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Per Business Insider:
I have some theories as to perhaps why some corporate sponsors are pulling back.
When an advocacy or activism movement becomes a "brand" of sorts and gets monetized (to the point where it becomes a corporate entity and people build actual careers around it), they have a need to keep broadening their scope in order to stay relevant, and the movement becomes abstracted to the point that people aren't 100% sure what they're even financially supporting anymore.
That could explain why we've seen both the acronym, and the number of pride flags, explode in a relatively short amount of time. In order for advocacy organizations to stay relevant, they have to be "fighting for something", and that "something" has to be something that there's a certain amount of societal pushback against.
That's why the pattern seems to be, as soon as most of society accepts something (or at least becomes tolerant of it), they have to quickly incorporate other things that most of society doesn't accept, so that they can have something to fight against. In essence, they have to keep nudging their advocacy just outside the Overton Window, so they have a "reason" for their activism.
When it gets watered down too much, I would imagine some of these big organizations that used to be corporate funders of some of these activism movements were probably scratching their heads thinking "Back in the 2000's when we started giving them money, we just wanted to show our support for equal protection laws and marriage rights for gay and lesbian couples...all of those original goals were achieved... and now we're giving money to sponsor Furries, Pony Play, and random fetishes??"
- SF Pride will lose at least $300,000 in sponsorships from major companies for this year's event.
- Sponsors cited local budget constraints for their reduced support in 2025, SF Pride exec says.
- NYC Pride said partners are also scaling back visibility or reassessing their spending on the event.
I have some theories as to perhaps why some corporate sponsors are pulling back.
When an advocacy or activism movement becomes a "brand" of sorts and gets monetized (to the point where it becomes a corporate entity and people build actual careers around it), they have a need to keep broadening their scope in order to stay relevant, and the movement becomes abstracted to the point that people aren't 100% sure what they're even financially supporting anymore.
That could explain why we've seen both the acronym, and the number of pride flags, explode in a relatively short amount of time. In order for advocacy organizations to stay relevant, they have to be "fighting for something", and that "something" has to be something that there's a certain amount of societal pushback against.
That's why the pattern seems to be, as soon as most of society accepts something (or at least becomes tolerant of it), they have to quickly incorporate other things that most of society doesn't accept, so that they can have something to fight against. In essence, they have to keep nudging their advocacy just outside the Overton Window, so they have a "reason" for their activism.
When it gets watered down too much, I would imagine some of these big organizations that used to be corporate funders of some of these activism movements were probably scratching their heads thinking "Back in the 2000's when we started giving them money, we just wanted to show our support for equal protection laws and marriage rights for gay and lesbian couples...all of those original goals were achieved... and now we're giving money to sponsor Furries, Pony Play, and random fetishes??"