IS AD SPEND FUNDING AN INCREASE IN LGBTQIA+ HATE CRIME?

Marty Davies (they/them) is Joint CEO of Outvertising, the marketing and advertising industry’s LGBTQIA+ advocacy group. And Co-Founder of Trans+ Adland, a grassroots community group of trans, non-binary, gender non-conforming and intersex people across the world of marketing and advertising. They are also the founder of creative strategy consultancy Smarty Pants.

Flowers and tributes to Brianna Ghey laid in Soho Square during the vigil on Saturday 18th February. Image: Marty Davies

Flowers and tributes to Brianna Ghey laid in Soho Square during the vigil on Saturday 18th February.
Image: Marty Davies

Brianna Ghey, a 16-year-old trans girl, was stabbed to death in Culcheth Linear Park in Warrington on February 11th. During the hearing on the following Wednesday, the prosecutor told the court that Brianna's death was "extremely brutal and punishing". Two teenagers, a boy and girl both aged 15, have now been charged with her murder and will stand trial in July.

The police said they were investigating the possibility that it was an anti-trans hate crime.

UK newspapers have stoked a trans-hostile environment

According to data from community database Dysphorum, over the past 5 years, there’s been a 217% increase in stories about trans people. In 2022, there were 7,525 articles, the vast majority with negative framing. In January this year, in the weeks leading up to Brianna’s murder, there were 1,202 articles. That’s an average of 38 articles a day.

Chart shows monthly volume of articles relating to trans people over the past 5 years (Jan '18 - Jan '23 captured by Dysphorum (excluding Pink News and Buzzfeed)

The 2021 census for England and Wales revealed that just 0.5% of the population have a gender identity that is different from the one they were assigned at birth. That’s a huge amount of media coverage centred on a very small percentage of the population.

Traditional newspaper titles, Daily Mail, Daily Mirror, Daily Express, The Guardian, The Independent, The Spectator, The Sun, The Telegraph and The Times have all contributed with trans-hostile reporting. I feel like they have blood on their hands.

Even in reporting the death of Brianna, the media failed her.

Brianna’s friend Jade told Vice World News she felt “sick” because of the way media outlets initially reported Brianna’s death. Some used her deadname (her birth name). Others ignored the fact she was trans. And when they did, they wouldn’t use her correct pronouns.

Infographic shows the total share of volume by publisher, includes all publishers captured by Dysphorum (Jan '18 - Dec '23)

Hate drives attention, and we advertisers are paying for that attention

In Paris Lees’ podcast, ‘The Flipside’, Professor Mary McNaughton-Cassill (the clinical psychologist who studies how the news affects our stress levels and our well-being) explains that “...the way the brain works is, we pay more attention to sensational negative things” and “we’re always wired to be scanning for danger.”

I could have gone for a more sensationalist spin on the headline for this piece. Something like ‘Is there blood in your media plan?’ to grab attention. But I chose not to. Yes, I want your attention, but I want your minds open to the evidence I'm presenting. And anger and fear are not emotions we should centre in our long term decision-making.

Sensationalist, fear-inducing headlines are commonplace among UK newspapers. I don’t need to mention the full list of their targets here, but we all know them. It’s not informing us well. It’s not healthy. And we’re all the poorer for it.

Montage of headlines from the past 12 months (Jan 2022 - Feb 2023)

Advertisers are unknowingly funding the largest anti-trans campaign we’ve ever seen

It’s an uncomfortable truth, but it’s one we must grapple with. We’re finding ourselves funding a forever intensifying, never-ending campaign of hate against the trans community. The World Association of News Publishers assessed that over 50% of news publisher revenue comes from advertising. The ‘gender critical’ journalists are pumping out execution after execution of this hate campaign and are paid generously from our hands. This campaign is setting the news agenda and leading our whole media and politics to become infected by its poison.

It’s important for us also to consider the role of our social platforms and broadcasters in this ecosystem. They also have questions to answer. TV and Radio broadcasters are platforming ‘gender critical’ voices unchallenged - framing anti-trans narrative as ‘legitimate concerns’. Sensationalist stories act like kindling for conversation across social platforms, allowing hateful views to burn like wildfire and become reinforced in algorithmic bubbles. Hate speech is commonplace and sanctions from platforms on users are slow if forthcoming at all. This commentary then provides content to be platformed and amplified by the media vying for attention to then sell on to us advertisers. 

This anti-trans campaign is incredibly effective

It’s no surprise to us advertisers that mass communication coupled with message reinforcement works. Professor Mary McNaughton-Cassill remarks that “if something is repeated often enough, we’ll assume it’s true.”

YouGov revealed attitudes toward trans people had eroded in recent years. Now, the majority disagree that a trans woman is a woman and the majority now believe allowing trans women to use spaces reserved for women presents a genuine risk to cis women (a common argument from the anti-trans lobby is that trans women are actually predatory men.) 

And those changing attitudes inevitably lead to negative behaviours.

Last year, the government reported a 56% increase in recorded hate crime toward transgender people. 4,355 total incidents. The true figure is likely to be a lot higher according to a recent Stonewall study, revealing “81% of LGBT people who experienced a hate crime or incident didn't report it to the police.”

At the time of the release of these figures, LGBT+ anti-abuse charity, Galop, responded to this rise, “Transphobic narratives in the media, and at a senior political level, have been allowed to grow unregulated, unchecked, and unchallenged. That translates into violence against our community – particularly for trans, non-binary and gender non-conforming people. Let us be clear – there is a direct line between words and violent acts against our community, and always has been.”

Speaking at the Conscious Advertising Network’s first conference in November last year, I posed a question: “Which hate crime is your advert funding?” This question sticks in my throat now.

Montage of headlines from the past 12 months (Jan 2022 - Feb 2023)

The Trans+ community needs unconditional and active allyship from advertisers

Listen, I believe passionately that we need a robust press and we need to hold power to account, but as a citizen of this country and a trans person, I know our press is not informing us properly on trans lives and trans people’s issues. The opposite is true – everything is through the lens of some people’s irrational issues with trans people, not trans people’s real issues. This is a repeat of the gay moral panic that swept through the media in the 80s. The trans issues that are not getting attention are mental health, accessible trans healthcare, hate speech and, yes, physical violence.

Politicians are using the trans community to distract from their failings and manufacturing a culture war. The media are caught in a model where hate is incentivised. And trans people are being failed as a result. Brianna was failed.

Speaking with Vice World Media, another of Brianna’s trans girlfriends, Hannah, said “If Bri would have wanted anything from her passing, it would be change.”

It falls on businesses to drive that change. We are that change.

I attended the vigils for Brianna outside the Department for Education and in Soho Square, I was struck by one message I read: ‘The trans agenda is an average life expectancy.’

We need to wake up to our complicity as advertisers. Love is love, but it's money that talks.

Is there blood in your media plan? The answer is probably yes. It’s uncomfortable to read because it’s an uncomfortable truth.

Outvertising are working with organisations such as Conscious Advertising Network and Stop Funding Hate to develop practical positive steps you can take. But we also need our industry to develop solutions too. Talk to us and work with us to create change.

Let’s fix a broken ecosystem.

Let’s invest in quality, truthful and inclusive journalism.

Let’s remove hate from our media plans. 

Let’s let trans kids be trans kids – and let’s see them grow old.

Rest in Pride, Brianna.

Introducing our new Joint-CEO, Marty Davies

We’re proud to announce that Marty Davies (they/them) is now our Joint CEO, working alongside Lucy McKillop (she/her). Marty joined the Outvertising board of directors in February 2021 and has been instrumental in our recent successes – playing a critical role in the delivery of our first ever in-person Outvertising Live, launching our Activism & Advocacy workstream and spearheading our efforts to counter LGBTQIA+ discrimination associated with the FIFA World Cup and the Safe To Be More conference. 

This fire that Mark started, that we now call Outvertising, really is a precious thing to be made caretaker of. Over the last two years, I’ve been endlessly impressed by the passion, talent and determination to create change in our industry from every Outvertising volunteer. And it’s that energy that makes me very excited and hopeful about the changes we’ll see over the coming years, accelerated along by our supportive partners, as we all continue to drive change for our queer community.

Brianna Ghey’s murder reminds us all how much work there is to do to drive LGBTQIA+ acceptance in our society. I believe advertising can be a powerful force for good – it’s the most ubiquitous communication medium, adverts reach each and every one of us. Advertising is also responsible for funding 50% of the news media and commentary we consume. For these reasons, I believe that our independent voice, advocating for our queer community from within the marketing and advertising community has never been more necessary.
— Marty

Away from Outvertising, Marty is the Co-Founder of Trans+ Adland, a grassroots community group of trans, non-binary, gender non-conforming and intersex people across the world of marketing and advertising. They are also the founder of creative consultancy Smarty Pants.

We caught up with Marty to find out their hopes for Outvertising.

Quickfire questions for Marty

Firstly, a huge congratulations on your new role. We wanted to start by asking what you hope to achieve as Joint-CEO?

Nothing big, just systemic change.

But like anything a planner says, it’s three things really:

  1. Continue to cultivate an LGBTQIA+ inclusive environment for people working in industry.

  2. Grow our influence within the network of agencies and among media and brand owners.

  3. Get more connected to the LGBTQIA+ sector - charities and queer-owned businesses – so we can use the power of advertising to help where our community needs it most.

How would you describe Outvertising to someone who’s new?

The most wonderful bunch of kind and generous changemakers on a mission to change the world. Or at the very least make big strides toward a more LGBTQIA+ inclusive industry in the work we output and in our work environments. 

What’s the biggest challenge for the organisation?

I think of our volunteer energy as the most precious thing Lucy and I have been made caretakers of. Without it nothing would progress. The challenge is how do we nurture, grow and channel that passion in the right ways to achieve the most impact for the community. That's the forever challenge.

But once harnessed the challenge is to have this energy find ears and eyeballs of our senior industry leaders with power and influence. To convert them into our allies and partner with them to affect change.

Why should someone get involved now?

I can tell you why I’m involved right now. Outvertising has built solid foundations, developed a reputation and has momentum. We can affect change, genuinely, and that is an exciting thing to be part of. Our organisation turns four-years-old this year, we’ve learned to walk, now it’s time to run.

As a member of the trans+ community, what advice would you give to LGB allies in the industry?

The Trans+ community is under particular attack at the moment. In January this year, in the weeks leading up to Brianna Ghey’s murder, there were 1,202 articles from the big newspaper outlets. That’s an average of 38 articles a day. The majority with negative framing.

You might think you know what trans issues are but you’re likely more aware of the issues people have with trans people as this is what’s sucking up the airtime.

So I’d say, make space for trans, non-binary, gender non-conforming and intersex voices. Lean in to learning about the range of experiences, those unique to each of us and those that we share.

Use your own voices and influence to support and fight for our community. I think a member of our community Jamie June Hill said it best when they said our buckets of water are depleted. “If you've got the capacity please grab a hose, a pale, a flipping firetruck if you have one, because it'll take all of us to start pushing the blaze back.”

And the most practical piece of easy advice to take away today? Correct people using our incorrect pronouns when we’re not in the room.

Do you have any heroes? And if so, who?

I’m not sure having heroes is altogether healthy, it creates unrealistic expectations for the person being chiseled from stone. But I have people I admire and who inspire me. I do my best to magpie how they operate so I can personally affect as much change as one person can.

I admire Valentino Vecchietti. She has an indomitable force for intersex rights and visibility. Creator of the Intersex-Inclusive Pride Flag, I admire their determination and the change they’re inspiring through this iconic cultural symbol that’s being adopted worldwide. But I think I most admire their generosity and humility. 

And I admire Shon Faye, she wrote the The Transgender Issue in 2021. I admire her argument making and skill as a writer and persuader and ability to do so with levity.

Away from the bubble of adland, what inspires you?

I’m a bit of a theatre nerd. And very very part time music journo. So I guess art inspires me. As cringe as that reads. With friends I’ve been working on new British musical about friendship, love and survival, set in Soho across 60 years, featuring the songs of Marc Almond and Soft Cell. We managed to stage a showcase at The Vaults Theatre before the pandemic and we’re very hopefully we’ll gather some momentum with the project over the coming months.

Favourite LGBTQIA+ ad?

The work by M&C Saatchi Sport & Entertainment for Absolut recently. The Absolut Choir - I feel genuinely seen and empowered by that work. Olly Alexander of Years & Years worked with grassroots organisation Trans Voices choir and many other changemakers to work on a new version of the song Shine.

It’s a great example of working with the queer community and lifting up and platforming important changemakers. M&C Saatchi say of it that their intention was to “open a conversation on stage to raise the volume of causes including LGBTQIA+ rights, self-love, better disability awareness and body positivity; proving that when we mix together and raise each other’s voices, we have the power to change the world.”

But in terms of marketing and sustained positive impact for our community… ads that don’t help fund journalism and comment that’s positioning trans+ people as dangerous and a threat to society. Those are my favourite ads at the moment.

What can we all look forward to in 2023?

We’ve built real momentum and visibility in 2022. This year we’re focusing on growing our community in order to grow our influence. We kicked off 2023 with our recruitment campaign. Coinciding with the start of LGBT History Month and created by our friends at Across the Pond, the ads feature rewritten scripts and headlines for some of the world’s most well-known ads, reimagining them to be more inclusive of LGBTQIA+ audiences. Our invitation is simple, join us and help us to build this future.

We’re already thinking about our annual event Outvertising Live. In 2022 we brought our queer community and allies together - it was an event that aligned us, inspired us and galvanised our spirit. This year we want to influence more C-suite - so this year we’ll be asking you to BYOB - bring your own boss. So keep a lookout for that at the back end of the year.

Finally, what’s one thing we might not know about you?

While working as a music journalist, I once turned down the opportunity to interview Lady Gaga. ‘Just Dance’ was number 1 in the UK at the time. I wasn’t all that keen. It felt very ‘dance anthem’ and heteronormative and I pigeonholed it as a one-hit wonder. At that time Lady Gaga was very ambiguous and impenetrable as an artist - but I also didn’t do much research. So I was very wrong not to do this interview.


I still like to do bits and pieces of music journalism when I’ve got something I really want to say. I recently wrote about the transfem mirror that is Sam Smith’s Gloria era for DIVA magazine.

Classic ads get a rewrite for Outvertising’s biggest ever campaign

Today we’re announcing the launch of our biggest campaign to date, taking over outdoor sites up and down the country.

Coinciding with the start of LGBT History Month and created by our friends at Across the Pond, the ads feature rewritten scripts and headlines for some of the world’s most well-known ads, reimagining them to be more inclusive of LGBTQIA+ audiences.

Outvertising is an independent voice standing up for queer people in our industry and beyond. To make that voice even louder we’re launching our biggest ever campaign and inviting everyone to join us. Together we can help write the LGBTQIA+ history of tomorrow, using the power and reach of advertising to shape society for the better.
— Marty Davies (they/them)

In the words of Jim de Zoete (he/him), Executive Creative of Director at Across the Pond, the campaign seeks to “mobilise our industry to create serious change around diverse representation. There are so many of us who want to make a difference, but just don’t know how to have a real impact. Joining the Outvertising community is a great start. And what's thrilling, and we hope this shows in the executions, is that this change is in your hands. Just by adapting a few words you can suddenly make the work, and the world, more inclusive.”

Our campaign calls on LGBTQIA+ ad professionals and allies to join the Outvertising community and will be visible on billboard sites in cities up and down the country, including London, Newcastle, Liverpool, Sheffield, Coventry and Hull. Thanks to OPEN Media, DOOH.com and Clear Channel for their support. Look out for further amplification will come from digital and social ads amplified by agency ERGS throughout LGBT History Month. 

Most importantly, to join our community, head to https://www.outvertising.org/slack.