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"path": "/newsletter/advocate-nl-6-23-26",
"publishedAt": "2026-06-23T21:30:01.000Z",
"site": "https://www.advocate.com",
"tags": [
"A new data investigation",
"As Christopher Wiggins reports",
"how Caraballo compiled her data here",
"the paper rejected the analysis and denied that its coverage is biased or anti-trans",
"As The Advocate reported in May",
"2024 analysis",
"GLAAD",
"previously reported",
"in this story from Wiggins"
],
"textContent": "A new data investigation says _The New York Times_ increasingly framed transgender rights as a debate instead of a lived reality. The Gray Lady -- or rather, the Times’ senior vice president of communications -- had some things to say about that.\n\nAudience Editor Edgar Ramirez here, back in your inbox on this Tuesday.\n\nAs Christopher Wiggins reports, an analysis published by civil rights attorney Alejandra Caraballo in _The Dissident_ reviewed 3,242 Times articles published between 2014 and early 2026. The analysis identified three broad eras in _Times_ coverage: a “tipping point” period from 2014 to 2017, a quieter and more neutral period from 2018 to 2021, and a marked shift beginning in 2022, when coverage of transgender issues increased and became more centered on medical skepticism, youth gender-affirming care, and political conflict, Caraballo explained.\n\n“This isn’t about any individual story,” Caraballo, who said the project took her two months to complete, told The Advocate in an interview. “This is about the whole corpus of how they’ve covered trans issues over time.”\n\nYou can find out how Caraballo compiled her data here.\n\nThe New York Times did not initially respond to The Advocate’s request for comment. After the story was published, the paper rejected the analysis and denied that its coverage is biased or anti-trans. In a statement to The Advocate, Danielle Rhoades Ha, the Times’ senior vice president of communications, said the paper’s role is “to report accurate, fact-based information on all aspects of a story to help the public understand vital issues better.”\n\n\nThough as Wiggins reminds us, Caraballo's findings build on years of criticism from LGBTQ+ advocates, transgender journalists, and media watchdogs who say the _Times_ often writes about transgender people without centering them as sources. As The Advocate reported in May, an Assigned Media analysis found that the Times produced more transgender-related coverage than any other outlet examined but was the least likely to quote transgender people or trans advocacy organizations in stories primarily focused on transgender issues.\n\n\nThe pattern also mirrors findings from a 2024 analysis by GLAAD and Media Matters, which __The Advocate__ previously reported on.\n\nYou can find the full statement from the _Times_ and Caraballo's data investigation all in this story from Wiggins.\n\nThanks folks, we'll be back tomorrow!\n\n### The New York Times helped turn trans rights into political controversy, analysis finds\n\n\n\n\n### 3 dead after fatal shooting near Pornhub's headquarters\n\n\n\n\n### Opinion: I survived political violence. LGBTQ+ candidates should not have to risk their lives to serve\n\n\n\n\n### Knoxville, Tennessee will lose one of its last two gay bars\n\n\n\n\n### Kiara St. James was the queen of New York's trans rights movement\n\n\n\n\n### Colorado school district says Trump admin accused mascots of being boys on girls’ teams\n\n\n\n\n### Court strips away California protections for transgender students’ privacy\n\n\n\n\n### Opinion: Clive Davis gave LGBTQ+ people the soundtrack of our lives and a place in music\n\n\n\n\n### Kristi Noem’s husband wanted to be called Crystal, longtime dominatrix says\n\n\n\n\n### Pornhub reveals the steamy stats for Pride Month — here's what the gays are searching\n\n\n",
"title": "Advocate NL 6/23/26"
}