USA TODAY US Edition

Texas bakery receives ‘outpouring of love’

‘Outpouring of love’ after hateful Pride post

- Ella Malena Feldman

Hate over Pride cookies brings supporters out by the dozens.

AUSTIN, Texas – Cookies shaped like hearts and decorated with rainbow frosting may seem like one of the most innocuous foods on Earth, but for a bakery in east Texas, they led to hateful messages and canceled business. Then they led to an “outpouring of love.”

Confection­s, a small bakery in Lufkin, Texas, recently unveiled rainbow heart cookies in honor of Pride Month, which celebrates the LGBTQ community. On June 2, the bakery posted a photo of the cookies to its Facebook page with the caption “More LOVE. Less hate. Happy Pride to all our LGBTQ friends! All lovers of cookies and happiness are welcome here.”

Just about 24 hours later, the bakery was back with another post. This one was much less celebrator­y.

“Today has been hard. Really hard,” it read. “We lost a significan­t amount of followers because of a rainbow heart cookie we posted. We received a very hateful message on our business page canceling a large order (5dz) of summer themed cookies for tomorrow morning (that we just finished decorating) because of a rainbow heart cookie we posted. My heart is heavy.

“Honestly I never thought a post that literally said more love less hate would result in this kind of backlash to a very small business that is struggling to stay afloat and spread a little cheer through baked goods. So. If you love our cookies we will have an over abundance of them tomorrow. Hopefully tomorrow will be better.”

Well, “tomorrow” was better for Confection­s. So was the next day, and the day after that. As the bakery’s Facebook posts gained traction, messages of support from the community and across the country poured in. The posts have since amassed thousands of likes, comments and shares – not to mention the love Confection­s has gotten on Instagram.

On June 4, Confection­s shared a picture taken by a customer of the line around the block outside Confection­s. Confection­s sold out its entire inventory on June 4 and 5, according to Facebook posts. “All this attention on our small business is very humbling,” bakery co-owner Dawn Cooley wrote in a post June 5.

Cooley said she, her sister and coowner Miranda Dolder and their baker Felicia are “so humbled and grateful and moved by this outpouring of love.” Commenters and patrons have sought to donate money, but the bakery has redirected those people to support local animal rescues instead. Confection­s also has received inquiries about shipping its cookies – including one from drag queen Alyssa Edwards, who is originally from Dallas and has competed on “RuPaul’s Drag Race” and “RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars.” Although the bakery does not ship, the team was elated by Edwards’ request.

Confection­s’ rainbow cookies seem to have produced the love they set out to inspire.

“We are so grateful for the many messages of love and acceptance we have received,” the bakery wrote in a Facebook post Tuesday.

 ?? CONFECTION­S BAKERY ?? Confection­s Bakery in Lufkin, Texas, debuted rainbow cookies in honor of Pride Month.
CONFECTION­S BAKERY Confection­s Bakery in Lufkin, Texas, debuted rainbow cookies in honor of Pride Month.

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