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American media executive (born 1971) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sarah Kate Ellis (born November 27, 1971) is an American media executive and activist.
Sarah Kate Ellis | |
---|---|
Born | Staten Island, New York, U.S. | November 27, 1971
Education | Russell Sage College (BA) |
Occupation(s) | Media executive, activist |
After Ellis's graduation from Russell Sage College in 1993 with a degree in Sociology and minor in Women's Studies, she began her career in media through the re-launch of Condé Nast's House & Garden.[1]
In January 2014, Ellis was appointed president and CEO of GLAAD, the largest U.S. lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) media advocacy organization.[2][3]
Ellis was born and raised on Staten Island, New York, where she attended Staten Island Academy. She and her older brother Spencer were raised by their parents, Barbara and Ken Ellis. During her youth, Ellis was an athlete; she participated in field hockey and was a Junior Olympic swimmer. While attending Russell Sage College, Ellis led a media campaign against the college administration's attempt to shut down the only women's center on campus and, in her senior year of college, Ellis came out of the closet as a lesbian. In 2011, Ellis attended the Tuck Executive Education program at Tuck School of Business Dartmouth College and completed it in 2012.
In 1995, Ellis began her profession in media. She first worked at mass media company Condé Nast, which laid the groundwork for her career advancement. Initially, Ellis worked at Condé Nast's House and Garden. From there, she moved to New York magazine as a senior manager, then to In Style as a director. Following her tenure at In Style, Ellis launched and directed the turnaround of Real Simple, which led her to Vogue where she oversaw ten lifestyle group brands.[4] Ellis specialized in marketing and took on leadership roles. Extending the reach of her efforts, Ellis involved herself as co-chair of OUT at Time Inc., the company's LGBT employee resource group, where she led programming to spotlight the diversity of the LGBT community (2008-2013).[citation needed]
Ellis began her activism in 1992, when she marched on Washington to support the rights of women and then marched again in 1993 to support the rights of LGBT people.
On January 1, 2014, Ellis began as president and CEO of GLAAD,[5] the only U.S. organization working to move lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) equality forward through the power of the media.
One of the first campaigns Ellis pursued at GLAAD was the organization's 2014 protest against the New York City St. Patrick's Day Parade, specifically the parade's ban of lesbian and gay participants. In an article in the New York Daily News,[6] Ellis wrote about her Irish-American heritage and sexual orientation, calling on parade organizers to end the ban.
In August 2024, the New York Times reported that Ellis had engaged in "lavish spending" at GLAAD that may have violated IRS rules for nonprofit organizations and the nonprofit's own policies. She was reimbursed by GLAAD for expenses including first-class flights, stays at the Waldorf Astoria, a $20,000 home office remodel that included a chandelier, and nearly half a million dollars for a week in a Swiss ski chalet with colleagues.[7]
In 2011, Ellis co-authored a memoir with her wife, Kristen Ellis-Henderson, titled Times Two, Two Women in Love and the Happy Family They Made, released by Simon & Schuster.[8] The autobiography chronicled their simultaneous pregnancies and road to motherhood—it was nominated for a Stonewall Book Award.[9] In 2013, the couple was featured on the "Gay Marriage Already Won" cover of TIME Magazine.[10]
Ellis and her wife were also profiled in a special New York Times Style section about marriage equality following its legalization in New York State[11] and were the subjects of The Huffington Post's three-part documentary web series titled "Here Come the Brides."[12] They were named one of GO Magazine's Most Captivating Couples of 2012[13] and are the mothers of two children. Ellis and her wife married in 2011;[14] they had the first marriage ceremony for a same-sex couple in the Episcopal Church in New York State.[15]
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