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Tips for Pride Month: How to Celebrate, Educate, and Support

From a film festival of your own to resources to help year-round, we have ideas for Pride Month celebrants and allies.

 & Chandra Steele Senior Features Writer

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Pride Month is the time to celebrate the LGBTQIA+ community, reflect on its history, and especially this year, to get organized for much-needed activism.

PCMag has put together guides to streaming shows and movies, games to play, along with suggestions from our sister sites IGN and Mashable, and other resources.

While Pride Month has been greeted with corporate-sponsored rainbows, an ugly right-wing campaign against the community has caused the true colors of some companies to show. As an ally, you can help turn the tide with some of our support suggestions and by looking into local organizations where you can get involved.


What to Watch

Attend a Pride month film festival or have one of your own at home with over 50 movies and shows you can stream. For some summer vibes, watch last year’s hit Fire Island.


Games to Play

We created a list of games that have LGBTQIA+ characters and creators, including Celeste, a game where you follow the title character, a trans girl, through her travails up a mountain. 


Books to Download

If you have a Kindle, Amazon put together a section for Pride month. And there’s a selection of Kindle Unlimited books that are free to download through the end of the month

screenshot of Amazon's Pride month selections

Our sister site IGN has some comics recommendations, including DC Comics’ Wonder Woman-adjacent Nubia & The Amazons


Social Media Accounts to Follow

Knowing your history takes on a new dimension with these social media accounts suggested by our sister site Mashable. You’ll get lessons in things like queer botany from lesbian fashion historian Ellie Medhurst.

@elliemedhurst you heard right, more queer flowers! #fashioningmasculinities #queerhistory #queerfashion #lesbianfashion #lgbthistory #fashionhistory #arthistory ? original sound - Eleanor


Places to Donate

As LGBTQI rights are eroding across the country, it’s more important than ever to support organizations that advocate and provide services for the community.

For the Gworls

Black trans women face the most discrimination and danger. For the Gworls assists them by providing funds for rent, medical care, and gender-affirming surgeries. You can donate here.

Trans Mutual Aid

Trans Mutual Aid provides the mutual aid in its name to the trans community as well as relocation resources, help with gender-affirming care, and more. You can contribute money as well as your time and skills.


Where to Find Resources

The Trevor Project

The Trevor Project is a literal lifeline for LGBTQ youth. You can contact the Trevor Lifeline 24/7 via phone at 1-866-488-7386, by texting START to 678-678, or going to TheTrevorProject.org/Get-Help to chat. The site also has lots of helpful information, including a guide to coming out.

To support The Trevor Project, thanks to a collaboration between IGN and Humble Bundle, you can purchase a Humble Choice Membership or Bundle. In June, 5% of every June Humble Choice membership goes to support The Trevor Project. This month’s Humble Choice games include Ghostwire: Tokyo, Remnant: From the Ashes – Complete Edition, and six more. Find out more here.

Trans Lifeline

The Trans Lifeline is a support and crisis hotline that is staffed by trans people. You can call at 1-877-565-8860. There are also links to resources on their sites. 

National Center for Lesbian Rights

The NCLR provides help with custody disputes, separation and divorce, immigration and asylum, and other issues. 


How to Be an Ally

This is no time to stand on the sidelines. The Trevor Project offers a guide to being an ally to transgender and nonbinary youth. And the Human Rights Campaign has a guide to being an LGBTQ+ ally

About Our Expert

Chandra Steele

Chandra Steele

Senior Features Writer

My Experience

My title is Senior Features Writer, which is a license to write about absolutely anything if I can connect it to technology (I can). I’ve been at PCMag since 2011 and have covered the surveillance state, vaccination cards, ghost guns, voting, ISIS, art, fashion, film, design, gender bias, and more. You might have seen me on TV talking about these topics or heard me on your commute home on the radio or a podcast. Or maybe you’ve just seen my Bernie meme

I strive to explain topics that you might come across in the news but not fully understand, such as NFTs and meme stocks. I’ve had the pleasure of talking tech with Jeff Goldblum, Ang Lee, and other celebrities who have brought a different perspective to it. I put great care into writing gift guides and am always touched by the notes I get from people who’ve used them to choose presents that have been well-received. Though I love that I get to write about the tech industry every day, it’s touched by gender, racial, and socioeconomic inequality and I try to bring these topics to light. 

Outside of PCMag, I write fiction, poetry, humor, and essays on culture.

My Areas of Expertise

  • Making incomprehensible tech news easy to understand
  • Expanding the boundaries of topics covered in the industry
  • Figuring out tips and tricks in apps and on devices and letting you know about them
  • Putting together gift guides for everyone in your life 

The Technology I Use

All that gadgets is gold for me: my iPhone 11 Pro, my fifth-generation iPad that I use only for streaming videos and music, my iPad mini 4 that I like to take with me whenever I carry a bag that can fit it, and my MacBook Pro. Why are they all different shades of gold, though? What’s going on, Apple? 

None of them quite live up to my two past loves: my LG Lotus LX600 phone and my Sony Walkman NW-E005 MP3 player. 

I've never given up wired earbuds so I was ahead of all those trend pieces. I use a Mangotek Lightning-to-3.5mm headphone jack adapter to connect them to my phone. 

I have had so many ebook readers, but I prefer paper to them all. Still, my Kindle Paperwhite is perfect for traveling or when I’m too impatient to wait for a book to be released in paperback.

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