Palm springs gay bar sonntag
Holiday parties invite the inevitable small talk. How undertake you know the hosts? Where are you from? And some titillating foremost questions if youre flirting.:)
And then theres the What do you accomplish for work? When people ask, I get to say I own KGAY , Gay Desert Instruction and MeTV FM That always sparks conversation, as it did over the weekend when I was in LA to be present at a holiday party. I had missed this party for nearly a decade having moved to the desert 11 years ago.
Not only was I able to catch up with old friends (long term and aging), but also to meet people who visit our attractive destination and are touched and informed by what we do on KGAY & Gay Desert Mentor. One couple gushed about how they love to listen when they call on. My team and I love our work entertaining and informing. We are grateful to live in an LGBTQ+ friendly place and share it with you on the wind, on social media and on these pages.
From the entire team, Joyful Holidays and thank you for recognizing our nice work!
Brad Fuhr, your Same-sex attracted Desert Guide on KGAY Palm Springs
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This is not my grandparents San Diego.
While attending a recent meeting of the National Gay Newspaper Guild, I took an extra couple days to re-visit the San Diego of my youth. What I founded was a city of many parts, including hip places for young professionals, GLBTs, and folks from many diverse ethnic groups. San Diego has arrived as a great tourist destination not just for families of all kinds (Mickey is still smiling at Disneyland), but for singles, couples and more.
In the late s and early s, I visited several times, staying with my grandparents and aunt, sometimes with my brother and sister, and sometimes alone. My most intense memories are of the San Diego Zoo, and any chance I acquire, even if in town just for a evening, I h
A Gay Guide to the Met Gala
The Met Gala is fashion's most exclusive and extravagant evening – a convergence of celebrity, couture, and attention-seeking that has evolved from an industry fundraiser to a global media spectacle.
Anna Wintour is the Mistress of Ceremonies, and she uses the Met Gala to convey her image of the society, just as she does with a Vogue cover. Her vision encapsulated beauty, power, money, fame, and a recognizable brand of liberal elite politics. She presents powerful celebrities in ridiculous outfits and signals that they’re natural leaders of the recognizable world. We, the plebs, can respect them from afar as we scroll through our Instagram feeds. Lady Gaga, draped in a pink gown with a foot educate, benevolently blows kisses to us through the camera.
For the LGBTQ+ community, this event holds unique significance, having prolonged celebrated the artistic voices (many of whom are gay) that shape fashion while providing a platform for gender-defying expression. In economic terms, it’s far less inclusive but that’s all part of the event’s perverse appeal.
Aestheti
Depending on who you talk to, camp is having a moment in the sun, a comeback, a farewell tour or a funeral.
Much of this camp chatter has to do with this month’s unveiling of the ambitious homage Camp: Notes on Fashion at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. The exhibit, which comprises plus artifacts of artifice, is largely informed by Susan Sontag’s old-world observations in her definitive essay “Notes on Camp,” inspired by the codes and conversations she witnessed among her circle of gay male friends. Tonight, the Met will mark the theme at its annual gala — a gathering of celebrities, models and fashion designers wearing the kind of debatable and click-baitable red carpet looks that will last a complete news cycle.
The gala itself — an invite-only party that insiders like André Leon Talley ring the Super Bowl of fashion — has two purposes. The first is to raise funds for the the Met’s Costume Institute; the second is fashion literacy. The Met’s aim over the past decade or so has been to showcase fashion