I agree Mo.
I was brought up in a very strict religious household where being (what we call gay) was taboo.
Over the years I have managed to change my views.
What I don't like though is eg TV personalities who deliberately exagerate their being gay. If you're gay, fine but don't shove it in my face.
It does strike me as being a bit weird at times
My wife used to work with a guy who was openly gay - and rather "gay" acting but it seemed to be natural to him
I met his husband at one point and he just looked and behaved like a normal middle class bloke
When I was a teacher we had a trainee at one point who was obviously gay
not "in your face" or anything just that every thing about him was JUST over the point where you would say "he's gay"
appearance, hand/arm gestures, way of waling - everything
turned out he wasn;t and it was a right pain
when he went on his first proper date with his wife she actually slapped him when he tried to kiss her
nothing weird - just a goodbye peck on the cheek or something
anyway - she thought this was just a very nice evening out between friend that went really well
didn;t realise he was strait and was very shocked when he tried to kiss her
stormed off thinking he had been leading her along pretending to be gay to get close to her
it was only because her friend - who knew him a bit better - convinced her that it was not an act and it was just how he was that she went back and apologised
to be honest I used to be well known as gay - in fact I was even officially the "only gay in the IT department" according to the company records when they started working out how to "do equality"
apparently the way I gesture and some other things can be mis-interpreted!!!
anyway - this is just a parade - point is just to make kids realise that people can be different and that is OK
which is a good thing to teach in a special school!