Los Angeles Dodgers Suffer Different Kind of Loss After Pride Night Furor

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The Los Angeles Dodgers suffered a strike-out after the baseball team celebrated Pride Month as their social media audience took a hit.

L.A's baseball team faced backlash from conservative fans because an LGBTQ+ band, the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, was invited to the annual Pride Night at Dodger Stadium on June 16. The group, who dress up in drag as nuns, were invited to the night, then disinvited and eventually reinvited to the ball game.

The baseball team has suffered a blow in the past month, as it lost a little more than 7,000 followers on Twitter, according to social media statistics website Social Blade.

Things were worse on Instagram where the baseball team lost 15,540 followers in the same amount of time, and as of June 19 had 3.1 million followers.

los angeles pride
Los Angeles Dodgers Pride hats before the game against the San Francisco Giants at Dodger Stadium on June 16, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. A conservative backlash developed after an LGBTQ+ band was invited to... Meg Oliphant/Getty Images North America

The Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence describe themselves as an "order of queer and trans nuns" who promotes human rights, community service and spiritual enlightenment.

But for conservative Christians it was not so enlightening. The Sisters involvement at the game was described as "diabolical," by Republican Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida.

After a lot of back and forth between the conservatives and LGBTQ+ groups, the Dodgers eventually allowed the Sisters to perform at the club's Pride Night on Friday.

The Dodgers suffered a loss on social media, but it is not clear if it was directly related to their commitment to Pride Month. However, the largest falls did occur in the immediate days on either side of the controversial Friday night ball game.

A clip of an empty Dodgers stadium at Friday's game went viral, which conservatives used as proof on Twitter that the L.A. Dodgers had alienated their fan base by going "woke."

Some people at the game pointed out the reason the stadium looked so empty was because protesters were blocking access to the venue through the main entrance on Vin Scully Avenue.

"I have a theory on why the stadium might be so empty. It's on the right," said attorney and former federal prosecutor Ron Filipkowski, sharing an image of the empty stadium next to one of the protests outside the stadium.

Actor Kevin T. Williams suggested the photos of an empty stadium didn't reflect reality.

"Game is sold out and maybe 1/3 of the seats are empty. Like every other night in LA," he wrote in a selfie post from the game.

The backlash to the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence comes as the Human Rights Council declared a "state of emergency" for LGBTQ+ people due to the "worst year on record," in state legislatures.

More than 525 bills focusing on the LGBTQ+ community were introduced in different states and of those, 220 targeted transgender people, including access to gender-affirming healthcare for trans people, especially minors.

Of the 525 bills, 76 have been signed into law so far, which is more than any other year on record.

About the writer

Shannon Power is a Greek-Australian reporter, but now calls London home. They have worked as across three continents in print, newspapers and broadcast, specializing in entertainment, politics, LGBTQ+ and health reporting. Shannon has covered high profile celebrity trials along with industry analysis of all the big trends in media, pop culture and the entertainment business generally. Shannon stories have featured on the cover of the Newsweek magazine and has been published in publications such as, The Guardian, Monocle, The Independent, SBS, ABC, Metro and The Sun. You can get in touch with Shannon by email at s.power@newsweek.com and on X @shannonjpower. Languages: English, Greek, Spanish.



Shannon Power is a Greek-Australian reporter, but now calls London home. They have worked as across three continents in print, ... Read more