Important Moments in Minnesota's LGBTQ+ History | Full Documentary

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 26 июл 2023
  • “Out North: MNLGBTQ History" explores the untold past of Minnesota's lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer community and celebrates the strides the state has made since the gay liberation movement began in the 1970s.
    The film lifts up the stories of well-known and largely unknown LGBTQ Minnesotans who found each other and spoke out when it was a tremendous risk to do so. The film explores some of the important ways that Minnesota has played a significant role in the national movement for LGBTQ equality. As part of Twin Cities PBS’ important body of work on Minnesota’s history, the film explores the past through people and place, personal moments and major milestones. Rather than chronicling politics and policy, these stories tilt toward the human, lived experience.
    ________________________________________________
    Enjoy what you're watching? Subscribe now to see more Minnesota history, music, documentaries, and more: ruclips.net/user/TwinCitiesPBS...
    Instagram: / twincitiespbs
    Facebook: / tptpbs
    TikTok: / twincitiespbs
    Twitter: / tpt
    This content is made possible by viewers like you. Support Twin Cities PBS: www.tpt.org/give​
    #documentary #lgbtq #gaypride #mnhistory
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 28

  • @bordershader
    @bordershader 2 месяца назад +9

    Interesting to watch this - I'm from Britain and I remember in the early 90s my uni gay society was "LGB", no T, no Q, nothing about anything other than loving within a binary. The Pink Paper regularly had letters from angry gay men who thought lesbians were jumping on their hard-fought-and-won efforts, and angry lesbians and gays saying bisexuals were fake... London clubs were great and it was an amazing time to be young and gay, but I felt such a stigma to call myself bi. And then it took until 2016 before I was also able to identify as genderqueer, and I thank our young people now for giving me the words to know who I am. We pass the torch back and forth, each time the flame gets brighter. Let's hope current times don't make us have to hide it again. Thanks for your film.

  • @bicuriousdirtbikeboi2594
    @bicuriousdirtbikeboi2594 4 месяца назад +20

    This is why we need to stand up for queer people. These rights we won are being threatened and can be taken away very fast. We need to stand up for ourselves and we need to show that we exist and we are not leaving.

  • @richardengelhardt582
    @richardengelhardt582 Месяц назад +6

    Brave men. I remember this so well. I am from Minnesota, but wasn't out in high school - I wasn't even sure I was gay. I graduated in 1966 and went to Yale. The first day at Yale I met my first boy friend / lover. Even in 1966, Yale was a safe and welcoming space for gays. I never hid my sexual orientation and in 1970, I was elected as chair of our college council. I was so lucky, never to have experienced any serious discrimination.❤

  • @MJ-qb5ph
    @MJ-qb5ph Месяц назад +3

    These docos are so important - thank you for making them

  • @RiteanDan
    @RiteanDan 9 месяцев назад +11

    I’m from small town Canada, about a 4-hour drive to Duluth, MN. I’ve been to the bars across Canada and the US coast to coast, and I can tell you that The Main Club in Duluth, MN can hold their own against any from the larger cities. It’s a great bar, large sized, interesting decor, and a lot of fun! I would say it’s one of my fav bars I have been to. I live across the country now, so we cannot drive up for the weekend like we used to, but I do miss it and recommend it to anyone!

    • @percy9406
      @percy9406 7 месяцев назад

      Yup alphabet people who are a minority want the same rights of the majority. Seems to me that is the opposite of a Democracy. If you don't like this country don't exspect me to condone what you do unless you want to leave the country.

  • @jenb7756
    @jenb7756 2 месяца назад +1

    This is wonderful! So glad the history of Loring Park was talked about. Even as a young sheltered student in the 90s I was aware of Loring as a LGBTQ neighborhood

  • @user-mf6li4sw6n
    @user-mf6li4sw6n 5 месяцев назад +5

    Building community by visibility was a radical act . I grew up around a lesbian aunt. From an early age I knew what she was. Only women friends. No men were noticeable. Years earlier she and her friend pretended to be straight by dating men publicly. The men were gay. So it may have looked normal to outsiders. Your average person had no idea.

  • @jameslong6329
    @jameslong6329 Месяц назад +4

    Awesome story! My life as a gay man was difficult & after marriage to a woman to try & change myself, divorced! Later found my life partner only to lose him to an accidental overdose from pain medication, he was hooked on from car accident years before! I am out proud but getting old with family & friends but alone with out a partner! Regret the guy I was in love with when young because he & I both couldn’t except ourselves!

  • @JasonLane-ci5ng
    @JasonLane-ci5ng 2 месяца назад +5

    IM GAY OUT AND PROUD🌈❤️🌈❤️🌈❤️🌈❤️🌈❤️🌈❤️🌈❤️🌈❤️🌈❤️

  • @user-mf6li4sw6n
    @user-mf6li4sw6n 5 месяцев назад +1

    TheBrass Rail is my favorite Gay bar in the twin cities. Overall every gay bar is above average. I lived in San Francisco where every bar has a gay clientel.

  • @877swissmiss
    @877swissmiss 3 месяца назад +1

    Why is Marquis de Sade shown while Magnus Hirschfeld was mentioned? ( i e his book) Confusing.

    • @kenster8270
      @kenster8270 2 месяца назад +1

      Because it was part of his library? Why else

  • @user-mf6li4sw6n
    @user-mf6li4sw6n 5 месяцев назад +2

    Growing up in the 60s and 70s in small town Minnesota we had Gay people. They were very closeted. Had to be. Several reasons that then seemed cemented into reality. Religion was the biggest . Society didn’t give us space, Religion gave us no voice. Even the most obvious queer pretended to be straight. Lesbians dated men in order to survive. Gay men, too. The big cities were our refuge. Remain so today.

  • @fredmanie2926
    @fredmanie2926 Месяц назад +1

    Didn't expect to see myself at 25:25

  • @user-mf6li4sw6n
    @user-mf6li4sw6n 5 месяцев назад +2

    Yes, my experience is much the same. Fargo 1980 had zero bars for the gay community. We had a monthly dance. Prairie Gay Community. Not very friendly. Clique. Small groups of gays that were very tight.

  • @user-mf6li4sw6n
    @user-mf6li4sw6n 5 месяцев назад +4

    The bars were our safe space. Where we could be ourselves. Outside of the bars life was harsh. We got dumped upon.

  • @fredmanie2926
    @fredmanie2926 Месяц назад +1

    Sad the 19 might be gone forver 😢

  • @sneezediamonds
    @sneezediamonds Месяц назад +2

    ❤️🧡💛💚💙💜🤎🖤

  • @firouz256
    @firouz256 Месяц назад +2

    Young gay people will never understand what it felt like!

  • @alexadam353
    @alexadam353 Месяц назад

    @2:19 America needs a Bonfire.