Abstract
Well into the 1990s, the septuagenarian Morris Kight vehemently opposed any sugestion that the Coors boycott was over or that the Coors Brewing Company and family had really changed their ways. The out spoken Los Angeles–based activist and cofounder of the city’s Gay and Lesbian Center—who had taken a leadership position in the boycott as early as 1976—remained committed to the anti-Coors movement.¹ Though Kight argued that the boycott had been “an ongoing, never-interrupted activity,” he worried that his fellow activists—especially those in the gay and lesbian community—had lost sight of its significance.² “The dissolution