
LGBTQ+ history in Michigan, African Americans in cybersecurity, One Detroit Weekend
Season 9 Episode 50 | 26m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
Michigan’s LGBTQ+ history, a conversation about cybersecurity and upcoming events this weekend.
In recognition of Pride Month, One Detroit examines Michigan’s contributions to LGBTQ+ history. Hear from a cybersecurity expert about her career journey and efforts to get more African Americans interested in the industry. Plus, contributors Dave Wagner and Haley Taylor of 90.9 WRCJ share events coming up around metro Detroit this weekend and beyond.
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One Detroit is a local public television program presented by Detroit PBS

LGBTQ+ history in Michigan, African Americans in cybersecurity, One Detroit Weekend
Season 9 Episode 50 | 26m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
In recognition of Pride Month, One Detroit examines Michigan’s contributions to LGBTQ+ history. Hear from a cybersecurity expert about her career journey and efforts to get more African Americans interested in the industry. Plus, contributors Dave Wagner and Haley Taylor of 90.9 WRCJ share events coming up around metro Detroit this weekend and beyond.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship- [Zosette] Coming up on "One Detroit."
In recognition of Pride Month, we'll show you how Michigan has made an impact on LGBTQ+ history.
Plus, we'll hear from a cybersecurity expert about her career journey and efforts to get more African Americans interested in the industry.
And we'll tell you about some of the Metro Detroit events taking place over Father's Day weekend.
It's all coming up next on "One Detroit."
- [Narrator 1] From Delta faucets to Behr paint, Masco Corporation is proud to deliver products that enhance the way consumers all over the world experience and enjoy their living spaces.
Masco, serving Michigan communities since 1929.
Support also provided by the Cynthia & Edsel Ford Fund for Journalism at Detroit PBS.
- [Narrator 2] The DTE Foundation is a proud sponsor of Detroit PBS.
Through our giving, we are committed to meeting the needs of the communities we serve statewide, to help ensure a bright and thriving future for all.
Learn more at DTEFoundation.com.
- [Narrator 1] Nissan Foundation, and viewers like you.
(light upbeat music) - [Zosette] Just ahead on "One Detroit."
We'll have a future of work report on career opportunities available in the growing field of cybersecurity.
Plus we'll have a list of fun activities for the family over the Father's Day weekend.
But first up, June is Pride Month and we're examining Michigan's contributions to LGBTQ+ history.
For this special report, I teamed up with my "One Detroit" colleagues, Bill Kubota and Chris Jordan for an in-depth look at local LGBTQ+ milestones, including Michigan's first Pride celebration 53 years ago.
We also talked with the nation's first openly gay political candidate elected to office.
(light upbeat music) Ferndale Pride 2025, the stretch of Nine Mile Road, helping kick off Pride Month in Southeastern Michigan, it's one of the biggest in the state.
- So we've been doing this for 15 years now.
We're considered one of the big six Pride events.
And so, for me that is kind of our little mark of fame, but we are one of the smallest towns of those big six.
♪ Pink pony club ♪ - And so now we have these opportunities to show all these people who are like you in one setting and just say, "It's okay to be you today.
You're gonna find someone else who's like you and you're gonna have a really good time and embrace who you are."
- [Zosette] Jaye Spiro owns a martial arts studio on Nine Mile.
Forndale Pride is outside her front door.
- It is just baffling to me how much we have been embraced as gay and lesbian people.
You know that these Prides are huge now.
- [Zosette] It started in New York City, 1970, with the Christopher Street Gay Liberation Day March, commemorating the time a year before when demonstrators clashed with police after a raid of the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in Manhattan.
Pride marches would spread nationwide, coming to Detroit in 1972.
- When the idea came to the fore in Michigan to have a Pride march and a Pride celebration and start having activities, they named it Christopher Street Detroit.
So that's where the name comes from.
I should note that Christopher Street comes from the name of the street that the Stonewall Inn was on.
- [Zosette] In Farmington Hills, a history lesson for Pride Month, they're hearing about happenings 53 years ago.
- And part of this early Pride week was the opening of Detroit's first LGBTQ Community Center.
- [Zosette] The Community Center located in the Virginia Park neighborhood.
Tim Retzloff's been collecting this history for years, researching things like this GLF banner that's for the Gay Liberation Front.
- It's an heirloom for our community.
So it's a really important artifact.
- [Zosette] It's on display at the Detroit Historical Museum for the next few months.
Part of an exhibit about a comic book titled, "Come Out in Detroit," in which Retzloff drew from oral histories to recreate Christopher Street Detroit '72.
- This is my favorite page from "Come Out in Detroit" because it goes to show just how many people were there.
This wasn't 15 or 20 people marching down Woodward Avenue, this was many people marching down Woodward Avenue.
- We decided this is the way to tell this story.
That's the origin story.
That's what comic books are known for, is the origin stories.
We know where Bruce Wayne and "Superman" and "Spider-Man" come from.
It kind of fit into being a comic book that way.
- [Zosette] "Come out in Detroit's" illustrator is Isabel Clare Paul.
- I didn't know very much about it at all starting out.
And so getting to do that research and learn that history and have access to all these old stories was really kind of special to me.
Pretty heavy topic, but the best way we can get around it is, you know, bringing an air of joy to it.
This was the same weekend they went to Palmer Park.
- It's really strange to get old.
And then what you did in your youth is actually history.
- [Zosette] Susan Swope lives near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, but she'd been an anti-war activist at the University of Michigan.
Then studying law at Wayne State University.
- In high school, I realized I was lesbian, but I did not have a word for it.
I thought I was the only one in the world.
That's what it was like growing up in a small town in the '50s and '60s.
- At first I was pretty closeted, although I didn't, might not have said "I'm a lesbian," it was clear.
- Lesbianism wasn't really up in the front of people's consciousness.
You know, gay men were much more thought about.
- You know, you're seeking people like you.
Was it hard, you know, or?
- It was very hard.
Well, it was illegal.
Being gay was actually illegal.
So you had to be very much more secreted and closeted in those days.
I mean, I was teacher, you know, would you want your children to be taught by gays?
You know, they'll corrupt their minds.
- Having come from the student activist movement against the war.
And what I understood was the power of acting as a group and of marches and rallies and public protests.
- Our whole generation that came from the Civil Rights Movement and the anti-war movement, I mean, we were dead serious.
The gay and lesbian movement just had a, you know, yeah, we were fighting against oppression and homophobia, but we were also, it was a big party and we were having fun and we were coming out and we were free.
And so it was a very different energy and you can really catch that.
- [Zosette] Merrilee Melvin helped organize the march.
- And it was quite an ordeal to put this together.
'cause we were just kind of making it up as we went along.
- Were there other things that you were involved in leading up to the march?
- It was very helpful to find this press release that I wrote.
- [Zosette] The first line, "If Michigan gay activists have their way, Detroit will never be the same again after June 24 and 25."
- So I am so proud of us.
We were reaching out, this was sent far and wide.
We were encouraging people to come from all over Michigan and from Canada.
- They had matchbooks made, lots of people were still smoking at the time.
That was a way to kind of get the word out.
They had stickers made, they had buttons made, they had T-shirts made.
- I came up with the idea for our logo, but the idea was a butterfly with an arm and a fist for the body and the head of the butterfly.
And it said, "Come out."
- My friend Susan Swope asked if they would be willing to pay me $25 a week to be an official event organizer.
And they said, yes.
And so I felt like I was the first professional paid lesbian in Detroit.
- [Zosette] Merrilee Melvin gave the marching orders.
- The morning of the march down Woodward from I think maybe Wayne State to Kennedy Square, which no longer exists in Downtown Detroit, it was raining, of course.
(laughs) - Susan Swope was the one lesbian that we know spoke at it.
- My own personal fear was I was still married and my husband knew I was a lesbian and we were working through that, but I hadn't come out to his parents and they lived in Detroit and I was gonna speak and the TV cameras were gonna be there.
But in the end, what they showed on TV was not the speeches, but the drag queens who had been sitting on the hood of a car.
And when the car stopped, they slid off the front of the car.
Ha-ha.
- Christopher Street was a combination of that.
You know, we're here and we're queer, and we want the laws against us changed, 'cause there were still laws against gay men in particular.
- For most of us, you know, we didn't fit in.
So the march was a place where you could celebrate who you were.
- It felt good, it gave purpose to my life.
I've always wanted to help people.
And here I was helping my own community.
- [Zosette] Another speaker at the March, Jim Toy, an Ann Arbor resident active in Detroit.
- This is another great picture of Jim Toy.
This is more what he looked like at the time.
- [Zosette] Toy, already an activist, was part of the Detroit Walk to Freedom March in 1963.
- He heard Martin Luther King give the first version of the "I Have a Dream" speech in Detroit.
- [Zosette] Toy was among those protesting the Vietnam War before Christopher Street.
- They took part in the anti-war movement rally that was held in April of 1970.
And that's where Jim Toy became the first person to publicly come out as gay in Michigan.
- And a lot of people have asked him, "Did you plan to come out in that speech?"
And he said, "Well, I wasn't planning to speak and do that that day, but I just decided that's what I would do, like just a few minutes beforehand."
- I probably said my name is Jim Toy.
I'm 40 years old and I'm a gay man.
Well, I had not thought about the press and the "Detroit Free Press" and "The Detroit News" were there, and they published articles.
And so I was out.
- [Zosette] Jim Toy died in 2022.
Born in 1930 to a white mother and Chinese father, he grew up in a small town in Ohio.
He married, divorced amicably and found Detroit's gay community, traveling often from Ann Arbor with a friend.
- We called ourselves the Detroit Gay Liberation Movement.
John and I driving in there two and three times a week for meetings, in his car, said to each other, "You know, this is ridiculous.
Let's start a group in Ann Arbor."
So we did.
- [Zosette] Toy's papers are held in the Bentley Historical Library at the University of Michigan, the school where he made his biggest mark advocating for LGBTQ+ students.
In 1971, Toy helped create what was called the Human Sexuality Office.
- They had so many people come after them, including regents.
There were regents that were hellbent on destroying that office.
- [Zosette] That office is considered the first of its kind, now known as the Spectrum Center.
- It's not likely that that there was an office anywhere in the world that preceded ours.
And we have never learned that there has been.
- Jim really believed in the power of institutions to change from within.
And he was controversial in this way.
Some of the radicals thought, "You've gotta tear the old institutions down."
- [Zosette] Toy kept working, receiving an honorary doctorate from the University of Michigan in 2021.
- No one knows how Jim didn't burn out.
I mean, it was like, it was so draining what he did.
- He was a friend to me, a mentor, somebody who was one of my earliest supporters in running for county commission eight years ago.
- [Zosette] Jason Morgan, an openly gay state representative, first took that office in 2022.
He grew up in a small town north of Bay City, but moved to Ann Arbor.
- Then I found this incredible community in Ann Arbor that wasn't just okay with people being gay, they embraced it and celebrated it and really supported me as just a human being, as an individual.
And I would say didn't care if I was gay, but no, they did, they cared in a really positive way.
- [Zosette] Ann Arbor led the nation observing Gay Pride Week in 1972.
- And then last but not least in terms of the gay liberation period, Kathy Kozachenko ran as an out lesbian in Ann Arbor in 1974.
- [Zosette] Kathy Kozachenko ran for city council and won.
- This is my favorite picture from back in that era.
This is me.
- [Zosette] The first out person to win public office in the nation.
- We knew that it was a first, but there's no way that I would've ever thought that I would be talking about it 50 years later.
And in fact, my niece Chelsea called me one day, says, "Hey, Aunt Kath, do you realize you have a Wikipedia page?"
And I'm like, "What?"
- [Zosette] Kozachenko lives in Pittsburgh these days.
- When I talk about that time period, people have to remember that what I'm talking about is a very liberal, liberal isn't even the word, radical college campus.
So things were different where I was than they were in the rest of the country.
- [Zosette] At U of M, she was another '60s activist, fighting for better conditions for farm workers.
- I found an organization called the Human Rights Party that sort of articulated my passion for economic justice as well as social justice.
- [Zosette] Two human rights party candidates had already won Ann Arbor City Council seats in 1972, Jerry DeGrieck and Nancy Wechsler would be the first openly gay elected officials who came out after they were elected.
They spearheaded the campaign for Gay Pride Week, but were leaving office as Kozachenko started her city council run.
- Young man, we started talking.
He said, "I'm really religious," and I'm like, you know, "Oh, okay."
And he says, "But God works in mysterious ways.
I'm gonna vote for you."
And I said, "Thank you."
So I had that instance, and then I had another less pleasant instance when I knocked on this door and I talked to these two young women and as I was walking away, I could sort of hear them sort of giggling.
One said to the other one, "That was her, that was her.
Did you see her looking at you?
Did you see her checking you out?"
And I just, but I really wanted to go back and knock on their door and say, "It's not like that, you can't transfer the way men react to women with how lesbians relate to women and relate to each other."
But I wasn't brave enough to do that.
So I just, you know, shook it off and went on to the next door.
- [Zosette] Kozachenko won by 109 votes, an award well populated by college students.
She served one term.
Since then, there's been more representation in public office.
There's Michigan's Attorney General, and in the state legislature, six representatives and one senator make up the LGBTQ+ caucus.
- We are still at seven today.
And that is huge.
That is massive progress for our state.
And most of us didn't run as, you know, "Oh, we're just running as a gay person."
We ran as community members stepping up to run and serve everybody in our community.
But it does matter that we are at the table when decisions are being made and that we are represented.
- [Zosette] 50 years later, Kathy Kozachenko has a different mission.
She's following the deportations of hundreds of people to El Salvador, including gay makeup artist, Andre Jose Hernandez Romero.
- It touched my heart and outraged me at the same time.
This has sparked a passion in me, and it's one way to take a little piece and to say, "I'm not gonna forget this man."
- This June, she's working Pride events like this one in Jamestown, New York, an activist reactivated today.
- It's really applicable today where it's like you have to take care of each other, you have to stand up, you gotta start doing stuff to make things happen, otherwise it's never gonna happen.
And just to say no.
"Hey, you need to treat us better than that."
- What would you say to someone who is watching and, you know, maybe has that similar feeling to when you were younger?
- Find your people and work with them.
- [Zosette] Turning now to a future of work report on the tech industry.
As technology continues to advance, the need for cybersecurity experts grows.
It's a field that is currently only 18% African American according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Detroiter Sakinah Tanzil is a 25-year veteran of the industry.
She's written a book titled "Breaking the Cyber Code: A Game Changer That Prepares Our Workforce And Secures The Future."
"American Black Journal" host and "One Detroit" contributor, Stephen Henderson spoke with Tanzil about getting more African Americans interested in a cybersecurity career.
(lighthearted music) - Let's start by just talking about cybersecurity, why it's so important and really just kind of how that works.
- Cybersecurity is about protecting people and building trust.
It's about confidentiality, integrity, and availability of that data that businesses and individuals hold.
So you have to put yourself in the shoes of an individual that may lose some money, may lose their Social Security card, and it gets stolen.
So it's so important.
And the sooner that you know about the safeguards, you can protect yourself and others.
- Yeah, let's talk about your career 25 years in the cybersecurity industry.
Tell me how you got interested in it and about your path there.
- Yeah, when I was a teenager, I was at home watching the television news and it was the late 1990s, and they were talking about the Y2K issue, coming the year 2000.
The year was gonna turn to 2000 from 1999 and computers only were set up for two-digit years, so they had to go back and extend it to four-digit years so it wouldn't crash.
- [Stephen] So it wouldn't think it was 1900, right.
- Exactly, exactly.
So when I saw that, I was like, "Wow, it seems like this is a call of duty for me.
Maybe I should enroll myself into college and go into the industry."
So that's exactly what I did.
I enrolled in Henry Ford College and went into their associate program, Computer Information Systems, and I found out about Bill Gates and his software.
I did a presentation and read his book and I was like, "Wow, I'm in the right industry.
software helps with space exploration, healthcare, all that.
So I'm in the right place."
So it inspired me to keep going and persevere.
- Yeah, and when you started, talk about how present African Americans were in the field and how much more present they are now, and then I guess how much more we still have to do.
- Yes, when I enrolled in college back in the late 1990s, I was one of two African Americans that I seen in the program.
- Wow.
- And that was kind of devastating because I was looking for friends that I can be around to help with studying and support groups and all that.
So I did hook up with the one other person and we stuck together, we studied together, and we had each other's back.
But it was kind of devastating and I was like, "Wow, you know, am I doing the right thing or what?"
So it kind of had me question what I was doing.
But as a Detroiter, we persevere, we're underdogs and all that.
So I learned to just stick it out and I knew I was doing the right thing.
- Yeah, in the time that you've worked in the industry, that presence has changed.
I mean the 18%, roughly the percentage of African Americans that exist in the country, or maybe a little more.
- Yes, and that's part of what I've been doing.
I've been mentoring, I've been coaching, I've been advocating, training young people because you should start as early as kindergarten, you know, K-12 because I got exposure in college.
But the earlier you start and you see people like you, then you're inspired and you see the possibilities.
So that's what I'm doing now is trying to build a legacy and invest in the young people to fill that gap.
because right now there's a shortage.
There's 4.8 million cybersecurity professionals needed globally.
And 265,000 just in the US.
So we need to fill that gap because these are high-skill, high-paying jobs and they can change the trajectory of your life.
- Yeah, yeah.
Let's talk about your book and what readers will learn about cybersecurity and its importance from the book.
- Yes, well, it's a memoir/guidebook.
So I walk you through all the challenges that I went through, things like how to negotiate your salary, or unconscious bias, or being resilient.
And then I'll talk about the 52 careers in cybersecurity, and I talk about the skills and the knowledge that you need to have.
So you look at it and you say, "Where do I fit?
What do I want to go after?"
I talk about scholarships that you can get to help pay for college, and I just coach you through things that you probably need help with it, and no one probably is there to help you with, and I'm here as a labor of love writing this book to be the person I needed when I was younger.
- [Zosette] Father's Day is this weekend and you'll find lots of fun, food, and festivals for the entire family across Metro Detroit.
Here's Dave Wagner from 90.9 WRCJ with today's "One Detroit Weekend."
- Hi everyone, I'm Dave Wagner from 90.9 WRCJ, with events to bring some family, fun, fantasy, and culture to your weekend plans.
First up, the Hamburg Family Fun Fest is in full swing through June 15th in Hamburg Township.
Enjoy carnival rides, fireworks, a classic car show, and food that screams summer.
If you want to head slightly north, you can make your way to Frankenmuth for the Bavarian Festival, which also runs through June 15th.
There's polka music, beer, bratwurst, and even duck races right there in Michigan's own little Bavaria.
On June 13th through the 15th, the Northville Art House host its outdoor art market featuring handmade works by local and regional artists, plus food trucks with a festival-like atmosphere.
In Ann Arbor, the Comic Arts Festival returns to the District Library June 14th and 15th where you can meet creators, catch panels, and dive into the colorful world of graphic novels and illustration.
And on June 19th, the Juneteenth Community Picnic Celebration at Corrigan Park in Detroit is a day of unity, music, food, and family fun.
And there's always so much more happening in and around Metro Detroit.
So stay tuned for a few more options and make it a week to remember.
Have a great weekend, everyone.
(light upbeat music) - [Zosette] That'll do it for this week's "One Detroit."
Thanks for watching.
Head to the "One Detroit" website for all of the stories that we're working on.
Follow us on social media and sign up for our weekly newsletter.
♪ Shoot another shot, try to stop the feeling ♪ ♪ You can say it's just the way you are ♪ ♪ Make a new excuse, 'nother stupid reason ♪ ♪ Good luck, babe ♪ - [Narrator 1] From Delta faucets to Behr paint, Masco Corporation is proud to deliver products that enhance the way consumers all over the world experience and enjoy their living spaces.
Masco, serving Michigan communities since 1929.
Support also provided by the Cynthia & Edsel Ford Fund for Journalism at Detroit PBS.
- [Narrator 2] The DTE Foundation is a proud sponsor of Detroit PBS.
Through our giving, we are committed to meeting the needs of the communities we serve statewide, to help ensure a bright and thriving future for all.
Learn more at DTEFoundation.com.
- [Narrator 1] Nissan Foundation, and viewers like you.
(light upbeat music) (light music)
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S9 Ep50 | 15m 47s | One Detroit explores Michigan’s first Pride celebration and contributions to LGBTQ+ history. (15m 47s)
Cybersecurity expert Sakinah Tanzil pushes for more African Americans in the tech industry
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S9 Ep50 | 4m 39s | Cybersecurity expert Sakinah Tanzil talks about cybersecurity opportunities for African Americans. (4m 39s)
One Detroit Weekend | Things to do around Detroit this weekend: June 13, 2025
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S9 Ep50 | 2m 16s | Dave Wagner of 90.9 WRCJ shares events coming up around metro Detroit this weekend. (2m 16s)
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