Attitude

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF’S LETTER

- @CliffJoann­ou

Welcome to our inaugural Attitude 101 issue! For the past five years, Attitude has marked Pride season with the Attitude Pride Awards, in which we celebrated ten inspiring everyday heroes who have done remarkable things, often borne out of personal tragedy. Unfortunat­ely, we weren’t able to produce the Pride Awards in the summer due to the financial and strategic challenges the magazine faced in the midst of the worst moments of the pandemic.

I know they say you shouldn’t wish your life away, but I’m not alone in saying it feels good to leave 2020 behind. So, for this issue — published 31 December 2020 as chance would have it

— we decided to look to the future and continue the ethos of the Pride Awards in elevating and celebratin­g LGBTQ+ voices by shining a light on the unsung heroes who are making great strides for our community’s visibility just by being themselves.

These are people who simply by walking into their place of work – be it an office, laboratory, studio, or other – show that sexuality or gender identity is no barrier to success. By making the choice to be out at work, each person becomes the best ambassador our community could ask for – a proudly authentic one.

I suppose, yes, it’s easy for us at Attitude Towers to be flippant about the importance of being out and visible at work – surrounded as we are by feather boas and wigs (maybe not quite, but you get the point). In some profession­s – such as banking, finance, or other industries that still hold onto tired tropes of heteronorm­ative masculinit­y – it’s still not easy to be fully out and flying the rainbow flag. The choice to be out at work can come with challenges that impact our personal and profession­al lives. But it’s rarely the wrong choice. And for every person that steps out of the closet, the door stays ajar for others to follow.

It’s for this reason we celebrate some monumental people with the Attitude 101. The gay man challengin­g prejudice in football. The bisexual woman fighting to banish HIV in England. The gay man working to end discrimina­tion gay men face when donating blood. These three appear alongside many, many others. One hundred of them, in fact.

The Attitude 101 by no means implies that these people are better than the multitudin­ous others who are doing great things in their respective fields — these are just some of the trailblaze­rs we have identified who have done exceptiona­l things in a challengin­g year, or who in their own way are working to make the world a better place in 2021.

We thank Clifford Chance who supported The Future (25 and under) category, led by cover girl Arlo Parks; and Pride in STEM who introduced us to Dr Paul McKay, the gay man who has formulated a COVID-19 vaccine – without the support of Big Pharma.

We top the Attitude 101 off with our Person of the Year. In 12 months in which hope was far too frequently hard to find, there have been glimmers of optimism, and one of those was the crack made in the glass ceiling of US politics when the publicly gay Pete Buttigieg campaigned to become the Democrats’ presidenti­al candidate. Although Pete stepped aside to throw his support behind Joe Biden, his impact will have shown younger LGBTQ+ people that their identity should be no barrier to ambition.

Here’s to an incredible 2021…

“By being out at work, each person becomes the best ambassador our community could ask for”

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