Not So GLAAD: Uncharitable Greed

By Mark Segal

Photo: Diarmuid Greene / Collision / Sportsfile, Courtesy Philadelphia Gay News

What would you suggest if a politician used public funds to rent a seven-bedroom Swiss chateau, remodel their home office with public money, rent a vacation home in Provincetown for their family, and enjoy first-class air travel and Mercedes car service at their whim? You’d likely call for their resignation or at least an investigation to determine if any laws were broken.

The same standards should apply to leaders of our LGBTQ+ non-profits. All the examples I just mentioned were actions taken by GLAAD’s head, Sarah Kate Ellis, who has led GLAAD since 2014. While she has built a formidable organization, raking in millions in your donations, she seems to have become excessively comfortable with your donations. There used to be a term for those overpaid within our community: “Gay Inc.” Her spending is nothing less than — and I’m being polite here — gay greed.

Photo: Diarmuid Greene / Collision / Sportsfile, Courtesy Philadelphia Gay News

This is a subject I know well, having fought mainstream media’s depictions of and censorship of the LGBTQ+ community — a field that I, along with others, pioneered in 1972 long before GLAAD existed and when Sarah Kate Ellis was a 1-year-old. We did this by disrupting live TV shows like “The Today Show,” “The Tonight Show” and “The CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite.” These actions led to agreements with CBS News (thanks to Walter himself) and an agreement with Av Westin at ABC in 1973. Further along, we worked with Cathy Reena, who at a new organization called GLAAD was the National News Media Director, and we secured their first victory by canceling a nationally syndicated show. Through these and other efforts, we fought to give visibility to our community and lift us out of the darkness of invisibility. We did this out of passion for our community, making it possible for many of you today to have the privilege to be your true selves. It was a labor of love. We did not receive chandeliers; most of the time, we ended up in jail.

A New York Times investigative report published on Aug. 1 under the headline, “A Pattern of Lavish Spending at a Leading L.G.B.T.Q. Nonprofit,” reveals that GLAAD’s Sarah Kate Ellis has lived a life of luxury on your donations — into the millions of dollars. This includes renting a seven-bedroom Swiss chateau, a vacation home in Provincetown, remodeling her home office at $20,000, enjoying Mercedes car service and flying first class — along with a salary listed in 2021 (three years ago) as $575,000, with additional compensation over $27,000. That’s $600,000 without travel, for an organization that has a half-million-dollar yearly travel budget. But there’s one item in the Times report that stands out and should tell you all you need to know: That $20,000 remodeling of her home office included a chandelier.

Non-profits should not operate like this, and such behavior would not be tolerated in other communities. Even right-wing organizations have been targets for similar practices — just think of the National Rifle Association. Can you imagine the executive directors of the NAACP or Amnesty International behaving similarly?

Of course, GLAAD spokesperson Richard Ferraro attempts to defend her, stating lines similar to, “She’s going to comply with new rules,” “She needed the lavish housing for meetings,” and “We don’t think she can get that bonus in her final year of $1.3 million.” Nothing is said about the $150,000 signing bonus, a $250,000 exit bonus, nor how her yearly bonus system works. For a group focused on communications, Mr. Ferraro gets an F.

Mr. Ferraro wasn’t even transparent on the issue of yearly bonuses. In the last few days, I’ve spoken to many LGBTQ+ pioneers who’ve been fighting for equality for over 50 years. We request that Sarah Kate Ellis never again describe herself as an activist since many of us view her as a profiteer.

The word about GLAAD is that they are more interested in hobnobbing with celebrities to bring in donations. When you misuse those donations for home chandeliers, Swiss chateaus and vacation homes, you start morphing into the lifestyles of those celebrities, which makes you part of their world and not our world.

There is value for our community with GLAAD, but for it to be reputable again, it has some house cleaning to do. That means sweeping out the disreputable Sarah Kate Ellis and searching for someone who will bring transparency and honor back to the organization.

This article is courtesy of Philadelphia Gay News as part of a shared media partnership.

Mark Segal is an American journalist. He is the founder and publisher of Philadelphia Gay News and has won numerous journalism awards for his column “Mark My Words,” including best column by The National Newspaper Association, The Society of Professional Journalists and Suburban Newspaper Association. 

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