The Queen Returns: Dana International in 2011

Thirteen years is a long time in pop culture. In 1998, when Dana International won Eurovision with “Diva,” the world was a different place. Trans visibility was minimal, the internet was still finding its feet, and a trans woman winning Europe’s biggest song contest was genuinely revolutionary. So when Dana decided to return to the …

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Montaigne: Living Life in Technicolour

When Australia sent Montaigne to Eurovision 2021 with “Technicolour,” they didn’t just send a song: they sent a whole vibe. A kaleidoscopic explosion of queer joy, artistic fearlessness, and the kind of authentic energy that makes Eurovision the cultural phenomenon it is. And honestly? We’re still not over it. Who is Montaigne? Born Jessica Cerro, …

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Graham Norton: The Voice of the Community

Every year when Eurovision rolls around, millions of viewers across the UK settle in for an evening of camp, chaos, and questionable costume choices. And guiding them through it all with razor-sharp wit and affectionate snark is Graham Norton, the man who transformed Eurovision commentary from a national institution into a queer cultural phenomenon. The …

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Moscow 2009: When Celebration Met Reality

Eurovision has always been more than just a song contest. It’s a celebration of diversity, a glittering spectacle where sequins meet solidarity, and where the LGBTQ+ community has long found a home. But what happens when this beacon of acceptance lands in a place where being queer isn’t celebrated, it’s condemned? That’s exactly what happened …

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Saara Aalto: Finland's Lesbian Pop Royalty

When Finland sent Saara Aalto to Lisbon for Eurovision 2018, they weren’t just sending a singer, they were sending a phenomenon. With her song “Monsters,” Aalto stepped onto that iconic stage and delivered a performance that had 180 million viewers captivated, cementing her status as one of the Nordic region’s most beloved pop icons and …

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Inside Euroclub: Where Every Night is Pride

If you’ve ever wondered where Eurovision truly lives and breathes after the cameras stop rolling, the answer is simple: Euroclub. This isn’t just another after-party. It’s a phenomenon, a sanctuary, and quite possibly the queerest place on Earth for one glorious week every May. For over three decades, Euroclub has been the beating heart of …

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Eurovision and the West End Connection

When Michael Ball took to the Eurovision stage in 1992 with “One Step Out of Time,” he wasn’t just representing the United Kingdom: he was embodying a cultural crossroads that the LGBTQ+ community had been celebrating for decades. The West End and Eurovision have always been two sides of the same fabulous, glittery coin, and …

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Silvía Night: Diva Worship and Satire

There’s something deliciously complicated about gay culture’s relationship with divas. We love them, worship them, quote them endlessly, and sometimes, we can’t quite tell when someone’s taking the piss. Enter Silvía Night, Iceland’s gloriously messy 2006 Eurovision entry, who walked the razor-thin line between satirical critique and full-blown diva worship so expertly that even the …

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Katrina: Walking on Sunshine and Pride

Before there was Conchita Wurst’s phoenix-like rise, before Dana International shattered barriers, and long before Eurovision became the glittering, unapologetically queer spectacle we know and love today, there was a moment in 1997 that quietly resonated with LGBTQ+ hearts across Europe. Katrina and the Waves took the stage in Dublin with “Love Shine a Light,” …

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The Forbidden Whisper of Tehran

ESCAPE STORIES FROM CRIMINALIZED NATIONS : AVAILABLE NOW AT READWITHPRIDE.COM Over 71 million LGBTQ+ people live in countries where their identity is illegal. Over 60 nations still criminalize same-sex intimacy. This is the first in a collection of 40 stories documenting real escapes to freedom. Visit Read with Pride for the complete series. The Last …

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Leaving the Lion's Den: A Cameroon Story

When Staying Means Death: Cameroon’s LGBTQ+ Crisis Cameroon criminalizes same-sex relationships with prison sentences up to five years. Physical violence, mob attacks, and extrajudicial killings target LGBTQ+ individuals daily. Over 71 million LGBTQ+ people worldwide live under these conditions. Cameroon represents one of Africa’s most dangerous nations for gay and bisexual men. Visit Read with …

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The Midnight Train from Moscow

FEATURED COLLECTION: Explore stories of resilience and courage in our LGBTQ+ fiction collection. Use code PRIDE15 for 15% off all titles. When Home Becomes the Danger Zone Over 71 million LGBTQ+ people worldwide live in countries where their identity is criminalized. In Russia, the escalation of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation has transformed daily life into a calculation …

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A New Life in Lisbon: Escaping Angola

For thousands of LGBTQ+ individuals, leaving home isn’t a choice: it’s survival. Angola, like over 60 countries worldwide, criminalizes same-sex relationships, forcing queer people to live in fear, face imprisonment, or risk violence. But across the Atlantic, Lisbon has become a beacon of hope, offering not just legal protection but a vibrant, welcoming community where …

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The Underground Path from Khartoum

When Survival Means Leaving Everything Behind In Sudan, being LGBTQ+ isn’t just illegal: it’s punishable by death. Article 148 of Sudan’s Criminal Code prescribes flogging, imprisonment, or execution for same-sex intimacy. For Ahmed, a 28-year-old activist whose real name we’ve changed for safety, this wasn’t abstract legal theory. It was a death sentence with his …

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The Long Flight from Georgetown

Escape Routes: LGBTQ+ Refugees From Guyana 6 hours and 40 minutes. That’s the flight time from Georgetown’s Cheddi Jagan International Airport to Toronto Pearson. Six hours to leave behind a country where same-sex intimacy remains criminalized. Six hours to escape persecution. Six hours toward freedom. Guyana is one of over 60 countries worldwide that criminalize …

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Escaping the Cage of Kinshasa

Over 71 million LGBTQ+ people worldwide live in countries where their identity is criminalized. In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, same-sex relationships can result in imprisonment, violence, and death. This is the story of those who escaped: and found healing through art in Paris. The Reality of LGBTQ+ Life in Kinshasa The Democratic Republic …

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