Watch: new marriage video from Australia
Posted on Nov 28, 2011 at 12:06 pm
Watch the amazing new marriage video from Australia's GetUp!.
Second New Yorkers United for Marriage TV Ad—Check It Out!
Posted on Jun 06, 2011 at 04:24 pm
Today, New Yorkers United for Marriage – the coalition that Freedom to Marry helped create and co-leads – released its second statewide television ad as part of the coalition’s campaign to pass legislation that would allow gay and lesbian couples to marry in the state of New York.
New York Ranger Sean Avery Comes Out for Marriage
Posted on May 09, 2011 at 01:48 pm
New York Ranger Sean Avery became the first professional athlete in New York to announce his support for the freedom to marry.
Marriage efforts heat up in key states
Posted on Jan 12, 2011 at 01:30 pm
Josh Bell, Freedom to Marry's online content manager, highlights new opportunities and challenges in key states for the freedom to marry in 2011.
Opponents of marriage equality launch $100,000 ad campaign
Posted on Jan 11, 2011 at 03:00 pm
The local chapter of the National Organization for Marriage plans to launch a $100,000 TV advertising campaign aimed at defeating the legalization of marriage for same-sex couples in Rhode Island.
NOM seeks to influence November elections
Posted on Oct 05, 2010 at 12:30 pm
The anti-marriage equality National Organization for Marriage filed federal court lawsuits in Florida, New York and Rhode Island challenging the states’ campaign finance laws.
The organization has cited the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment to void restrictions on political advertising and campaign-finance disclosure laws in the three states.
Cynthia Nixon Joins Fight To Oust Anti-Freedom to Marry Senators
Posted on Mar 11, 2010 at 10:22 am
Cynthia Nixon has joined the fight to oust senators who voted against a freedom to marry bill in New York.
The openly lesbian Nixon stars in a new video for Fight Back NY, the political action committee that is targeting anti-gay senators.
Super Bowl Kiss Ad May Force CBS to Rate Smooches
Posted on Jan 30, 2010 at 04:03 pm
Faith and Reason (USA Today) January 29, 2010
Controversy on whether an advertisement for ManCrunch, a gay dating site, will air on CBS during the Super Bowl comes amid controversy surrounding CBS's decision to air an ad from Focus on the Family. [Link]
Op-Ed: NOM recycles its garbage in New Jersey, Garden State Equality responds
Posted on Nov 25, 2009 at 11:58 am
November 24, 2009
Lurleen discusses how NOM is pouring hundreds of thousands of dollars into an anti-gay campaign in New Jersey featuring recycled falsehoods from other state campaigns:
Male ANNCR: Here's a question. If you were a state legislator, what would you focus on during the Lame Duck session?Garden State Equality has fought back with two new ads of its own:
Female ANNCR: There's lots of choices. I'd say jobs and the economy. And the budget deficit!
Male ANNCR: Good pick there. New Jersey has an $8 billion deficit. You know what some legislators are focused on? Redefining marriage. Throwing marriage to the curb and redefining it as any two people regardless of gender.
Female ANNCR: With all our problems, they want to legalize gay marriage?
Male ANNCR: Governor Corzine had four years to bring this issue up but hasn't, and now, with just days to go in his administration, the big push is on.
Female ANNCR: No voter input. No accountability. Give me a break!
Male ANNCR: 290,000 New Jerseyans have signed petitions opposing gay marriage. And every state where the people have voted on gay marriage has rejected it.
Female ANNCR: Gay couples ought to be able to live as they choose, but they shouldn't get lame duck legislators to redefine marriage for all of society.
Male ANNCR: Take a stand. Call your state legislators and tell them you oppose redefining marriage.
Paid for by the National Organization for Marriage.
Man: Can you believe what's happening in New Jersey? Hospitals won't let some people visit sick loved ones. And some employers won't give health care to couples who aren't married. It's terrible! Civil unions aren't good enough.
Woman: I don't understand why New Jersey doesn't let all couples... just... marry. When two people marry, it doesn't affect our marriage.
Man: Wait - no health care?! In this economy?! Because people can't marry?! That ain't fair.
Woman: And neither are the phony arguments against equality. What does anyone's marriage have to do with curriculum? New Jersey law already lets parents control what's taught in school.
Man: We need to focus on the economy... jobs... lowering taxes. You know what?
Straight, gay... let people get married. Have equal health care. And share the American dream.
Woman: Paid for by Garden State Equality. We believe in equality for everyone.
Announcer: New Jersey parents. New Jersey heroes. Marsha and Louise.
Louise: We've had to deal with raising four children, two of whom had significant handicaps. They could not be without health insurance. When I was looking for jobs, I had to ask the question, "Do you have civil union benefits?" Many looked at me as if I had two heads.
Announcer: New Jersey's civil union law failed Marsha, Louise and their children.
Marsha: That put us in quite a bit of debt in order to meet their special needs. One of our children had significant medical complications... and he passed in July.
Louise: We've been together for 20 years, in circumstances in which most people would have separated or divorced. I don't know what a marriage is, if it is not what we have, and I want that legal recognition.
Announcer: Give Marsha and Louise the freedom to marry. It won't affect your marriage, but it will mean everything to them.
Paid for by Garden State Equality.
Help keep Garden State Equality's ads on the air with a donation. And if you're a New Jersey resident, contact your legislators and let them know that voting on and passing the Freedom of Religion and Equality in Civil Marriage Act this session is not negotiable. [Link]
Garden State Equality - TV Commercial “Emilia”
Posted on Nov 05, 2009 at 02:44 pm
November 3, 2009
Garden State Equality releases a commercial in support of marriage equality in N.J. featuring a straight woman who emphasizes, through speaking about her own experiences visiting her dying husband in the hospital, how the state's civil unions law fails to adequately protect gay couples. [Link]






