This year, it got unexpectedly much tougher. We entered 2019 with every reason to be confident we were going to have a strong year. What happened, mates? People didn’t want to read your crap anymore? Notice how they leave out the key information.īut as the year progressed, decisions have been delayed and projects people had committed to do with us have fallen flat. There are a number of reasons, of course. But the biggest change was the level of confidence brands and businesses in the UK have, due to the uncertainty over Brexit.
It won’t surprise anyone to hear that many media organisations are struggling with the same problem. The British people voted to restore their rights as a sovereign nation to retain the power of decision-making and nation-building for themselves. The “little people” of the Midlands, the rural areas, and the London suburbs got tired of a bunch of arrogant, elitist, distant-and pro-LGBT–bureaucrats dominating their daily lives, their business, and their national security. They blame the very corporate elites and Big Tech Masters of the Universe for their demise, specifically because they have not been pro-gay enough: Ordinary Britons of all walks of life, including wealthy and conservative point of fact, wanted nothing more do with with the failed European Union project.įor this, the perverted gay news website could no longer continue carrying on business. There has also been another trend which has become more apparent this year. Brands which are wishing to ‘do’ LGBTI work are increasingly doing so in a tokenistic way. Rather than working with us to engage and serve LGBTI people year round, many have chosen to ‘rainbow wash’. They have turned their logo rainbow colored for Pride week or month and – at best – made a small donation to an LGBTI good cause.