Glaad Awards 2024 Nominations, Wiki, Host, and More

Explore the history and impact of the GLAAD Media Awards, an annual event that recognizes and honors media that accurately and inclusively represents the LGBT community.

by Reshwanth A

Updated Jan 18, 2024

Glaad Awards 2024 Nominations, Wiki, Host, and More
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Glaad Awards 2024

The 35th GLAAD Media Awards will happen in 2024. GLAAD organizes this event every year to celebrate and honor movies, TV shows, video games, musicians, and journalism that represent the LGBT community in a fair and inclusive way. The awards will be given out in two separate ceremonies. The first one will be on March 14, 2024, in Beverly Hills, California, and the second one will be on May 11, 2024, in New York City.

The works that are eligible for these awards are those that were released or published between January 1, 2023, and December 31, 2023. People are excited to find out who the nominees and winners will be, as these awards help promote diversity, understanding, and acceptance in the media.

Join us at Fresherslive to explore current news and trends presented in a clear and concise manner. Our goal is to keep you informed without any confusion, making your journey of staying updated a smooth one.

Glaad Awards 2024 Nominations

Outstanding Film – Wide Theatrical Release

  • All of Us Strangers (Searchlight Pictures)
  • American Fiction (Amazon MGM Studios)
  • Anyone But You (Columbia Pictures)
  • The Blackening (Lionsgate Films)
  • Bottoms (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer)
  • The Color Purple (Warner Bros.)
  • It’s a Wonderful Knife (RLJE Films)
  • Knock at the Cabin (Universal Pictures)
  • Moving On (Roadside Attractions)
  • Shortcomings (Sony Pictures Classics)

Outstanding Film – Limited Theatrical Release

  • Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe (Blue Fox Entertainment)
  • The Blue Caftan (Strand Releasing)
  • Blue Jean (Magnolia Pictures)
  • How to Blow Up a Pipeline (Neon)
  • Joyland (Oscilloscope)
  • L’immensità (Music Box Films)
  • Monica (IFC Films)
  • Our Son (Vertical Entertainment)
  • Passages (Mubi)
  • Summoning Sylvia (​​The Horror Collective)

Outstanding Film – Streaming Or TV

  • Cassandro (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Christmas on Cherry Lane (Hallmark Channel)
  • Friends & Family Christmas (Hallmark)
  • Frybread Face and Me (Array Releasing)
  • Nuovo Olimpo (Netflix)
  • NYAD (Netflix)
  • Red, White, and Royal Blue (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Runs in the Family (Indigenous Film Distribution)
  • Rustin (Netflix)
  • You’re Not Supposed To Be Here (Lifetime Television)

Outstanding Documentary

  • Beyond the Aggressives: 25 Years Later (MTV Documentary Films)
  • Eldorado: Everything the Nazis Hate (Netflix)
  • Every Body (Focus Features)
  • Kokomo City (Magnolia Pictures)
  • Little Richard: I Am Everything (Magnolia Pictures)
  • Orlando, My Political Biography (Janus Films)
  • Rainbow Rishta (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Rock Hudson: All That Heaven Allowed (HBO
  • Documentary Films)
  • The Stroll (HBO)
  • “UYRA – The Rising Forest” POV (PBS)

Outstanding New Series

  • The Buccaneers (Apple TV+)
  • Class (Netflix)
  • Culprits (Hulu)
  • Deadloch (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Everything Now (Netflix)
  • Found (NBC)
  • Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies (Paramount+)
  • The Last of Us (HBO)
  • The Other Black Girl (Hulu)
  • Tore (Netflix)

Outstanding Drama Series

  • 9-1-1: Lone Star (Fox)
  • The Chi (Showtime)
  • Chucky (SyFy/USA Network)
  • Doctor Who (Disney+)
  • Good Trouble (Freeform)
  • Grey’s Anatomy (ABC)
  • Quantum Leap (NBC)
  • Riverdale (The CW)
  • Station 19 (ABC)
  • Yellowjackets (Showtime)

Outstanding Comedy Series

  • And Just Like That… (Max)
  • Good Omens (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Harlem (Prime Video)
  • Harley Quinn (Max)
  • Our Flag Means Death (Max)
  • Sex Education (Netflix)
  • Somebody Somewhere (HBO)
  • Ted Lasso (Apple TV+)
  • What We Do In The Shadows (FX)
  • With Love (Amazon Prime Video)

Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series

  • Black Cake (Hulu)
  • Bodies (Netflix)
  • The Confessions of Frannie Langton (Britbox)
  • The Fall of the House of Usher (Netflix)
  • Fellow Travelers (Showtime)
  • The Full Monty (FX)
  • The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story (Netflix)
  • Scott Pilgrim Takes Off (Netflix)
  • Transatlantic (Netflix)

Outstanding Reality Program

  • Bargain Block (HGTV)
  • Family Karma (Bravo)
  • I Am Jazz (TLC)
  • Living for the Dead (Hulu)
  • Queer Eye (Netflix)
  • Real Housewives of New York City (Bravo)
  • Selling Sunset (Netflix)
  • Swiping America (Max)
  • TRANSworld Atlanta (Tubi)
  • The Ultimatum: Queer Love (Netflix)

Outstanding Reality Competition Program

  • The Boulet Brothers’ Dragula (Shudder/AMC+)
  • The Challenge: Battle for a New Champion (MTV)
  • Drag Me to Dinner (Hulu)
  • Love Trip: Paris (Freeform)
  • My Kind of Country (Apple TV+)
  • Next in Fashion (Netflix)
  • Project Runway (Bravo)
  • RuPaul’s Drag Race (MTV)
  • Survivor (CBS)
  • The Voice (NBC)

Outstanding Children’s Programming

  • “Any Way You Slice It” Strawberry Shortcake: Berry in the Big City (Netflix)
  • “Blue River Wedding” Ada Twist: Scientist (Netflix)
  • Bossy Bear (Nick Jr.)
  • Firebuds (Disney Jr.)
  • Monster High (Nickelodeon)
  • Pinecone & Pony (AppleTV+)
  • Princess Power (Netflix)
  • Ridley Jones (Netflix)
  • Summer Camp Island (Cartoon Network)
  • Work It Out Wombats! (PBS Kids)

Outstanding Kids & Family Programming or Film – Live Action

  • Heartstopper (Netflix)
  • High School Musical: The Musical: The Series (Disney+)
  • Jane (AppleTV+)
  • Power Rangers Cosmic Fury (Netflix)
  • XO, Kitty (Netflix)

Outstanding Kids & Family Programming or Film – Animated

  • Adventure Time: Fionna and Cake (Max)
  • Craig Of The Creek (Cartoon Network)
  • The Dragon Prince (Netflix)
  • The Ghost and Molly McGee (Disney Channel)
  • Hailey’s On It! (Disney Channel)
  • The Loud House (Nickelodeon)
  • Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur (Disney Channel)
  • Nimona (Netflix)
  • The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder (Disney+)
  • Transformers: EarthSpark (Paramount+)

Outstanding Music Artist

  • Billy Porter, Black Mona Lisa (Island UK/Republic Records)
  • boygenius, The Record (Interscope)
  • Brandy Clark (Slate Creek/Warner Records Inc.)
  • Janelle Monae, The Age of Pleasure (Atlantic Records)
  • Kim Petras, Feed the Beast & Problematique (Amigo/Republic Records)
  • Miley Cyrus, Endless Summer Vacation (Columbia Records)
  • Renee Rapp, Snow Angel (Interscope)
  • Sam Smith, Gloria (Capitol Records)
  • Troye Sivan, Something to Give Each Other (EMI Australia/Capitol Records)
  • Victoria Monet, JAGUAR II (Lovett Music/RCA Records)

Outstanding Breakthrough Music Artist

  • Chappell Roan (Amusement/Island Records)
  • David Archuleta (Archie Music)
  • Fancy Hagood (Fancy Hagood Enterprises)
  • G FLIP (Future Classic)
  • Ice Spice (10K Projects/Capitol Records)
  • Iniko (Columbia Records)
  • Jade LeMac (Artista Records)
  • The Scarlet Opera (Republic Records)
  • Slayyyter (FADER Label)
  • UMI (Keep Cool/RCA)

Outstanding Broadway Production

  • Fat Ham, by James Ijames
  • How to Dance in Ohio, by Jacob Yandura and Rebekah Greer Melocik
  • Melissa Etheridge: My Window, by Melissa Etheridge
  • Once Upon A One More Time, by Jon Hartmere
  • The Sign in Sydney Brustein’s Window, by Lorraine Hansberry

Outstanding Podcast

  • Finding Fire Island (Broadway Podcast Network)
  • Gay and Afraid with Eric Sedeño (Past Your Bedtime)
  • Las Culturistas (iHeart)
  • NPR’s Embedded (NPR)
  • Queen of Hearts (Wondery)
  • Rooted Recovery Stories (Promises Behavioral Health)
  • Sibling Rivalry (Studio 71)
  • That Conversation With Tarek Ali (BYALI Entertainment)
  • This Queer Book Saved My Life (This Queer Book Productions, LLC)
  • TransLash (TransLash Media)

Outstanding Video Game

  • Baldur’s Gate 3 (Larian Studios)
  • Goodbye Volcano High (KO_OP)
  • Horizon Forbidden West: Burning Shores (Guerrilla Games/Sony Interactive Entertainment)
  • Little Goody Two Shoes (AstralShift/Square Enix)
  • Overwatch 2 (Blizzard Entertainment)
  • Stray Gods: The Roleplaying Musical (Summerfall Studios/Humble Games)
  • Tchia (Awaceb/Kepler Interactive)
  • Thirsty Suitors (Outerloop Games/Annapurna Interactive)
  • This Bed We Made (Lowbirth Games)
  • Too Hot To Handle 2 (Nanobit/Netflix Games)

Outstanding Comic Book

  • Adventures of Superman: Jon Kent, written by Tom Taylor (DC Comics)
  • Betsy Braddock: Captain Britain, written by Tini Howard (Marvel Comics)
  • Hawkgirl, written by Jadzia Axelrod (DC Comics)
  • Killer Queens 2, written by David M. Booher (Dark Horse Comics)
  • The Neighbors, written by Jude Ellison S. Doyle (BOOM! Studios)
  • New Mutants Lethal Legion, written by Charlie Jane Anders (Marvel Comics)
  • The Oddly Pedestrian Life of Christopher Chaos, written by Tate Brombal based on an idea by James Tynion IV (Dark Horse Comics)
  • Poison Ivy, written by G. Willow Wilson (DC Comics)
  • Star Wars: Doctor Aphra, written by Alyssa Wong (Marvel Comics)
  • Tim Drake: Robin, written by Meghan Fitzmartin (DC Comics)

Outstanding Original Graphic Novel/Anthology

  • Blackward, by Lawrence Lindell (Drawn & Quarterly)
  • Carmilla: The First Vampire, written by Amy Chu (Berger Books/Dark Horse Comics)
  • Cosmoknights (Book Two), by Hannah Templer (Top Shelf Productions)
  • Four-Color Heroes, by Richard Fairgray (Fanbase Press)
  • Heartstopper Vol. 5, by Alice Oseman (Graphix/Scholastic)
  • Light Carries On, by Ray Nadine (Dark Horse Books)
  • Northranger, written by Rey Terciero (HarperAlley)
  • Parallel, by Matthias Lehmann (ONI Press)
  • Roaming, by Jillian Tamaki, Mariko Tamaki (Drawn & Quarterly)
  • Us, by Sara Soler (Dark Horse Books)

Outstanding Variety or Talk Show Episode

  • “Certainty” Turning the Tables with Robin Roberts (Disney+)
  • “Chaos, Law, and Order” The Problem With Jon Stewart (Apple TV+)
  • “Cynthia Nixon and Kim Petras” Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen (Bravo)
  • “Dulcé Sloan & Sasha Colby Talk What It Means to Be A Happy Trans Person” The Daily Show (Comedy Central)
  • “Elliot Page Opens Up In New Memoir: ‘It Felt Like The Right Time’” The View (ABC)
  • “The Hardest Fight Is the Fight Against Status Quo” The Conversations Project (Hulu)
  • “I’m Not Just Gay, I’m Your Son” Karamo (syndicated)
  • “Jennifer Hudson Surprises HIV Activist with $10,000” The Jennifer Hudson Show (syndicated)
  • “Trace Lysette & Patricia Clarkson, Laverne Cox” The Kelly Clarkson Show (syndicated)
  • “Unapologetically Me” Tamron Hall (syndicated)

Outstanding TV Journalism Segment

  • “11th Hour: Transgender Athletes and What People Don’t Understand” The 11th Hour (MSNBC)
  • “19-Year-Old Designer CJ King Gets Second Chance to Walk the Runway” GMA3 (ABC)
  • “The All in Y’all” (KEYE-TV CBS Austin)
  • “Anti-LGBTQ+ Law in Uganda that Threatens the Death Penalty Sparks International Outcry” PBS Newshour (PBS)
  • “Bringing Queer Joy into the World of Hip-Hop” ABC News Live Prime (ABC News Live)
  • “Des Moines LGBTQ Community Hosts First-Ever ‘People’s Pride’” (WOI-TV Local 5 Des Moines)
  • “Geena Rocero Talks About Her New Memoir ‘Horse Barbie’ and the Power of Living Unapologetically” CBS Mornings (CBS)
  • “How Eco-Drag Queen Pattie Gonia Defines What It Means to Fight for the Environment” Nightline (ABC)
  • “New York City Gay Bar Deaths Classified as Homicides” (NBC News Now)
  • “One-on-One with the President of the American Medical Association (AMA)” The CBS Evening News with Norah O’Donnell (CBS)

Outstanding TV Journalism – Long-Form

  • “Beyond Limits: Who I Am” CBS Sports (CBS)
  • “CBS Reports: A Nation in Transition” CBS News (CBS)
  • “Club Q One Year Later” (KKTV CBS 11 Colorado)
  • “Freedom to Exist” Soul of a Nation (ABC)
  • “It’s Ok To Ask Questions – Pidgeon Pagonis” (WMAQ-TV NBC 5 Chicago)
  • “Marty’s Place: Where Hope Lives” (+Life Media with KGO-TV & ABC Localish)
  • “Our America Who I’m Meant to Be – Episode 3” (ABC Owned Television Stations)
  • “Proud Voices: A NY1 Special” (Spectrum News NY1)
  • “Serving in Secret: Love, Country and ‘Dont Ask Don’t Tell’” (MSNBC)
  • “VICE Special Report – Out Loud // Big Freedia Presents: Young Queer Artists To Look Out For” (Vice News)

Outstanding Live TV Journalism – Segment or Special

  • “Capehart on SCOTUS rulings: ‘My Possibilities are Up to Them, Not Up to Me’”  The Last Word (MSNBC)
  • “CNN’s Anderson Cooper Speaks With Lauri Carleton’s Daughter, Ari Carleton, About Her Mother’s Legacy” Anderson Cooper 360 (CNN)
  • “Flipping the Script: Live Interviews on LGBTQ+ Community” Morning News NOW (NBC News Now)
  • “Gio Benitez Interviews Sasha Velour on Her Book and the Climate of Drag in America” Good Morning America (ABC)
  • “Indiana Students Put on LGBTQ-Themed Play Themselves After it’s Canceled By the School” Yasmin Vossoughian Reports (MSNBC)
  • “José Díaz-Balart Reports: A Texas Mother’s Fight: the Case for Gender-Affirming Care” José Díaz-Balart Reports (MSNBC)
  • “One-on-One with Eureka O’Hara” The Reid Out (MSNBC)
  • “Pride Across America” (ABC News Live)
  • “TikTok Sensations ‘The Old Gays’ Talk About How They Became Friends and Their New Docuseries” TODAY with Hoda & Jenna (NBC)
  • “Two Anti-LGBTQ Bills Advance to Louisiana House” Breakdown (WWL-TV CBS New Orleans)

Outstanding Print Article

  • “As Drag Bans Proliferate, Maren Morris Goes Deep With Drag’s Biggest Stars on Why the Show Must Go On” by Stephen Daw (Billboard)
  • “Black Queer History is American History” by Myeshia Price (TIME)
  • “‘But Most of All I’m Human’: These 3 Transgender Teens Prove Identity Stretches Beyond One Label” by Susan Miller (USA TODAY)
  • “The Dancer” by Matt Kemper (The Atlanta-Journal Constitution)
  • “Heroism Overpowers Hate” by John Sotomayor (Embrace Magazine)
  • “Kim Petras Is Breaking the Mold” by Jeff Nelson (People)
  • “Pop Icons Are ‘Mothers’ Now. The LGBTQ Ballroom Scene Wants Credit.” by Samantha Cherry (The Washington Post)
  • “Stop Bad Hair and Uglier Legislation (The New Classics)” by Karen Giberson (AC Magazine)
  • “Transgender Youth: ‘Forced Outing’ Bills Make Schools Unsafe” by Hannah Schoenbaum and Sean Murphy (AP)
  • “We Have the Tools to Stop HIV. So Why Is It Still Spreading?” by LZ Granderson (Los Angeles  Times)

Outstanding Magazine Overall Coverage

  • The Advocate
  • Billboard
  • People
  • Variety
  • Out

Outstanding Online Journalism Article

  • “The AP Interview: Pope Francis Says Homosexuality Not a Crime” by Nicole Winifield (AP.com)
  • “Book Banners Came for This Colorado Town. They Didn’t Anticipate Resistance.” By Jeff Fuentes Gleghorn (LGBTQNation.com)
  • “Evidence Undermines ‘Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria’ Claims” by Timmy Broderick (ScientificAmerican.com)
  • “From Drag Bans to Sports Restrictions, 75 Anti-LGBTQ Bills Have Become Law in 2023” by Jo Yurcaba (NBCNews.com)
  • “How the Latinx Drag Queens of Brooklyn Are Finding Freedom through Their Cultures” by Juan De Dios Sanchez Jurado (TeenVogue.com)
  • “Pedro Zamora, ‘Real World’ Star Who Died of AIDS, ‘Humanized the Disease for a Generation,’ Say Activists” by David Artavia (Yahoo.com)
  • “Pride Month Feels Different As Threats, Fear of Violence Grows” by Brooke Migdon (TheHill.com)
  • “Some Trans Kids Are Being Forced to Flee America for Their Safety” by Nico Lang (HuffPost.com)
  • “Stochastic Terrorism: Links between the GOP, Right-Wing Influencers & Neo-Nazi Violence” by Christopher Wiggins (Advocate.com)
  • “What Does Queer Gen Z Want on TV? Everything under the Rainbow” by Jude Cramer (INTOMore.com)

Outstanding Online Journalism – Video or Multimedia

  • “7 Remarkable Trans Elders Share Lessons for the Next Generation” (them.us)
  • “Brave Spaces” (PBS.org)
  • “CANS Can’t Stand” (NewYorker.com)
  • “Club Q: Stronger Together” (NFL.com)
  • “‘I’ve Always Known I Was Different’: Four Trans People Share Their Stories” (WashingtonPost.com)
  • “Michaela Jaé Rodriguez Calls Out the New York Times’ Anti-Trans Coverage & Advice for Trans Youth” (Variety.com)
  • “Moving Isa” (Insider.com)
  • “People Come Out to Their Parents | Truth or Drink” (Cut.com)
  • “Protecting Pride: Resilience after Tragedy – Club Q Survivors Fight to Project Their Community” (GoodMorningAmerica.com)
  • “Transnational” (Vice.com)

Outstanding Blog

  • Charlotte’s Web Thoughts
  • Erin in the Morning
  • Holy Bullies and Headless Monsters
  • LawDork
  • Mombian
  • Pittsburgh Lesbian Correspondents
  • The Queer Review
  • The Randy Report
  • The Reckoning
  • The Rot Spot

Special Recognition

  • The Dads (Netflix)
  • Love in Gravity
  • Relighting Candles (Hulu)
  • Renaissance: A Film by Beyonce (AMC Theatres)
  • The Tennessee Holler
  • Yes I Am: The Ric Weiland Story

Glaad Awards 2024 Date

The 35th GLAAD Media Awards is set to take place on March 14, 2024. This event celebrates and honors the outstanding achievements and contributions of the LGBTQ+ community in the media industry. With its rich history and commitment to inclusivity, the GLAAD Media Awards have become a prominent platform for recognizing the diverse voices and stories that have made a significant impact on society. As the date approaches, excitement builds among industry professionals, activists, and supporters who eagerly anticipate this night of celebration and recognition.

Glaad Awards Host

The host for the 35th GLAAD Media Awards in 2024 has not been announced yet. GLAAD, the organization behind the awards, is known for selecting talented and influential individuals to host their ceremonies. In the past, notable hosts have included celebrities such as Ross Mathews, Laverne Cox, and Andy Cohen. As the event approaches, GLAAD will likely make an official announcement regarding the host for the 35th GLAAD Media Awards.

Glaad Awards Overview

Awarded for

Outstanding representations of the LGBT community in media

Country

United States

Presented by

GLAAD

First awarded

1990

Country

United States

Disclaimer: The above information is for general informational purposes only. All information on the Site is provided in good faith, however we make no representation or warranty of any kind, express or implied, regarding the accuracy, adequacy, validity, reliability, availability or completeness of any information on the Site.

Glaad Awards 2024 Nominations - FAQs

1. What are the GLAAD Awards?

The GLAAD Awards are an annual event organized by GLAAD to celebrate and honor movies, TV shows, video games, musicians, and journalism that represent the LGBT community in a fair and inclusive way.

2. When will the 35th GLAAD Media Awards take place?

The 35th GLAAD Media Awards will be held in 2024. The first ceremony is scheduled for March 14, 2024, in Beverly Hills, California, and the second ceremony will take place on May 11, 2024, in New York City.

3. Who is eligible for the GLAAD Awards?

Works released or published between January 1, 2023, and December 31, 2023, are eligible for the 35th GLAAD Media Awards. These works include movies, TV shows, video games, musicians, and journalism that fairly and accurately represent the LGBT community.

4. Who will host the 35th GLAAD Media Awards?

The host for the 35th GLAAD Media Awards in 2024 has not been announced yet. GLAAD is known for selecting talented and influential individuals to host their ceremonies, and an official announcement regarding the host is expected closer to the event.

5. What is the purpose of the GLAAD Awards?

The GLAAD Awards aim to promote diversity, understanding, and acceptance in the media by recognizing and honoring outstanding representations of the LGBT community. These awards celebrate the achievements and contributions of the LGBT community in the media industry, sending powerful messages of acceptance to audiences globally.