NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists Legacy Award

The NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists Legacy Award was created to recognize an outlet, publication or news organization that has exhibited innovative, high-quality and sustained news coverage of the LGBTQ+ community over an extended period of time. The outlets, publications or news organizations that will be recognized by the award have exemplified the association’s mission to promote and foster fair and accurate LGBTQ+ news coverage. The NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists Legacy Award is the association’s only award that is presented to an outlet, publication or news organization to recognize the work of its entire staff, rather than an individual.

This Year’s Recipient

The Philadelphia Gay News

The Philadelphia Gay News is the recipient of the 2023 Legacy Award. Founded by Publisher Mark Segal in 1976, Philadelphia Gay News has been a part of Philadelphia’s thriving LGBTQ+ community for decades. As a community publication, PGN serves as a platform for the LGBTQ+ community to learn about the issues that impact them and the people who create change and visibility. The word Gay, printed on its cover and on its iconic purple vending boxes that still line the city of Philadelphia, showed the community they were not alone and inspired many to live their lives openly. Some of the groundbreaking stories PGN has covered include the 21-year and counting efforts to uncover the truth about the death of trans woman Nizah Morris, a first of its kind series on lesbian nuns in the 1980s, and a countdown clock and feature when Philadelphia city government stalled on implementing domestic partner benefits. Most recently, the publication broke stories on Moms for Liberty’s annual summit and the organizations hosting them.

Past Recipients

The Bay Area Reporter

The Bay Area Reporter

The Bay Area Reporter, recipient of the 2022 Legacy Award, is the country’s oldest continuously published LGBTQ newspaper, and celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2021. The newspaper has long documented the queer community, from drag performances and the Imperial Court...

Windy City Times

Windy City Times

2021 Legacy Award winner The Windy City Times was founded in 1985 to serve the diverse needs of the Chicago LGBTQ community. The outlet first began as a free print newspaper but has since grown to be a daily online platform with more than 125,000 site visitors every...

The Washington Blade

The Washington Blade

The Washington Blade is the recipient of the 2019 NLGJA Legacy Award. The Washington Blade was founded as “The Gay Blade” in 1969. Originally a black and white, one-sheet community newsletter, the paper was initially distributed in local D.C. bars....