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GLBT EXPO

Photo of from GLBT Expo
The Good, the Bad, and the Fab


by Ric Kasini Kadour

      At one time in America, your identity was shaped largely by what you did. America has changed, however. It is no longer what you do, but what you buy that is important. Access to social enfranchisement comes not from producing but from consuming. As such, be you an immigrant or a queer person, driving the right car, vacationing at the right destination, buying the right food, or wearing the right clothes signals that you are an American and tells other people to accept you.
      "Advertising to gay men and lesbians has often promised that full inclusion in the national community of Americans is available through personal consumption," observes Alexandra Chasin in Selling Out: The Gay and Lesbian Movement Goes to Market. "In other words, consumption has been held out as a route to political and social enfranchisement."
     The nexus of this cultural, political, social phenomenon is the 11th Original Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Business and Entertainment Expo held this past March at the Jacob Javits Convention Center in New York City. Over the course of a weekend, the Expo put 21,000 "affluent, brand-loyal, well-educated, and business-minded" consumers in front of 500 vendors hungry for the "perfect market niche."
     At its heart, the Expo is like any event where you wander around checking out vendor booths. Think really gay Home Show.
      I was in heaven at the Expo - and a little aroused by the promises of the rainbow-draped booths and other assorted pretty, gay stuff. As I descended the escalators and passed through the enormous rainbow-balloon arch, nostalgia for the time I lived in Seattle's gay ghetto overwhelmed me. Having been back in Vermont for three years now - where the worlds of queer and commerce rarely meet - I crave that place where sexuality and pocketbook blend together like two colors in a painting, where one can purchase mutual funds from a guy whose advertisements showcase the rock-hard abs of a potentially available, but just out-of-reach Adonis; where the horny urges of lust can be satiated with a quick trip to the gay bookstore. What fabulous new thing have I been missing?

Heteros in Homoland

       The Expo is produced by the RDP Group, a Connecticut-based marketing firm. Vendor booths are organized under various themes: The Passport Travel Pavilion, #1 Entertainment, a small-business area, and (my personal favorite) the Same-Sex Wedding Expo's Loveland, which helps attendees "discover the hottest trends in weddings and commitment ceremonies" because we must "now more than ever support same-sex marriage rights."
     The Expo is a showcase for businesses wanting a piece of the estimated $35 billion gay market. Some businesses were gay-owned and operated; some were mainstream American companies. Genre, Provincetown Tourism, GLNation.com, A&U, Pride National Network, Cybersocket.com and other recognizably gay companies sat side-by-side with Fleet Bank, Prudential Finance, JP Morgan Chase, Bud Light, Hair Club for Men, Washington Mutual and a host of other major U.S. corporations. They sent representatives to staff booths, handed out key chains, and talked about how much they love gay people.
      When asked why they attended the Expo, most bragged about their company's track record on diversity or said nice things about the queer community.
      "They're a great community to work with," said Alba Cera, director of catering at the fancy W-Union Square Hotel. "W is a brand - pushing the envelope. For us, it's a natural thing" to reach out to gay and lesbian people.
      Jennifer Jordon, Marketing Manager from Okamoto USA, the makers of Crown and Beyond Seven condoms was less subtle in her reasoning for attending the Expo.
      "We hope to get a market we haven't had before and increase our sales," said Jordon. "We're here to market to the gay community because they use a lot of condoms." Yes, we do.
     I generally find apple polishing and other sorts of sycophantic behavior off-putting, but not here. One of the things I learned about myself at the Expo was that I enjoyed being a target of sophisticated marketing. Is there anything special about Piper-Heidsieck cozying up to me in the hopes I'll buy their champagne? Not really. If I get a seven-colored knickknack or a lemon-scented aromatherapy candle out if it, so be it.
     So what makes the Expo different from any other event of a similar nature? Why did 21,000 queer consumers from as far south as Florida to as far north as Maine pay twelve bucks to descend the escalator and walk through the rainbow arch?
     "It's a great opportunity to learn who's marketing to the gay community," said New York City resident Sandra Thomas. "It's nice to know who wants our business."
     Stanley, who didn't want to give his last name, came down from Connecticut. He was enjoying seeing the "big companies next to the little companies all trying to make us happy." His friend, George, was liking all the free stuff.
     Most simply, the quid pro quo being offered by companies at the Expo is "You scratch our back; We'll scratch yours." But I'm not sure it's that simple.
     In a letter to the "Faithful and Fabulous Attendees" in the Expo's program, Steven Wesler, President of the RDP Group, casts attendance at the Expo in political terms.
     "You have shown Mainstream America the economic and political power the GLBT Community wields," writes Wesler. "I encourage you to utilize the companies that support our cause and support them with your purchasing power."
     Despite the potential for a complicated social and political context here, the power dynamic between queer consumers and big corporations is such that queer people are really second-class citizens, dependent on the whims of institutions to accept or not accept us. In my view, the exchange at the Expo is, "You buy our stuff and we'll treat you like a human being."
     This is the secret to the Expo's huge number of attendees. No big surprise, queer people desperately want to be treated like human beings. The Expo is an exercise in being accepted. It feels great. All these companies, some with names you know, some with names you don't, act like they like you. It's refreshing to just put it all out there and say, "I'm here. I'm queer. Sell me something." But this isn't social change. It's just good retail.
      Shopping can feel like acceptance. What we buy often tells us something about ourselves. Buying my first home felt like adulthood in a way for which I was completely unprepared. Personally, the experience of buying leather affirms my own acceptance of sexuality, of being a sexual person who is interested in going beyond the limits. Imagine how many queer people's first act of coming out was buying their first gay magazine.
      But this only explains half of what was going on at the Expo.

Economic Organizing: A Very Brief History

      Queer people have been organizing around economic issues since the beginning of the movement. In the mid-twentieth century, queer people consolidated economic power by forming neighborhoods in urban areas. Gay bars, restaurants, and other businesses served as focal points and places to meet for the community. While many of these businesses weren't gay-owned or operated, a mutual, if silent, agreement often maintained a delicate balance between the community and the business.
     As the movement progressed, economic organizing took on new shapes. Queer people pulled resources together to produce publications: ONE, Mattachine Review, Gay Community News, Ladder, and a slew of other queer presses and publications.
      In the Seventies, queer people discovered the power of boycotts. From refusing to purchase orange juice in protest over its spokeswoman's support of an anti-gay initiative in Florida to giving up the products of Coors Brewing Company because of the conservative politics of its owners, queer people sometimes were successful at changing corporate policy. More recently, the queer history of boycotting made it easier for groups like the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation to target corporate sponsors of homophobic radio and TV shows by Dr. Laura and Michael Savage.
      AIDS distracted gay men from any Leftist agenda the movement may have had and in the intervening years, some radical lesbians had children and formed families. The movement changed. Some say it grew up.
     We have worked toward assimilation by fighting for laws to protect us against employment discrimination - laws of great symbolic value, but of limited real benefit primarily to middle-class and wealthy working gay people. In any case, our move toward assimilation and a larger reorganization of the source of American identity from function to consumerism opened the door for a new form of economic organizing: the market niche.
      It wasn't until the Nineties that savvy marketers and assimilationist gays promoted queer people as an untapped market. With an estimated $35 billion up for grabs, businesses jump through hoops not to upset queer people. Corporations spend millions of dollars advertising in our national publications, supporting our organizations, or sponsoring our events to get our attention. Many have adopted more inclusive human resource policies. Businesses that accept and support queer people are in; those that discriminate or work against us are out. The Coors Brewing Company, once the target of boycotts, now provides millions each year to sponsor theme nights at gay bars or advertise in national gay publications.
      Today, playing up the gay market niche is the dominant form of economic organizing in the gay movement. We do little-to-no economic development within our own community. We do not encourage individuals to start their own businesses and work towards self-sufficiency. We do not have mentoring programs for queer-owned small businesses. If we support gay-owned businesses, we do so because they also support our community institutions, and not because advancing the economic interest of our gay brothers or sisters is inherently a good thing. We have not, as other oppressed minorities have, organized funding cooperatives or community financial institutions (national banks posing as 'gay banks' don't count).
     These forms of economic organizing would undermine the value of queer purchasing power and, ultimately, an assimilationist agenda. If we can stand on our own as a community, employ each other, support each other's businesses, then why would we need to hetero-model ourselves into the straight world?

What Makes Us Stronger

     And yet, one of the interesting things about the Expo was how many queer people were there to support or build up queer businesses. The straight companies competed side-by-side with traditionally gay companies in a way that democratized commerce.
     Aaron Leventman was at the Expo representing Provincetown, where he's the assistant town clerk, and Provincetown Tourism, where he’s the administrative assistant.
     They were there to "promote tourism because tourism is our main industry," said Leventman. "Because of gay marriage and the high court ruling, we're here to answer questions about getting married in Provincetown."
      Provincetown, a small Portuguese fishing village and summer arts community on the tip of Cape Cod, has been a gay tourism destination for the better part of a century. While vowing to remain a party town for gay singles, Provincetown is positioning itself as, in the words of Provincetown Tourism Director Patricia Fitzpatrick, "A Gay Niagara Falls."
      A number of gay entrepreneurs went to the Expo to network with other businesses. Jonathon Corish saw the Expo as "a platform to launch this business and get our name out." Based in Florida, his company Forever Now produces greeting cards for the gay and lesbian market that are "high-quality and tasteful."
     "It was an excellent place to meet key people in this industry and have fun at the same time," said Corish.
     Susan Siegel attended to promote the Children's Alternative Media Project, "a business dedicated to increasing lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender acceptance and visibility by developing and marketing quality children's media with accompanying curriculum materials." That's gay-themed children's books, if you weren't paying attention.
Wachovia Corporation, the U.S. Postal Service, DiversityWorking.com, and others offered career information. Starbucks brought their mobile latte van and set up an elaborate booth that stretched over three spaces.
     "We're committed to neighborhoods," said Jack Rakes, regional recruiter for Starbucks Coffee Company, who attended the expo to recruit workers. Rakes stressed that Starbucks was deeply committed to promoting diversity. The company offers domestic partnership benefits and focuses its philanthropy on literacy and AIDS issues.
     The goal of economic organizing is not the reformulation, recasting, or revision of queer people to serve the needs of corporate America. It's about changing America's economic and commercial culture so that it meets the needs, whims, wants, and desires of queer people. As a tool to this end, the Expo offers a place where queer people can network and exchange ideas; a matchmaker for employers and queer workers; and a venue for gay businesses to compete directly with mainstream businesses and let the natural tension between capitalism and identity work its magic.

Ric Kasini Kadour is a freelance writer and consultant who lives in Shoreham, Vermont. The 12th Original GLBT Expo, "Blending Business & Entertainment for Over a Decade," is scheduled for April 15-16, 2005 in New York City.




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