Alcohol Focus Scotland. (2025) Community not a commodity: the LGBT+ community’s views on alcohol marketing. Edinburgh: Alcohol Focus Scotland.
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This report is based on a series of workshops held in late 2024 with LGBT+ individuals, offering a safe space for participants to share their experiences and perspectives on alcohol marketing. The report captures participants’ reflections on how alcohol is promoted in LGBT+ venues, events, and media - and how this intersects with their own experiences of identity, inclusion, and community.
Key findings include:
- Superficial inclusivity: Participants expressed concern that alcohol brands use rainbow branding and slogans as a marketing tactic, without offering meaningful support to the community.
- Commercialisation of queer history: Some brands were seen to exploit the legacy of events like the Stonewall Riots for promotional gain, which many found inappropriate and offensive.
- Social pressures and unrealistic portrayals: Alcohol advertising was seen to reinforce the idea that drinking is a necessary part of queer social life, contributing to pressure and exclusion - especially for those in recovery or who choose not to drink.
- Alcohol in queer spaces: There was a strong sense that LGBT+ venues are too often centred around alcohol, with limited alcohol-free alternatives available.
- Pride and sponsorship: The presence of alcohol companies at Pride events was a particular point of discomfort, with some participants questioning whether these partnerships are aligned with the values Pride is meant to represent.
The report makes a series of recommendations aimed at both policy-makers and the LGBT+ community, including calls for increased regulation of alcohol marketing, more inclusive alcohol-free spaces, and a critical rethink of corporate sponsorship at Pride.
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