Fifth Harmony’s Lauren Jauregui was warned not to come out by her friends and family

Fifth Harmony’s Lauren Jauregui was warned not to come out by her friends and family

Lauren Jauregui was told by friends and family not to come out.

The Fifth Harmony member and fellow bisexual singer Halsey released a love song called Strangers earlier this year which is believed to be the first same-sex love duet to hit mainstream radio.

But Jauregui, who came out as bisexual in a powerful open letter to Trump supporters after November’s election, said it was common for musicians to be told not to reveal their sexuality.

“A lot of artists are held back by the notion that they’ll lose their fan base or alienate themselves,” she said.

“Even friends and family would tell me to keep it to myself. But the more I thought about it, the more I was like, ‘Why?’” Jauregui told Out Magazine in an interview released during Bisexual Awareness Week.

The Cuban-American star also revealed that she had a crush on another girl in high school while growing up in Miami, but felt too guilty to act on her feelings.

“I was in a Latin household and part of a Catholic community,” she said. “What was I going to do?”

That’s all behind Jauregui now, though, who hits out at anyone judging her for being bisexual.

“People still talk shit,” she said. “But it’s like, why does it make you feel gross? You can watch a kid get bombed and not do anything about it, but you can’t watch me kiss my girlfriend? Go fuck yourself.”

The singer also revealed that Strangers was originally going to be a heterosexual love song, until Halsey sent her a history-altering message.

Lauren and Halsey

“I got a text from her: ‘Hey, babe, you can totally shut this down, but I was thinking we could switch the pronouns,’” Jauregui said.

“I was like: ‘Bitch, I was thinking the same thing!’”

Jauregui has also shown her fearless streak in the political arena, using her words and music to condemn the President. The star slammed Trump as “disgusting” following his decision to ban trans people from the military and his reaction to white supremacists marching in Charlottesville.

On Fifth Harmony’s new self-titled album, a track called Bridges stands out as a clear anti-Trump protest song. The key lyrics are “we build bridges / Bridges, not walls,” as the band uses the popular line from protests to stand against all of the administration’s divisive policies, including the proposed multi-billion-dollar US-Mexico border wall.

Previous Usher’s male accuser claims singer exposed him to herpes at Koreatown spa
Next Let’s Discuss…About Using The Label “Queer”

About author

You might also like

The Happenings 18 Comments

“Gays, Remarried Catholics Are Just As Sinful As Murderers.” – Cardinal Raymond Burke

When Pope Francis last year effectively demoted U.S. Cardinal Raymond Burke by moving him out of a senior post in the Vatican to a largely ceremonial role as head of

The Happenings 17 Comments

Woman Claims She’s the Real Cookie Lyon, Sues ‘Empire’ Creators

A Detroit woman named Sophia Eggleston, who says she is the “real-life Cookie Lyons,” has filed a $300 million lawsuit against Empire co-creator Lee Daniels and Fox, claiming that Daniels

The Happenings 0 Comments

Gay Nigerian Writes A Letter To the Queer Community

Safety. Dating. Sex. Community. Internalized homophobia. These are some of the issues that Twitter user @CardinalOrsini address in his twitter thread of a letter to members of the community, especially

5 Comments

  1. Mandy
    September 23, 17:12 Reply

    I just downloaded the Strangers song. Beautiful song. ??

  2. Delle
    September 25, 09:31 Reply

    I love the inscription on her shirt!

    I’m so stealing it?

    • Pink Panther
      September 25, 12:23 Reply

      I’m already having a shirt made out like that. 🙂

  3. mike
    September 25, 12:10 Reply

    All of a sudden she caught my eyes with her scene in “he like that”, I use to ignore her lines,buh suddenly she got hotter,it has to be that bisexual thingy.huh

Leave a Reply

Click here to cancel reply.