Author: Read with Pride

Spread Your Wings: The Global Rise of the Eagle Bars

readwithpride.com Walk into any Eagle bar from Amsterdam to San Francisco, and you’ll feel it immediately, that unmistakable energy of leather, denim, and unfiltered authenticity. These aren’t your typical rainbow flag-draped establishments. Eagle bars represent something deeper, grittier, and undeniably more subversive: a global network of independently owned spaces where the leather and cruise community …

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No Suits Allowed: Inside NYC’s Legendary Mineshaft

readwithpride.com If you showed up at 835 Washington Street in Manhattan’s Meatpacking District between 1976 and 1985 wearing a button-down shirt and khakis, you weren’t getting in. Splash on some cologne? Forget about it. The Mineshaft wasn’t just particular about who walked through its unmarked doors, it was downright militant about it. And that’s exactly …

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Berlin’s Leather Heart: The Legend of Tom’s Bar

readwithpride.com Walk down Motzstraße in Berlin’s Schöneberg district, and you’re stepping through layers of queer history. This neighborhood wasn’t just a gay scene: it was the gay scene, hosting Germany’s first gay bar and serving as the beating heart of European queer liberation in the early 20th century. And right there at number 19 sits …

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Rome’s Wildest Nights: Bacchanalia and Forbidden Love

readwithpride.com When Ancient Rome Threw the Ultimate Rager Picture this: It’s 186 BC, and somewhere in the shadows of ancient Rome, torch-lit groves are pulsing with bodies, wine flows like water, and the air is thick with incense, sweat, and something that definitely isn’t just fermented grapes. Welcome to the Bacchanalia, the legendary festivals that …

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Bacchus and the Boys: Wine and Desire in Ancient Greece

readwithpride.com Picture this: It’s Athens, around 400 BCE. The sun has set, and you’re reclining on a cushioned couch in a dimly lit room. A young man pours wine into your cup, not straight, because that would be barbaric, but mixed with water in just the right proportion. Around you, other men recline, talking philosophy, …

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Berlin’s Gilded Age: Cocaine and Cabarets of the 1920s

readwithpride.com When the World’s Wildest Party Happened in Germany Picture this: It’s 1925, midnight in Berlin. The streets pulse with jazz music spilling from every doorway. Men in tuxedos dance with men in dresses. Women kiss women in dimly lit corners. Cocaine lines disappear from silver trays. And nobody, absolutely nobody, gives a damn what …

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The Poppers Revolution: 1970s NYC and the Disco Fever

readwithpride.com When the Night Belonged to Us Picture this: It’s 1976, you’re walking down a Manhattan street at midnight, and the entire block vibrates with music. Disco beats pulse through the pavement, and you can smell the mix of sweat, cologne, and freedom before you even reach the club entrance. Inside, a thousand bodies move …

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Opium and Outsiders: San Francisco’s Queer 19th-Century Underworld

readwithpride.com When we think about LGBTQ+ safe spaces, we usually picture rainbow flags, pride parades, and welcoming coffee shops. But rewind 150 years, and the reality was wildly different. In 19th-century San Francisco, queer folks found sanctuary in the most unexpected places, including the smoke-filled, dimly lit opium dens of Chinatown and the Barbary Coast. …

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The Green Fairy’s Kiss: Absinthe and Art in Jazz Age Paris

readwithpride.com Here’s the delicious irony of Jazz Age Paris and its obsession with absinthe: by the time American queers started flooding into Montparnasse cafés in the 1920s, la fée verte, the Green Fairy, had been banned for nearly a decade. France outlawed absinthe in 1915, right in the middle of World War I, blaming the …

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Club Kids and Ecstasy: Reimagining Queer Life in the 80s

readwithpride.com Picture this: It’s 3 AM in New York City, 1988. The subway station at Union Square has transformed into an impromptu nightclub. Kids in feathers, glitter, and costumes that defy every gender norm are dancing their hearts out. Someone’s dressed as a human chandelier. Another person looks like they walked out of a sci-fi …

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Speakeasy Secrets: How Prohibition Created Gay Safe Havens

readwithpride.com When Banning Booze Accidentally Created Queer Liberation Here’s the wild irony: America tried to clean up its moral act by banning alcohol in 1920, and accidentally created some of the first real safe spaces for LGBTQ people. Sometimes the universe has a sense of humor, right? Before Prohibition, if you were a queer person …

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Sake and Shadows: The Birth of Tokyo’s Queer Nightlife

readwithpride.com When we think about queer nightlife, we often picture disco balls, thumping bass, and packed dance floors. But in post-war Tokyo, the story unfolded differently: quieter, more intimate, and steeped in the ritual of shared sake cups and whispered conversations. This is the tale of how alcohol became the social lubricant that helped birth …

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Gin and Gentlemen: The Underground Molly Houses of Victorian London

readwithpride.com Picture this: Victorian London, thick with coal smoke and secrets. The streets reeked of horse manure and human desperation, but inside certain “respectable” taverns and gin palaces, something extraordinary was happening. Behind locked doors and through hidden passages, gay men were creating their own world, one fueled by cheap gin, defiant love, and the …

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Spirit of the Forest: The Sacred Bonds of the Yanomami

Deep in the Amazon rainforest, where the canopy filters sunlight into emerald shadows and the air hums with life, the Yanomami people have lived for thousands of years. Their understanding of human connection, intimacy, and gender exists far outside the boxes Western culture tried to build. And honestly? That’s exactly what makes their story so …

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The Hidden Rites of the Sambia: Beyond Western Labels

readwithpride.com Here’s a question that might make you uncomfortable: What if everything you think you know about sexual orientation is actually just… cultural baggage? Before you close this tab, hear me out. Deep in the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea, there’s a people called the Sambia who’ve been challenging Western assumptions about sexuality for …

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Rainforest Shamans: The Fluid Genders of the Amazon

readwithpride.com Deep within the Amazon rainforest, where the world’s most powerful river system carves through millions of acres of green canopy, Indigenous communities have preserved traditions that challenge everything we think we know about gender and sexuality. Long before Western activists coined terms like “non-binary” or “gender fluid,” Amazonian shamans were already living these truths, …

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Life-Force and Legacy: The Ritual Love of the Etoro

readwithpride.com Deep in the mountains of Papua New Guinea, far from the reach of colonial influence for centuries, the Etoro people developed a worldview so radically different from Western thought that it challenges everything we think we know about gender, sexuality, and the meaning of masculinity itself. This isn’t just another “hidden civilization” story. This …

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Guardians of the Third Gender: Deep Forest Traditions

readwithpride.com Long before Western society started having conversations about gender identity, Indigenous communities across Central and South America already had it figured out. Deep in the forests and remote villages where ancient traditions still pulse with life, third gender individuals weren’t just accepted: they were revered as spiritual guides, healers, and essential pillars of their …

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Echoes in the Congo: Love Among the Baka People

readwithpride.com Deep in the Congo Basin, where the forest canopy weaves a green cathedral overhead and rivers carve ancient pathways through the earth, the Baka people have lived for millennia. These hunter-gatherers, sometimes called “the people of the forest,” have built a society so intertwined with the rainforest that their language contains dozens of words …

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The Last Sanctuaries: Queer Life Before Colonialism

readwithpride.com Before missionaries arrived with Bibles and shame, before colonial laws criminalized love, there were sanctuaries. Deep in the world’s rainforests and remote woodlands, human societies flourished with radically different understandings of gender and sexuality: understandings that often celebrated rather than condemned queer lives. These weren’t utopias. But they were places where same-sex love, gender …

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