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Working to Change the World

“In my role leading ACRIA, I’ve retained PR and communications consulting from Cathy and Renna Communications on a project basis. She and her team are smart, expert and creative! She has ideal contacts and relationships, and secured us amazing and substantive coverage in major media outlets in the U.S. and beyond. Indeed, having worked with other PR firms none have done anywhere near as well as Cathy in attracting much needed and highly-desirable PR for ACRIA. Moreover, she’s fun!” – Daniel Tietz, Executive Director, ACRIA

With nearly two consecutive decades of communications experience and special expertise in lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) issues, Renna Communications’ team brings sophisticated and nuanced communications strategies to organizations and people who are working to change the world for the better.

Whether your goals are to gain media coverage and shape national political dialogue or to expand your visibility and reach more people in need, you have something you need to communicate. You have an important story to tell. As a client of Renna Communications, you can be certain of one thing: We’ll get your story told.

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    Kevin Cathcart and Lambda Legal: Celebrating a 20-Year Journey

    Eric A. Webber | The Los Angeles Daily Journal | May 23, 2012

    Click the link below to read the article.

    http://rennacommunications.com/file_download/49

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    posted: 29 May 12


    Cathy Renna - AGLP 2012 Barbara Gittings Award Acceptance Speech

    Renna Communications Managing Partner Cathy Renna accepts the 2012 Barbara Gittings Award from the Association of Gay and Lesbian Psychiatrists (AGLP) at Philadelphia’s Museum of American Jewish History:

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    posted: 20 May 12


    Association of Gay and Lesbian Psychiatrists to Honor Media Expert and LGBT Activist Cathy Renna with 2012 Barbara Gittings Award

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    Contact: Nathan Tabak, 347-633-5221, nathan@rennacommunications.com

    PHILADELPHIA – April 27, 2012 – The Association of Gay and Lesbian Psychiatrists will present its 2012 Barbara Gittings Award to Cathy Renna, Managing Partner of Renna Communications, at their annual awards ceremony, to be held Monday, May 7, 2012 at 7:00 PM at the National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia. This prestigious honor recognizes a woman who demonstrates exceptional leadership and advocacy for lesbian issues.

    Renna is nationally recognized as a media relations expert and as a leader within the LGBT community. As a major force behind the success and growth of the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD), where she worked for 14 years, Cathy served as a primary spokesperson for GLAAD, as well as its first National News Media Director.

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    posted: 1 May 12


    Cathy Renna on Morning Jolt

    Listen to our Managing Partner Cathy Renna on the January 3, 2012 edition of Sirius OutQ’s Morning Jolt with Larry Flick.

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    posted: 1 January 12


    Parents urged to support, safeguard children as they explore gender

    Phil Gast | CNN.com | October 30, 2011

    (CNN) — At first, Felisha Archuleta thought her young son’s affinity for wearing dresses, primping his hair and playing with Barbies and Bratz dolls indicated he was going through a stage.
    But Bobby Montoya’s interest in “girl stuff” has not been short-lived: He’s grown his hair out and has dressed as a girl when he can for much of his 7 years. Bobby’s been “outspoken” about his gender identity, said Archuleta.
    The Denver, Colorado, family’s recent attempt to sign up Bobby with Girl Scouts, however, left him in tears, his mother said.
    A leader said he could not join because of his “boy parts,” Archuleta told CNN affiliate 9News.

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    posted: 30 October 11


    Cathy Renna and Teresa Nolan

    Listen to our Managing Partner Cathy Renna and Green Chimneys’ Teresa Nolan discuss homeless LGBT youth and the diversity of the LGBT community on the October 25 edition of Sirius OutQ’s Morning Jolt with Larry Flick.



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    posted: 25 October 11


    Ally Sheedy and Carl Siciliano

    Actress Ally Sheedy and Carl Siciliano, Executive Director of the Ali Forney Center, discuss homeless youth on the October 24 broadcast of Sirius OutQ’s Morning Jolt with Larry Flick.



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    posted: 25 October 11


    Between a Rock and a Hard Place: The State of LGBT Visibility in the Media

    Cathy Renna | Huffington Post | October 14, 2011

    I approach every October with a sense of pride and dread. For all of the history and progress we celebrate — and there is a lot to celebrate, especially in the past few years — there is always sadness in my heart, because October always takes me back, whether I like it or not, to the time I spent in Laramie, Wyo. following the beating of Matthew Shepard in 1998. And while Oct. 11 is National Coming Out Day, it was that day in 1998 that I spent in vigil and solidarity with Matt’s friends, fellow students and activists on the campus of the University of Wyoming, only to be woken up in the middle of night on Oct. 12 to be told we lost Matt. And every year I take that experience and reflect on it as a marker for how much progress we have truly made.

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    posted: 14 October 11


    An Exclusive Club You Don't Want an Invitation To

    Terrence Meck | The Huffington Post | June 17, 2011

    July 4th will mark the third anniversary of the death of my husband, Rand Skolnick, from pancreatic cancer. A perfectly healthy man at 49, he was diagnosed on March 4th of 2008 and died four months later shortly after his 50th birthday.

    Since his death I have carried on his legacy through The Palette Fund, a foundation honoring Rand’s life that has granted more than $2 million to programs in the areas of Nutrition & Wellness, Patient Navigation and Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender human rights. Nothing I have done prepared me for Pancreatic Cancer Advocacy Day in our nation’s capital.

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    posted: 17 June 11


    Cathy Renna on ‘Two Spirits’ on PBS

    Same Sex Sunday | June 13, 2011

    We chatted with Cathy Renna about the season finale of PBS’ ‘Independent Lens’ Tuesday which will feature the documentary “Two Spirits,” about the murder of Navajo trans teen Fred Martinez in Cortez Colorado a decade ago.

    America Ferrera from ‘Ugly Betty’ will host this special, discussing the life and death of Martinez, as well as the notion of ‘two spirit’ in Native American culture. Cathy Renna, who worked on the investigation of the murder with GLAAD at the time, is working with the documentary team in educating America on this special story and this special subject.

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    posted: 13 June 11


    Gay couples seek green cards despite likely denial

    Amy Taxin | Associated Press | June 5, 2011

    CATHEDRAL CITY, Calif. — Faced with losing the life they’ve built together in the dusty California desert town of Cathedral City, Doug Gentry and Alex Benshimol are making a last-ditch effort to stave off the looming threat of deportation.

    To a large degree, the couple is stuck. While the American information technology consultant and Venezuelan pet groomer wed at a romantic Connecticut ceremony last year, the federal government won’t recognize the marriage between the two men — and as a result, won’t approve their application for a green card.

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    posted: 6 June 11


    Obama Administration Seeks To Address Homeless Crisis Among Gay Teens

    Jason Cherkis | Huffington Post | June 1, 2011

    WASHINGTON — Jonathan had spent nearly a decade in Louisiana’s child welfare system. The safest places, the gay teen discovered, were the moldy homes he squatted in after Hurricane Katrina.

    Roofs sagged, floors caved in, mold veined walls and there were always rats. “It was very uncomfortable,” said Jonathan. “Old, dark, lots of insects, rodents. … It was times I cried.” Often, he lit fires to keep the rats away.

    He was 18 years old, and had just aged out of foster care essentially homeless. But those boarded-up dwellings were peaceful refuges compared to the facilities he experienced as a state ward.

    Jonathan had logged time in group homes, foster homes, shelters, a secure detention center and even a military boot-camp-style school. It didn’t matter where he ended up. He said he always felt the sting of homophobia.

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    posted: 1 June 11