Cannick is the co-founder along with Gemmel Moore's Mom
LaTisha Nixon of Justice 4 Gemmel and All of Ed Buck's Victims. She is the co-founder of My Hood Votes along with rapper
Lil Eazy-E, a voter registration initiative focused on Los Angeles County's roughest neighborhoods. Cannick is a co-founder of the National Black Justice Coalition, the nation's largest and oldest Black lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender civil rights organization. She currently sits on the board of the Los Angeles African American Women's Political Action Committee and the Black Alliance for Justice Immigration (BAJI) Political Action Committee. Cannick has been a voice and an advocate for many causes. She led a campaign to retire white gay comedian
Charles Knipp's character Shirley Q. Liquor, a self-described inarticulate black woman on welfare with 19 kids. In 2005, she advocated to help make sure that the Los Angeles City taxpayers did not foot the bill to honor a homophobic black pastor. That same year, she helped lead a protest against the "Tookie Must Die Hour" on KFI-AM with talk-show hosts
John Kobylt and
Ken Chiampou. Stanley "Tookie" Williams was the founder of the Crips gang and scheduled to be executed after being convicted in the 1979 killings of four people. Cannick also was the last person to interview Williams before his execution. She would go on to face off against KFI-AM again after talk-show hosts Kobylt and Chiampou made fun of
Whitney Houston after she was found dead in a bathtub at the Beverly Hilton calling her a "crack ho." Several years later Cannick criticized oKFI-AM morning show host Bill Handel for calling Florida Congresswoman
Frederica Wilson a "cheap sleazy Democrat whore" on air. Cannick has been an advocate of the black LGBTQ community, which she belongs to. When
Proposition 8, a measure that made same-sex marriage illegal in California was on the ballot, she was one of the leading voices in the black and LGBTQ communities calling out African-Americans for their homophobia and the white-led LGBTQ community for their racism against blacks. She is known for her column "A White Gay’s Guide on Dealing with the Black Community for Dummies" where she would break down the pervasive and systemic racism in the white gay community towards black people. When
Mitrice Richardson went missing after being released from a Los Angeles County jail in Malibu, Cannick worked with Richardson's family to call attention to the case and to challenge the Sheriff's Department on the narrative they were spinning in the media. In 2018, she won a major victory on behalf of a dozen tenants in South Los Angeles facing homelessness after a transitional housing manager took their money, failed to pay rent, and abandoned the property. Through her advocacy for the victims, she was able to get them relocation assistance as well as call attention to a new practice taking place in Los Angeles where low-income renters are being taken advantage of with rent-a-room scams. ==Film and television==