US | gay marriage Gay Weddings Go on Without Bridezillas Flamboyant or offbeat Calif. ceremonies could hurt the cause By Sam Gale Rosen Posted Jun 17, 2008 1:56 PM CDT Copied Shelly Bailes, left, and Ellen Pontac, right, hold each other during their wedding ceremony held at the Yolo County Clerk/Recorder's office in Woodland, Calif., Monday, June 16, 2008. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli) Same-sex couples getting married in California are trying to avoid offbeat weddings that gay marriage opponents could use in a campaign against them, reports the LA Times. "We want everybody to be free, but the image does matter. They are going to try to make us look like freaks," says a soon-to-be-wed Californian. "One of the things that have hurt the gay effort in California is the exhibitionism in San Francisco," says a political analyst. Still, proponents point to polls that show that in Massachusetts, people become more accepting after witnessing gay marriages. "It's the power of marriage," says an adviser to San Francisco's mayor, gay-marriage cheerleader Gavin Newsom. Read These Next Sydney Sweeney is at the center of a controversy yet again. Canada's Mark Carney is standing by his big Davos speech. Crew dealing with an allegedly unruly passenger had to get creative. Treasury drops Booz Allen over Trump tax return leak. Report an error