Skip to content

Parker Molloy and transgender people

Parker Molloy is an American author and transgender media activist. Molloy released an autobiography on making a gender transition and frequently comments on media coverage related to gender identity and expression.

Molloy is best known for lecturing others about using anti-LGBTQ slurs. Molloy was subsequently exposed for frequently directing abuse and slurs at other transgender women. Molloy apologized for some of these attacks and began developing a less confrontational public persona.

Background

Parker Marie Molloy was born on April 24, 1986 and grew up in Manhattan, Illinois with two siblings, Adam and Casey. Molloy’s parent Kevin is an insurance agent and is married to Suzanne “Sue” Molloy.

After graduating from Lincoln-Way Central High School in New Lenox in 2004, Parker Molloy attended Millikin University before transferring to Columbia College Chicago and earning a bachelor’s degree in 2009.

Molloy’s early jobs focused on the music industry, including Pitchfork Media, Ekonomisk Mgmt, and Flameshovel Records, primarily writing as a marketing and SEO expert for several musical acts. Those jobs landed marketing roles at Forsalebyowner.com/Tribune Digital, Media General Operations, and Starcom Mediavest Group.

In 2012, Molloy made a gender transition at age 26, which led to the end of a 4-year relationship with a woman.

Molloy is a strong proponent of disease models of neurodiversity and has written frequently about related personal experiences. Molloy got a semicolon tattoo, which proponents say represents “resilience, hope, and strength in the face of mental health struggles.” Molloy wrote:

I recently decided to get a semicolon tattoo. Not because it’s trendy (though, it certainly seems to be at the moment), but because it’s a reminder of the things I’ve overcome in my life. I’ve dealt with anxiety, depression, and gender dysphoria for the better part of my life, and at times, that led me down a path that included self-harm and suicide attempts. But here I am, years later, finally fitting the pieces of my life together in a way I never thought they could before. The semicolon (and the message that goes along with it) is a reminder that I’ve faced dark times, but I’m still here.

On October 21, 2017, Molloy married Kayla Pekkala (born May 26, 1988), an artist who founded the studio Tiny Werewolves. They live in Chicago with their pets.

Self-publishing (2012–present)

Soon after starting transition, Molloy began focusing primarily on self-promotion via self-publishing platforms, including Thought Catalog, Tumblr, Twitter, Medium, and later Substack and Bluesky.

Prior to transition, Molloy had already exhibited a pattern of fawning behavior toward people and groups to curry favor, like the Chicago Cubs. Molloy also used social media to lash out at those who did not benefit Molloy’s career. As an example, Molloy took Bleacher Nation to task for not publishing a piece by Molloy that they found to have a “tenuous baseball connection.”

After transition, Molloy continued this pattern of sycophantic behavior toward those who might help Molloy’s career, notably Jennifer Finney Boylan, Christina Kahrl, and GLAAD. Molloy also developed a large following among other compulsive Twitter users, especially politically progressive media figures.

Molloy soon found a niche as an outrage merchant, using clickbait, ragebait, histrionics, memes, and trolling to build a strong parasocial relationship with a loyal fan base of HelloGiggles-era millennials who reveled in call-out culture.

This strategy worked; in 2014, Chicago queer publication Windy City Times named Molloy to their “30 Under 30” list. In a cringeworthy video Molloy has since removed, Molloy bragged about having a penis: “Acceptance speeches are not my forte http://youtu.be/sGEStDFTbVM (yes, I ended that “30 Under 30″ acceptance speech by talking about my genitals… oops).”

Advocate.com (2014)

In January 2014, Molloy joined the Advocate.com website as transgender issues correspondent and promptly began writing pieces promoting friends and calling out those Molloy deemed problematic.

Molloy specifically targeted other trans people involved in entertainment and media while simultaneously trying to make inroads as a writer in those professions. Word spread quickly that Molloy’s real persona was very different than the sanctimonious public persona being cultivated. After several examples were shared via non-public channels, those who saw them generally agreed Molloy would not be a good fit with other writers and producers.

Criticism of Jen Richards and The Trans 100

Founded in 2013 by activists Jen Richards and Toni D’orsay, The Trans 100 was an annual list “celebrating excellence in service to the trans community.” Molloy was enraged at not being included, reportedly lashing out at Richards in particular in an expletive-laden rant:

“So, looks like I didn’t end up making that stupid list. It just occurred to me that it’s this weekend, and no one had even contacted me. I should be on that God damn list, but looks like I’m not even a fucking alternate. So fuck Jen fucking cock sucking Richards. I’m sick of fucking pieces of shit like her. I deserve a soot [sic] on that fucking list… Some dipshit who hosts a little support group for 15 people doesn’t have anything on half a million readers a month. So get the fuck out of here with that nonsense like I don’t have as much of an impact, I impact more people total. I deserve it. If I’m not on it, it’s a joke, and I’ll be sure to keep that in mind as I continue to do my work down the road. Because clearly if I don’t make their little list, I’m not influential so they won’t mind me freezing them out of anything I ever write, and I will.”

The organization then included Molloy on the 2014 list. The list was discontinued after 2015.

Criticism of Calpernia Addams

As seen with Molloy’s private messages about the Trans 100, Molloy began unethically using Advocate.com to promote projects that might benefit Molloy and friends, like the series Transparent, while criticizing similar projects that did not benefit Molloy and friends, like Dallas Buyers Club. Molloy’s double standard about cisgender actors in transgender roles was most glaring in how Molloy covered these two projects. The consultant for Jeffrey Tambor on Transparent was Jennifer Finney Boylan, one of Molloy’s most staunch and unwavering supporters, while the consultant for Jared Leto on Dallas Buyers Club was Calpernia Addams, my friend and business partner who had no connection to Molloy.

Molloy has a long pattern of engaging in access journalism, doing softball interviews and thinly-veiled promotional pieces for people who might benefit Molloy’s career. In a piece urging readers to support the show, Molloy said, “Transparent could have a lasting impact on not only how viewers of this show come to understand trans people, but it may also send a message to other writers, directors, and producers, helping to shape their own trans storylines.” Molloy presents Transparent showrunner Joey Soloway in a consistently positive light, but presents Dallas Buyers Club director Jean-Marc Vallée in a consistently negative light. That’s because Molloy hoped to be hired by Soloway in some capacity.

Molloy was enraged after Leto was nominated for an Academy Award, and criticism intensified over the director’s casting of a cisgender actor. Molloy began covering the controversy “objectively” while carrying on an acerbic running commentary on Twitter.

In response, Addams published an op-ed in The Advocate outlining the complexities:

I’m not so shortsighted that I’ll destroy allies and advocates — even less-than-perfect allies — if I think the overall contribution is beneficial. My beliefs in this area come from actual experience and familiarity with the film industry. Some small but vocal groups will disagree, and that’s just the nature of contentious issues. They can do their thing, and I’ll do mine, because in the end, there are many ways to contribute.

Molloy then published an op-ed response, Addams later composed a song about Molloy called Ugly Hearts.

Criticism of Carmen Carrera

Molloy was enraged when Drag Race star Carmen Carrera expressed support for trans athlete Chloie Jönsson after CrossFit ruled that Jönsson could not compete in the women’s category. Carrera said that after bottom surgery “you are no longer a male and you don’t produce testosterone.” Molloy took offense to this, tweeting:

Parker Molloy’s insults toward Carmen Carrera (2014).

Molloy’s views on Carrera quickly softened after Carrera echoed Molloy’s views on slang and slurs in “Is the T Word the New N Word?” Molloy began covering Carrera in the positive tone reserved for friends and allies.

Criticism of RuPaul and RuPaul’s Drag Race

In 2014, Molloy became a key figure in the long-running tensions between a faction of trans women and drag performers. Many trans lesbians who transition outside the drag scene have negative feelings about drag, ranging from mild disapproval to outright contempt. They see drag as a form of misogyny and transmisogyny that produces little or nothing of value, a viewpoint shared by many gender critical activists, religious and political conservatives, and anti-LGBTQ activists.

The criticism escalated as the show RuPaul’s Drag Race gained popularity. RuPaul had been vocal about not including trans contestants, a sentiment reflected in the trans-exclusionary rules of some older drag pageants. Trans women who had been involved in drag objected to this, and the show’s prohibition was eventually lifted.

Concurrently, the show had jokingly used a number of words and phrases to which some objected. At the start of each competition, RuPaul would say “Gentlemen, start your engines, and may the best woman win.” That was later changed to “Racers, start your engines, and may the best drag queen win.” The show also featured a segment called “You’ve Got She-Mail,” which remained in place until 2014, when a segment called “Female or She-Male?” aired to widespread criticism. Nearly everyone agreed that RuPaul’s Drag Race should stop using the slur shemale and variants on the show (the producers removed the segment and apologized).

Molloy was enraged about the Drag Race controversy, and Molloy’s long pattern of anti-drag sentiment and prescriptivism around community slang reached a boiling point. On March 18, 2014, Molloy posted on Twitter, “I fucking hate @RuPaul. Like… there really are very few people I truly hate. He is one of them.” The same day, Molloy published an “objective” news article criticizing RuPaul on Advocate.com.

Parker Molloy: "I fucking hate RuPaul"
Molloy published “objective” reporting about RuPaul the same day as Tweeting “I fucking hate RuPaul.”

A number of artists and activists stepped forward to object to this overreach by the anti-drag faction, noting that the show helped improve acceptance by bringing LGBTQ culture into the mainstream. I wrote a piece using Molloy’s tweet as the headline, which further enraged the anti-drag faction. They created an open letter condemning Calpernia Addams and me for criticizing Molloy’s ethics and tactics. In an attempt to isolate and shun me, Molloy gave our mutual followers on social media an ultimatum, sending messages like “unfriend Andrea James on Facebook or me,” citing a false claim by Molloy’s close friend Christina Kahrl that I looked forward to Molloy’s suicide.

Meanwhile, some prominent activists who shared Molloy’s views on drag began discussing an advertiser boycott, and some privately expressed a desire to get the show cancelled altogether. Behind the scenes, GLAAD was working on an amicable resolution. Molloy was enraged that GLAAD was not moving quickly enough and put pressure on board members Jennifer Finney Boylan and Christina Kahrl to the point that GLAAD felt they had to defend themselves from Molloy on March 29, writing:

Some writers and trans advocates questioned our entire commitment to trans people because we did not post about this issue on our site immediately. Why was there not an immediate post? We know from past experience that dialogue and education are the most effective ways to create substantive and lasting change in the media, and today’s statements are the beginning of new conversations with this network and this show.

GLAAD shared a statement from the Drag Race producers that stated in part: “‘We are newly sensitized and more committed than ever to help spread love, acceptance and understanding,’ said RuPaul Charles, Fenton Bailey, Randy Barbato, Tom Campbell, Steven Corfe and Mandy Salangsang.”

After everything was resolved amicably, Molloy went into damage control mode. Molloy dismissed the ethical lapse as “an off-the-cuff tweet that I never expected to get such press,” stating:

Without even thinking about it, I’d provided commentary on something I’d earlier written about in a news context. Making things worse, my piece — turned in before I tweeted anything — went live after the tweets, making it seem as though I went on a rant and then decided, “Hey, I’ll report on this.”

Cayenne Rouge wrote:

“There is a dilemma present in how long ­respected feminist ideas (born in academia) are being interpreted by the masses. Take for instance, the case of Advocate writer Parker Marie Molloy: she has been labeled a hate­monger by half of her peers and a representative voice by others. Molloy’s stances are well ­known in the blogosphere; she is noted for her negative cognitive attitudes regarding trans sex work and drag outsider art. She hates RuPaul, doesn’t like “drag queen” trans representatives like transgender model and reality TV alum Carmen Carrera, and is probably elated at the decision of Free Pride Glasgow to ban drag performances from this year’s celebration.”

Criticism of Our Lady J

Molloy was enraged after writer and musician Our Lady J was critical of Molloy’s attacks on RuPaul’s Drag Race. Our Lady J chided Molloy for the intemperate tone and tactics of Molloy’s agenda about community language use, writing:

“When I first transitioned, I proudly identified as a ‘tranny’ until people within the trans community told me the word was offensive to them. I complied but quickly realized that while striving to be accepted by the hetero-dominated world, the upper echelons of the trans community were trying to sweep the fringe under the rug by censoring the language with which they identify. In addition to banishing ‘tranny,’ ‘sissy,’ ‘sex change,’ and ‘she-male’ as slander, they insisted that the users of these words were the oppressors, making themselves the victims—a well-worn tool of manipulation and control.”

Meanwhile on Twitter, Molloy used tried-and-true “sealioning” methods to troll Our Lady J:

  • Odd. I asked @ourladyj to point out factual errors in the news piece I wrote that she threw a fit over, and she hasn’t responded. #shocked
  • .@ourladyj I think you’ve successfully satisfied the LGB crowd that backs your career.
  • .@ourladyj Seriously, though, you’ve had like half a dozen @huffpostgay features about you, treating you like some hero.
  • .@ourladyj Try @Queerty, @huffpostgay, and dozens of other sites all too happy to push your “agenda.”
  • @ourladyj and I’m sorry, are there not enough LGBT sites running non-stop pro-slur BS pieces for you?
  • .@ourladyj “Agenda?” What on earth are you getting at? That wasn’t an op-ed, that was straight reporting. @TheAdvocateMag

Molloy was enraged again when Joey Soloway chose Our Lady J as a writer on the second season of Transparent. As with the Trans 100, Molloy felt entitled to the Transparent gig, or wanted it to go to one of Molloy’s supporters. Citing friend Rebecca Juro without noting their relationship, Molloy wrote, “Some trans activists have criticized Soloway’s decision to hire Our Lady J, citing the singer’s questionable etymological account of a number of anti-trans slurs, along with her overall relatability.”

Criticism of Candis Cayne

Molloy was enraged when actor Candis Cayne disagreed with Molloy’s take on Drag Race and slang. In an interview with drag queen Pollo Del Mar, Candis Cayne said:

“There’s no transphobic anything [on Drag Race]. There’s a group of people who don’t like certain words and now everyone has to change their lives around it. The word ‘she-male,’ if someone called me that, I’d be irritated, but I’m not going to change a whole segment of a television show that’s about drag because they used it. To me, it’s not a serious show. It’s a fun, whimsical competition. I believe words mean something with intention. I don’t believe the word ‘tranny’ is ‘wrong.’ I don’t believe the word ‘she-male’ is that tasteful — it’s not something I would use — but I don’t see why there’s such an uproar about it. We weren’t allowed to be [trans], but we all called each other ‘tranny.’ A new, young activist isn’t going to tell me I can’t use that word. That’s how I feel.”

Molloy then tweeted:

“OMG WOMAN WHO NAMED HERSELF AFTER A CHRISTMAS-THEMED TREAT THINKS SLURS R COOL. NEWS AT NINE.” Every time HuffPost Gay Voices finds another C-list celeb to support their agenda, a gay angel gets its wings.

Parker Molloy’s insults toward Candis Cayne (2014).

Criticism of Laverne Cox

In 2014, Molloy joined anti-trans activist Cathy Brennan and others in amplifying a negative story about actor Laverne Cox, who played a trans woman imprisoned for identity theft on Orange is the New Black. Cox was approached by trans prisoner advocates Sylvia Rivera Law Project (SRLP) to participate in their End Solitary campaign. Cox appeared in a video reading a letter from SRLP member Synthia China Blast. Molloy wrote: “What Cox was seemingly unaware of at the time she agreed to record the video were the crimes of which Blast had been found guilty. In 1996, Blast and Carlos Franco — both members of the Latin Kings gang — were found guilty in the 1993 rape and murder of 13-year-old Ebony Williams.”

Cox requested that the video be taken down, and despite Molloy’s coverage, Cox was able to manage the potential PR crisis.

Attack on Kelsie Brynn Jones and Advocate.com suspension

In August 2014, Molloy was enraged after writer Kelsie Brynn Jones “voiced a contrary opinion to a piece that was highly critical of citizen journalism.” Molloy called Jones a “cunt” urged Jones to “commit suicide. “drink bleach.”

Several other people then came forward describing Molloy’s pattern of abusive behavior. In an apology, Molloy claimed to be “taking a step back” from trans activism. 

Jones published a detailed exposé on how Molloy operates, writing:

“Rather than Molloy writing from social conviction it would seem that her body of work of late, such as her writing against RuPaul and Carmen Carrera, has been solely authored to co-opt the movement against the use of misogynistic and trans-misogynistic slurs in order to further her grip on becoming a spokeswoman within mainstream organizations rather from any deep-seated belief. […] The speed at which she began trying to re-write the narrative as if it were one of her article drafts, claiming that she was the aggrieved party because her “private” chat to me was exposed, with barely an acknowledgement of what she herself had done, is shocking. It is my sincere hope that Ms. Molloy has taken this time to deal with her mental health issues, and that her return will signal a kinder, gentler approach to advocacy writing,”

Molloy was suspended without pay from Advocate.com and issued an apology on August 25:

“Last week, I lashed out at another trans woman after she disagreed with a post on my wall. In anger, I sent her a series of private messages, containing heated, vulgar language, and certainly not representative of the level of respect she deserves as a fellow human being. The language I used was absolutely inexcusible, even in a private conversation, and my heart aches that I hurt this person — someone who had been friendly to me to that point. I’m not naming her here, as I don’t know that she wants any additional attention on the matter (though should she indicate differently, I’ll happily edit this post to include her name). The things I said — profanity, casual references to self-harm, other horrible language — are, again, absolutely inexcusible. Today, I will be calling the therapist I used to go to in hopes of setting up a new appointment. I need to learn to channel my feelings, and to just generally be a better person.

For the forseeable future, I’ll be taking a step back from “trans activism.” While I will continue to write, it will be largely in the capacity of someone simply reporting events as they occur, and not providing commentary or promoting a cause. There are others out there who do a much better job of this, and I hope you seek out those voices.

I am disappointed in myself, and I just don’t want to hurt anyone anymore. I disconnected from social media for a period this weekend to reconsider how I use these accounts, and how I interact with people. My anger does not have a place in writing. My anger does not have a place in conversation.”

Advocate.com resignation and attacks on colleagues

Molloy was brought back after the suspension to cover anti-trans violence, but the return was short-lived.

According to Molloy, “publicly calling out an employee” on October 8 was the final straw. Advocate.com editor Lucas Grindley posted a self-defense and defended Advocate.com staff, saying, “That’s not what you told us when you left. I thought you explained your resignation well on [Facebook].” Grindley quoted from an October 10 message Molloy published, which said in part that Molloy’s attacks on colleagues and LGBT leaders “have given way to distraction that overshadows the topics I took so much pride in covering.” Molloy’s message continued:

In March, I said that I ‘f*cking hated’ someone. […] In August, I responded to a critical comment by calling someone a stupid c*nt and telling them to ‘drink bleach.’[…] All that’s left is for me to never ever make that sort of mistake again, to grow, and to learn from it. […] my future writing will no longer feature the ‘rage-y,’ ‘call out culture’ style some love and some hate. […] you’re not going to see me launch personal attacks on anyone.

“Anyone can rant and rage. What I’ve found is that universally denouncing someone, that ‘calling someone out’ just for the sake of calling them out, does little other than cast others as pariahs. Lately, I’ve been trying to promote a message of inclusivity, rather than division, and I’m the first one to admit that I’ve been guilty of fostering attitudes of division and anger in the past. […] Hopefully you can see the marked change in attitude and tact. You deserve better than me. All of you. I promise to do everything I can to be better.”

After Advocate.com and Molloy quietly parted ways in October 2014, it took less than three weeks for Molloy to start attacking former employers.

Molloy was enraged after being misgendered by a Verizon employee and turned to Twitter to vent. The rant soon turned into trolling comedian Michael Che, then turned to Advocate.com editor Lucas Grindley and staff with another profanity-laced diatribe. Molloy slammed Grand Editorial executives Matthew Breen and Aaron Hicklin, as well as Here Media’s Diane Anderson-Minshall and Tracy Gilchrist, claiming their “transphobia” and coverage of celebrities associated with trans issues are “on par with Breitbart,” the right-wing news site. 

In the 2014 annual Queerties Awards, Molloy was nominated for “Most Annoying Person,” losing out to homophobic Duck Dynasty star Phil Robertson.

Molloy joined Upworthy in 2015, writing “uplifting” content, and was laid off in August 2018.

A meme in Upworthy’s style (2015).

Sexual assault allegations

On June 15, 2015, Facebook user Felicity Hunter accused Molloy of sexual assault, one of several people who came forward to report experiencing Molloy’s abusive behavior:

Felicity Hunter: The Trans ‘community’ sure does idolizing known rapists. Parker Molloy. She raped me, she’s raped close friends of mine. This is no secret in the Chicago community. This happened in 2012. I’ve told people before. It never does anything.

Willow Tiffany Hadan: It really sucks when I lose more support for fighting a known rapist who molested many of my friends than for keeping my mouth shut about it.

Chelsea Autumn Tera: I have firsthand experience with Parker Molloy. She is *not* a good person. She is a bully. I’m glad I blocked her out of my life, because I think she was trying to bully me into killing myself.

Naomi Love: I don’t know Parker Molloy but I’ve heard from very credible sources she is a rapist.

Kelsie Drako: There’s a group that surrounds her and idolizes her for leading the call-out culture. Her followers are almost like a cult, who turn on anyone who says anything about her. My phone blew up and I got hateful message after hateful message from people, lots of wall posts telling me by posting on my FB I was killing her, making her suicidal : (

Kaia Quixote: <– also been sexually assaulted by Parker Molloy
I’ve been trying to drink away this post for most of the day, but here I am again apparently. my curiosity would be how many people who come so virulently to parker’s defense have ever spent time with her in person, or done so regularly, or when she’s intoxicated — or whether they solely subscribe to her sanitized, eternally blameless e-persona. I do have the chat logs of her apology to me (including, regrettably, her use of “Fuck me. Fuck.”), but… no. parker and greta and whoever the fuck else can keep the trans community. i’m out.

Several people came forward with allegations against Molloy.

Relationship with Jesse Singal

Anti-trans activist Jesse Singal and Molloy share many attributes and behaviors. Both are compulsive social media users interested in drama and self-promotion above all else. Both are deferential to anyone who might be helpful to their careers and vitriolic to anyone they feel gets in their way or shares a differing view. Both are hyperpartisan activists who mimic the language of objective journalism to litigate their personal opinions.

Molloy and Singal had a conversation while Singal was writing the 2016 defense of Kenneth Zucker titled, “How the Fight Over Transgender Kids Got a Leading Sex Researcher Fired.” Molloy wanted to maintain a relationship with Singal in hopes of some future benefit, writing “Jesse Singal seems like a very nice person. I like Jesse. He’s fun to chat with. I hope to have fun discussions with him about anything except this.”

Activism and subsequent attacks

In August 2018, Molloy began writing for Media Matters for America, a non-profit progressive media watchdog, continuing until 2021.

As Twitter began to collapse as the platform of choice for media professionals, Molloy began looking for other platforms to create drama and engage in attention-seeking behavior. Molloy focused on a Mastodon journalism forum and resumed the same lifelong pattern of histrionics.

Molloy was enraged on Mastodon after writer Mike Pesca praised a 2022 anti-trans piece by Emily Bazelon that appeared in the New York Times during their anti-trans coverage crisis. Molloy wrote:

“Holy crap, man, No. No, no, no, Jesus fucking Christ, no. Are you kidding me with this shit? ‘This seemed like careful, thorough reporting!’ What the fuck. And it’s no surprise that you seem to have decided that the most anti-trans of the pieces is the correct one. ‘Careful, thorough reporting!’ No, it’s bigoted drivel. Fucking hell. You think that piece us full of ‘careful, thorough reporting’ because you agree with it. Because you’re a bigot. What kind of utter hack sees an article that goes, ‘On one hand, here’s what doctors say… on the other, ‘Republicans and other politicians say…’ and goes, ‘This is good journalismismismsim! I am so fucking sick of anti-trans ghouls like you promoting this shit under the guise of ‘just asking questions.'”

Molloy then delivered an ultimatum for the moderators: “You can block Pesca for pushing his anti-trans BS here or I can leave and join the chorus of people urging others to block the entire instance for being a haven for anti-trans BS. This doesn’t need a meeting. This needs a decision now.

In addition to attacking moderator Adam Davidson, Molloy also attacked Evan Urquhart, the trans founder of Assigned Media and a founder of Mastodon’s journalism forum.

“But my patience with @adamdavidson’s lack of action here is running very short. Either anti-trans nonsense isn’t allowed, or it is, and at that point I’ll urge people to block the entire instance.

Well, Evan is already signaling that he thinks it’s fine, unfortunately, even saying that he’s reporting me for harassing him on here (right after telling me that I should @ him directly). What a total shitshow. Yeah, like, I called him a bootlicker after he started backpedaling and defending the NYT article. “Well, it’s NYT…” (which is the entire problem with mainstream news outlets embracing an anti-trans agenda).”

Pesca then called Molloy an activist. Both Pesca and Molloy were banned from the forum for a time. Molloy once again apologized, ultimately abandoning the platform in favor of Bluesky.

The Present Age

On June 7, 2021, Molloy launched a Substack newsletter called The Present Age. At the time, Substack actively courted writers with “a talent for Twitter theatrics,” according to The New Republic. This mutually beneficial arrangement paid off; by 2024, Molloy’s newsletter had over 80,000 subscribers.

On July 6, 2021, Molloy launched an accompanying podcast which was relaunched as a feature titled “You Know” in 2024. Guests have included:

  • Maris Kreizman April 18, 2024)
  • Taylor Lorenz (October 9, 2024)
  • Jessica Valenti (September 30, 2024)
  • A.C. Newman (September 22, 2024)
  • Lane Moore (August 2, 2024)
  • Wajahat Ali (June 19, 2024)
  • Maris Kreizman (April 18, 2024)
  • Siva Vaidhyanathan (April 15, 2024)
  • Rhett Miller (March 12, 2024)
  • Ben Lee and Ione Skye of Indie Rock Breakfast Radio (March 7, 2024)
  • “Art But Make It Sports” (February 27, 2024)
  • Krista Burton (February 16, 2024)
  • W. Kamau Bell (February 5, 2024)
  • Matt Negrin (January 19, 2022)
  • Matthew Sheffield (November 17 & 24, 2021)
  • Michael Ian Black (November 10, 2021)
  • Talia Lavin (November 3, 2021)
  • Pete Croatto (October 27, 2021)
  • Thor Benson (October 20, 2021)
  • Nick Lutsko (October 13, 2021)
  • Aaron Rupar (October 6, 2021)
  • Eddie Geller (September 22, 2021)
  • Franchesca Ramsey (September 15, 2021)
  • Molly Jong-Fast (September 1, 2021)
  • Bryan Brinkman (August 25, 2021)
  • Joe Galbo (August 11, 2021)
  • Keith Law (August 4, 2021)
  • Carlos Maza (July 28, 2021)
  • Sara Benincasa (July 21, 2021)
  • Joe Walsh (July 14, 2021)
  • Dan Slott (July 6, 2021)

Criticism of Wikipedia

Molloy has had a complicated relationship with Wikipedia. In 2007 a Wikipedia account added Molloy to Wikipedia’s “April 24” article list of notable birthdays, stating that Molloy is an “American adventurer.” The account quickly reverted the vandalism.

In November 2014, at the height of Molloy’s attacks on members of the trans community, Molloy’s Twitter followers created and then expanded a Wikipedia article about Molloy. On Twitter, Molloy encouraged users to vandalize the biography. The article was kept following a discussion about deleting it. In the ensuing ten years, the content remained largely unchanged, except for the removal of many details about Molloy’s controversies.

Because the biography was one of the few high-profile places that summarized Molloy’s past behavior, Molloy saw a reputation management opportunity in getting it removed. On November 22, 2024, Molloy posted on Bluesky, “I’d feel safer in this world if I didn’t have a Wikipedia entry, to be honest. I don’t think I meet notability criteria. If anyone can push to try to get it deleted altogether, I’d be fine with that. […] I hate that wiki page.”

The following day, a Wikipedia editor created a second deletion discussion and made the detailed case that Molloy did not meet Wikipedia’s notability criteria for biographies. The article was deleted on December 14, 2024, citing Molloy’s deletion request and concluding there was no clear consensus that Molloy was notable.

References

Urquhart, Evan (November 28, 2022). Ouroboros: Evan Urquhart Becomes the Anti-Trans Propagandists’ Muse. Assigned Media https://www.assignedmedia.org/breaking-news/ouroboros-evan-urquhart-becomes-the-anti-trans-propagandas-source

Wright, Mark Antonio (November 28, 2022). A Journalism ‘Crisis’ You Have to See to Believe. National Review https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/a-journalism-crisis-you-have-to-see-to-believe/

Rozenshtein, Alan (November 21, 2022). Mastodon’s Content-Moderation Growing Pains. Reason https://reason.com/volokh/2022/11/21/mastodons-content-moderation-growing-pains/

Bernstein, Joseph (November 21, 2022). Chaos on Twitter Leads a Group of Journalists to Start an Alternative. New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/21/style/mastodon-twitter-adam-davidson.html

Urquhart, Evan (November 21, 2022). [summary of Molloy’s attacks on Mike Pesca and Evan Urquhart] https://twitter.com/e_urq/status/1594842808635924484

Pesca, Mike (November 19, 2022). [documentation of attacks by Parker Molloy] X https://x.com/pescami/status/1594004079227068416

Valinsky, Jordan (August 3, 2018). Upworthy editor-in-chief resigns after company lays off 31 employees. CNN Money https://money.cnn.com/2018/08/03/media/upworthy-layoffs/ [archive] alt URL: https://www.fox13now.com/2018/08/03/upworthy-editor-in-chief-resigns-after-company-lays-off-31-employees

Editors (October 31, 2014). Parker Molloy Resigns From Advocate, Lashes Out At Former Colleagues. Queerty https://www.queerty.com/parker-molloy-resigns-from-advocate-lashes-out-at-former-colleagues-20141031

Editors (October 7, 2014). Parker Molloy Returns To The Advocate Covering Violence Against LGBTs Following Her Violent Outburst Against A Fellow Trans Activist. Queerty https://www.queerty.com/parker-molloy-returns-to-the-advocate-covering-violence-against-lgbts-following-her-violent-outburst-against-a-fellow-trans-activist-20141007

Jones, Kelsie Brynn (August 27, 2014). Park That Attitude: The Danger Of Trans Activist Parker Molloy. Queerty https://www.queerty.com/park-that-attitude-the-danger-of-trans-activist-parker-molloy-20140827

Woolbert, Allison (August 2014). Transgender Violence Advisory – Parker Marie Molloy. http://www.transviolencetracker.org/index.php/articles/106-transgender-violence-advisory-parker-marie-molloy-violence-alert [archive] note: Woolbert was later revealed to be a convicted sex offender, per TransAdvocate

Staff report (June 25, 2014). Windy City Times 30 Under 30 to be honored June 26. Windy City Times https://windycitytimes.com/2014/06/25/windy-city-times-30-under-30-to-be-honored-june-26/

Forman, Ross (May 14, 2014). Chicagoan Writes Nationally From the T Perspective. Windy City Times https://windycitytimes.com/2014/05/14/chicagoan-writes-nationally-from-the-t-perspective/ [original URL] http://www.windycitymediagroup.com/lgbt/Chicagoan-writes-nationally-from-the-T-perspective/47423.html

Jones, Zinnia (April 26, 2014). The worst assimilation of all: How modern-day drag hurts trans women and achieves little or nothing of value. The Orbit https://the-orbit.net/zinniajones/2014/04/the-worst-assimilation-of-all-how-modern-day-drag-hurts-trans-women-and-achieves-little-or-nothing-of-value/

Diaz, Alexa (April 22, 2014). Parker Molloy Does Not Hate RuPaul. HuffPost https://www.huffpost.com/entry/parker-molloy-rupaul-controversy_b_5183437

Addams, Calpernia (April 17, 2014). Op-ed: Burning Books, One Word at a Time. The Advocate https://www.advocate.com/commentary/2014/04/17/op-ed-burning-books-one-word-time

NewNowNext Staff (April 14, 2024). Logo Pulls “She-Mail” From “RuPaul’s Drag Race.” http://www.newnownext.com/logo-pulls-she-mail-from-rupauls-drag-race/04/2014/ [archive]

Adams, Nick (April 14, 2024). Update on “Female or She-male” sketch and ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race.’ GLAAD https://glaad.org/blog/update-female-or-she-male-sketch-and-rupauls-drag-race [archive]

Jones, Zinnia (April 14, 2024). Open Letter: 350+ Trans Women and Transfeminine People Stand Against Calpernia Addams and Andrea James. The Orbit https://the-orbit.net/zinniajones/2014/04/open-letter-100-trans-women-stand-against-calpernia-addams-and-andrea-james/

James, Andrea (April 4, 2014). “I fucking hate @RuPaul”. Boing Boing https://boingboing.net/2014/04/04/rupaul.html

Addams, Calpernia (April 2, 2014). Transphobic and Homophobic Slurs Don’t Matter, but Our Response Does. HuffPost https://www.huffpost.com/entry/parker-marie-molloy_b_5077322

Addams, Calpernia (March 5, 2014). Op-ed: In Defense of Jared Leto. The Advocate https://www.advocate.com/commentary/2014/03/05/op-ed-defense-jared-leto

Reynolds, Daniel (March 31, 2014). 2014 Trans 100 Includes CeCe McDonald, Fallon Fox. The Advocate https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/03/31/2014-trans-100-includes-cece-mcdonald-fallon-fox

Kolieboi, Asher; Richards, Jen (2014). The Trans 100 2014. http://www.thetrans100.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Trans_100_2014_Booklet_Update_9.pdf

Graef, Jon (March 1, 2014). INTERVIEW: The Advocate’s Parker Marie Molloy [Part One]. Chicagoist https://chicagoist.com/2014/03/01/interview_the_advocates_parker_mari.php

Selected publications by Molloy

pieces with an * are listed in Molloy’s portfolio

*Molloy, Parker (January 23, 2019). It’s time for a reckoning for journalists who boosted false narratives about Donald Trump’s LGBTQ policy positions. Media Matters for America https://www.mediamatters.org/donald-trump/its-time-reckoning-journalists-who-boosted-false-narratives-about-donald-trumps-lgbtq

*Molloy, Parker (January 23, 2019). How Bret Stephens and Bari Weiss have taken the NY Times’ campus concern trolling to new heights in just 2 years. Media Matters for America https://www.mediamatters.org/new-york-times/how-bret-stephens-and-bari-weiss-have-taken-ny-times-campus-concern-trolling-new

*Molloy, Parker (January 23, 2019). Tucker Carlson’s war on the ruling class is a master class of misdirection. Media Matters for America https://www.mediamatters.org/tucker-carlson/tucker-carlsons-war-ruling-class-master-class-misdirection

*Molloy, Parker (January 23, 2019). The social science explaining why Fox News wants you to believe masculinity is under threat. Media Matters for America https://www.mediamatters.org/tucker-carlson/social-science-explaining-why-fox-news-wants-you-believe-masculinity-under-threat

*Molloy, Parker (November 20, 2018). Foreign media outlets keep showing how to cover politics in the age of Trump. Will U.S. outlets learn their lesson? Media Matters for America https://www.mediamatters.org/daily-caller/foreign-media-outlets-keep-showing-how-cover-politics-age-trump-will-us-outlets-learn

*Molloy, Parker (November 9, 2018). Right-wing media and Trump Jr. peddle debunked, years-old story about illegal voters in Florida. Media Matters for America https://www.mediamatters.org/blog/2018/11/13/right-wing-media-and-trump-jr-peddle-debunked-years-old-story-about-illegal-voters-florida/222063

*Molloy, Parker (November 9, 2018). Just days after Democrats retake the House, conservative commentators insist that they’re doing it all wrong. Media Matters for America https://www.mediamatters.org/blog/2018/11/09/just-days-after-democrats-retake-house-conservative-commentators-insist-they-re-doing-it-all-wrong/222050

*Molloy, Parker (November 2, 2018). Headlines can’t handle Trump’s lies, so it’s time to rethink them. Media Matters for America https://www.mediamatters.org/blog/2018/11/02/headlines-can-t-handle-trump-s-lies-so-it-s-time-rethink-them/221968

*Molloy, Parker (October 18, 2018). Media keep talking about “identity politics.” But what does it even mean anymore? Media Matters for America https://www.mediamatters.org/blog/2018/10/18/media-keep-talking-about-identity-politics-what-does-it-even-mean-anymore/221736

*Molloy, Parker (October 15, 2018). The party of personal responsibility is now the party of “The libs made me do it.” Media Matters for America https://www.mediamatters.org/washington-post/party-personal-responsibility-now-party-libs-made-me-do-it

*Molloy, Parker (May 8, 2019). Caster Semenya and the myth of the uneven playing field. Columbia Journalism Review https://www.cjr.org/criticism/caster-semenya.php

*Molloy, Parker (November 29, 2018). Opinion: How Twitter’s Ban on ‘Deadnaming’ Promotes Free Speech. New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/29/opinion/twitter-deadnaming-ban-free-speech.html

*Molloy, Parker (October 19, 2018). 4 Reasons School Dress Codes Are Sexist. Decoded S07E01 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6CRx-bW1qeA

*Molloy, Parker (March 30, 2018). Loyola Chicago’s Final Four run: how an underdog restored a city’s basketball glory. The Guardian https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2018/mar/30/loyola-chicago-basketball-michael-jordan

*Molloy, Parker (October 2018). Jonny Sun, the Aliebn Invader. Bonobos https://guidebook.bonobos.com/blog/jonny-sun-bonobos

*Molloy, Parker (August 8, 2018). By not banning Alex Jones, Twitter is making a political choice. The Verge https://www.theverge.com/2018/8/8/17662140/twitter-infowars-alex-jones-apple-facebook-spotify-pinterest-ban

Molloy, Parker (February 11, 2016). About that New York Magazine article on Kenneth Zucker. https://medium.com/@parkermolloy/about-that-new-york-magazine-article-on-kenneth-zucker-8212506a2bf1

Molloy, Parker (March 7, 2015). From ‘Glen or Glenda’ to ‘The Danish Girl’: A History of Trans Lives on Film. Vice https://www.vice.com/en/article/trans-history-101/

Molloy, Parker Marie (January 12, 2015). What the ‘Transparent’ Golden Globes win means for transgender people. Bustle https://www.bustle.com/articles/58106-transparent-winning-two-golden-globe-awards-shows-that-we-transgender-people-are-taking-steps-towards-societal

*Molloy, Parker (November 6, 2014). Heroes, Martyrs, And Myths: The Battle For The Rights Of Transgender Athletes. Vice https://sports.vice.com/en_us/article/bmea9w/heroes-martyrs-and-myths-the-battle-for-the-rights-of-transgender-athletes

*Molloy, Parker (November 6, 2014). Are Politicians Too Dumb to Understand the Lyrics to ‘Born in the USA’? Daily Beast https://www.thedailybeast.com/are-politicians-too-dumb-to-understand-the-lyrics-to-born-in-the-usa/

Molloy, Parker Marie (August 26, 2014). Laverne Cox Distances Herself From Controversial Trans Inmate. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/08/26/laverne-cox-distances-herself-controversial-trans-inmate

Molloy, Parker Marie (July 3, 2014). Joan Rivers Calls Michelle Obama a “Tr*nny.” Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/07/03/watch-which-transphobic-slur-did-joan-rivers-call-michelle-obama

Molloy, Parker Marie (June 18, 2014). Op-ed: Born a Man? No, Born a Baby. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/commentary/2014/06/18/op-ed-born-man-no-born-baby

*Molloy, Parker Marie (June 12, 2014). Opinion: Under the Skin. New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/13/opinion/the-next-fight-for-transgender-insurance-equality.html

Molloy, Parker Marie (July 20, 2014). How One Careless Tweet Turned My Life Into A Living Hell. Thought Catalog https://thoughtcatalog.com/parker-marie-molloy/2014/07/how-one-careless-tweet-turned-my-life-into-a-living-hell/

Molloy, Parker Marie (May 28, 2014). Carmen Carrera Becomes Lightning Rod in T-Word Debate. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/05/28/carmen-carrera-becomes-lightning-rod-t-word-debate

Molloy, Parker Marie (May 22, 2014). Radio Hosts Suspended Fired Following Transphobic Rant. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/05/22/rochester-ny-radio-hosts-fired-following-transphobic-rant

Molloy, Parker Marie (May 21, 2014). Trannyshack No More: Founder Launches Rebranding Effort. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/05/21/trannyshack-no-more-founder-launches-rebranding-effort

Molloy, Parker Marie (May 7, 2014). OITNB Star Joins Michfest Lineup. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/2014/05/07/orange-new-black-star-joins-line-trans-exclusionary-music-festival

Molloy, Parker Marie (May 6, 2014). Carnie Wilson Makes Transphobic Comment on The Talk. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/05/06/wilson-phillips-singer-makes-transphobic-comment-cbss-talk

Molloy, Parker Marie (May 1, 2014). Jennifer Finney Boylan Joins Barnard College. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/05/01/glaad-cochair-jennifer-finney-boylan-joins-barnard-college

Molloy, Parker Marie (April 14, 2014). Prominent Trans Twitter Engineer Charged With Raping Her Wife. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/crime/2014/04/14/prominent-trans-twitter-engineer-charged-raping-her-wife

Molloy, Parker Marie (April 14, 2014). RuPaul’s Drag Race, Logo TV Apologize for Transphobic Slur. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/04/14/rupauls-drag-race-logo-tv-apologize-transphobic-slur

Molloy, Parker Marie (April 8, 2014). Ad Watchdog Org Under Fire for Its Own Transphobic Ad. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/04/08/advertising-watchdog-organization-under-fire-its-own-transphobic-ad

Molloy, Parker Marie (April 1, 2014). Carmen Carrera Slams Drag Race Over Transphobic Slur. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/04/01/carmen-carrera-slams-idrag-racei-over-transphobic-slur

Molloy, Parker Marie (March 29, 2014). Logo, RuPaul’s Drag Race Respond to Antitrans Slurs. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/03/29/logo-rupauls-drag-race-respond-antitrans-slurs

Molloy, Parker Marie (March 24, 2014). Jerry Springer Will Stop Using the T-Word. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/03/24/watch-jerry-springer-will-no-longer-use-t-word

Molloy, Parker Marie (March 18, 2014). RuPaul Stokes Anger with Use of Transphobic Slur. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/03/18/rupaul-stokes-anger-use-transphobic-slur

Molloy, Parker Marie (March 17, 2014). Wendy Williams Sorry for Transphobic Panel Discussion. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/03/17/wendy-williams-apologizes-transphobic-panel-discussion

Molloy, Parker Marie (March 12, 2014). Tranny Awards’ Changes its name, not its nature. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/03/12/tranny-awards-changes-its-name-not-its-nature

Molloy, Parker Marie (March 10, 2014). What People Don’t Get About Dismay Over Jared Leto. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/commentary/2014/03/10/op-ed-what-people-dont-get-about-dismay-over-jared-leto

Molloy, Parker Marie (February 6, 2014). Jared Leto Accused of Transmisogyny at Award Ceremony. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/02/06/jared-leto-accused-transmisogyny-award-ceremony

Molloy, Parker Marie (February 20, 2014). Op-ed: It’s Time to Stop With the T-Word. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/commentary/2014/02/20/op-ed-its-time-stop-t-word

Molloy, Parker Marie (February 24, 2014). Op-ed: Is Alec Baldwin Transphobic or Just Ignorant? Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/commentary/2014/02/24/op-ed-alec-baldwin-transphobic-or-just-ignorant

Molloy, Parker Marie (February 25, 2014). Tim Gunn ‘Conflicted’ About Trans Models. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/02/25/tim-gunn-conflicted-about-trans-models

Molloy, Parker Marie (January 24, 2014). Op-ed: The Deadly Effects of Outing. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/commentary/2014/01/24/op-ed-deadly-effects-outing

Molloy, Parker Marie (January 9, 2014). Op-Ed: Can Media Stop Focusing on Trans People’s Bodies? Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/commentary/2014/01/09/op-ed-can-media-please-stop-focusing-trans-peoples-bodies

Molloy, Parker Marie (January 7, 2014). Did This Toronto Star Columnist Act Unethically? Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/01/07/toronto-star-columnist-publishes-unverified-antitransgender-claims

Molloy, Parker Marie (January 1, 2014). Trans Golfer Trying to Go Pro, Claims Unfair Advantage. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2014/01/01/trans-golfer-still-trying-join-pro-tour-even-while-claiming-have

Molloy, Parker Marie (2014). My Transgender Coming Out Story. [ebook] Thought Catalog, ASIN ‎B0791WTLQY

Molloy, Parker Marie (December 10, 2013). Buck Angel Shuts Down Trans Surgery Fundraising Site. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2013/12/10/buck-angel-shuts-down-transgender-surgery-fundraising-site

Molloy, Parker Marie (November 25, 2013). Gay Dudes, Can You Just Not? Huffington Post https://www.huffpost.com/entry/gay-dudes-can-you-just-not_b_4330353

Molloy, Parker (October 28, 2013). What It Feels Like to Be a Transgender Woman. Bustle https://www.bustle.com/articles/7727-im-a-transgender-woman-and-this-is-what-its-like

Molloy, Parker Marie (October 10, 2013). Op-ed: No One Else Can Define Your Attraction. Advocate.com https://www.advocate.com/commentary/2013/10/10/op-ed-no-one-else-can-define-your-attraction

Molloy Parker Marie (September 4, 2013). 3 Pictures to Illustrate why “Tr*nny” is a Slur. https://parkthatcar.net/2013/09/04/3-pictures-to-illustrate-why-trnny-is-a-slur/ [archive]

Molloy, Parker Marie (August 23, 2013). The happy story of my transgender coming-out. Salon https://www.salon.com/2013/08/23/the_happy_story_of_my_transgender_coming_out/

Media

Another Day with Ana Marie Cox (August 27, 2024). Day 69: Parker Molloy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GdWKo8–I1A

All In with Chris Hayes (Jun 15, 2022). Right-Wing Extremists Ramp Up Anti-LGBTQ Hate. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=loyacDl4HuI

Matt Binder (December 16, 2021). The (Fake) Forever War on Christmas (w/ Parker Molloy). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0TMZJPBI-U

Staff (October 27, 2018). Parker Molloy on Caitlyn Jenner. AM2DM by BuzzFeed News https://x.com/AM2DM/status/1056094146254041090

Giese, Rachel (August 31, 2018). From NAFTA to Paul Manafort: A look back at the summer’s long, hot, nonstop news cycle. Day 6 https://www.cbc.ca/radio/day6/episode-405-trudeau-s-bummer-summer-gay-asylum-seekers-in-austria-louis-c-k-s-return-gabor-mat%C3%A9-and-more-1.4803895/from-nafta-to-paul-manafort-a-look-back-at-the-summer-s-long-hot-nonstop-news-cycle-1.4803919

Brown, Karamo (October 26, 2018). Where the Personal and Political Meet: In Conversation with Karamo Brown and Parker Molloy. With Friends Like These https://crooked.com/podcast/where-the-personal-and-political-meet-in-conversation-with-karamo-brown-and-parker-molloy/

20×2 Chicago (October 24, 2018). Why Is It Important? – Parker Molloy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y6QQ6JSfdaE

Tuesday Funk (June 28, 2016). June 2016: Parker Molloy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_S7aQcGvQI

Siegel, Robert (February 6, 2015). Is Bruce Jenner Fervor Good For Trans Community? All Things Considered https://www.npr.org/transcripts/384345852

Project UROK (May 27, 2015). Project UROK User Parker Molloy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LRjugUlIil4

Molloy, Parker (2014). [30 under 30 speech about Molloy’s penis.] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sGEStDFTbVM [deleted]

Resources

note: Molloy’s extensive pre-transition online presence has been omitted as a courtesy.

Parker Molloy (parkthatcar.net) [archive]

Thought Catalog (thoughtcatalog.com)

  • My Transgender Coming Out Story [archive]
  • thoughtcatalog.com/book/my-transgender-coming-out-story
  • Parker Marie Molloy
  • thought.is/author/parker-marie-molloy
  • original URL: thoughtcatalog.com/parker-marie-molloy

Tumblr (tumblr.com)

Parker Molloy (parkermolloy.com)

Bio Sites (biosites.com)

Authory (authory.com)

Substack (substack.com)

Collective Speakers (https://collectivespeakers.com/)

  • Parker Molloy
  • collectivespeakers.com/speakers/parker-molloy
  • Previous URL: collectiveentinc.com/speaker-parker-molloy [archive]

HelloGiggles (hellogiggles.com)

Media Matters for America (mediamatters.org)

X/Twitter (x.com)

Instagram (instagram.com)

Facebook (facebook.com)

TikTok (tiktok.com)

Threads (threads.net)

Patreon (patreon.com)

LinkedIn (linkedin.com)

BlueSky (bsky.app)

Rolling Stone (rollingstone.com)

Bandcamp (bandcamp.com)

Daily Beast (thedailybeast.com)

Slate (slate.com)

Talking Points Memo (talkingpointsmemo.com)

Glamour (glamour.com)

The Guardian (theguardian.com)

Vice (vice.com)

Salon (salon.com)

Muck Rack (muckrack.com)

Huffington Post (huffpost.com)

The Advocate (advocate.com)

them (them.us)

Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org)

  • Parker Molloy (deleted December 14, 2024) [archive]
  • en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parker_Molloy
  • en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Parker_Molloy
  • Articles for deletion: Parker Molloy (2024) [archive]
  • en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Parker_Molloy