Current:Home > InvestPride vs. Prejudice -NextFrontier Finance
Pride vs. Prejudice
View
Date:2025-04-14 14:08:21
Pride feels more needed, more urgent than ever this year, and I say that as a gay man who spent most of my life rolling my eyes at the rainbow bunting outside my Dupont Circle neighborhood's coffee shops and nail salons. I've only attended a handful of Pride festivals in my life, being among the cohort of LGBTQ+ folk constitutionally averse to crowds, midday sun and dancing. (Do not underestimate our numbers. We're here, we're queer, we'd rather go someplace where we can actually hear.)
My husband and I couldn't see D.C.'s Pride Parade itself from the balcony of our old apartment, but we could watch the throngs of people streaming towards 17th Street to cheer it on. I'd get up early the Sunday after the parade so I could watch folk in tiaras, boas and rainbow leis wandering blearily home from their hookups.
We moved out of D.C. early in the pandemic, to a cabin in the Blue Ridge mountains about an hour-and-change west of the city. We traded our balcony overlooking Q Street for a deck overlooking a patch of yellow poplars. We still see just as many bears as we used to back in the old gay neighborhood, just, you know. Of a different sort.
Oh sure, we do what we can to glitter and be gay out here. When we go out to local bars and restaurants, we're physically affectionate to the extent that we feel safe being so, which of course changes depending on the day, the place, the crowd around us.
At home? Super queer. Devouring the latest seasons of The Other Two, Drag Race All Stars, Drag Race España (sleep on Pitita at your peril!) and Queen of the Universe. Listening to queer podcasts, watching queer comedy specials, reading queer books and comics, writing a queer fantasy novel.
All of that's enriching, and enjoyable, and life-affirming.
What it isn't, so much, is helping.
Something's changed. Drag performers are under disingenuous attack. Trans kids are being used to score bad-faith political points. Queer folk are being assaulted in the streets. The very worst, most hateful people feel supported and emboldened. In the face of all that, my naming my horse in The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom "Padam Padam" maybe isn't striking the blow for Big Gay Justice I can too easily lull myself into believing it does.
So this year, we're schlepping back into the city for Pride. We're a good deal grayer and slower and achier than we used to be, and we're still carrying the extra pounds we picked up during the pandemic. But we'll be there, back in our old neighborhood, to cheer the parade along, and bake in the sun at the festival. We'll dance, we'll pay way too much for drinks, we'll go to drag shows and tip our local queens outrageously, we'll nod at the rainbow flags opportunistically festooning the bar where we used to meet each other after work. We'll pass by our old building, and gaze up at the balcony from which we used to watch Pride pass us by.
And we'll think, This is ... something. It's a hell of a lot more than we used to do; it's more than absolutely nothing.
But we'll also know: It's not enough. It's not nearly enough. It's just the start of the onset of the beginning.
This piece also appeared in NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter. Sign up for the newsletter so you don't miss the next one, plus get weekly recommendations about what's making us happy.
Listen to Pop Culture Happy Hour on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
veryGood! (17)
Related
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- US military Osprey aircraft with 8 aboard crashes into the sea off southern Japan
- Critically endangered Sumatran rhino named Delilah gives birth to 55-pound male calf
- How a group of ancient sculptures sparked a dispute between Greece and the UK
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Sherrod Brown focuses on abortion access in Ohio Senate reelection race
- Critically endangered Sumatran rhino named Delilah gives birth to 55-pound male calf
- India opens an investigation after US says it disrupted a plot to kill a Sikh separatist leader
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- 2 seriously injured after large 'block-wide' fire scorches homes in South Los Angeles; investigation ongoing
Ranking
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Kentucky Republican chairman is stepping down after eventful 8-year tenure
- Sports Illustrated is the latest media company damaged by an AI experiment gone wrong
- Ransomware attack prompts multistate hospital chain to divert some emergency room patients elsewhere
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- John Mulaney relates to Matthew Perry's addiction battle: 'I’m thinking about him a lot'
- 'We need to do more': California to spend $300 million to clear homeless encampments
- Novelist Tim Dorsey, who mixed comedy and murder in his Serge A. Storms stories, dies at 62
Recommendation
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Pope cancels trip to Dubai for UN climate conference on doctors’ orders while recovering from flu
How can we break the cycle of childhood trauma? Help a baby's parents
Cardiologist runs half-marathon with runners whose lives he saved a year ago
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
'Metering' at the border: Asylum-seekers sue over Trump, Biden border policy
Former Google executive ends longshot bid for Dianne Feinstein’s US Senate seat in California
Latest projection points to modest revenue boost for Maine government