What Yahoo! Answers Meant to a Generation of LGBTQ+ Kids

Alex Gonzalez
4 min readApr 7, 2021

Before LGBTQ+ people formed online communities via Tumblr and Twitter hashtags, like #growingupgay, we spent much time searching for answers to our queer questions via forums and message boards. While the fact that people peruse Yahoo! Answers to see if anyone answered questions they were too embarrassed to ask has become a running joke on the internet, the people who asked those questions can be hailed as martyrs for LGBTQ+ people.

Yahoo! Answers will officially shut down on May 4, and while we still have sites like Quora to ask all of life’s burning questions anonymously (or openly via Twitter, if we’re feeling bold), Yahoo! Answers served as a safe space for young millennials.

There was very little LGBTQ+ representation in mainstream media 10 years ago, aside from television programs like Glee. And even with the little representation we had, many of the LGBTQ+ characters on TV were reduced to stereotypes or side characters, or only given coming-out storylines. Also, many of the characters representing the LGBTQ+ community were white, cisgender, homosexual men.

Of course, my point isn’t to discredit these characters and the boundaries they broke. There are many gay men who saw themselves in characters like Kurt Hummel. But at the time, representation for lesbians, bisexuals and transgender…

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Alex Gonzalez

UNT Alumnus | 26 | Lover of music, food, baseball, dogs and world cultures | Curator of incredibly dope playlists