Here are the LGBTQ+ celebs impacted by the LA wildfires
Harvey Guillen, Gina Yashere, Dove Cameron, Rosie O’Donnell, and Farrah Moan have been affected by this heartbreaking disaster.
January 10, 2025
By continuing to use our site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Harvey Guillen, Gina Yashere, Dove Cameron, Rosie O’Donnell, and Farrah Moan have been affected by this heartbreaking disaster.
His beautiful house in the Hollywood Hills is for sale.
Hundreds of fans gathered Saturday at Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills to honor the sensational mother-daughter actresses.
The reality tv star opened up about her sexuality on Wednesday's episode.
West Hollywood's new Andaz Hotel is an isle of style in a gaudy Sunset sea.
The entertainer honored the late producer, who was a longtime creative collaborator, with a song from Hairspray.
Reacting to Wednesday morning's news that California's Prop. 8 has likely passed and eliminated same-sex marriage in the state, a crowd of some 2,000 protesters took to the streets Wednesday evening, marching down West Hollywood's Sunset Strip and backing up traffic for blocks. Other groups marched in Hollywood, attracting news helicopters and shutting down major intersections.
Every year on 9/11 the country stops and people remember where they were and who was lost that day.
The closing of this 45-year-old San Fernando Valley watering hole is another blow to women's spaces.
Following Thursday's supreme court ruling for same-sex marriage, gays and allies eat cake and pledge to love, honor, and respect in L.A.'s gay epicenter
The AIDS Healthcare Foundation poured $5.5 million into a Los Angeles ballot initiative that has little to do with HIV. After AHF's measure went down in flames Tuesday, the organization has some explaining to do.
A friend of the lesbian folk legend Norma Tanega, whose song 'You're Dead' has a second life in What We Do in the Shadows, shares memories from her career and old gay Hollywood.
When Californians took to the polls on Tuesday, November 4, 52.5% cast a vote against equal rights, saying same-sex marriage has no place in the Golden State. But in the wake of California's LGBT population lamenting yet another blow to their rights, something magical happened. LGBT Californians stood up, brushed themselves off, and prepared for the fight of a generation.