Contents:
"FOR THE MORNG GAYS": THE IMPORTANCE OF LGBTQ-OWNED F AS SOBER, QUEER SPAC
While gay bars have bee a bean for many the muny and tend to domate nversatns regardg gathergs, we hear far ls about other typ of plac to e together. We're jt for the morng gays.
"When people thk of gay spac or queer spac, they immediately thk of a nightclub or bar — maybe a ltle hole the wall, " he said. Gay bars hold a eply important place the history of LGBTQ rights and visibily the Uned Stat. For s and s, jt visg a gay bar was a high-risk activy.
For young members of the LGBTQ muny, gog out to a gay or lbian bar was almost like a re of passage. Growg up as a queer, Black women Louisville, Kentucky, Arielle Clark said that she felt like there were certa "ton" she wanted to meet to feel at home the muny: She wanted to attend Kentucky Pri and meet other LGBTQ people, and then she wanted to get to some kd of gay bar or nightclub bee that's where everyone spent time on the weekends. Facg a lack of queer-specific gatherg plac Utah, many members of the state’s LGBTQ muny have embraced ffee shops as their -facto safe spac, servg as hubs for both nnectn and n be difficult to put a fger on what mak certa ffee shops more welg plac than other spac, but those that do offer the opportuny to be fully themselv: to wear clothg that bt exprs their genr and inty, to be openly affectnate wh a partner, or to otherwise prent as openly Mason, a 21-year-old Salt Lake Cy rint who grew up Park Cy, said a recent terview that there’s a “cent queer ffee culture” Utah — and that those spac provi a way for queer Utahns who are sober or who are too young to go to gay bars to build muny.