Don’t hate–celebrate

20th Annual Honolulu LGBT Pride Parade and Celebration / In a state that generously flaunts rainbows on its license plates and storefronts, denizens of Waikiki may not notice the spike in rainbow-colored accoutrements that’ll pervade street corners this week. Harder to miss will be the Dykes on Bikes (you don’t have to be a dyke, but you do need a bike) roaring out of Magic Island at 10am Saturday, kicking off the 20th Annual Honolulu LGBT Pride Parade and Celebration. When the last of the sequined-clad drag queens sashays through Kalakaua Avenue, festivities will continue until 6pm at Kapiolani Park.
With House Bill 444 sitting on Governor Linda Lingle’s desk–her pending signature would legalize same-sex civil unions in Hawaii–this year’s Pride parade emerges at a particularly political moment. Neil Abercrombie, a proponent of the bill, is set to speak at Kapiolani Park, which, according to parade coordinator Michael Golojuch Jr., is the first time a major nominee for governor will speak at a gay pride event in Hawaii. Another breakthrough is the amount of LGBT allies participating, including organizations like Planned Parenthood and Interfaith Alliance, and with the recent repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell,” you can bet a lot of crew cut sporting men (and women) will be soldiering out of closets and into the streets.
Unlike Pride parades in New York and Los Angeles, which tend to feature floats carrying brawny men gyrating in ass-less Speedos, Golojuch Jr. stresses that Hawaii’s Pride celebration is fun for the whole family. Featured at Kapiolani Park will be bouncy houses, balloon artists and vendors providing food, services and–this goes without saying–crafts. After, leave the kids with Tutu and head down to one of the three official after-parties–Tapa’s Lanai Bar in Waikiki, Downetowne at Bar 35 in Chinatown, and Chemisstry at T-Spot 590 in Kapolei–hosted conveniently throughout the island.
Golojuch Jr. encourages everyone to come out and celebrate, even the detractors. After all, he said, “Once you meet us, it’s a lot harder to hate us.”







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