LGBT+ History Month: 3 groundbreaking campaigns from the ’80s and ’90s

Table of Contents

Subaru

In the 1990s, Subaru did some research to identify four groups of key buyers in their American market. They made a surprising discovery – there was a fifth group, and they were single women living as the head of a household.

Subaru “coded” the ads so that only lesbians would understand – there were allusions to the TV show Xena: Warrior Princess, a popular gay vacation spot, and super smart a-ha copy.

United Colors Of Benetton

In the early ’90s, United Colors Of Benetton produced some of the most controversial ads of the era. The brand was forthright in its support for the queer community with arresting imagery that remains striking to this day.

Ranging from AIDS activism to empowering images of interracial queer relationships, the fashion firm was bold in its backing of LGBTQIA+ communities at a time when doing so was still taboo.

Celebrating change-making campaigns

While we celebrate LGBT+ History Month and the rights for which queer people have fought and won, there’s still more work to do. Many parts of the community are moving into the mainstream – but certain groups remain marginalised. 

This LBGT History Month we’ll be donating to ICON UK, a charity focusing on supporting people with I/VSC (intersex traits/variations of sex characteristics) and Mermaids, a charity supporting trans, non-binary and gender-diverse children, young people and their families.

Want to get involved? Donate here:

If you’d like to share any amazing queer campaigns with us, we’d love to hear from you – email us at hello@digitalradish.co.uk

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