with which the pioneering Gay Liberation movement wanted to engage in a forward-moving, proactive dialogue. And KCET reached then a liberal demographic in L.A. The appearance of gay and lesbian people on the show was validation for what GLF/GCSC was trying to accomplish at the time-the creation for the first time of a visible, organized, politically/culturally aware, and self-accepting gay community where we collectively assumed responsibility for each other. which took the Gay Liberation movement seriously and had a substantive discussion about gay and lesbian oppression within the context of systemic and institutionalized Hetero Supremacy. The appearance of militant and articulate gay and lesbian people on the show was an important breakthrough at the time-the first television show in L.A. The premise of “Current Events” was to report on what was new and cutting edge in L.A. PRIDE only one year old, when GLF/GCSC was invited to be on KCET, then the National Public Television station in L.A., as guests talking about Gay Liberation and GCSC on the “Current Events” show hosted by a young Lynn Littman. One of those early pivotal events occurred in 1971, a half century ago with L.A.
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It is a collective Gay Liberation story of profound significance and magnitude. Over the next year, I will be writing about that history in Los Angeles (1969-1980), and its pivotal events. Gay Liberation Front which evolved into the Gay Community Services Center (now the LA LGBT Center), then as now, the largest such organization in the world. were the Metropolitan Community Church and the L.A.
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The early vehicles for this radical revolution in L.A.
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In 1969, with the Stonewall Rebellion and the beginning of the militant Gay Liberation movement, the lives of gay and lesbian people in Los Angeles and nationally were transformed.