Pros
It pays very well and the benefits are best-in-class.
Cons
Leadership wants to sand every edge off a queer app until it's bland enough to sell to advertisers and reassure Wall Street. Grindr publicly wants the app to become a "Global Gayborhood in Your Pocket," ... but the result is an enshittified, barely function app that's anything but the sharp, sex-positive, specifically queer product it was at its inception.
The straightwashing is the part I can't get past. Several teams have become a creeping majority of straight people making creative and strategic decisions about an app they have never once opened. I don't know how you greenlight campaigns for a community you've never been part of, but they manage it, and it shows in every flat, focus-grouped piece of work that goes out the door. The audience can tell. The audience can always tell.
It's insanity. The people steering the brand simply don't care about the people using it, and you cannot fake the thing that's missing.
Any person with moderately competent critical thinking skills could be able to understand why this is an issue. You're having people who have never used the app, who aren't gay themselves, acting as arbiters for what an audience wants and gets to receive. No wonder our why our audience hates us—the decision makers are either straight, out of touch, or both.