Diane Anderson-Minshall
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Diane Anderson-Minshall (born March 19, 1968) is an American journalist and author best known for writing about lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender subjects.[1] She was the first female CEO of Pride Media, publisher of The Advocate, Out, HIV Plus and other LGBTQ-focused magazines and websites.[2][3] She also co-authored the acclaimed 2014 memoir Queerly Beloved: A Love Story Across Genders, documenting her relationship with her husband Jacob Anderson-Minshall throughout his gender transition.[4][5]
Early life
Diane Anderson was born in Southern California, and later raised in Payette, Idaho from an early age. She is an alum of Tulane University (which she attended 1986–87) and Xavier University of Louisiana(1987–88). While working in publishing, she continued taking classes at University of California, Berkeley, Chaffey College, College of San Mateo, and Idaho State University before finishing a weekend B.A. degree completion program at the New College of California.
Career
In 1990, Anderson-Minshall became the editor of the Crescent City Star, a weekly LGBT newspaper in New Orleans.[6] In 1993, she was named editor at On Our Backs, the lesbian erotic magazine founded by Nan Kinney and Debbie Sundahl. A year later, she and fellow On Our Backs employees left the magazine and founded their own publication, the lesbian entertainment magazine Girlfriends.[6] She later became executive editor of Curve.[7] Anderson-Minshall started working for The Advocate in 2011.[8]
During her tenure at Girlfriends and later at other publications including Curve, Anderson-Minshall gained some attention for a series of high-profile celebrity interviews.[9] Dana Plato,[10] Angelina Jolie[11] and singer Sinéad O'Connor[12] "came out" as lesbian or bisexual women in interviews with Anderson-Minshall, although O'Connor and Plato later retracted their statements.[13]
In 1999, she founded the short-lived women's lifestyle magazine, Alice. As a freelance writer, her work has been published in many magazines, including Passport, Bust, Bitch, Venus, Utne and Seventeen. She became an editor at Curve magazine in 2004 and later became editor-in-chief.
Anderson-Minshall co-edited the anthology of LGBTQ youth writing, Becoming: Young Ideas on Gender, Race and Sexuality, and her autobiographical essays have appeared in several other anthologies. Her first solo fiction, Punishment with Kisses, was published in 2009.
She co-authored the 2014 memoir Queerly Beloved: A Love Story Across Genders with her husband Jacob. The work focuses on how their relationship survived the transition from lesbian couple to husband and wife.[14] The couple previously collaborated in writing the Blind Eye Detectives mystery series (Blind Curves, Blind Leap and the Lambda Literary Award finalist Blind Faith) through Bold Strokes Books. In 2015 Jacob Anderson-Minshall became the first openly transgender author to win a Goldie award from the Golden Crown Literary Society; he shared the award for best creative non-fiction book with Diane Anderson-Minshall for Queerly Beloved: A Love Story Across Genders.[15]
In 2015, she appeared on Larry King Now to talk about HIV in transgender women, explaining that trans woman had a higher rate of HIV than other people in the LGBTQIA community.
At Pride Media, Anderson-Minshall became editor-at-large at The Advocate and the editor-in-chief of HIV Plus Magazine. In 2018, she helped launched the company's Black gay male lifestyle publication Chill Magazine.
On January 15, 2020, Pride Media named Anderson-Minshall as its new chief executive officer, the first woman to hold such a position at the company.
Personal life
After her partner Jacob transitioned from female to male, the couple held a second wedding ceremony in 2006 to celebrate their union this time as husband and wife.[7]
Awards
- 1998 – Visa Versa award for her celebrity journalism at Girlfriends magazine.
- 2000 – Exceptional Women in Publishing (EWIP)'s Woman of the Year finalist
- 2006 – Power Up's Ten Amazing Gay Women in Showbiz Award
- 2009 – Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Mystery finalist, Blind Faith
- 2010 – GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Magazine Overall Coverage, The AdvocateScript error: No such module "Unsubst".
- 2011 – GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Magazine Overall Coverage, The AdvocateScript error: No such module "Unsubst".
- 2012 – Excellence in Journalism Award from Northern California Chapter of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association[16]
- 2012 – GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Magazine Overall Coverage, The AdvocateScript error: No such module "Unsubst".
- 2012 – NLGJA Northern California Chapter Excellence in Journalism Aware[17]
- 2013 – GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Magazine Overall Coverage, The AdvocateScript error: No such module "Unsubst".
- 2013 – LA Pride Osborn/Michaels Media Award,[18] which "honors those who disseminate information to the public for the betterment of the LGBT community in order to raise awareness and fight for equality."[19]
- 2013 – NLGJA Excellence in HIV/AIDS Coverage Award, Second Place: Diane Anderson-Minshall for a series in HIV Plus Magazine[20]
- 2014 – GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Magazine Overall Coverage, The AdvocateScript error: No such module "Unsubst".
- 2014 – GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Digital Journalism Article, "Prime Timers: Spotlight on LGBT Seniors" (series), Advocate.comScript error: No such module "Unsubst".
- 2014 – The First Annual WPA Awards of Distinction Leadership Award for helping develop the HIV Plus Treatment Guide Mobile App.[21]
- 2014 – NLGJA Los Angeles Chapter Overall Grand Prize for Excellence in Journalism for coverage of worst mass killing of LGBT people in U.S. History (prior to Orlando mass shooting)[22]
- 2014 – LA Press Club SoCal Journalism Award for Best Online Feature "Remembering the Worst Mass Killing of LGBT People in U.S. History[23]
- 2014 – Western Publishing Association Inaugural Maggie Leadership Award for creating the HIV Plus Treatment Guide mobile app[24]
- 2015 – GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Digital Journalism Article "31 Days of PrEP" (series), Advocate.comScript error: No such module "Unsubst".
- 2015 – NLGJA Excellence in Online Journalism Award, Third Place: Sunnivie Brydum for "40 Under 40: Emerging Voices," The Advocate with Michelle Garcia, Lucas Grindley, Daniel Reynolds, Neal Broverman, Trudy Ring, Jase Peeples, Diane Anderson-Minshall, Parker Marie Molloy, Tracy E. Gilchrist, Annie Hollenbeck, and Thom Senzee[25]
- 2015 – Shared the award for best creative non-fiction book from the Golden Crown Literary Society with her husband Jacob Anderson-Minshall for the book Queerly Beloved: A Love Story Across Genders.[15]
- 2015 – Special guest on the Larry King Now show educating the people about why Transgender women are 49% more likely to have HIV.
- 2016 – NLGJA Lisa Ben Award for Achievement in Features Coverage[26]
- 2016 – NLGJA Excellence in Profile Writing Award, First Place: Advocate Staff for "40 Under 40: Intersectional Coverage," The Advocate[27]
- 2016 – NLGJA Excellence in Social Media Award, First Place: Advocate Staff for "Day in LGBT America," The Advocate[27]
- 2017 – NLGJA Excellence in Bisexual Coverage Award for "Freddie Mercury's Life Story is the Story of HIV, Bisexuality, and Queer Identity," The Advocate[28]
- 2018 – NLGJA Sarah Pettit Memorial Award for the LGBTQ Journalist of the Year[29]
- 2018 – Folio: Eddie and Ozzie Award for Best Editorial Team of the Year[30]
- 2018 – Folio: Eddie and Ozzie Award for Best New Magazine Launch, Chill[30]
Works
Fiction
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Nonfiction
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Anthologies
- Reading the L Word: Outing Contemporary Television
- Bitchfest: Ten Years of Cultural Criticism from the Pages of Bitch Magazine
- Body Outlaws
- Closer to Home: Bisexuality and Feminism
- Young Wives Tales: New Adventures in Love and Partnership
- 50 Ways to Support Lesbian and Gay Equality: The Complete Guide to Supporting Family, Friends, Neighbors or Yourself
- Tough Girls
References
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External links
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- Pages with script errors
- 1968 births
- 20th-century American non-fiction writers
- 20th-century American women writers
- 21st-century American non-fiction writers
- 21st-century American women writers
- American feminist writers
- Chaffey College alumni
- Idaho State University alumni
- College of San Mateo alumni
- American LGBTQ journalists
- LGBTQ people from Idaho
- LGBTQ Native Americans
- Bisexual rights activists
- Bisexual women writers
- Bisexual memoirists
- Living people
- New College of California alumni
- Tulane University alumni
- University of California, Berkeley alumni
- Xavier University of Louisiana alumni
- People from Payette, Idaho
- American women non-fiction writers
- 21st-century American LGBTQ people
- American bisexual women
- American bisexual writers
- Memoirists from California