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Hallmark pulls ad featuring lesbian couple after conservative protest

People are now boycotting the channel.

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Tiffanie Drayton

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The Hallmark channel is at the center of a controversy for removing an ad featuring a lesbian couple that previously aired on the network.

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The decision came after conservative group One Million Moms and website LifeSiteNews circulated petitions demanding the removal of the ad and for the network to refrain from introducing LGBTQ characters into its films, warning that they would boycott the network.

“Hallmark would be offending Christian viewers and Christian parents big time, by experimenting with homosexual themes, and, or cooperating with LGBT indoctrination agenda,” LifeSiteNews’ petition reads. “By doing so, Hallmark would risk losing a big part of their market–because people just couldn’t be sure of what to expect.”

The One Million Moms’ petition echoed similar sentiments, arguing that Hallmark should remain “family-friendly” and should not be “politically correct by forcing tolerance and acceptance of homosexuality, a sinful lifestyle that scripture clearly deems as wrong.”

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In response to the conservative backlash, Hallmark made the decision to pull an ad featuring a lesbian couple by Zola, a company that offers wedding services and online registries.

In the ad, the two women are standing at the altar when they start a conversation about whether their wedding would’ve gone more smoothly had they used Zola’s services. The brides eventually kiss and agree their big day would’ve been better with the company’s help. After Zola became aware of the news that Hallmark cut the ad, the company decided to pull all of its advertising “for the foreseeable future,” according to Variety.

In a statement to the New York Times, Hallmark blamed the couple’s PDA for its choice to pull the ad, arguing it violated the network’s policies. However, many noted that a similar ad featuring a heterosexual couple wasn’t censored.

Many expressed outrage and disappointment on Twitter over Hallmark’s decision to cave to conservative pressure.

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“This is the lovely ad that Hallmark channel pulled from their broadcast after conservatives complained. A simple kiss by lesbian newlyweds. Same-sex marriage has been the law of the land for four years. LGBTQ families are beautiful,” tweeted Charlotte Clymer, a staff member at the Human Rights Campaign.

https://twitter.com/cmclymer/status/1205988565248856064

GLAAD, an organization that advocates for LGBTQ rights, also tweeted about the controversy.

“The Hallmark Channel’s decision to remove LGBTQ families in such a blatant way is discriminatory and especially hypocritical coming from a network that claims to present family programming,” Sarah Kate Ellis, president and CEO of GLAAD, said in a statement.

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Others shared their thoughts with the trending hashtag #BoycottHallmark.

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“I married my husband in 2009, and we raised 5 children together. The ⁦Hallmark channel’s decision to cave to pressure from homophobes is very sad. Until they affirm the equality of LGBTQ families, we will #BoycottHallmark. Love makes a family,” Jon Cooper, chairman of the Democratic Coalition, tweeted. 

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https://twitter.com/B52Malmet/status/1206202689245155329

In response to Hallmark’s decision to pull the ad, Walt Disney Television’s Freeform channel stepped up to offer Zola’s advertising a new home.

“This is what happens when you focus all your energy on exclusion instead of clever plotlines. Call us, Zola. We celebrate the holidays with everyone,” the channel tweeted.

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So far it is unclear where Zola will host its family-friendly advertisements.

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H/T Variety.com

 
The Daily Dot