We Speak Events
East & Southeast Asian Pride UK Set to Make History with Inaugural London Celebration
The UK’s queer cultural landscape is set to welcome an important new addition this summer as East & Southeast Asian Pride UK launches for the first time on Friday, 24 July 2026, at London’s Electrowerkz. Presented by Strictly Come Dancing champion Carlos Gu alongside The Bitten Peach and Kakilang, the event aims to create a vibrant and dedicated space celebrating East and Southeast Asian LGBTQIA+ identities, creativity and community.
Running from 7pm until 3am, the event combines a community-focused atmosphere with a diverse entertainment programme. Guests will be welcomed by a community market fair and drinks reception featuring charities, grassroots organisations and independent vendors representing East and Southeast Asian communities from across the UK.
As the evening progresses, attention will turn to a packed main stage programme showcasing drag, cabaret, live music, dance and burlesque performances. Organisers have assembled a line-up designed to highlight the breadth of artistic talent emerging from queer East and Southeast Asian communities, while creating opportunities for visibility and representation.
For Carlos Gu, the event carries a deeply personal significance. Having moved from China to the UK, he has spoken about finding the freedom to live authentically and openly. East & Southeast Asian Pride UK represents an opportunity to celebrate that journey while creating new role models and platforms for future generations of queer Asian creatives.
Following the live performances, the celebration will continue with DJs across two rooms until the early hours. Combining community engagement, cultural expression and nightlife, the inaugural East & Southeast Asian Pride UK promises to be one of the most significant new additions to London’s Pride calendar in 2026.
TICKETS: https://www.outsavvy.com/event/36425/asian-pride-uk-2026#anchor
We Speak Events
Atlanta Screening of The Alabama Solution Brings Together Panel of Advocates, Leaders, and Community Voices
ATLANTA, GA — Community leaders, advocates, and residents gathered in Atlanta for a special screening of the Oscar-nominated HBO documentary The Alabama Solution, an evening centered on film, dialogue, and community engagement around issues of justice and incarceration.

Hosted at 2345 Cheshire Bridge Road NE, the event brought together organizations and community members for a formal evening of reflection and conversation following the powerful documentary. The film, co-directed by Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman and co-produced by Alex Duran, offers an intimate and unfiltered look into Alabama’s prison system.

At the heart of the documentary are the voices of justice-impacted individuals Melvin “Bennu” Ray and Robert “Kinetik” Council, whose experiences shed light on the realities inside the prison system while challenging viewers to consider deeper questions about accountability, dignity, and reform.
Following the screening, a panel discussion brought together leaders and advocates working in justice reform and community outreach. The conversation was moderated by Bridgette Simpson of Barred Business, who guided the dialogue with panelists representing several organizations committed to addressing issues within the justice system.
Panelists included Gerald Griggs of the NAACP, Kimberly Jones of Fork the System, Octavious Holiday of the Positive Outreach Development Society, Kevin Marshall of The Marshall Law Group, LLC, Kathryn Hamoudah of the Southern Center for Human Rights, and Christopher Willars of The Life Unit Inc.

Each panelist offered insight shaped by their work in advocacy, legal reform, and community engagement. Their perspectives highlighted the far-reaching effects incarceration can have on families and communities, while also emphasizing the importance of awareness, accountability, and continued dialogue around the issues presented in the film.
The screening was supported by several organizations dedicated to justice and civic engagement, including One for Justice, Dream.org, Barred Business, the Southern Center for Human Rights, The Life Unit, the Center for Civic Innovation, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), and the Free Atlanta Abolition Movement.

The evening also served as a moment of connection for those in attendance, including family members and advocates whose lives have been impacted by the justice system. Through film and conversation, the gathering created space for reflection and for communities to engage with the realities highlighted in the documentary.

As conversations continued after the screening, the event underscored the power of storytelling to bring people together, raise awareness, and encourage deeper consideration of issues that often remain unseen by the public.
As momentum continues to grow around conversations sparked by the documentary, organizers are encouraging community members to take an additional step by supporting efforts aimed at protecting justice-impacted individuals from discrimination.
Advocates are currently inviting the public to sign a virtual petition card supporting the establishment of a statewide Protected Class Ordinance in Georgia, which would help ensure justice-impacted individuals are protected from discrimination in employment, housing, and opportunity.
You may find and share the virtual petition here:
Statewide Protected Class
https://www.theprotectedclassnetwork.org/sign-our-petition


























































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