It's time to make your own YouTube for LGBT equality and submit what you see as a march for a more perfect union to equality through the o the White House's "LGBT Pride Month Champions of Change Video Challenge."
Videos are being accepted now — they can be music videos, PSAs, interviews — whatever your creativity inspires and will be accepted until May 4. Finalists will be selected in early June and the public will have a chance to vote on which video best represents the work for equality.
Atlanta Eagle celebrates 25 years, gay superheroes and more...
'AKA Blondie,' Pastor Tony Byrd, can crushing and more...
In what has to be the single greatest parody of Wilson Philip's “Hold On” ever made, “Chow Down (At Chick-fil-A)" takes direct aim at the Atlanta-based restaurant chain over the company's anti-gay views.
Chick-fil-A has come under fire for its political donations to anti-gay organizations in the last several years.
The video stars RuPaul’s Drag Race contestant Willam Belli alongside Detox, and Vicky Vox and attempts to answer an important question: how can gay folks justify eating such delicious food from the Bible-thumping fast food chain?
Fast food parody video the funniest thing you'll see all day
YouthPride, wack-a-doo drag news, HRC Dinner and more...
Tanya Ditty, Hidden Man controversy, gay pumpkins and more...
In a move some legislators say they've never seen before, the media was banned from taking photos and video during a public hearing today at the Georgia General Assembly that included testimony on HB 630, the State Fair Employment Practices Act. The bill, which would ban job discrimination against state employees based on sexual orientation and gender identity, was discussed for a second time by a subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee.
No vote was taken on the bill today. It was tabled at a hearing on Feb. 21, but Rep. Mike Jacobs (R-Atlanta), who presided over today's subcommittee hearing and is a co-sponsor of the bill, said the legislation remains "alive" in his subcommittee.
"Well, I don't know what happens next at this point. We're just at a point where there's a lot of legislation pending and inability to get it all done prior to crossover day,” Jacobs said.
Lawyer of victim in anti-gay videotaped beating speaks out against those defending alleged attackers
Gay activists with Change Atlanta met with the mother of a suspect accused of brutally attacking a gay man in southwest Atlanta and are now planning a town hall meeting with her and the suspect's attorney. The lawyer representing the victim, however, believes their approach is not helpful to the case that is being investigated as a federal hate crime.
Brandon White, 20, who is gay, was brutally attacked Feb. 4 by three male gang members who repeatedly called him "faggot." The assailants then uploaded a video of the attack on a hip hop website where it went viral. The three suspects — Christopher Cain, Dorian Moragne and Darael Demare Williams — have all been arrested.
CBS Atlanta was invited to the meeting with Change Atlanta and Dorian Moragne's mother and reported on the meeting Wednesday, Feb. 22.