It Gets Better Project
It Gets Better is an Internet-based 5013 nonprofit founded in the United States by gay activist, author, media pundit, and journalist Dan Savage and his husband Terry Miller on September 21, 2010, in response to the suicides of teenagers who were bullied because they were gay or because their peers suspected that they were gay. Its goal is to prevent suicide among LGBT youth by having gay adults convey the message that these teens' lives will improve. The project has grown rapidly: over 200 videos were uploaded in the first week, and the project's YouTube channel reached the 650 video limit in the next week. The project is now organized on its own website, the It Gets Better Project, and includes more than 50,000 entries from people of all sexual orientations, including many celebrities; the videos have received over 50 million views.
A book of essays from the project was released in March 2011. The project was given the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Governor's Award at the 64th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards for "strategically, creatively and powerfully utilizing the media to educate and inspire," according to the academy's chairman and CEO Bruce Rosenblum.
Project history
The project was founded by Savage in response to the suicide of Billy Lucas and other teenagers who were bullied because they were gay or perceived to be, such as with Raymond Chase, Tyler Clementi, Ryan Halligan, Asher Brown, and Seth Walsh. Savage wrote, "I wish I could have talked to this kid for five minutes. I wish I could have told Billy that it gets better. I wish I could have told him that, however bad things were, however isolated and alone he was, it gets better." In September, they launched their YouTube channel. A one-hour special aired on February 21, 2012, hosted by Savage. A second hour long "It Gets Better" special was aired on both MTV and Logo networks on October 9, 2012. On May 3, 2011, a video ad developed by Google Chrome was launched during an episode of Glee and later aired across the nation.Former U.S. President Barack Obama lent his voice to the movement against bullying and contributed a video on October 21, 2010, saying, "We've got to dispel this myth that bullying is just a normal rite of passage; that it's just some inevitable part of growing up. It's not. We have an obligation to ensure that our schools are safe for all of our kids. And for every young person out there you need to know that if you're in trouble, there are caring adults who can help." In March 2011, Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama hosted an anti-bullying conference.
A viral to the campaign posits that for some, "It Doesn't Get Better." Critic Tavia Nyong’o has the project to an upward mobility available to an exceptional class of urban liberal gays. acknowledges that the project focuses on white, middle-class, and cisgender men, while largely ignoring the lives of genderqueer and transgender people, lesbians, people of color, and the lower-class. is an alternative video campaign started by Latoya Peterson recognizing the influence of racism on homophobic bullying. points out that American and Canadian may have a higher suicide rate than queer youth.
The project operates as a 501 charitable organization.
Contributors
People and groups named on this list as notable "It Gets Better" video contributors are linked to associated articles and include footnotes with an external link to their video and any other relevant citations.Individuals
- Jonathan Adler
- Max Adler
- J. Alexander
- Marsha Ambrosius
- Darla K. Anderson
- Buck Angel
- Andy Bell of Erasure
- Laura Benanti
- Chester Bennington
- Julie Benz
- John Berry
- Joe Biden
- Justin Bieber
- Chaz Bono
- Kate Bornstein
- Guy Branum and Jeffery Self
- Drew Brees
- Blondell Reynolds Brown
- Sherrod Brown
- Michael Buckley
- Joel Burns
- David Cameron
- Cazwell
- Annie Clark
- Margaret Cho
- Hillary Clinton
- Andy Cohen
- Ben Cohen
- Stephen Colbert
- Chris Colfer
- Dane Cook
- Chris Crocker
- Shane Bitney Crone
- Adrianne Curry
- Shane Dawson
- Ellen DeGeneres
- Jason Derulo
- Simon Doonan
- Rebecca Drysdale
- Hal Duncan
- Lisa Edelstein
- Omar Epps
- Gloria Estefan
- Eve
- Blake McIver Ewing
- Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Eric Stonestreet
- Martin Foley
- Al Franken
- Chris Giunchigliani
- Ari Gold
- Wynter Gordon
- Kathy Griffin
- Vinny Guadagnino
- Tim Gunn
- Amy Gutmann
- Kevin Hague
- Todrick Hall
- Tom Hanks
- Mark Hanson
- Don Harmon
- Neil Patrick Harris
- Jodie Harsh
- Anne Hathaway
- Darren Hayes
- Jennifer Love Hewitt
- Keri Hilson
- Perez Hilton
- Dave Holmes
- Janet Jackson
- Peter Jacobson
- Valerie Jarrett
- Micah Jesse
- Jewel Kilcher
- Kermit the Frog
- Kesha
- Ruben Kihuen
- Larry King
- Michael Kors
- Ryan Kwanten and Chris Bauer
- La La and Ciara
- Lady Gaga
- Adam Lambert
- Jack Layton
- Claudia Lee
- Rex Lee
- Nicole LeFavour
- Adam Levine
- Judith Light
- Lizzy the Lezzy
- Joel Madden
- Bill Maher
- Joe Manganiello
- Jay Manuel
- Sergio Gabriel Martinez
- Kyle Dean Massey
- Jenny McCarthy
- Dalton McGuinty
- A. J. McLean
- Rick Mercer
- Jeff Merkley
- Cesar Millan
- Stephanie Miller
- Nicki Minaj
- Jim Moran
- John Nolan
- Danny Noriega
- Barack Obama and Michelle Obama
- Rory O'Malley
- Suze Orman
- Anna Paquin
- Nancy Pelosi
- John Pérez
- Katy Perry
- Randy Phillips
- P!nk
- John Quale
- Zachary Quinto
- Patricia Racette and her wife Beth Clayton
- LeAnn Rimes
- Rise Against
- Gene Robinson
- Dennis Van Roekel
- Dan Savage
- Debbie Wasserman Schultz
- Ken Seeley for Palm Springs High School
- Fiona Shaw
- Jake Shears
- Peter Shumlin
- Sia
- Alexander Skarsgard
- Ian Somerhalder
- Jesse Spencer
- Jeffree Star
- George Takei
- Gareth Thomas
- Rob Thomas
- Michael Urie
- Tom Vilsack
- Derek Warburton
- Elizabeth Warren
- Brent Weber
- Chris Whiteside
- Olivia Wilde
- Wendy Williams
- BD Wong
Organizations and groups
- Accenture
- Adobe Systems
- AMC Theatres
- Apple Inc.
- Bayer HealthCare
- Best Buy
- Cisco Systems
- Credit Suisse
- Digitas
- Draftfcb
- DreamWorks Animation
- Electronic Arts
- Eli Lilly and Company
- Ernst & Young
- Etsy
- Ford
- Gap, Inc.
- General Motors
- GlaxoSmithKline
- LivingSocial
- Lonely Planet
- Microsoft Corporation
- NVIDIA Corporation
- O'Melveny & Myers
- Principal Financial Group
- Razorfish Inc.
- SAP
- Sony Pictures Entertainment
- Telus
- Thomson Reuters
- ThoughtWorks
- Visa Inc.
- The Walt Disney Company
- Wells Fargo
- Yahoo!
- Brigham Young University
- The College of William & Mary
- Columbia University
- Concordia College
- Cornell University
- Eastern Michigan University
- Emerson College
- Emory University
- *Oxford College
- Glasgow University
- Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion
- Heidelberg University
- Ithaca College
- La Trobe University
- Marymount Manhattan College
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Occidental College
- Northeastern Illinois University
- Northwestern University Athletics
- Princeton University
- Purdue University
- Smith College
- Southern Oregon University Theater
- Stephen F. Austin State University
- SUNY Geneseo
- University of Akron
- University of Alabama
- University of Calgary
- University of California, Los Angeles
- University of California, San Francisco
- University of Cincinnati
- University of Michigan Law School
- University of North Carolina Athletics
- University of Pennsylvania
- University of San Diego
- University of Southern California
- University of Virginia
- Washington University School of Medicine
- Wellesley College
- Western Washington University
- Yale University
- Children's Hospital Boston
- Saints Medical Center
- American Institute of Bisexuality
- Chicago Gay Men's Chorus
- Gay Men's Chorus of Los Angeles
- Human Rights Campaign
- International Gay Rodeo Association
- Kenyon College Queer Women's Collective
- LGBT Youth Scotland
- London Gay Men's Chorus
- New York City Gay Men's Chorus
- NOH8 Campaign
- Members of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence
- Twin Cities Gay Men's Chorus
- University of Idaho Gay Straight Alliance
- University of Southern California's LGBT and Allied Community
- Ursinus College Gay-Straight Alliance
- Actors from Brothers & Sisters
- Cast members of the musical Chicago
- Ashley Tisdale and other cast members of Hellcats
- Cast members of House
- Cast and crew of Jersey Boys National Tour
- Cast of Priscilla Queen of the Desert
- Cast of HBO's True Blood
- Cast of Wicked
- Democratic National Committee
- LGBT Equality Caucus
- Maine Democratic Party
- Massachusetts congressional delegation
- Massachusetts Democratic Party
- Salt Lake City Public Library
- San Francisco Police Department
- United States Senate
- White House staff
- The World Bank
- First Unitarian Universalist Church
- Gospel of Grace Ministries, Big Sandy Texas
- Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion
- Highland Presbyterian Church
- JQYouth
- Most Holy Redeemer Church, San Francisco
- Baltimore Orioles
- Boston Red Sox
- Chicago Cubs
- Los Angeles Dodgers
- Oakland Athletics
- Philadelphia Phillies
- Pittsburgh Pirates
- San Francisco Giants and San Francisco 49ers
- Seattle Mariners, Seattle Storm, Seattle Sounders, and Seattle Seahawks
- Tampa Bay Rays
Other
- Canada
- Malaysia
- Singapore
- Web comic artist Lucy Knisley
Countries adopting similar projects
Australia
In Australia, the organisation It Gets Better Australia was established as the official Australian affiliate to the US based It Gets Better Project in 2011. It is supported by well-known members of the community including Ministers Kevin Rudd and Anna Bligh who have made their own YouTube videos. Rudd is quoted as saying "You have the strength of the Australian nation behind you", encouraging teenagers to feel comfortable in their own identity. Other Australian figures to have supported the regional project include Triple J, Telstra, Optus, Missy Higgins, Courtney Act and Kerryn Phelps.Canada
One organization, It Gets Better Canada, created a 12-minute video which featured a number of Canadian LGBT public figures, including Deb Pearce, Rick Mercer, Rex Harrington, Ann-Marie MacDonald, Enza Anderson, Diane Flacks, Brad Fraser, Mark Tewksbury, George Smitherman, Peter Fallico, Laurie Lynd and the cast of 1 Girl 5 Gays, talking about their own experiences of coming out in a documentary interview format. In addition to the Trevor Project, this video also endorsed two similar Canadian services, Kids Help Phone and Toronto's Lesbian Gay Bi Trans Youth Line. A similar video was subsequently released by a group of Canadian Broadcasting Corporation employees, including national network figures such as Jian Ghomeshi, Sook-Yin Lee, W. Brett Wilson and Brent Bambury as well as numerous other staffers and freelancers, speaking about their experiences of bullying on a variety of issues, including sexuality, race and disability. Former politicians Michael Ignatieff and Jack Layton also released videos when they were in office.Following the 2011 suicide of Ottawa teenager Jamie Hubley, an It Gets Better-themed video dedicated to Hubley, filmed on Parliament Hill and featuring commentary by Parliament staffers, Conservative members of parliament including John Baird, Vic Toews, Lois Brown, Alice Wong, Mike Wallace, Rona Ambrose, Shelly Glover, Deepak Obhrai, Candice Hoeppner and David Sweet and Conservative Senator Don Meredith was posted to YouTube on October 20, 2011. Former law clerk for the Federal Court Josh D. Scheinert noted on The Huffington Post that many of the participant legislators in the video had voted against the legalization of same-sex marriage in 2005 and that a few had ties to anti-gay organizations, but he concurred with Dan Savage's opinion that the video was a first, but not final, step for the Conservative Party towards better relations with LGBT citizens in Canada.
In addition, comedian Rick Mercer — who had previously made an earlier, more lighthearted "It Gets Better" video — devoted a weekly "rant" on Rick Mercer Report to an updated comment on the subject, making an impassioned plea for LGBT public figures to come out on the grounds that Hubley's death had made it unacceptable to stay silent anymore. Mercer — who first came out as gay in 2009 — faced some criticism for not explicitly reminding viewers in the video that he is gay himself; he subsequently appeared on CBC Radio One's The Current to talk about the video and his own experience as a gay man.
In 2012, a group video was also released by twenty Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers.
Chile
The project Todo Mejora was launched on March 20, 2012 in Chile. In August 2011 the activist Júlio Cezar Dantas raised the idea of creating a Spanish version of the original site along with the U.S. coordinators of It Gets Better. They identified and contacted the Chilean organization Fundación Iguales to support the initiative. The organization agreed to work, and make an alliance, with Proyecto Todo Mejora. The Chilean project also aims to support, together with the coordinators of It Gets Better U.S., other countries in Latin America who want to create a Todo Mejora project in their nations.Finland
In Finland, numerous celebrities including Ministers Tuija Brax and Alexander Stubb appeared on a YouTube video Kaikki muuttuu paremmaksi encouraging teenagers to feel comfortable with their sexuality.European Union
One of the Vice-Presidents of the European Commission and the European Commissioner for Digital Agenda, Neelie Kroes, recorded an "It Gets Better Europe" video.Italy
In Italy, Isbn Edizioni launched the campaign "Le cose cambiano", the Italian affiliate of the project.Malaysia
In Malaysia, the organizers of the festival Seksualiti Merdeka produced a series of videos within the vein of the It Gets Better Project featuring bloggers such as Azwan Ismail, Pang Khee Teik, Gary Ooi, Jerome Kugan, Joe Pang, Kavidha Natarajan, Michelle Nor Ismat, Nabila Nasir, Nisha, Peter Ong, Seetha, Sharaad Kuttan, Sulastri and Tina Fazlita Fadzil. Alvin Ng. Ismail's video, which was addressed directly to gay Muslims in the country, resulted in anonymous death threats being issued against him. The videos were inspired by an interview of Gabrielle Yong, a 21-year-old Malaysian openly bisexual student who attempted suicide while studying abroad in Massachusetts; while her attempt was due to the difficulty of adjustment in a different environment, she was inspired to contribute her own testimony in the vein of the project.Paraguay
The Paraguayan versión was launched on December 10, 2013 as "Todo Mejora Paraguay" trying made différents with Chile version. It was an initiative of the journalist Diego Bazán as a project inside the LGBT organization ParaGay, working in the wellnes, to promote and empowerment in human rights to LGBT youth across of the country. It was independence on November 2016 as a not profit organization with the new name in English "It Gets Better Paraguay", now they continue working with LGBT youth in some service, one of the called "Hora Segura" where psychologist trying to content, support and help to any people who write and needs contention by social media networks.Peru
The Peruvian version was launched on January 7, 2011 as "Proyecto Todo Mejora". It was an initiative of psychologist/journalist Victor Cerna. It has engaged some of the leading Peruvian political and show business leaders on the subject of LGBT bullying, including former vice-presidential nominee Carlos Bruce and Lima mayor Susana Villarán. Although originally inspired by the American project, the Peruvian project has created its own logo and has expanded its original message to straight youth in recent months.South Africa
Andrew Barry recorded various videos at the University of Cape Town, including one featuring the captain of the university's Ikey Tigers rugby team, Nick Fenton-Wells.Sweden
In Sweden, TV3 and the Swedish Save the Children launched the campaign "Det blir bättre". The campaign did not target LGBT youth but rather all youth, not wanting to exclude heterosexual children, and was criticized for watering down the concept. The campaign was later relaunched under the same name but as a grass-roots movement and with a focus on LGBT youth.United Kingdom
The former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom David Cameron, other UK Members of Parliament, members of the UK armed forces, schoolteachers, comedians, actors, media presenters, journalists, writers, students, sportspeople, parents, DJs, and other celebrities and members of the public have recorded videos for a similar project called "It gets better... today", with the strapline "We can make it happen" for the UK lesbian, gay and bisexual rights charity Stonewall, which was inspired by the original American project, and is part of Stonewall's anti-homophobic bullying in schools and anti-discrimination campaign. They have also collected statements of support from other celebrities, some of them from outside the UK, for example Katy Perry, Beverley Knight, Christina Aguilera, Danny Miller and Marc Silcock, Kieron Richardson, Ian 'H' Watkins, Jon Lee, Amy Lamé, Joe McElderry, Sarah Waters, John Amaechi, Skunk Anansie, and Stella Duffy, and has also inspired other organisations to take part, such as The Co-operative Group and Tesco.In October 2011 several lesbian UK musicians got together to record the song 'It Does Get Better' under the banner of The L Project, an anti-LGBT-bullying fundraising initiative led by Georgey Payne and Sofia Antonia Milone. The song's aim, with accompanying video, is to raise funds for charities Stonewall and Diversity Role Models for their work addressing the issue of LGBT bullying in schools, and also to help spread the message that it gets better. The song reached number 11 in the Official UK independent singles chart in February 2012, the week it was released, and spent several days at the top of the UK iTunes and Amazon rock and folk/rock charts.
Switzerland
In May 2011, Daniel R. Frey and Fabio Huwyler started the Swiss affiliate of the Project. Both work at gayRadio, a Swiss LGBT-Radiobroadcast. Frey and Huwyler named their Project "Es Wird Besser Schweiz", the German translation of the sentence "It Gets Better Switzerland".Mexico
In May 2014, Todo Mejora Monterrey started as a local affiliate in the Mexican northern city of Monterrey. In June of the same year, the project expanded at the national level, known as It Gets Better México. Alex R. Orué, one of the contributors to the It Gets Better book, joined the group lead by Rubén Maza and serves currently as their Executive Director.The project has earned collaborations from public figures in Mexico, such as actor and singer Mauricio Martínez, politologist and writer Genaro Lozano, activist and journalist Enrique Torre Molina, blogger and radio host Johnny Carmona and singer and songwriter Jaime Kohen