of BBC podcasts in English, Welsh and Gaelic to listen to on-demand. Listening to BBC audio programming on non-BBC platforms will not be affected by this change. Thanks for reading. Read more: Upcoming changes for listening to BBC audio outside the UK