Pride From Above (2023)

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Pride From Above (2023)

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NARRATOR: This is an

invitation to Pride,

as you've never seen it before.

From above.

We'll take a flying

tour across the world

as LGBTQ+ people

celebrate Pride...

ALL: Happy Pride!

NARRATOR: And

demand equal rights.

From parades, to

protest marches,

our cameras will reveal

the color and spectacle

of some of the

world's great Pride events.

We'll fly over majestic

falls as they light the way

for the annual Pride season.

We'll see

streets turn rainbow in

one of the world's

most progressive countries.

And we'll see how Pride lights

up the hearts of people from

all over the world as Pride

and the hope for liberation

for all LBGTQ+ people

spreads around the world.

(theme music plays)

NARRATOR: Pride events are held

in 107 countries around

the world each year.

People march for Pride

in most of Western Europe.

In the United States alone

there are more than

200 different Prides.

From Amsterdam to Antarctic and

from Tel Aviv to Mexico City.

All seven continents of

the world mark LGBTQ+ Pride.

Most Pride events take place

in a northern hemisphere summer,

but in February, in

the southern hemisphere,

a year of Pride begins.

We start our adventure at

one of the first Pride events

of the calendar year.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: Sydney's Pride

is an extravaganza of color

and q*eer joy.

ALL: Happy Mardi Gras!

(cheering)

NARRATOR: The

world-famous Mardi Gras Parade

is a celebration of

Pride like no other and

has been an

annual event since 1978.

CHRIS: It's the

best time of the year.

It's gay Christmas.

NARRATOR: From the

q*eer First nations community

to drag performers of

all kinds, people come from

all over Australia to take

part in the huge Pride parade.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: Gearing up to take

part in the parade this year

is Michelle Ricketts.

She's a member of

Lifesavers with Pride,

the LGBTQIA+ arm of

Surf Life Saving Australia.

MAN: Ready, five,

six, seven, eight.

NARRATOR: The lifesavers are

one of over 200 parade entrants

who will be

dancing and marching along

Sydney's q*eer mile

during Mardi Gras.

In preparation

for the big parade,

they spend weeks rehearsing

a choreographed dance routine.

MICHELLE: I feel

really excited to be part of

the Mardi Gras Parade.

It's probably one of my

favorite parts of the year.

The rehearsals are

going really good.

So, now it's just

about perfecting the

different movements

and making sure that

everyone moves in

exactly the same time.

So we look amazing.

NARRATOR: Surf Life Saving

Australia volunteers have been

keeping swimmers safe

at Australian beaches

for over 100 years.

The lifesavers are

considered heroes in Australia,

and are a crowd

favorite in the parade.

Tonight's their final

rehearsal before the big event

and they practice for

hours into the night to

perfect their performance.

MAN: Five, six, seven, eight.

Five, six, seven, eight.

NARRATOR: Two days later.

It's Mardi Gras.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: Hundreds of thousands

of people line the streets to

watch Australia's

biggest Pride event.

MICHELLE: The

atmosphere here is amazing.

Everyone's energy is up.

Everyone's excited

and we cannot wait.

NARRATOR: At 7:00 pm.

It's showtime.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: The largest

night-time Pride Parade in

the world bursts into life.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: Mardi Gras,

like Pride parades and

protests all over the world,

is a mass celebration of

gender and sexual diversity.

It's also a demand

for equal rights for

the entire LBGTQ+ community.

Tonight, 12,000 people are

taking part in this joyous

demonstration of solidarity.

And over half a million

spectators line the streets

to cheer them on.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: The Life Savers,

the guardians of

Australia's beaches

are met with a hero's welcome.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: For over

an hour the Life Savers

dance their way through Sydney.

Playing up to the crowds

and celebrating LGBTQ+ Pride.

MICHELLE: I feel proud.

It was incredible.

The crowd was nuts, the energy

they were just throwing at us.

It was amazing.

NARRATOR: The party

lasts long into the night

with Sydney Mardi Gras

complete for another year.

It's just the beginning

for the rest of the world.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: Our next

Pride party takes us

to Canada where the world's most

famous waterfall is about

to receive a Pride glow-up.

Pride month is

marked globally every June

and at Niagara Falls,

its residents are

gearing up to celebrate

the beginning of

this special month.

Liam Coward, a local activist,

is working with the

park's illuminations board,

to mark the

occasion by lighting up

the falls in a

giant Pride Rainbow.

LIAM: It's really exciting.

I look forward to

Pride Month every year because

it's a time of celebration, but

it's also a time of advocacy.

A q*eer, trans

and 2SLGBT people,

this is the month for them.

This is the month to

sort of be themselves and

to be seen and,

and visible and heard.

NARRATOR: This

evening's celebrations include

a special fireworks display.

The team set more

than 500 individual shells

ready for launch.

The pyrotechnics will

fill the skies with color,

above the illuminated falls.

There couldn't be a

bigger or more famous backdrop

for tonight's

celebration of Canadian Pride.

Canada's first Gay rights

protest took place in 1971 with

100 people marching on

Parliament Hill in Ottawa.

Today around

two million people take part

in over 50 separate marches and

celebrations across the country.

Night descends on Niagara.

The lights switch on.

(water rumbling)

The illuminations

turn Niagara Falls into

a multi-colored

spectacle as one by one,

colors are cast

across the famous torrent.

They culminate in

one giant rainbow of light

across the walls of water.

LIAM: To see the rainbow

is just such a beautiful and

iconic symbol for our community.

And I hope it really

fills people with joy

and with Pride, of course.

NARRATOR: With

Niagara transformed into

a glittering beacon of Pride,

the fireworks complete

the evening's celebrations.

(explosions)

LIAM: I hope the

message for everyone watching

these illuminations, who

sees the waterfall is lit up in

those beautiful rainbow colors,

as are a few things.

Acceptance, love, equality, uh,

and just joy.

NARRATOR: Whether in

celebration or in protest,

the rainbow is a universal

symbol of the Pride Movement.

The Pride Rainbow flag

was designed by American,

Gilbert Baker in 1978,

as a banner under which

all q*eer people

could find belonging.

And today it flies

proudly as a beacon of Pride,

including at the oldest

Pride event in the world.

NARRATOR: The next stop on

our Pride journey is the place

where it all began,

New York City.

And a very

special floating parade.

Each summer, one of the

most diverse cities in the USA

erupts in a sea of rainbow.

From uptown, to the

world's most famous gay bar,

the Stonewall Inn and beyond.

(whistles blaring)

Parades, marches

and street parties span

the length of Manhattan.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: Even the

Hudson gets in on the action.

Each year, this

famous river plays host to

the annual Pride

sailing regatta.

Liz Woolley learned to

sail on the Hudson and

looks forward to

this event all year.

LIZ: I'm excited.

There's no other greater

feeling than like sailing down

the Hudson with our

huge Pride flags and

it's a extra ounce of

excitement in the air.

NARRATOR: It's 11:00 am and

Liz and her crew mates set sail

on their special journey.

New York's LGBTQ+ Sailing Club,

the Knickerbocker

Sailing Association,

hosts the annual

Rainbows on the Hudson Regatta.

They will sail around the

southern tip of Manhattan today

and to the Statue of Liberty,

where they'll

meet with other boats.

The course takes

them past midtown

and Greenwich Village...

The place where Pride began.

It was here in June 1969

that New Yorkers first rose up

against the

criminalization of h*m*

and the mistreatment

of LGBTQ+ people.

(yelling)

NARRATOR: Following a police

raid on the Stonewall Inn,

a well-known gay bar

in Greenwich Village,

q*eer people protested

for six days and nights

demanding equality.

(yelling)

NARRATOR: The following year,

on the anniversary of

the Stonewall uprising,

LGBTQ+ New Yorkers

marched again,

calling their

demonstrations a Pride march.

Building on decades of activism,

the event helped

inspire q*eer people

around the world to action

and the global

Pride movement was born.

Today, more than 50 years on,

Liz and the crew anchor under

the shadow of

the Statue of Liberty while

the other boats in

the flotilla arrive.

One by one the sailors

dive into the summer waters to

celebrate their journey.

Lady Liberty watches on, as

the boaters enjoy a floating

Pride Party that lasts

long into the afternoon.

LIZ: I feel so great.

And that's what

New York Pride is.

Pride is a riot.

Pride is a party.

Pride is a celebration.

We're happy, we're here,

we're q*eer, and

we're not going anywhere.

NARRATOR: From its

defiant beginnings, today,

Pride events take

many different forms.

In Lithuania,

hot air balloons fly rainbows

over the capital city,

Vilnius during Pride.

This airborne spectacle is a

dramatic show of solidarity with

the Baltic LGBTQ+ community.

Staying in Europe, we fly

to one of the first countries

outside of the USA

to March for Pride.

In August each year, the

English seaside town of Brighton

explodes into a mass of people,

color and festivity as

its world-famous Pride Parade

takes over the entire city.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: A highlight

of the parade is

its giant rainbow flag.

Leighton De Burca is Brighton

Pride's volunteer coordinator.

LEIGHTON: Being

part of Pride today is

exciting, stressful,

fun, um, exhilarating.

So many people always wanting to

carry the huge rainbow flag and

volunteer every year.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: At

11:00 am the march begins.

From above, the

164-foot-long flag appears as

a wave of color against

the expanse of pebble beach.

(whistles blaring)

(cheering)

NARRATOR: Brighton is known

worldwide for its Pride Parade.

It began as a small

protest march in 1972,

just two years after the very

first Pride march in New York.

Today, the three-day

event attracts an estimated

400,000 people making it one of

the United Kingdom's

largest Pride events.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: The thriving

LGBTQ+ community comes out

in force to

support the Pride Parade.

OLEME: I feel elated,

you understand?

It's like having

a bird in a cage.

And the bird being

released out of the cage.

'Cause coming

from Nigeria, and being gay,

it's not something

that I can do back home.

And it's the best, best feeling.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: The cheering

crowds line the parade route

right down to the sea front.

LEIGHTON: Seeing that

huge sea of color and

wave through the city with

so many joyous people cheering.

It just makes people happy.

NARRATOR: At

Brighton's famous pavilion,

the flag travels the

final stages of the route.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: And as the

parade ends for another year,

the party continues

into the evening.

(whistle blaring)

WOMAN: Let's go!

WOMAN 2: Excited, emotional.

Everyone is happy, yee-haw.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: Across the world,

and throughout history,

many cultures have had a more

expansive concept of gender

than just male and female.

On Australia's Tiwi Islands,

the aboriginal community

recognizes gender diversity.

Sistergirl and brotherboy are

terms of self-identification for

many aboriginal

gender-diverse people.

In North America, two spirit

people are a part of a lineage

that expresses sexual

and gender diversity.

And the Zapotec culture in

southern Mexico recognizes

Muxes as a third gender,

distinct from male and female.

The Pride of today

has moved beyond LGBT.

It's grown.

And it embraces a

far wider spectrum of

gender identities

and expressions

as it continues

to drive towards Progress.

There is an island in

the north Atlantic that has

led the way in emancipation

for all LGBTQ+ people.

NARRATOR: Our

next Pride takes us to

one of the world's most

socially progressive countries

where equality is

painted onto its streets.

Reykjavik Pride is the

biggest public festival

in all of Iceland.

Over 100,000 people

take to the streets for this

huge celebration of freedom

for the country's q*eer people.

Every year, a week

before the main Pride event,

the city chooses a

street to be decked out

in bright Pride colors.

Today, in the

center of the city,

volunteers are preparing to

paint the busy retail street,

Bankastraeti with a

giant Progress Pride flag.

Among the volunteers

painting the street today is

q*eer educator

and activist, Mars.

MARS: We are painting

the street of Bankastraeti in

the Intersex-Inclusive

Progress Pride flag.

So we are not only focusing on

people who are gay or lesbian or

bisexual or have a

q*eer sexual orientation.

We're also focusing on

people who are intersex or

people who are trans

and people of color.

NARRATOR: The progress flag is a

Pride flag for the 21st century.

It adds new colors to

the Gilbert Baker rainbow.

The blue, pink and white

represent trans people and

gender diversity.

The black and brown stripes

represent people of color and

the yellow triangle and circle

represent intersex people.

Reykjavik's Progress Pride Flag

will be more than 250 feet long,

and cover one whole city block.

WOMAN: Hi.

(speaking in native language)

NARRATOR: As the

work gets underway,

from above, the street

begins to spring into color

the carefully crafted lines

a symbol of Iceland's

LGBTQ+ Pride.

Iceland is renowned for

its progressive politics.

In 2009 it elected the world's

first lesbian head of state.

Today, that spirit of

inclusivity is reflected in

the volunteers taking part.

MARS: It's not only

q*eer people themselves,

but also allies

and people that, like,

just want to

celebrate that show up.

And it's really family friendly.

And we have a lot of children

just running around everywhere.

It's really colorful.

NARRATOR: By mid-afternoon the

giant painted flag is complete.

From above, the stretches of

color are a bold addition to

Reykjavik's streets

and a great celebration of

Iceland's q*eer and

gender diverse people.

For some q*eer people,

who live in the most

progressive parts of the world,

every day can be an opportunity

to live out and proud.

Year-round visibility of

LGBTQ+ people is important and

makes Pride much

more than a march.

Our next stop

takes us to Germany,

and a ride with a famous

club of motorcycle enthusiasts.

This is the German

branch of the Dykes on Bikes,

a worldwide club

for lesbian bikers and

an iconic member of

the LGBTQ+ community.

Heike is the

president of the club.

HEIKE: The great thing

about Dykes on Bikes is,

first of all, the

sisterhood worldwide.

The solidarity as

a group, it's fantastic.

NARRATOR: It's a

sunny Sunday morning and

the group head off

on a 150 mile ride from

the heart of historic Cologne

to the rural Rhine River Gorge.

The Dykes on Bikes ride

each month of summer, the

club provides a community

and a sense of belonging.

And on today's trip,

they're inducting new members.

BEA: I was just trying to

find some women I can ride with.

Then, I saw the

Dykes on Bikes at Pride

and thought, "Hey, maybe

that's the right community,

we have the same background,

the same interests."

NARRATOR: The Dykes on Bikes

are an icon of LGBTQ+ heritage.

They formed in San Francisco

in the mid-1970s and have been

taking part in

Pride Parades for over 45 years.

The club now has chapters

right across the world.

Each year the bikers

rev up the crowds as

they lead many Pride

marches across the world.

From Canada's

largest Pride in Toronto

to Sydney Mardi Gras

where up to 300 bikes

light up the night-time parade.

In Germany, it's time

for the new riders to become

fully inducted members

of this famous club and

to wear their club

patches with pride.

(speaking German).

BEA: I'm feeling proud to be a

part of these really nice women

who also advocate

for great things,

especially regarding

lesbian visibility to be

a part of the group

is really, really nice.

NARRATOR: LGBTQ+ visibility

in some parts of the world is

celebrated against the

backdrop of snowy white...

(cheering)

NARRATOR: For q*eer

people the world over,

the opportunity to

marry the one we love is

an important step in equality.

In 2001 the Netherlands was

the first country in the world

to legalize same sex marriage.

Over two decades later,

in Europe, almost 20 countries

recognize same sex marriage.

In the Americas, there are

nine countries where people of

the same gender can live

in legally recognized union.

As of 2023,

same sex marriage is legal in

over 32 countries

across the world.

Our next Pride party is in

the first country in Oceania to

allow same-sex marriage.

New Zealand's

Southern Alps are some of

the highest

mountains in Oceania.

In the peak of Winter

this setting plays host to

a most unusual event.

Winter Pride.

The highlight of the week-long

festival is the Color Run.

It's a mountain Pride Parade.

Skiers dress in

bright rainbow colors and

all their Pride finery.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: It's an event that

Chinese-Australian Justin Song

has been looking

forward to all year.

JUSTIN: I'm very, very

excited about the Color Run.

It's going to lay the mark

and the whole mountain will

know that we are here.

NARRATOR:

New Zealand's Winter Pride

is the largest

Winter Pride Festival

in the Southern Hemisphere.

Alongside skiing,

park runs and partying,

the festival also helps raise

money for local q*eer charities,

including LGBTQ+

youth support groups.

MAN (over megaphone): Six,

five, four, three, two, one.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: The

downhill run begins.

Filling the

mountains with Pride colors.

New Zealand is renowned

as a progressive place for

LGBTQ+ people to live.

As well as Winter Pride,

this small island nation has

over ten other Pride

events throughout the year.

CHELSEA: I feel safe here,

I feel like

everybody is accepting.

Whoo!

MAN: Woo!

WOMAN: I think New Zealand is

a really good place to be LGBT.

Be proud about who you

are and what you're about.

Which I think is the

ultimate goal really.

NARRATOR: After the

ten-minute downhill run

they arrive at the resort.

It's a special moment

for those taking part.

AARON: Seeing all those flags

going down that slope today

I'm super proud of that.

WOMAN: It was like

a ribbon of color.

It was so good I think it

kind of signified the unity.

NARRATOR: The Color Run

is over for another year.

For Justin, it's a

chance to reflect on

the meaning of Winter Pride.

JUSTIN: It makes me proud

of myself being who I am,

of my cultural

background or sexuality,

or just me as a person that

I can be the true myself and

release all that

energy on this mountain.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: Not all countries

are as inclusive as New Zealand.

Across most of the world,

q*eer and gender diverse people

face persecution and

v*olence on a daily basis.

As of 2023, 67 countries

still criminalize h*m*.

11 of those can

impose the death penalty

as punishment for being gay.

But glimmers of hope remain

for the people who live in fear.

In Sri Lanka,

despite oppressive laws,

nearly 50 brave

people walk through

the capital city of Columbo.

They march in solidarity to

raise awareness of their plight.

It's a small but

powerful statement of Pride.

Protests and

activism can bring change,

and there are some

nations that appear like

bright beacons of hope,

shining light on their

neighbors and leading the way,

to the future of Pride.

NARRATOR: Next, we travel

to an island in East Asia,

where q*eer people

enjoy more freedoms than

most others in the region.

Taiwan, its capital's Pride

is one of the largest in all

of East Asia and on a

rainy day it makes for

an extraordinary aerial view.

Sean Du is a local gay activist.

He became involved in LGBTQ+

activism as a university student

and helped organize Taiwan's

first Pride 20 years ago.

There were fewer than

800 fearless activists

at that first protest march.

SEAN: For the first Pride, uh,

people are really

nervous about it.

But now, you can see

that people are very happy.

And it's just like a reunion.

So, I can find

out a lot of friends.

Old friend, new friend.

We connect to each other.

NARRATOR: It's early morning

and Sean and his friends have

arrived at Taipei City Hall to

dress their float

in a mass of balloons.

The float promotes the Taiwan

Tongzhi Hotline Association.

The Hotline is the oldest q*eer

rights association in Taiwan.

It provides support to tens of

thousands of people each year.

Even in liberal Taipei,

coming out can be a challenge.

And it's vital the

float stands out so that

more people become

aware the Hotline exists.

They put the finishing

touches to the display of over

200 brightly colored balloons

transforming it into

a beacon of LGBTQ+ Pride.

(speaking in native language)

NARRATOR: The rain is

pouring down in Taipei today

but Sean hopes

his bright display

will bring a splash of

sunshine to the gloom.

SEAN: I hope the

weather would be better but

we cannot control it.

So I hope that people won't

be afraid because of weather.

Like more and more LGBcommunity and supporters can

all join us and to celebrate

and also to be our true self.

NARRATOR: After two hours,

the balloons are attached and

the float is ready to go.

From above, the

truck is a mass of color.

SEAN: I think that the most

beautiful float we have so far.

NARRATOR: It's 2:00 pm and

Taipei City Center fills with

tens of thousands

of colorful umbrellas,

as people brave the weather

to march for LGBTQ+ Pride.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: Taiwan has a

history of youth led protests

and activism that have aided

the island's liberal stance of

h*m* and

same sex relationships.

This year's parade has

been another massive success.

Thousands have seen

the Hotline's float.

And Sean hopes it will be a

lifeline to even more people on

their coming out journey.

(cheering)

SEAN: It's very proud for

me to stand on the float.

The first Pride was really hard.

And I cannot imagine that, okay,

so after 20 years,

we can have such big Pride.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: The next stop on

our Pride journey takes us

to Mozambique, where art is

making a stand for human rights.

The Amsterdam Rainbow Dress

is a living art work by

Dutch designers

Arnout van Krimpen,

Mattijs van Bergen, Jochem Kaan

and Oeri van Woezik.

The artwork has

travelled globally to

raise awareness

of LGBTQ+ rights.

The dress was displayed in

Mozambique's capital Maputo in

2022 as a way of drawing

attention to the continued fight

for rights across Africa.

From above, the dress,

which is over 2,000 square feet,

is a patchwork of

68 national flags,

and nine rainbow flags.

Each national flag

belongs to a country

that criminalizes LGBTQ+ people.

When a country ends

its discriminatory laws,

its panel will be

replaced with a rainbow.

When every q*eer person on Earth

is free of legal persecution,

the dress will be transformed

into a gown of rainbow colors.

Staying in Africa, there's

one nation that's pressing for

change across a whole continent.

NARRATOR: We end our

Pride adventure at an event

for the whole of Africa.

Each year LGBTQ+ visitors

from dozens of African nations

descend on the South African

city of Johannesburg.

Organizers need to work

through the night to set up

the infrastructure

for this massive influx.

It's the night

before it all kicks off and

the streets of

Sandton are quiet.

A fleet of trucks line up,

waiting to bring in

the array of stages,

stalls and tents that

will make up the event space.

At midnight the

street is closed and

ready to begin the preparations.

The person in charge of

this huge event is Kaye Ally.

KAYE: You know, the

setup is always very tricky.

It's always a race against time.

What we do, here we have

to do perfectly because it is

for our community

at the end of the day.

NARRATOR: The 100 people rigging

the site work against the clock.

They unload the trucks,

erect the barriers,

and set up the

entire event space.

KAYE: There's a

lot of responsibility.

But if Pride can make a

difference to anyone and

give anyone the

sense of family and

sense of belonging,

then it's all worth it

at the end of the day.

NARRATOR: The following morning,

the sun reveals the

fruits of their labors.

The stage rig is

nearly complete.

The rest areas

are ready to go and

the vehicles start

to clear the site.

A few hours later...

the Pride party

is in full swing.

(cheering)

Drunk in love

DUDUZILE: The atmosphere

today is exuberant fueled with

so much joy and happiness.

So much enthusiasm.

Charisma, we see bold people.

Different types of people.

There's so much.

(sighs)

So much fun.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: Alongside the dancing,

Johannesburg Pride

includes a protest march

where thousands of people demand

freedom for all LGBTQ+ Africans.

THABO: I came to represent

other African q*eer activists

and other African q*eer,

q*eer people that are not here.

MAN: Yes, babe!

WOMAN: I live in Midrand but

I'm originally from Swaziland.

This is my first Pride,

so it's very exciting.

It's lovely to be here.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: Many call

Johannesburg Pride,

the Pride of Africa.

The first march took

place over 30 years ago,

but it remains one of the few

legal Prides on the continent.

(cheering)

LEBO: Pride of Africa would

definitely mean all the Africans

in the entire continent coming

together and standing firm for

what they believe in,

which is the Rainbow Nation,

the q*eer Nation.

But also for being part of

the freedom that we deserve.

(cheering)

NARRATOR: As the sun sets on

a successful Johannesburg Pride

the party continues.

It offers hope to an

entire continent and

an entire world

who want to be free.

Our Pride aerial

adventure is at an end and

from across the world,

we come together with you and

all members of the

global LGBTQ+ community

in strength, unity and Pride.

ALL: Happy Pride!

(cheering)
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