You are using an outdated browser. Please upgrade your browser to improve your experience and security.

Skip to main
Blog

Why We Still Need Pride Month: Celebs Chime In

BY: Trevor News
Two smiling young people wave the Trans and Progress Pride flag.
Donate

Since 1970, LGBTQ+ people and our allies have observed Pride Month each June in the United States to honor the infamous June 1969 Stonewall riots by celebrating the LGBTQ+ community, and acknowledging the progress we have yet to make. As we approach our 55th Pride Month, so much has changed for both our country and our community. Today, many people – both within the LGBTQ+ community and outside of it – are asking themselves, “Why do we celebrate Pride Month?”
To weigh in on why Pride Month still matters for uplifting LGBTQ+ voices and continuing our community’s fight for equality, we asked our friends to share their thoughts.

“I grew up being taught to be ashamed of who I was. It has taken so much work (and therapy!) to turn that shame into pride. Pride Month reminds me to keep on working to undo that shame and to live out and proud so that others may find hope to do the same. Also, I love rainbows. I wish there were rainbows in every window of every business every day.”

– Daniel K. Isaac

Demi Lovato

“We need Pride month because it’s a celebration of being recognized and loved for who we are, something the LGBTQ+ community is still fighting to fully achieve. Pride Month reminds us of the work we and those before us have done, the resilience our community has, the advocacy work that continues every day, and the shared hope for a more inclusive and loving future.”

– Demi Lovato

“Growing up, Pride month offered me some of my happiest memories whether that was watching the San Diego pride parade with my best friends or seeing someone like me on a poster in the makeup aisle. Now as an adult in 2025, I could really use that same glimmer of joy, and I think a lot of the community could too.”

– Dylan Mulvaney 

Dylan Mulvaney

“In a world where the right to exist as a queer person is constantly being threatened, pride month serves as a reminder that queer people deserve to celebrate their identities. It is a revolutionary act to be loudly queer when you’ve been socialized to be shamed into silence. BE LOUD, BE PROUD — Happy Pride!!!”

– Kelly Marie Tran 

“We are our past leaders’ wildest dreams. Pride is not only a celebration of each and every one of our expressions of selfhood and identity, but it’s a persistent act of resistance and perseverance. Now more than ever, we must protect our community, uplift every voice within it and fight for a world where every queer and trans person can live in safety, dignity, joy, and liberation.” 

– Quintessa Swindell 

Quintessa Swindell
Tate McRae

“Pride Month is so important because many members of the LGBTQ+ community, especially young people, are fighting just to feel safe and seen. Pride Month is a chance to celebrate the community and their resilience, and remind everyone that love and identity should never be up for debate. I’m so proud to support The Trevor Project and everything they do to protect and uplift the community.”

– Tate McRae

Read more from
Blog

Young person holding the Bi+ Flag
Blog

Commemorating Bi Awareness Week

By: Gabriella Potter (they/them), Crisis Services Digital Supervisor In my work as a Crisis Services Digital Supervisor at The Trevor Project, I hear from young bi people everyday about the challenges and fears they face because of the stigma around bisexuality. That’s why we created, “How To Support Bisexual Youth: Ways to Care for Young People Who Are Attracted to More Than One Gender.” We know how important it is to provide resources for those who want to support the bi young people in their lives, as well as affirm and uplift bisexuality as a valid identity for bi young…
Photo of Jack Turban
Blog

Dr. Jack Turban’s New Book Confronts Misinformation on Gender Identity and Young People

Dr. Jack Turban's New Book Confronts Misinformation on Gender Identity and Young People The Trevor Project spoke to Jack Turban, MD, MHS about his book, “Free to Be: Understanding Kids & Gender Identity.” Turban is a Harvard, Yale, and Stanford-trained child and adolescent psychiatrist and founding director of the Gender Psychiatry Program at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). He is an internationally recognized researcher and clinician whose expertise and research on the mental health of transgender youth have been cited in legislative debates and major federal court cases regarding the civil rights of transgender people in the United…