ISSUE 5
C E L E B R AT I N G
VOLUME 50
48 YEARS
F R I D AY
IN
FEBRUARY 4, 202 2
PRINT S E AT T L E ’ S L G B T Q I A + N E W S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T W E E K LY S I N C E 19 74
NATIONAL POLL: STRAIGHT PEOPLE “SATISFIED” WITH THE WAY THEY TREAT LGBTQ+ AMERICANS by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer Sixty-two percent of Americans are “very” or “somewhat” satisfied with the “acceptance” of Gays and Lesbians, according to a new Gallup Mood of the Nation poll. “Mood of the Nation” is a series of monthly topical polls conducted by Gallup, using samples of at least 1,000 respondents. The January poll — which is where these numbers come from — asks questions about an assortment of policy areas.
see POLL page 15
Photo by Lukas / Pexels
Guaranteed to leave you breathless
Jacqueline Hyde on her new show at Julia’s
Florida moves to ban LGBTQ books
Jacqueline Hyde – Photo courtesy of the artist
by Nick Rapp SGN Contributing Writer Self-proclaimed “baroness of burlesque and alchemist of tease” Jacqueline Hyde is bringing a showcase of sensual fun to Julia’s on Broadway in her upcoming show Breathless. Hyde is not merely a performer; she established a career in burlesque to wide acclaim
shortly after her first exposure to the art and has been proving her “jill-of-all-trades” nature throughout her career. For years, she worked in information technology for Microsoft in addition to arduous hours of hand-beading, makeup production, wig crafting, and garnering two master’s degrees (marketing and project management).
see HYDE page 5
Photo by Mikhail Nilov / Pexels
by Lindsey Anderson SGN Contributing Writer LGBTQ literature took another hit this week when the Florida Senate Education Committee committee met on January 25 to discuss several proposed bills that will make it easier for parents to challenge and ban LGBTQ+ books in public schools. One was proposed by state Sen. Joe Gruters,
who explained that his bill will make it easier for concerned parents to challenge library books. “A parent… can make a complaint to their local principal, and if the principal agrees, they will pull that material,” he said. “If there’s complaints and nothing happens, eventually it would move to the local school board, and they would make a decision.”
see FLORIDA page 16