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Tuesday Jan 17, 2006
Covering Gay Life
While it helps to write what you know, it's not mandatory. "The writer needn't be gay but definitely should have a clear understanding and appreciation for gay lifestyle," says Bendersky. "A lot of straight and gay-friendly writers can write for the pubs about gay life from their perspective (assuming it's not maligning). Out magazine has the Voices section which allows regular people (albeit good writers) to contribute personal essays (some that even have research and reporting)." more after the break! Just like pitching to any other publication, make sure you have good material. "I don't know that there are any subjects that are taboo to pitch to gay publications, but if you're going to write a piece on say HIV/AIDS or Crystal Meth addiction, it'd better be an original angle that hasn't been covered," says Bendersky. "With gays and lesbians being more accepted into the mainstream, this opens up so many things to write about. My best advice: just be creative and think of things that no one has covered yet -- and read the publications you want to write for." Herndon L. Davis, host of the world's first black gay/lesbian focused TV Talk show, "The Herndon Davis Reports," has some ideas for topics to look into. "I'd first break them down into the following: These are broad categories with tons of sub-categories you could emphasize in such as gay people of color, lesbian issues, gay and disabled, etc." Writer Jessica Hoffman specializes in non-mainstream queer writing, if that's more your style. "It's pretty much the same as breaking into any media space -- you need to know your stuff, be reliable and study the |
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